登陆注册
34581900000002

第2章

He was on his way to Paris when (as he recorded in his journal) a light came into his life. This illumination first shone for him by means of one Cooley, son and inheritor of all that had belonged to the late great Cooley, of Cooley Mills, Connecticut. Young Cooley, a person of cheery manners and bright waistcoats, was one of Mellin's few sea-acquaintances; they had played shuffleboard together on the steamer during odd half-hours when Mr. Cooley found it possible to absent himself from poker in the smoking-room; and they encountered each other again on the channel boat crossing to Calais.

~"Hey!"~ was Mr. Cooley's lively greeting. "I'm meetin' lots of people I know to-day. You runnin' over to Paris, too? Come up to the boat-deck and meet the Countess de Vaurigard.""Who?" said Mellin, red with pleasure, yet fearing that he did not hear aright.

"The Countess de Vaurigard. Queen! met her in London. Sneyd introduced me to her. You remember Sneyd on the steamer? Baldish Englishman--red nose--doesn't talk much--younger brother of Lord Rugden, so he says. Played poker some. Well, ~yes!~""I saw him. I didn't meet him.""You didn't miss a whole lot. Fact is, before we landed I almost had him sized up for queer, but when he introduced me to the Countess I saw my mistake. He must be the real thing. ~She~certainly is! You come along up and see."So Mellin followed, to make his bow before a thin, dark, charmingly pretty young woman, who smiled up at him from her deck-chair through an enhancing mystery of veils; and presently he found himself sitting beside her. He could not help trembling slightly at first, but he would have giving a great deal if, by some miraculous vision, Mary Kramer and other friends of his in Cranston could have seen him engaged in what he thought of as "conversational badinage" with the Comtesse de Vaurigard.

Both the lady and her name thrilled him. He thought he remembered the latter in Froissart: it conjured up "baronial halls" and "donjon keeps," rang resonantly in his mind like "Let the portcullis fall!" At home he had been wont to speak of the "oldest families in Cranston," complaining of the invasions of "new people" into the social territory of the McCords and Mellins and Kramers--a pleasant conception which the presence of a De Vaurigard revealed to him as a petty and shameful fiction; and yet his humility, like his little fit of trembling, was of short duration, for gay geniality of Madame de Vaurigard put him amazingly at ease.

At Calais young Cooley (with a matter-of-course air, and not seeming to feel the need of asking permission) accompanied her to a compartment, and Mellin walked with them to the steps of the coach, where he paused, murmuring some words of farewell.

Madame de Vaurigard turned to him with a prettily assumed dismay.

"What! You stay at Calais?" she cried, pausing with one foot on the step to ascend. "Oh! I am sorry for you. Calais is ter-rible!""No. I am going on to Paris.""So? You have frien's in another coach which you wish to be wiz?""No, no, indeed," he stammered hastily.

"Well, my frien'," she laughed gayly, "w'y don' you come wiz us?"Blushing, he followed Cooley into the coach, to spend five happy hours, utterly oblivious of the bright French landscape whirling by outside the window.

There ensued a month of conscientious sightseeing in Paris, and that unfriendly city afforded him only one glimpse of the Countess. She whizzed by him in a big touring-car one afternoon as he stood on an "isle of safety" at the foot of the Champs Elysees. Cooley was driving the car. The raffish, elderly Englishman (whose name, Mellin knew, was Sneyd) sat with him, and beside Madame de Vaurigard in the tonneau lolled a gross-looking man--unmistakably an American--with a jovial, red, smooth-shaven face and several chins. Brief as the glimpse was, Mellin had time to receive a distinctly disagreeable impression of this person, and to wonder how Heaven could vouchsafe the society of Madame de Vaurigard to so coarse a creature.

All the party were dressed as for the road, gray with dust, and to all appearances in a merry mood. Mellin's heart gave a leap when he saw that the Countess recognized him. Her eyes, shining under a white veil, met his for just the instant before she was quite by, and when the machine had passed a little handkerchief waved for a moment from the side of the tonneau where she sat.

With that he drew the full breath of Romance.

He had always liked to believe that ~"grandes dames"~ leaned back in the luxurious upholstery of their victorias, landaulettes, daumonts or automobiles with an air of inexpressible though languid hauteur. The Newport letter in the Cranston Telegraph often referred to it. But the gayety of that greeting from the Countess' little handkerchief was infinitely refreshing, and Mellin decided that animation was more becoming than hauteur--even to a ~"grande dame."~That night he wrote (almost without effort) the verses published in the Cranston Telegraph two weeks later. They began:

~Marquise, ma belle~, with your kerchief of lace Awave from your flying car, And your slender hand--The hand to which he referred was the same which had arrested his gondola and his heart simultaneously, five days ago, in Venice. He was on his way to the station when Madame de Vaurigard's gondola shot out into the Grand Canal from a narrow channel, and at her signal both boats paused.

