Mrs. Craddock by W. Somerset Maugham (best ereader for manga TXT) đ
- Author: W. Somerset Maugham
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By this time Bertha was frightened out of her wits.
âBut, Eddie, youâre not going to ride itâsupposing something should happen. Oh, I wish you hadnât bought him.â
âHeâs all right,â said Craddock. âIf any one can ride him, I canâand, by Jove, Iâm going to risk it. Why, if I bought him and then didnât use him, Iâd never hear the last of it.â
âTo please me, Eddie, donât! What does it matter what people say? Iâm so frightened. And now of all times you might do something to please me. Itâs not often I ask you to do me a favour.â
âWell, when you ask for something reasonable, I always try my best to do itâbut really, after Iâve paid thirty-five pounds for a horse, I canât cut him up for catâs meat.â
âThat means youâll always do anything for me so long as it doesnât interfere with your own likes and dislikes.â
âAh, well, weâre all like that, arenât we?... Come, come, donât be nasty about it, Bertha.â
He pinched her cheek good-naturedlyâwomen, we all know, would like the moon if they could get it; and the fact that they canât doesnât prevent them from persistently asking for it. Edward sat down beside his wife, holding her hand.
âNow, tell us what youâve been up to to-day. Has any one been?â
Bertha sighed deeply. She had absolutely no influence over her husband. No prayers, no tears would stop him from doing a thing he had set his mind onâhowever much she argued he always managed to make her seem in the wrong, and then went his way rejoicing. But she had her child now.
âThank God for that!â she murmured.
Chapter XVCRADDOCK went out on his new horse and returned triumphantly.
âHe was as quiet as a lamb,â he said. âI could ride him with my arms tied behind my back; and as to jumpingâhe takes a five-barred gate in his stride.â
Bertha was a little angry with him for having caused her such terror, angry with herself also for troubling.
âAnd it was rather lucky I had him to-day. Old Lord Philip Dirk was there, and he asked Branderton who I was. âYou tell him,â says he, âthat it isnât often Iâve seen a man ride as well as he does.â You should see Branderton, he isnât half glad at having let me take the beast for thirty-five quid. And Mr. Molson came up to me and said, âI knew that horse would get into your hands before long, youâre the only man in this part who can ride itâbut if it donât break your neck, youâll be lucky.ââ
He recounted with great satisfaction the compliments paid to him.
âWe had a jolly good run to-day.... And how are you, dear, feeling comfy? Oh, I forgot to tell youâyou know Rodgers, the huntsman, well, he said to me, âThatâs a mighty fine hack youâve got there, sir, but he takes some riding.âââI know he does,â I said; âbut I flatter myself I know a thing or two more than most horses.â They all thought I should get rolled over before the day was out, but I just went slick at everything to show I wasnât frightened.â
Then he gave details of the affair; and he had as great a passion for the meticulous as a German historian. He was one of those men who take infinite pains over trifles, flattering themselves that they never do things by halves. Bertha had a headache, and her husband bored her; she thought herself a great fool to be so concerned about his safety.
As the months wore on Miss Glover became very solicitous. The parsonâs sister looked upon birth as a mysteriously heart-fluttering business, which, however, modesty required decent people to ignore. She treated her friend in an absurdly self-conscious manner, and blushed like a peony when Bertha frankly referred to the coming event. The greatest torment of Miss Gloverâs life was that, as lady of the Vicarage, she had to manage the Maternity Bag, an institution to provide the infants of the needy with articles of raiment and their mothers with flannel petticoats. She could never, without much confusion, ask the necessary information of the beneficiaries in her charity; feeling that the whole thing ought not to be discussed at all, she kept her eyes averted, and acted generally so as to cause great indignation.
âWell,â said one good lady, âIâd rather not âave her bag at all than be treated like that. Why, she treats you as ifâwell, as if you wasnât married.â
âYes,â said another, âthatâs just what I complain ofâI promise you I âad âalf a mind to take my marriage lines out of my pocket anâ show âer. It ainât nothinâ to be ashamed aboutânice thing it would be after âavinâ sixteen, if I was bashful.â
But of course the more unpleasant a duty was, the more zealously did Miss Glover perform it; she felt it right to visit Bertha with frequency, and manfully bore the young wifeâs persistence in referring to an unpleasant subject. She carried her heroism to the pitch of knitting socks for the forthcoming baby, although to do so made her heart palpitate uncomfortably; and when she was surprised at the work by her brother, her cheeks burned like two fires.
âNow, Bertha dear,â she said one day, pulling herself together and straightening her back as she always did when she was mortifying the flesh. âNow, Bertha dear, I want to talk to you seriously.â
Bertha smiled. âOh donât, Fanny; you know how uncomfortable it makes you.â
âI must,â answered the good creature, gravely. âI know youâll think me ridiculous, but itâs my duty.â
âI shanât think anything of the kind,â said Bertha, touched with her friendâs humility.
