登陆注册
38037000000056

第56章 CHAPTER XIX. CREATIVE ART(1)

He went forth, seeking.

The Schofield household was catless this winter but there was a nice white cat at the Williams'. Penrod strolled thoughtfully over to the Williams's yard.

He was entirely successful, not even having been seen by the sensitive coloured woman, aged fifty-three years and four months.

But still Penrod was thoughtful. The artist within him was unsatisfied with his materials: and upon his return to the stable he placed the cat beneath an overturned box, and once more sat down in the inspiring wheelbarrow, pondering. His expression, concentrated and yet a little anxious, was like that of a painter at work upon a portrait that may or may not turn out to be a masterpiece. The cat did not disturb him by her purring, though she was, indeed, already purring. She was one of those cozy, youngish cats--plump, even a little full-bodied, perhaps, and rather conscious of the figure--that are entirely conventional and domestic by nature, and will set up a ladylike housekeeping anywhere without ****** a fuss about it. If there be a fault in these cats, overcomplacency might be the name for it; they err a shade too sure of themselves, and their assumption that the world means to treat them respectfully has just a little taint of the grande dame. Consequently, they are liable to great outbreaks of nervous energy from within, engendered by the extreme surprises that life sometimes holds in store for them. They lack the pessimistic imagination.

Mrs. Williams's cat was content upon a strange floor and in the confining enclosure of a strange box. She purred for a time, then trustfully fell asleep. 'Twas well she slumbered; she would need all her powers presently.

She slumbered, and dreamed not that she would wake to mingle with events that were to alter her serene disposition radically and cause her to become hasty-tempered and abnormally suspicious for the rest of her life.

Meanwhile, Penrod appeared to reach a doubtful solution of his problem. His expression was still somewhat clouded as he brought from the storeroom of the stable a small fragment of a broken mirror, two paint brushes and two old cans, one containing black paint and the other white. He regarded himself earnestly in the mirror; then, with some reluctance, he dipped a brush into one of the cans, and slowly painted his nose a midnight black. He was on the point of spreading this decoration to cover the lower part of his face, when he paused, brush halfway between can and chin.

What arrested him was a sound from the alley--a sound of drumming upon tin. The eyes of Penrod became significant of rushing thoughts; his expression cleared and brightened. He ran to the alley doors and flung them open.

"Oh, Verman!" he shouted.

Marching up and down before the cottage across the alley, Verman plainly considered himself to be an army. Hanging from his shoulders by a string was an old tin wash-basin, whereon he beat cheerily with two dry bones, once the chief support of a chicken.

Thus he assuaged his ennui.

"Verman, come on in here," Penrod called. "I got sumpthing for you to do you'll like awful well."

Verman halted, ceased to drum, and stared. His gaze was not fixed particularly upon Penrod's nose, however, and neither now nor later did he make any remark or gesture referring to this casual eccentricity. He expected things like that upon Penrod or Sam Williams. And as for Penrod himself, he had already forgotten that his nose was painted.

"Come on, Verman!"

Verman continued to stare, not moving. He had received such invitations before, and they had not always resulted to his advantage. Within that stable things had happened to him the like of which he was anxious to avoid in the future.

"Oh, come ahead, Verman!" Penrod urged, and, divining logic in the reluctance confronting him, he added, "This ain't goin' to be anything like last time, Verman. I got sumpthing just SPLENDUD for you to do!"

Verman's expression hardened; he shook his head decisively.

"Mo," he said.

"Oh, COME on, Verman?" Penrod pleaded. "It isn't anything goin' to HURT you, is it? I tell you it's sumpthing you'd give a good deal to GET to do, if you knew what it is."

"Mo!" said Verman firmly. "I mome maw woo!"

Penrod offered arguments.

"Look, Verman!" he said. "Listen here a minute, can't you? How d'you know you don't want to until you know what it is? A person CAN'T know they don't want to do a thing even before the other person tells 'em what they're goin' to get 'em to do, can they?

For all you know, this thing I'm goin' to get you to do might be sumpthing you wouldn't miss doin' for anything there is! For all you know, Verman, it might be sumpthing like this: well, f'rinstance, s'pose I was standin' here, and you were over there, sort of like the way you are now, and I says, 'Hello, Verman!' and then I'd go on and tell you there was sumpthing I was goin' to get you to do; and you'd say you wouldn't do it, even before you heard what it was, why where'd be any sense to THAT? For all you know, I might of been goin' to get you to eat a five-cent bag o' peanuts."

Verman had listened obdurately until he heard the last few words; but as they fell upon his ear, he relaxed, and advanced to the stable doors, smiling and extending his open right hand.

"Aw wi," he said. "Gi'm here."

