登陆注册
15760000000001

第1章

So blindly were they in love, that they considered their marriage their greatest asset. The rest of the world, as represented by mutual friends, considered it the only thing that could be urged against either of them. While single, each had been popular. As a bachelor, young "Champ" Carter had filled his modest place acceptably. Hostesses sought him for dinners and week-end parties, men of his own years, for golf and tennis, and young girls liked him because when he talked to one of them he never talked of himself, or let his eyes wander toward any other girl. He had been brought up by a rich father in an expensive way, and the rich father had then died leaving Champneys alone in the world, with no money, and with even a few of his father's debts. These debts of honor the son, ever since leaving Yale, had been paying off. It had kept him very poor, for Carter had elected to live by his pen, and, though he wrote very carefully and slowly, the editors of the magazines had been equally careful and slow in accepting what he wrote.

With an income so uncertain that the only thing that could be said of it with certainty was that it was too small to support even himself, Carter should not have thought of matrimony. Nor, must it be said to his credit, did he think of it until the girl came along that he wanted to marry.

The trouble with Dolly Ingram was her mother. Her mother was a really terrible person. She was quite impossible. She was a social leader, and of such importance that visiting princes and society reporters, even among themselves, did not laugh at her. Her visiting list was so small that she did not keep a social secretary, but, it was said, wrote her invitations herself.

Stylites on his pillar was less exclusive. Nor did he take his exalted but lonely position with less sense of humor. When Ingram died and left her many millions to dispose of absolutely as she pleased, even to the allowance she should give their daughter, he left her with but one ambition unfulfilled. That was to marry her Dolly to an English duke. Hungarian princes, French marquises, Italian counts, German barons, Mrs. Ingram could not see. Her son-in-law must be a duke. She had her eyes on two, one somewhat shopworn, and the other a bankrupt; and in training, she had one just coming of age. Already she saw her self a sort of a dowager duchess by marriage, discussing with real dowager duchesses the way to bring up teething earls and viscounts. For three years in Europe Mrs.Ingram had been drilling her daughter for the part she intended her to play. But, on returning to her native land, Dolly, who possessed all the feelings, thrills, and heart-throbs of which her mother was ignorant, ungratefully fell deeply in love with Champneys Carter, and he with her. It was always a question of controversy between them as to which had first fallen in love with the other. As a matter of history, honors were even.

He first saw her during a thunder storm, in the paddock at the races, wearing a rain-coat with the collar turned up and a Panama hat with the brim turned down. She was talking, in terms of affectionate familiarity, with Cuthbert's two-year- old, The Scout.

The Scout had just lost a race by a nose, and Dolly was holding the nose against her cheek and comforting him. The two made a charming picture, and, as Carter stumbled upon it and halted, the race-horse lowered his eyes and seemed to say: "Wouldn't YOU throw a race for this?" And the girl raised her eyes and seemed to say: "What a nice-looking, bright-looking young man! Why don't I know who you are?"So, Carter ran to find Cuthbert, and told him The Scout had gone lame. When, on their return, Miss Ingram refused to loosen her hold on The Scout's nose, Cuthbert apologetically mumbled Carter's name, and in some awe Miss Ingram's name, and then, to his surprise, both young people lost interest in The Scout, and wandered away together into the rain.

After an hour, when they parted at the club stand, for which Carter could not afford a ticket, he asked wistfully: "Do you often come racing?" and Miss Ingram said: "Do you mean, am I coming to-morrow?""I do!" said Carter.

"Then, why didn't you say that?" inquired Miss Ingram. "Otherwise I mightn't have come. I have the Holland House coach for to-morrow, and, if you'll join us, I'll save a place for you, and you can sit in our box.

"I've lived so long abroad," she explained, "that I'm afraid of not being simple and direct like other American girls. Do you think I'll get on here at home? ""If you get on with every one else as well as you've got on with me," said Carter morosely, I will shoot myself."Miss Ingram smiled thoughtfully. "At eleven, then," she said, "in front of the Holland House."Carter walked away with a flurried, heated suffocation around his heart and a joyous lightness in his feet. Of the first man he met he demanded, "Who was the beautiful girl in the rain-coat?" And when the man told him, Carter left him without speaking. For she was quite the richest girl in America. But the next day that fault seemed to distress her so little that Carter, also, refused to allow it to rest on his conscience, and they were very happy. And each saw that they were happy because they were together.

The ridiculous mother was not present at the races, but after Carter began to call at their house and was invited to dinner, Mrs.