"Ah! but you fly away!" she cried, lifting her eyebrows mournfully, as she saw the steamer-trunk in his gondola. "You are goin' return to America?""No. I'm just leaving for Rome.""Well, in three day' ~I~ am goin' to Rome!" She clapped her hands lightly and laughed. "You know this is three time' we meet jus' by chance, though that second time it was so quick--~pff~! like that--we didn't talk much togezzer! Monsieur Mellin," she laughed again, "I think we mus' be frien's. Three time'--an' we are both goin' to Rome! Monsieur Mellin, you believe in ~Fate~?"With a beating heart he did.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 仙门遍地是奇葩

    仙门遍地是奇葩

    原来仙门竟是这般不以为耻,当真是脸皮厚到极致。师傅喜欢徒弟,徒弟却为魔界鬼祭哭得死去活来。好一个郎艳独绝,遗世独立的灵澈仙人。又好一个不知羞耻,仙门之辱的徒弟。不愧是仙门之境,遍地奇葩,魔为仙成仙,仙为魔堕魔;不疯不魔,不魔不仙(ps:纯属瞎七八扯,毫无逻辑。)
  • 影响青少年的100个孝敬父母故事

    影响青少年的100个孝敬父母故事

    传承中华美德,体会传统美德的魅力,感受孔融让梨的礼让、司马光砸缸的聪明才智、勾践卧薪尝胆的坚忍、祖逖闻鸡起舞的勤奋、匡衡凿壁偷光的好学、岳飞精忠报国的忠心耿耿……以此来不断地增强我们的民族自尊心、民族自信心和民族自豪感。
  • 生仙记

    生仙记

    九天之上有九真,九真返还化一元。阴阳气数乃造化,顺则生凡逆成仙。
  • 万界交易城

    万界交易城

    一个奇异的空间,一座古老的城。这里,有来自千万世界的人,这里可以买到任何世界的东西,这里,是天堂,也是地狱。万界交易城。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 久逢初晴,依然爱你

    久逢初晴,依然爱你

    他不爱她!却不曾提离婚!可又夜夜冷落她!而如果偶尔避不开,那么每次,他便必定会亲自端一杯水给她。在那杯水里,有着他亲手放进去的药。“徐屹然,为什么?”“为什么?呵,当然是因为你这样的人,根本不配有的孩子!”爱情从来不是一场较量,当她终于在这场婚姻里认输,终于决定离开时,他却拦住了她——“初晴,继续爱我,可不可以?”
  • 杀手公主惑世间:一舞倾天下

    杀手公主惑世间:一舞倾天下

    她,从不怕任何的毒物,并且什么毒药只要尝一口便可以分析其毒性;虽然是二十一世纪的杀手,但她的中国武功却十分卓越,所以别人都称她—中国娃娃。冷月萱,这只是一个假名而已,没有人知道她的真实名字,就连她自己也一无所知。从她被遗弃在路边的那一刻开始,命运的转盘便已经开始转动……穿越古今,旧缘难了;一双紫眸,美丽妖娆;爱恨交织,情仇难解……
  • 逍遥剑谷

    逍遥剑谷

    天蚕剑传人笑傲风独创逍遥剑法,威震江湖,自此武林展开一段传奇.........
  • 偏离的轨迹

    偏离的轨迹

    一个即将退役的特工人员,在最后一次任务中被俘,凭借坚定的信念和意外的能力独自摧毁了敌方的基地,随后被抛入“虫洞”,转世重生,进入了一个婴儿的躯体。依靠前世意外获得的能力和自身的努力,打造了崭新的人生……科技在手,能力强悍的他屡屡挫败针对国家和他的阴谋,无数次在生死之间的徘徊让他越挫越勇,终于成就了自己的梦想……美女簇拥,他将如何选择自己的真爱……作者隆重推荐《回到清末》《梦幻足球之天才纵横》《棋斗士》《邪气凛然》《精武门》《杀戮无罪》《剑仙》《上古神迹》《鬼艳劫》等作品本书的QQ组群:32499156感谢好友lushengcai冰蓝少军提供
  • 圣天无极

    圣天无极

    圣,乃天境,天,乃无极。圣天无极,混沌苍穹。熔炎绝情。寒冰冷情。尖晶无情。风沙狂情。乌云多情。这是一个力量的时间,在这个世界,只有力量才能生存,只有力量才能主宰。他是一个孤儿,却因为走上了复仇之路。弱肉强食的世界,让他明白了,力量才是主道,为了追寻哪份力量,他不惜一切代价。