âWell, you talk a great deal ofâof whatâs going to happenââMiss Glover blushedââbut Iâm not sure if you are really prepared for it.â
âOh, is that all?â cried Bertha. âThe nurse will be here in a fortnight, and Dr. Ramsay says sheâs a most reliable woman.â
âI wasnât thinking of earthly preparations,â said Miss Glover. âI was thinking of the other. Are you quite sure youâre approaching theâthe thing, in the right spirit?â
âWhat do you want me to do?â
âIt isnât what I want you to do. Itâs what you ought to do. Iâm nobody. But have you thought at all of the spiritual side of it?â
Bertha gave a sigh that was chiefly voluptuous. âIâve thought that Iâm going to have a son, thatâs mine and Eddieâs; and Iâm awfully thankful.â
âWouldnât you like me to read the Bible to you sometimes?â
âGood heavens, you talk as if I were going to die.â
âOne can never tell, dear Bertha,â replied Miss Glover, sombrely; âI think you ought to be prepared.... âIn the midst of life we are in deathââone can never tell what may happen.â
Bertha looked at her somewhat anxiously. She had been forcing herself of late to be cheerful, and had found it necessary to stifle a recurring presentiment of evil fortune. The Vicarâs sister never realised that she was doing everything possible to make Bertha thoroughly unhappy.
âI brought my own Bible with me,â she said. âDo you mind if I read you a chapter?â
âI should like it,â said Bertha, and a cold shiver went through her.
âHave you got any preference for some particular part?â asked Miss Glover, extracting the book from a little black bag which she always carried.
On Berthaâs answer that she had no preference, Miss Glover suggested opening the Bible at random, and reading on from the first line that crossed her eyes.
âCharles doesnât quite approve of it,â she said; âhe thinks it smacks of superstition. But I canât help doing it, and the early Protestants constantly did the same.â
Miss Glover, having opened the book with closed eyes, began to read: âThe sons of Pharez! Hezron, and Hamul. And the sons of Zerah; Zimri, and Ethan, and Heman, and Calcol, and Dara; five of them in all.â Miss Glover cleared her throat. âAnd the sons of Ethan; Azariah. The sons also of Hezron, that were born unto him; Jerahmeel, and Ram, and Chelubai. And Ram begat Amminadab; and Amminadab begat Nahshon, prince of the children of Judah.â She had fallen upon the genealogical table at the beginning of the Book of Chronicles. The chapter was very long, and consisted entirely of names, uncouth and difficult to pronounce; but Miss Glover shirked not one of them. With grave and somewhat high-pitched delivery, modelled on her brotherâs, she read out the bewildering list. Bertha looked at her in amazement.
âThatâs the end of the chapter,â she said at last; âwould you like me to read you another one?â
âYes, I should like it very much; but I donât think the part youâve hit on is quite to the point.â
âMy dear, I donât want to reprove youâthatâs not my dutyâbut all the Bible is to the point.â
And as the time passed, Bertha quite lost her courage and was often seized by a panic fear. Suddenly, without obvious cause, her heart sank and she asked herself frantically how she could possibly get through it. She thought she was going to die, and wondered what would happen if she did. What would Edward do without her? Thinking of his bitter grief the tears came to her eyes, but her lips trembled with self-pity when the suspicion came that he would not be heartbroken: he was not a man to feel either grief or joy very poignantly. He would not weep; at the most his gaiety for a couple of days would be obscured, and then he would go about as before. She imagined him relishing the sympathy of his friends. In six months he would almost have forgotten her, and such memory as remained would not be extraordinarily pleasing. He would marry again; Edward loathed solitude, and next time doubtless he would choose a different sort of womanâone less remote from his ideal. Edward cared nothing for appearance, and Bertha imagined her successor plain as Miss Hancock or dowdy as Miss Glover; and the irony of it lay in the knowledge that either of those two would make a wife more suitable than she to his character, answering better to his conception of a helpmate.
Bertha fancied that Edward would willingly have given her beauty for some solid advantage, such as a knowledge of dressmaking; her taste, her arts and accomplishments, were nothing to him, and her impulsive passion was a positive defect. âHandsome is as handsome does,â said he; he was a plain, simple man and he wanted a simple, plain wife.
She wondered if her death would really cause him much sorrow; Berthaâs will gave him everything of which she was possessed, and he would spend it with a second wife. She was seized with insane jealousy.
âNo, I wonât die,â she cried between her teeth, âI wonât!â
But one day, while Edward was hunting, her morbid fancies took another turn. Supposing he should die? The thought was unendurable, but the very horror of it fascinated her; she could not drive away the scenes which, with strange distinctness, her imagination set before her. She was seated at the piano and heard suddenly a horse stop at the front doorâEdward was back early: but the bell rang; why should Edward ring? There was a murmur of voices without and Arthur Branderton came in. In her mindâs eye she saw every detail most clearly. He was in his hunting clothes! Something had happened, and knowing what it was, Bertha was yet able to realise her terrified wonder, as one possibility and another rushed through her brain. He was uneasy, he had something to tell, but dared not say it; she looked at him, horror-stricken, and a faintness came over her so that she could hardly stand.
Berthaâs heart beat quickly. She told herself it was absurd to let her imagination run away
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