"Well," Penrod returned, a trifle embarrassed, "I didn't say it WAS peanuts, did I? Honest, Verman, it's sumpthing you'll like better'n a few old peanuts that most of 'em'd prob'ly have worms in 'em, anyway. All I want you to do is--"

But Verman was not favourably impressed; his face hardened again.

"Mo!" he said, and prepared to depart.

"Look here, Verman," Penrod urged. "It isn't goin' to hurt you just to come in here and see what I got for you, is it? You can do that much, can't you?"

Surely such an appeal must have appeared reasonable, even to Verman, especially since its effect was aided by the promising words, "See what I got for you." Certainly Verman yielded to it, though perhaps a little suspiciously. He advanced a few cautious steps into the stable.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 罪名成立

    罪名成立

    一起离奇命案突然发生,刑警队长和漂亮的女记者同时介入案情调查。犯罪嫌疑人仓皇进入山林,众多鬼魅人物粉墨登场,刑警队长却阴差阳错成了另一起命案的疑凶。当连环重案逐一破解,这多起命案的幕后元凶竟然都是她!什么样的遭遇激起了美丽女人的夺取命杀心?她的心中到底还埋藏着多少惊心动魄的秘密……
  • 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。)
  • 时光匆匆别等我!

    时光匆匆别等我!

    在二十一世纪圣英中学,有这样一群追逐梦想的少年。他们在一起会檫出怎样的火花呢?是好聚好散,还是完成他们的追梦历程?在追寻梦想的道路上,是艰难而有趣的,为了梦想,很多人可以不顾一切,付出自己全部的心血和努力,当然,他们也不例外。至于他们,原本只是一群互不相识的学生罢了,有的人富有,有的人贫穷。很多人会问出这样的问题:“他们是怎样相识,相知,相伴的呢?要知道,现在这样的纯友谊已经很少了。”他们肯定会毫不犹豫地这样回答你:“因为梦想,因为我们有着共同的梦想。”是的,因为梦想,他们认识了。他们的梦想之路是坎坷的,但他们身上有着坚持,努力的精神。所以,我相信他们的梦想之路终有一天会被光明照亮。
  • 永远不忘的记忆——星空下的微笑

    永远不忘的记忆——星空下的微笑

    林雨涵她只记得从小生活在林家,记忆中的自己从来没有在唐家呆过一天。可是,十七年后,一切都发生了变化。他不清楚自己是谁,到底是谁家的人?他想要揭开真相,揭开迷雾。林默然,到底是不是自己的哥哥?还是说,唐莫雨才是自己的哥哥呢!林雨涵最终到底会选择谁呢!
  • 名人传奇故事丛书-希特勒

    名人传奇故事丛书-希特勒

    希特勒1933年爬上德国总理宝座。他加紧重新武装,疯狂向外扩张,挑起第二次世界大战,但在强大的苏联红军和英、美盟军的打击下,希特勒霸占欧洲和世界的美梦终被粉碎。
  • 染血的太刀

    染血的太刀

    因为圣主的阴谋导致了一场席卷全球的病毒风暴。地球上的生灵产生了巨大的变化,人类不再是地球的主宰,反而生存都岌岌可危......
  • 饥饿的灵魂

    饥饿的灵魂

    叶向阳编著的《饥饿的灵魂》共分七卷。A卷《我有责任叫醒你》;B卷《风吹斜的诗行》;C卷《你把我送出七月》;D卷《被诗思索的山河》;E卷《大海在一滴水中漫步》;F卷《饥饿的灵魂》;G卷《挽歌》。诗集以近作为主,兼收部分旧作。对历史复调式的思考和对未来赋格式的畅想构成诗集的主题。所收诗作冷峻而又热情;深沉而又高亢。体现出诗人融音乐于诗歌的功力。
  • 西游之大唐天庭

    西游之大唐天庭

    西游世界,妖魔鬼怪视人族为血食。满天神佛只为信仰,无人在乎人族生死疾苦。李承乾身为大唐太子布局西游,只为给人族讨一个公道。如果天不给,那便逆天,建一个大唐天庭。(本书无系统、无后宫、不脑残。若是喜欢不带脑子看书轻松向,尽可绕道。)
  • 莲舟路

    莲舟路

    蜀有莲村,村有莲香,莲香擅采莲……莲香有状元哥哥,炼香的师傅,还有一个好夫君,爱她一生(本文全部架空,不要与现实相对照)
  • 最后的使徒

    最后的使徒

    千劫万险,魂飞魄散,我依在;百世轮回,六道无常,我永生!天道!天道!天已失道,何需奉天!地意!地意!地已无情,何须多情!逆天!逆天!此天不逆!妄为一世之人!封地!封地!此地不封,安能平一生愤?