Ingram received him with her habitual rudeness. As an impediment in the success of her ambition she never considered him. As a boy friend of her daughter's, she classed him with "her" lawyer and "her" architect and a little higher than the "person" who arranged the flowers. Nor, in her turn, did Dolly consider her mother; for within two months another matter of controversy between Dolly and Carter was as to who had first proposed to the other. Carter protested there never had been any formal proposal, that from the first they had both taken it for granted that married they would be. But Dolly insisted that because he had been afraid of her money, or her mother, he had forced her to propose to him.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 医世倾城王妃很淡定

    医世倾城王妃很淡定

    一场奇葩的穿越,让一个气死人不偿命的淡定姐终结了一个腹黑男。
  • 猫妖叶安的幸福理论

    猫妖叶安的幸福理论

    叶安这辈子只有一个心愿,那就是下辈子做只猫,天天只要吃了玩,玩了睡,有个铲屎官天天伺候着,自己只需要迈着优雅的步伐,高兴的时候卖个萌,不高兴的时候回以一个高冷的眼神就好,想想就觉得不能更美好了。秦昊这辈子都没想到自己有一天会捡到一只猫妖,没想到自己有一天会做保姆。
  • 宋词是一朵情花Ⅱ

    宋词是一朵情花Ⅱ

    月有阴晴圆缺,人有悲欢离合,花有荣枯开落,词有喜怒哀乐,此事古难全。千古爱恨总是相似的,不同的只是故事中变换的“主角”。大概每个人的心底都曾开过一朵情花,为着一个人或一段爱。点点滴滴心事,丝丝缕缕柔情,都镌刻在飘摇尘世的情花上,镂空的是花瓣,饱满的是深情。人生自是有情痴,流连必是多情处。今人爱宋词,爱情花,恐怕也是因为逃不出这个“情”字。她包罗万象,又于万象中生出种种聚散无常。宋词就是开在绝情谷的绚烂情花,我们都中了它的毒。
  • 妖讳

    妖讳

    妖力道法并存,天生灵体,一路开挂,管你阎王厉鬼旱魃僵尸,见到本皇,还不喊声妖皇大人,前世我爱你入骨,今生我虐你百遍!什么?不服?没用!谁叫你前生害我那么惨。
  • 末世猎尸者

    末世猎尸者

    病毒来临,末世危机。被囚禁了两年的黑帝适应了末世。对于敌人,他通常只有一个字说。对于阴谋,别逗了,他可是黑帝,有了辅助后阴谋这种东西跟黑帝无缘。末世里的‘都教授’,黑客出身的黑帝能造就怎样的传奇?
  • 校草的甜心:丫头,别说话,吻我

    校草的甜心:丫头,别说话,吻我

    “池牧,你到底要怎样!”一个貌美的少女对着一个俊美如斯的少年吼。“我并不想怎样。”池牧眯着眼睛,嘴角上升一定弧度,看着眼前的白也。自从白也爸爸妈妈因故去世后,白也就住在池牧家,她本以为,等自己做兼职赚了一定的钱以后,自己租房住的,可没想到,自己住在池牧家,简直就是一个错误!
  • 惊心动魄

    惊心动魄

    在这个弱肉强食的世界里‘刘文东’必须要让自己变得更强,只有变强了他才能让自己身边的人过上一个安稳幸福的生活。他为了能让自己身边的亲人,朋友过上完美生活他曾经历‘千辛万苦’但他却从未放弃过那心中最初的梦想。一条不一样的强者之路从这里开始。。。。。
  • 爱情心理么么哒

    爱情心理么么哒

    爱情其实没有那么难,只要你能看透对方的心理,一切都会变的轻松自然。爱情高手之所以能够笑傲情场,就是因为洞悉了爱情的秘密,而这秘密,正是爱情心理。这本书先从表象切入爱情,介绍爱情本质。要经营好爱情和婚姻,就要了解恋爱各个阶段的爱情心理。不是每段爱情都能开花结果,认识到爱情失败的原因,才能更好地开始。在这本书里,你都能找到答案。
  • 邪王追妻:霸道靖王妃

    邪王追妻:霸道靖王妃

    任性学生妹一朝穿越,竟将军府大小姐,与靖王演绎倾城虐恋……
  • 青春,三人行

    青春,三人行

    青春是一场单程的旅行,他不会返航,但他会一直往前,它会一路高歌,也会一路坎坷……青春,三人行。