第 18 节
作者:指点迷津      更新:2021-02-20 05:05      字数:9322
  her last opportunity of appealing to him had gone by; and she
  nearly burst into tears at the thought。 It occurred to her that
  she might prevail upon him by making a scene in public。 But the
  street was a busy one; and she was a little afraid of him。
  Neither consideration would have checked her in one of her
  ungovernable moods; but now she was in an abject one。 Her moods
  seemed to come only when they were harmful to her。 She suffered
  herself to be put into the railway omnibus; which was on the
  point of starting from the innyard when they arrived there; and
  though he touched his hat; asked whether she had any message to
  give him; and in a tender whisper wished her a safe journey; she
  would not look at or speak to him。 So they parted; and he
  returned alone to the chalet; where he was received by the two
  policemen who subsequently brought him to the college。
  CHAPTER VI
  The year wore on; and the long winter evenings set in。 The
  studious young ladies at Alton College; elbows on desk and hands
  over ears; shuddered chillily in fur tippets whilst they loaded
  their memories with the statements of writers on moral science;
  or; like men who swim upon corks; reasoned out mathematical
  problems upon postulates。 Whence it sometimes happened that the
  more reasonable a student was in mathematics; the more
  unreasonable she was in the affairs of real life; concerning
  which few trustworthy postulates have yet been ascertained。
  Agatha; not studious; and apt to shiver in winter; began to break
  Rule No。 17 with increasing frequency。 Rule No。 17 forbade the
  students to enter the kitchen; or in any way to disturb the
  servants in the discharge of their duties。 Agatha broke it
  because she was fond of making toffee; of eating it; of a good
  fire; of doing any forbidden thing; and of the admiration with
  which the servants listened to her ventriloquial and musical
  feats。 Gertrude accompanied her because she too liked toffee; and
  because she plumed herself on her condescension to her inferiors。
  Jane went because her two friends went; and the spirit of
  adventure; the force of example; and the love of toffee often
  brought more volunteers to these expeditions than Agatha thought
  it safe to enlist。 One evening Miss Wilson; going downstairs
  alone to her private wine cellar; was arrested near the kitchen
  by sounds of revelry; and; stopping to listen; overheard the
  castanet dance (which reminded her of the emphasis with which
  Agatha had snapped her fingers at Mrs。 Miller); the bee on the
  window pane; 〃Robin Adair〃 (encored by the servants); and an
  imitation of herself in the act of appealing to Jane Carpenter's
  better nature to induce her to study for the Cambridge Local。 She
  waited until the cold and her fear of being discovered spying
  forced her to creep upstairs; ashamed of having enjoyed a silly
  entertainment; and of conniving at a breach of the rules rather
  than face a fresh quarrel with Agatha。
  There was one particular in which matters between Agatha and the
  college discipline did not go on exactly as before。 Although she
  had formerly supplied a disproportionately large number of the
  confessions in the fault book; the entry which had nearly led to
  her expulsion was the last she ever made in it。 Not that her
  conduct was betterit was rather the reverse。 Miss Wilson never
  mentioned the matter; the fault book being sacred from all
  allusion on her part。 But she saw that though Agatha would not
  confess her own sins; she still assisted others to unburden their
  consciences。 The witticisms with which Jane unsuspectingly
  enlivened the pages of the Recording Angel were conclusive on
  this point。
  Smilash had now adopted a profession。 In the last days of autumn
  he had whitewashed the chalet; painted the doors; windows; and
  veranda; repaired the roof and interior; and improved the place
  so much that the landlord had warned him that the rent would be
  raised at the expiration of his twelvemonth's tenancy; remarking
  that a tenant could not reasonably expect to have a pretty;
  rain…tight dwelling…house for the same money as a hardly
  habitable ruin。 Smilash had immediately promised to dilapidate it
  to its former state at the end of the year。 He had put up a board
  at the gate with an inscription copied from some printed cards
  which he presented to persons who happened to converse with him。
  _______________________________________________________
  JEFFERSON SMILASH
  PAINTER; DECORATOR; GLAZIER; PLUMBER & GARDENER。 Pianofortes
  tuned。 Domestic engineering in all its Branches。 Families waited
  upon at table or otherwise。
