Tono-Bungay H. G. Wells (popular novels .txt) đ
- Author: H. G. Wells
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Last belated figure in that grouping round my uncleâs deathbed is my aunt. When it was beyond all hope that my uncle could live I threw aside whatever concealment remained to us and telegraphed directly to her. But she came too late to see him living. She saw him calm and still, strangely unlike his habitual garrulous animation, an unfamiliar inflexibility.
âIt isnât like him,â she whispered, awed by this alien dignity.
I remember her chiefly as she talked and wept upon the bridge below the old castle. We had got rid of some amateurish reporters from Biarritz, and had walked together in the hot morning sunshine down through Port Luzon. There, for a time, we stood leaning on the parapet of the bridge and surveying the distant peeks, the rich blue masses of the Pyrenees. For a long time we said nothing, and then she began talking.
âLifeâs a rum go, George!â she began. âWho would have thought, when I used to darn your stockings at old Wimblehurst, that this would be the end of the story? It seems far away nowâ âthat little shop, his and my first home. The glow of the bottles, the big coloured bottles! Do you remember how the light shone on the mahogany drawers? The little gilt letters! Ol Amjig, and Snap! I can remember it allâ âbright and shiningâ âlike a Dutch picture. Real! And yesterday. And here we are in a dream. You a manâ âand me an old woman, George. And poor little Teddy, who used to rush about and talkâ âmaking that noise he didâ âOh!â
She choked, and the tears flowed unrestrained. She wept, and I was glad to see her weeping.â ââ âŠ
She stood leaning over the bridge; her tear-wet handkerchief gripped in her clenched hand.
âJust an hour in the old shop againâ âand him talking. Before things got done. Before they got hold of him. And fooled him.
âMen oughtnât to be so tempted with business and things.â ââ âŠ
âThey didnât hurt him, George?â she asked suddenly.
For a moment I was puzzled.
âHere, I mean,â she said.
âNo,â I lied stoutly, suppressing the memory of that foolish injection needle I had caught the young doctor using.
âI wonder, George, if theyâll let him talk in Heaven.â ââ âŠâ
She faced me. âOh! George, dear, my heart aches, and I donât know what I say and do. Give me your arm to lean onâ âitâs good to have you, dear, and lean upon you.â ââ ⊠Yes, I know you care for me. Thatâs why Iâm talking. Weâve always loved one another, and never said anything about it, and you understand, and I understand. But my heartâs torn to pieces by this, torn to rags, and things drop out Iâve kept in it. Itâs true he wasnât a husband much for me at the last. But he was my child, George, he was my child and all my children, my silly child, and life has knocked him about for me, and Iâve never had a say in the matter; never a say; itâs puffed him up and smashed himâ âlike an old bagâ âunder my eyes. I was clever enough to see it, and not clever enough to prevent it, and all I could do was to jeer. Iâve had to make what I could of it. Like most people. Like most of us.â ââ ⊠But it wasnât fair, George. It wasnât fair. Life and Deathâ âgreat serious thingsâ âwhy couldnât they leave him alone, and his lies and ways? If we could see the lightness of itâ â
âWhy couldnât they leave him alone?â she repeated in a whisper as we went towards the inn.
II Love Among the Wreckage IWhen I came back I found that my share in the escape and death of my uncle had made me for a time a notorious and even popular character. For two weeks I was kept in London âfacing the music,â as he would have said, and making things easy for my aunt, and I still marvel at the consideration with which the world treated me. For now it was open and manifest that I and my uncle were no more than specimens of a modern species of brigand, wasting the savings of the public out of the sheer wantonness of enterprise. I think that in a way, his death produced a reaction in my favour and my flight, of which some particulars now appeared stuck in the popular imagination. It seemed a more daring and difficult feat than it was, and I couldnât very well write to the papers to sustain my private estimate. There can be little doubt that men infinitely prefer the appearance of dash and enterprise to simple honesty. No one believed I was not an arch plotter in his financing. Yet they favoured me. I even got permission from the trustee to occupy my chalet for a fortnight while I cleared up the mass of papers, calculations, notes of work, drawings and the like, that I left in disorder when I started on that impulsive raid upon the Mordet quap heaps.
I was there alone. I got work for Cothope with the Ilchesters, for whom I now build these destroyers. They wanted him at once, and he was short of money, so I let him go and managed very philosophically by myself.
But I found it hard to fix my attention on aeronautics, I had been away from the work for a full half-year and more, a half-year crowded with intense disconcerting things. For a time my brain refused these fine problems of balance and adjustment altogether; it wanted to think about my uncleâs dropping jaw, my auntâs reluctant tears, about dead negroes and pestilential swamps, about the evident realities of cruelty and pain, about life and death. Moreover, it was weary with the frightful pile of figures and documents at the Hardingham, a task to which this raid to Lady Grove was simply an interlude. And there was Beatrice.
On the second morning, as I sat out upon the veranda recalling memories and striving in
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