The Song of the Lark Willa Cather (free ebooks romance novels .TXT) đ
- Author: Willa Cather
Book online «The Song of the Lark Willa Cather (free ebooks romance novels .TXT) đ». Author Willa Cather
His interest in Thea was serious, almost from the first, and so sincere that he felt no distrust of himself. He believed that he knew a great deal more about her possibilities than Bowers knew, and he liked to think that he had given her a stronger hold on life. She had never seen herself or known herself as she did at Mrs. Nathanmeyerâs musical evenings. She had been a different girl ever since. He had not anticipated that she would grow more fond of him than his immediate usefulness warranted. He thought he knew the ways of artists, and, as he said, she must have been âat it from her cradle.â He had imagined, perhaps, but never really believed, that he would find her waiting for him sometime as he found her waiting on the day he reached the Biltmer ranch. Once he found her soâ âwell, he did not pretend to be anything more or less than a reasonably well-intentioned young man. A lovesick girl or a flirtatious woman he could have handled easily enough. But a personality like that, unconsciously revealing itself for the first time under the exaltation of a personal feelingâ âwhat could one do but watch it? As he used to say to himself, in reckless moments back there in the canyon, âYou canât put out a sunrise.â He had to watch it, and then he had to share it.
Besides, was he really going to do her any harm? The Lord knew he would marry her if he could! Marriage would be an incident, not an end with her; he was sure of that. If it were not he, it would be someone else; someone who would be a weight about her neck, probably; who would hold her back and beat her down and divert her from the first plunge for which he felt she was gathering all her energies. He meant to help her, and he could not think of another man who would. He went over his unmarried friends, East and West, and he could not think of one who would know what she was driving atâ âor care. The clever ones were selfish, the kindly ones were stupid.
âDamn it, if sheâs going to fall in love with somebody, it had better be me than any of the othersâ âof the sort sheâd find. Get her tied up with some conceited ass whoâd try to make her over, train her like a puppy! Give one of âem a big nature like that, and heâd be horrified. He wouldnât show his face in the clubs until heâd gone after her and combed her down to conform to some fool idea in his own headâ âput there by some other woman, too, his first sweetheart or his grandmother or a maiden aunt. At least, I understand her. I know what she needs and where sheâs bound, and I mean to see that she has a fighting chance.â
His own conduct looked crooked, he admitted; but he asked himself whether, between men and women, all ways were not more or less crooked. He believed those which are called straight were the most dangerous of all. They seemed to him, for the most part, to lie between windowless stone walls, and their rectitude had been achieved at the expense of light and air. In their unquestioned regularity lurked every sort of human cruelty and meanness, and every kind of humiliation and suffering. He would rather have any woman he cared for wounded than crushed. He would deceive her not once, he told himself fiercely, but a hundred times, to keep her free.
When Fred went back to the observation car at one oâclock, after the luncheon call, it was empty, and he found Thea alone on the platform. She put out her hand, and met his eyes.
âItâs as I said. Things have closed behind me. I canât go back, so I am going onâ âto Mexico?â She lifted her face with an eager, questioning smile.
Fred met it with a sinking heart. Had he really hoped she would give him another answer? He would have given pretty much anythingâ âBut there, that did no good. He could give only what he had. Things were never complete in this world; you had to snatch at them as they came or go without. Nobody could look into her face and draw back, nobody who had any courage. She had courage enough for anythingâ âlook at her mouth and chin and eyes! Where did it come from, that light? How could a face, a familiar face, become so the picture of hope, be painted with the very colors of youthâs exaltation? She was right; she was not one of those who draw back. Some people get on by avoiding dangers, others by riding through them.
They stood by the railing looking back at the sand levels, both feeling that the train was steaming ahead very fast. Fredâs mind was a confusion of images and ideas. Only two things were clear to him: the force of her determination, and the belief that, handicapped as he was, he could do better by her than another man would do. He knew he would always remember her, standing
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