登陆注册
37836100000015

第15章 VI.(2)

"No, nothing has happened," said Gregory, with a sort of violence; which was heightened by a sense of the rings and tendrils of loose hair springing from the mass that defined her pretty head. "Don't you know that you oughtn't to say 'No'm' and 'Yes'm?"' he demanded, bitterly, and then he expected to see the water come into her eyes, or the fire into her cheeks.

Clementina merely looked interested. "Did I say that? I meant to say Yes, ma'am and No, ma'am; but I keep forgetting."

"You oughtn't to say anything!" Gregory answered savagely, "Just say Yes, and No, and let your voice do the rest."

"Oh!" said the girl, with the gentlest abeyance, as if charmed with the novelty of the idea. "I should be afraid it wasn't polite."

Gregory took an even brutal tone. It seemed to him as if he were forced to hurt her feelings. But his words, in spite of his tone, were not brutal; they might have even been thought flattering. "The politeness is in the manner, and you don't need anything but your manner."

"Do you think so, truly?" asked the girl joyously. "I should like to try it once!"

He frowned again. "I've no business to criticise your way of speaking."

"Oh yes'm--yes, ma'am; sir, I mean; I mean, Oh, yes, indeed! The'a!

It does sound just as well, don't it?" Clementina laughed in triumph at the outcome of her efforts, so that a reluctant visional smile came upon Gregory's face, too. I'm very mach obliged to you, Mr. Gregory--I shall always want to do it, if it's the right way."

"It's the right way," said Gregory coldly.

"And don't they," she urged, "don't they really say Sir and Ma'am, whe'e --whe'e you came from?"

He said gloomily, "Not ladies and gentlemen. Servants do. Waiters--like me." He inflicted this stab to his pride with savage fortitude and he bore with self-scorn the pursuit of her innocent curiosity.

"But I thought--I thought you was a college student."

"Were," Gregory corrected her, involuntarily, and she said, "Were, I mean."

"I'm a student at college, and here I'm a servant! It's all right!" he said with a suppressed gritting of the teeth; and he added, "My Master was the servant of the meanest, and I must-- I beg your pardon for meddling with your manner of speaking"--"Oh, I'm very much obliged to you; indeed I am. And I shall not care if you tell me of anything that's out of the way in my talking," said Clementina, generously.

"Thank you; I think I won't wait any longer for Mr. Fane."

"Why, I'm su'a he'll be back very soon, now. I'll try not to disturb you any moa."

Gregory turned from taking some steps towards the door, and said, "I wish you would tell Mr. Fane something."

"For you? Why, suttainly!"

"No. For you. Tell him that it's all right about his calling you Boss."

The indignant color came into Clementina's face. "He had no business to call me that."

"No; and he doesn't think he had, now. He's truly sorry for it."

"I'll see," said Clementina.

She had not seen by the time Fane got back. She received his apologies for being gone so long coldly, and went away to Mrs. Atwell, whom she told what had passed between Gregory and herself.

"Is he truly so proud?" she asked.

"He's a very good young man," said Mrs. Atwell, "but I guess he's proud.

He can't help it, but you can see he fights against it. If I was you, Clem, I wouldn't say anything to the guls about it."

"Oh, no'm--I mean, no, indeed. I shouldn't think of it. But don't you think that was funny, his bringing in Christ, that way?"

"Well, he's going to be a minister, you know."

"Is he really?" Clementina was a while silent. At last she said, "Don't you think Mr. Gregory has a good many freckles?"

"Well, them red-complected kind is liable to freckle," said Mrs. Atwell, judicially.

After rather a long pause for both of them, Clementina asked, "Do you think it would be nice for me to ask Mr. Gregory about things, when I wasn't suttain?"

"Like what?"

"Oh-wo'ds, and pronunciation; and books to read."

"Why, I presume he'd love to have you. He's always correctin' the guls;

I see him take up a book one day, that one of 'em was readin', and when she as't him about it, he said it was rubbage. I guess you couldn't have a betta guide."

"Well, that was what I was thinking. I guess I sha'n't do it, though.

I sh'd neva have the courage." Clementina laughed and then fell rather seriously silent again.

同类推荐
  • Iphigenia at Aulis

    Iphigenia at Aulis

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 订鬼篇

    订鬼篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 书断

    书断

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 续诗品

    续诗品

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • DON JUAN

    DON JUAN

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 我的女朋友是洛天依

    我的女朋友是洛天依

    龙决死后穿越到二次元,然后在二次元中邂逅了洛天依,并帮助她成为虚拟歌姬的故事。
  • TFBOYS之时空公主

    TFBOYS之时空公主

    女主林蕊是一个被家人遗弃的孩子,在一个下雪的夏天(没错,就是一个下雪的夏天)她被到地球考察的布西娜星球的魔法王国的女王瑞纳带走,成为了时空公主,改名为金夏雪(时空公主就是一个有魔法的公主,会经常来到地球帮助需要帮助的人类),可是一次意外的任务让金夏雪和三个男孩结下了不解情缘······
  • 一生应结识的25个人

    一生应结识的25个人

    本书介绍了25位世界名人的生平事迹,包括:切·格瓦拉、文森特·凡·高、阿尔伯特·史怀哲、阿尔伯特·爱因斯坦、伊莎多拉·邓肯等。
  • 剑无缘

    剑无缘

    王家破门,唯一的幸存者王世剑苟延残喘,缺遇到了家族老祖…………
  • 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!
  • 一口吃不成大胖子

    一口吃不成大胖子

    某仙人甲:“前面洞府宝光四溢,定是宝贝不少!兄弟们,冲啊。”只是冲进去之后,眼前一片漆黑。哪里还有刚才看到的宝光。“洞府”外,王大强心满意足的打了个饱嗝。
  • 灵感应

    灵感应

    听,是鬼魂在说话!我是梅琳达·戈登,刚结婚,刚刚来到这个小镇。对,是鬼魂在说话。我自出生以来,就拥有能够与同亡者交流的能力。祖母将他们称为地缚灵,他们留在世间是有自己的夙愿还未完成,而我的职责,就是帮他们完成他们未完成的愿望!
  • 废材妖孽小姐太嚣张

    废材妖孽小姐太嚣张

    她是罂粟,一朵有毒的花,却是杀手届赫赫有名的杀神,朝夕之间,友情亲情的双重背叛令她痛不欲生,谁知碰巧赶上穿越的潮流,成为将军府嫡出大小姐,翩然醒转,当她变成她!风华无人可挡。曾经的背叛让她的内心附上层层枷锁,无人可解。他,云盘王朝天赋异禀的七皇子翊王,绝世强者,冷漠如冰,却偏偏对她爱护有加,给予她至高无上的宠溺,可谁又知冷漠如她,在这个风起云涌的时代,不知是谁先乱了谁的眼,收了谁的心。无奈就算是高深莫测的翊王也有善感的时刻:月儿,你知不知道我一直都在你身边,只要回头一看,就能看到,可为何你一直都不回头看看我呢?谁主浮沉,先爱上的人注定要被虐得死死的!
  • 灵异事件实录簿

    灵异事件实录簿

    大学刚毕业的伊辰,在无意间收到了一封死亡信件,这无疑打破了他平静的生活,当他还未反应过来的时候,一件件灵异事件接踵而来,这一切究竟是一场无法解释的灵异现象,还是一个蓄谋已久的阴谋……
  • 狩魂链

    狩魂链

    这是一个关于召唤位面的世界。什么,任何东西都可能召唤出来。那是不是能召唤个女朋友给我啊!!!