Short Fiction Kate Chopin (best e reader for android .txt) đ
- Author: Kate Chopin
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It had entertained her passably, she admitted, upon returning it. A New England story had puzzled her, it was true, and a Creole tale had offended her, but the pictures had pleased her greatly, especially one which had reminded her so strongly of MontĂ©clin after a hard dayâs ride that she was loath to give it up. It was one of Remingtonâs Cowboys, and Gouvernail insisted upon her keeping itâ âkeeping the magazine.
He spoke to her daily after that, and was always eager to render her some service or to do something towards her entertainment.
One afternoon he took her out to the lake end. She had been there once, some years before, but in winter, so the trip was comparatively new and strange to her. The large expanse of water studded with pleasure-boats, the sight of children playing merrily along the grassy palisades, the music, all enchanted her. Gouvernail thought her the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. Even her gownâ âthe sprigged muslinâ âappeared to him the most charming one imaginable. Nor could anything be more becoming than the arrangement of her brown hair under the white sailor hat, all rolled back in a soft puff from her radiant face. And she carried her parasol and lifted her skirts and used her fan in ways that seemed quite unique and peculiar to herself, and which he considered almost worthy of study and imitation.
They did not dine out there at the waterâs edge, as they might have done, but returned early to the city to avoid the crowd. AthĂ©naĂŻse wanted to go home, for she said Sylvie would have dinner prepared and would be expecting her. But it was not difficult to persuade her to dine instead in the quiet little restaurant that he knew and liked, with its sanded floor, its secluded atmosphere, its delicious menu, and its obsequious waiter wanting to know what he might have the honor of serving to âmonsieur et madame.â No wonder he made the mistake, with Gouvernail assuming such an air of proprietorship! But AthĂ©naĂŻse was very tired after it all; the sparkle went out of her face, and she hung draggingly on his arm in walking home.
He was reluctant to part from her when she bade him good night at her door and thanked him for the agreeable evening. He had hoped she would sit outside until it was time for him to regain the newspaper office. He knew that she would undress and get into her peignoir and lie upon her bed; and what he wanted to do, what he would have given much to do, was to go and sit beside her, read to her something restful, soothe her, do her bidding, whatever it might be. Of course there was no use in thinking of that. But he was surprised at his growing desire to be serving her. She gave him an opportunity sooner than he looked for.
âMr. Gouvernail,â she called from her room, âwill you be so kine as to call Pousette anâ tell her she foâgot to bring my ice-water?â
He was indignant at Pousetteâs negligence, and called severely to her over the banisters. He was sitting before his own door, smoking. He knew that AthĂ©naĂŻse had gone to bed, for her room was dark, and she had opened the slats of the door and windows. Her bed was near a window.
Pousette came flopping up with the icewater, and with a hundred excuses: âMo pa oua vou Ă tab câte lanuite, mo cri vou pĂ© gagni dĂ©ja lĂ -bas; parole! Vou pas cri contĂ© ça Madame Sylvie?â She had not seen AthĂ©naĂŻse at table, and thought she was gone. She swore to this, and hoped Madame Sylvie would not be informed of her remissness.
A little later AthĂ©naĂŻse lifted her voice again: âMr. Gouvernail, did you remark that young man sitting on the opposite side from us, coming in, with a gray coat anâ a blue banâ arounâ his hat?â
Of course Gouvernail had not noticed any such individual, but he assured Athénaïse that he had observed the young fellow particularly.
âDonât you think he looked somethingâ ânot very much, of coâseâ âbut donât you think he had a little faux-air of MontĂ©clin?â
âI think he looked strikingly like MontĂ©clin,â asserted Gouvernail, with the one idea of prolonging the conversation. âI meant to call your attention to the resemblance, and something drove it out of my head.â
âThe same with me,â returned AthĂ©naĂŻse. âAh, my dear MontĂ©clin! I wonder wâat he is doing now?â
âDid you receive any news, any letter from him today?â asked Gouvernail, determined that if the conversation ceased it should not be through lack of effort on his part to sustain it.
âNot today, but yesterday. He tells me that maman was so distracted with uneasiness that finally, to pacify her, he was foâced to confess that he knew wâere I was, but that he was bounâ by a vow of secrecy not to reveal it. But Cazeau has not noticed him or spoken to him since he threatenâ to throw poâ MontĂ©clin in Cane river. You know Cazeau wrote me a letter the morning I lefâ, thinking I had gone to the rigolet. Anâ maman opened it, anâ said it was full of the mosâ noble sentiments, anâ she wanted MontĂ©clin to senâ it to me; but MontĂ©clin refuseâ poinâ blank, so he wrote to me.â
Gouvernail preferred to talk of Montéclin. He pictured Cazeau as unbearable, and did not like to think of him.
A little later AthĂ©naĂŻse called out, âGood night, Mr. Gouvernail.â
âGood night,â he returned reluctantly. And when he thought that she was sleeping, he got up and went away to the midnight pandemonium of his newspaper office.
IXAthénaïse could not have held out through the month had
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