An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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And Clyde remembered that, along with the others, he had carried away the impression that for solitude and charmâ âor at least mysteryâ âthis region could scarcely be matched. And to think it was all so comparatively near Lycurgusâ ânot more than a hundred miles by road; not more than seventy by rail, as he eventually came to know.
But now once more in Lycurgus and back in his room after just explaining to Roberta, as he had, he once more encountered on his writing desk, the identical paper containing the item concerning the tragedy at Pass Lake. And in spite of himself, his eye once more followed nervously and yet unwaveringly to the last word all the suggestive and provocative details. The uncomplicated and apparently easy way in which the lost couple had first arrived at the boathouse; the commonplace and entirely unsuspicious way in which they had hired a boat and set forth for a row; the manner in which they had disappeared to the north end; and then the upturned boat, the floating oars and hats near the shore. He stood reading in the still strong evening light. Outside the windows were the dark boughs of the fir tree of which he had thought the preceding day and which now suggested all those firs and pines about the shores of Big Bittern.
But, good God! What was he thinking of anyhow? He, Clyde Griffiths! The nephew of Samuel Griffiths! What was âgetting intoâ him? Murder! Thatâs what it was. This terrible itemâ âthis devilâs accident or machination that was constantly putting it before him! A most horrible crime, and one for which they electrocuted people if they were caught. Besides, he could not murder anybodyâ ânot Roberta, anyhow. Oh, no! Surely not after all that had been between them. And yetâ âthis other world!â âSondraâ âwhich he was certain to lose now unless he acted in some wayâ â
His hands shook, his eyelids twitchedâ âthen his hair at the roots tingled and over his body ran chill nervous titillations in waves. Murder! Or upsetting a boat at any rate in deep water, which of course might happen anywhere, and by accident, as at Pass Lake. And Roberta could not swim. He knew that. But she might save herself at thatâ âscreamâ âcling to the boatâ âand thenâ âif there were any to hearâ âand she told afterwards! An icy perspiration now sprang to his forehead; his lips trembled and suddenly his throat felt parched and dry. To prevent a thing like that he would have toâ âtoâ âbut noâ âhe was not like that. He could not do a thing like thatâ âhit anyoneâ âa girlâ âRobertaâ âand when drowning or struggling. Oh, no, noâ âno such thing as that! Impossible.
He took his straw hat and went out, almost before anyone heard him think, as he would have phrased it to himself, such horrible, terrible thoughts. He could not and would not think them from now on. He was no such person. And yetâ âand yetâ âthese thoughts. The solutionâ âif he wanted one. The way to stay hereâ ânot leaveâ âmarry Sondraâ âbe rid of Roberta and allâ âallâ âfor the price of a little courage or daring. But no!
He walked and walkedâ âaway from Lycurgusâ âout on a road to the southeast which passed through a poor and decidedly unfrequented rural section, and so left him alone to thinkâ âor, as he felt, not to be heard in his thinking.
Day was fading into dark. Lamps were beginning to glow in the cottages here and there. Trees in groups in fields or along the road were beginning to blur or smokily blend. And although it was warmâ âthe air lifeless and lethargicâ âhe walked fast, thinking, and perspiring as he did so, as though he were seeking to outwalk and outthink or divert some inner self that preferred to be still and think.
That gloomy, lonely lake up there!
That island to the south!
Who would see?
Who could hear?
That station at Gun Lodge with a bus running to it at this season of the year. (Ah, he remembered that, did he? The deuce!) A terrible thing, to remember a thing like that in connection with such a thought as this! But if he were going to think of such a thing as this at all, he had better think wellâ âhe could tell himself thatâ âor stop thinking about it nowâ âonce and foreverâ âforever. But Sondra! Roberta! If ever he were caughtâ âelectrocuted! And yet the actual misery of his present state. The difficulty! The danger of losing Sondra. And yet, murderâ â
He wiped his hot and wet face, and paused and gazed at a group of trees across a field which somehow reminded him of the trees ofâ ââ ⊠wellâ ââ ⊠he didnât like this road. It was getting too dark out here. He had better turn and go back. But that road at the south and leading to Three Mile Bay and Greys Lakeâ âif one chose to go that wayâ âto Sharon and the Cranston Lodgeâ âwhither he would be going afterwards if he did go that way. God! Big Bitternâ âthe trees along there after dark would be like thatâ âblurred and gloomy. It would have to be toward evening, of course. No one would think of trying toâ ââ ⊠wellâ ââ ⊠in the morning, when there was so much light. Only a fool would do that. But at night, toward dusk, as it was now, or a little later. But, damn it, he would not listen to
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