登陆注册
14827300000024

第24章

It was not very Homeric, when it came off, or very mediaeval, but it was really lots of fun, or far more fun than one would have thought. The storming of the castle was very sincere, and the fortress was honestly defended. Miss Macroyd was made umpire, as she wished, and provided with a large snowball to sit on at a safe distance; as she was chosen by the men, the girls wanted to have an umpire of their own, who would be really fair, and they voted Verrian into the office. But he refused, partly because he did not care about being paired off with Miss Macroyd so conspicuously, and partly because he wished to help the fight along.

Attacks were made and repelled, and there were feats of individual and collective daring on the side of the defenders which were none the less daring because the assailants stopped to cheer them, and to disable themselves by laughing at the fury of the foe. A detachment of the young men at last stormed the castle and so weakened its walls that they toppled inward; then the defenders, to save themselves from being buried under the avalanche, swarmed out into the open and made the entire force of the enemy prisoners.

The men pretended that this was what might have been expected from the beginning, but by this time the Berserker madness had possessed Miss Macroyd, too; she left her throne of snow and came forward shouting that it had been perfectly fair, and that the men had been really beaten, and they had no right to pretend that they had given themselves up purposely.

The sex-partisanship, which is such a droll fact in women when there is any question of their general opposition to men, possessed them all, and they stood as, one girl for the reality of their triumph. This did not prevent them from declaring that the men had behaved with outrageous unfairness, and that the only one who fought with absolute sincerity from first to last was Mr. Verrian.

Neither their unity of conviction concerning the general fact nor the surprising deduction from it in Verrian's case operated to make them refuse the help of their captives in getting home. When they had bound up their tumbled hair, in some cases, and repaired the ravages of war among their feathers and furs and draperies, in other cases, they accepted the hands of the late enemy at difficult points of the path.

But they ran forward when they neared the house, and they were prompt to scream upon Mrs. Westangle that there never had been such a success or such fun, and that they were almost dead, and soon as they had something to eat they were going to bed and never going to get up again.

In the details which they were able to give at luncheon, they did justice to Verrian's noble part in the whole affair, which had saved the day, not only in keeping them up to the work when they had got thinking it couldn't be carried through, but in giving the combat a validity which it would not have had without him. They had to thank him, next to Mrs.

Westangle herself, whom they praised beyond any articulate expression, for thinking up such a delightful thing. They wondered how she could ever have thought of it--such a simple thing too; and they were sure that when people heard of it they would all be wanting to have snow battles.

Mrs. Westangle took her praises as passively, if not as modestly, as Verrian received his. She made no show of disclaiming them, but she had the art, invaluable in a woman who meant to go far in the line she had chosen, of not seeming to have done anything, or of not caring whether people liked it or not. Verrian asked himself, as he watched her twittering back at those girls, and shedding equally their thanks and praises from her impermeable plumage, how she would have behaved if Miss Shirley's attempt had been an entire failure. He decided that she would have ignored the failure with the same impersonality as that with which she now ignored the success. It appeared that in one point he did her injustice, for when he went up to dress for dinner after the long stroll he took towards night he found a note under his door, by which he must infer that Mrs. Westangle had not kept the real facts of her triumph from the mistress of the revels.

"DEAR MR. VERRIAN, I am not likely to see you, but I must thank you.

M. SHIRLEY.

"P. S. Don't try to answer, please."

Verrian liked, the note, he even liked the impulse which had dictated it, and he understood the impulse; but he did not like getting the note. If Miss Shirley meant business in taking up the line of life she had professed to have entered upon seriously, she had better, in the case of a young man whose acquaintance she had chanced to make, let her gratitude wait. But when did a woman ever mean business, except in the one great business?

同类推荐
  • 本草衍义

    本草衍义

    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。
  • 望云集

    望云集

    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。
  • 人间乐诱部

    人间乐诱部

    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。
  • 南华真经章句音义余事

    南华真经章句音义余事

    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。
  • 扬州清曲曲词卷

    扬州清曲曲词卷

    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
  • 玉面邪君

    玉面邪君

    这是一部不容错过的精彩武侠玄乎小说,是男人就不容错过
  • 斩洪荒

    斩洪荒

    龙,要翱翔九天凤,要鹏程万里王,要傲视天下一代冷王,妻子毒害陨落,却灵魂不灭,附体到了一个二愣少爷身上,当冷王二度重生之时,一代腥风血雨,就此展开。天,遮不住我的眼地,盖不住我的心斗破苍穹,武动乾坤,斩洪荒!
  • 仙侠奇缘之霓凰殿

    仙侠奇缘之霓凰殿

    九天仙宫霓凰殿,凌界旭日穹弯上。云霞流光彩翼舞,金翩银河绕漫天。凰鸟跃徊丝羽楼,龙蛇盘柱擎瀚宇······昙玥灵:九天非生我之地,一个异数罢了。凰千辰:求你······你怎舍孤我一人。璧粼轩红鸾星动自作心疾得知时委实晚矣孤炎月终尝七情六欲得不到弃不能苦尽难甘莲尘子与鱼儿私奔再同寝时拜堂夜鱼儿钻怀里呼泡大睡无法哄娇妻醒解衣带反扑到底七尊下界遇璧粼轩氺玲珑竹之青风逍遥龙千旭······二尊被当成妖怪一尊被认居心不良伏羲君遇到一个头疼的徒弟见面就打眼比剑
  • 腹黑太子是我王妃

    腹黑太子是我王妃

    “听说太子府上近日在招男宠,你看我如何?”“槿王怕是弄错了,我对男人没兴趣,府上也只缺一个太子妃。”“那……你就更该考虑考虑我了。”
  • 健康孕产100分

    健康孕产100分

    本书坚持以人为本,以简单、轻松的风格,打造适合准父母们阅读的模式,传播人性化、通俗化、科学化的孕产育百科知识。让初为人母、初为人父的夫妻们少一分担心,多一分安心;少一分忧心,多一分开心!
  • 夺命魂师

    夺命魂师

    豪门世家,战功显赫,却因世俗皇权所忌!繁花开尽,一片流离,家族灰飞烟灭!飘荡游魂,历尽艰辛,如何重建未来?一位世家子弟的生死历险,改写逆天夺命的造化!
  • 曾国藩家书

    曾国藩家书

    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。
  • 那年那月的那些事

    那年那月的那些事

    和新转学的女生当朋友一起玩耍一起聊天。对抗那一些男生。说好了永不分散,不离不弃。青春不老,我们不散。虽然有时候起一些小内讧,想分散,但是最后又和好了。
  • 那年青春的初恋进行时

    那年青春的初恋进行时

    那年青春,她们在慕华影视学院相遇。友情,爱情……这些因素在他们体内渐渐发酵。那年青春,给他们带来了欢乐,笑容。同时也少不了失望,泪水……走进这本书,让我们一起来追忆那年我们的初恋进行时。
  • 中庸

    中庸

    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。