正文 The Courtship of Mr Lyon-1

Outside her kit window, the hedgerow glistened as if the snow possessed a light of its own; when the sky darkeowards evening, ahly, reflected pallor remained behind upon the winters landscape, while still the soft flakes floated down. This lovely girl, whose skin possesses that same, inner light so you would have thought she, too, was made all of snow, pauses in her chores in the mean kit to look out at the try road. Nothing has passed that way all day; the road is white and unmarked as a spilled bolt of bridal satin.

Father said he would be home before nightfall.

The snht down all the telephone wires; he couldnt have called, even with the best of news.

The roads are bad. I hope hell be safe.

But the old car stuck fast in a rut, wouldnt budge an inch; the engine whirred, coughed and died and he was far from home. Ruined, ohen ruined again, as he had learnt from his lawyers that very m; at the clusion of the lengthy, slow attempt to restore his fortunes, he had turned out his pockets to find the cash for petrol to take him home. And not even enough money left over to buy his Beauty, his girl-child, his pet, the one white rose she said she wahe only gift she wanted, no matter how the case went, how rich he might once again be. She had asked for so little and he had not been able to give it to her. He cursed the useless car, the last straw that broke his spirit; then, nothing for it but to fasten his old sheepskin coat around him, abandon the heap of metal a off down the snow-filled lao look for help.

Behind wrought-iron gates, a short, snowy drive performed a retit flourish before a miniature, perfect Palladian house that seemed to hide itself shyly behind snow-laden skirts of an antique cypress. It was almost night; that house, with its sweet, retiring, melancholy grace, would have seemed deserted but for a light that flickered in an upstairs window, so vague it might have been the refle of a star, if any stars could have peed the snow that whirled yet more thickly. Chilled through, he pressed the latch of the gate and saw, with a pang, how, ohered ghost of a tangle of thorns, there g, still, the faded rag of a white rose.

The gate ged loudly shut behind him; too loudly. For an instant, that reverberating g seemed final, emphatiinous as if the gate, now closed, barred all within it from the world outside the walled, wintry garden. And, from a distahough from what distance he could not tell, he heard the most singular sound in the world: a great r, as of a beast of prey.

In too mueed to allow himself to be intimidated, he squared up to the mahogany door. This door was equipped with a knocker in the shape of a lions head, with a ring through the nose; as he raised his hand towards it, it came to him this lions head was not, as he had thought at first, made of brass, but, instead, of gold. Before, however, he could announce his presehe door swung silently inward on well-oiled hinges and he saw a white hall where the dles of a great delier cast their benign light upon so many, many flowers i, free-standing jars of crystal that it seemed the whole of spring drew him into its warmth with a profound intake of perfumed breath. Yet there was no living person in the hall.

The door behind him closed as silently as it had opened, yet, this time, he felt no fear although he knew by the pervasive atmosphere of a suspension of reality that he had entered a place of privilege where all the laws of the

上一章目錄+書簽下一頁