  CHAMOUNIX VILLA; LYVERN。 (N。B。 Advice Gratis。 No Reasonable offer
  refused。) _______________________________________________________
  The business thus announced; comprehensive as it was; did not
  flourish。 When asked by the curious for testimony to his
  competence and respectability; he recklessly referred them to
  Fairholme; to Josephs; and in particular to Miss Wilson; who; he
  said; had known him from his earliest childhood。 Fairholme; glad
  of an opportunity to show that he was no mealy mouthed parson;
  declared; when applied to; that Smilash was the greatest rogue in
  the country。 Josephs; partly from benevolence; and partly from a
  vague fear that Smilash might at any moment take an action
  against him for defamation of character; said he had no doubt
  that he was a very cheap workman; and that it would be a charity
  to give him some little job to encourage him。 Miss Wilson
  confirmed Fairholme's account; and the church organist; who had
  tuned all the pianofortes in the neighborhood once a year for
  nearly a quarter of a century; denounced the newcomer as Jack of
  all trades and master of none。 Hereupon the radicals of Lyvern; a
  small and disreputable party; began to assert that there was no
  harm in the man; and that the parsons and Miss Wilson; who lived
  in a fine house and did nothing but take in the daughters of rich
  swells as boarders; might employ their leisure better than in
  taking the bread out of a poor work man's mouth。 But as none of
  this faction needed the services of a domestic engineer; he was
  none the richer for their support; and the only patron he
  obtained was a housemaid who was leaving her situation at a
  country house in the vicinity; and wanted her box repaired; the
  lid having fallen off。 Smilash demanded half…a…crown for the job;
  but on her demurring; immediately apologized and came down to a
  shilling。 For this sum he repainted the box; traced her initials
  on it; and affixed new hinges; a Bramah lock; and brass handles;
  at a cost to himself of ten shillings and several hours' labor。
  The housemaid found fault with the color of the paint; made him
  take off the handles; which; she said; reminded her of a coffin;
  complained that a lock with such a small key couldn't be strong
  enough for a large box; but admitted that it was all her own
  fault for not employing a proper man。 It got about that he had
  made a poor job of the box; and as he; when taxed with this;
  emphatically confirmed it; he got no other commission; and his
  signboard served thenceforth only for the amusement of pedestrian
  tourists and of shepherd boys with a taste for stone throwing。
  One night a great storm blew over Lyvern; and those young ladies
  at Alton College who were afraid of lightning; said their prayers
  with some earnestness。 At half…past twelve the rain; wind; and
  thunder made such a din that Agatha and Gertrude wrapped
  themselves in shawls; stole downstairs to the window on the
  landing outside Miss Wilson's study; and stood watching the
  flashes give vivid glimpses of the landscape; and discussing in
  whispers whether it was dangerous to stand near a window; and
  whether brass stair…rods could attract lightning。 Agatha; as
  serious and friendly with a single companion as she was
  mischievous and satirical before a larger audience; enjoyed the
  scene quietly。 The lightning did not terrify her; for she knew
  little of the value of life; and fancied much concerning the
  heroism of being indifferent to it。 The tremors which the more
  startling flashes caused her; only made her more conscious of her
  own courage and its contrast with the uneasiness of Gertrude; who
  at last; shrinking from a forked zigzag of blue flame; said:
  〃Let us go back to bed; Agatha。 I feel sure that we are not safe
  here。〃
  〃Quite as safe as in bed; where we cannot see anything。 How the
  house shakes! I believe the rain will batter in the windows
  before〃
  〃Hush;〃 whispered Gertrude; catching her arm in terror。 〃What was
  that?〃
  〃What?〃
  〃I am sure I heard the bellthe gate bell。 Oh; do let us go back
  to bed。〃
  〃Nonsense! Who would be out on such a night as this? Perhaps the
  wind rang it。〃
  They waited for a few moments; Gertrude trembling; and Agatha
  feeling; as she listened in the darkness; a sensation familiar to
  persons who are afraid of ghosts。 Presently a veiled clangor
  mingled with the wind。 A few sharp and urgent snatches of it came
  unmistakably from the bell at the gate of the college grounds。 It
  was a loud bell; used to summon a servant from the college to
  open the gates; for though there was a porter's lodge; it was
  uninhabited。
  〃Who on ear