Back to Wando Passo David Payne (find a book to read .TXT) đ
- Author: David Payne
Book online «Back to Wando Passo David Payne (find a book to read .TXT) đ». Author David Payne
âBut you do?â
âDo I? Madam, believe you me, I do! I object most strenuously and told him so in no uncertain terms. If he persists in this folly, I mean to contest the will, and let them see how a South Carolina court views the rights of one spoiled, selfish nigger slave against those of a plantation owner and first lieutenant in the Twenty-first!â
âMy dear!â she says. âWhat happened?â
âWhat happened? What happened?â Harlan fulminates. âMadam, had there been pistols in the room, I could not have confidently ruled out the possibility of bloodshed. They all took his side, of courseâof course!â
âAnd Clarisse?â says Addie. âIs she to be freed as well?â
âClarisse? Clarisse is free, Addie. Long since free. Have I not acquainted you with her situation?â
âI donât believe you have.â
Harlanâs features concentrate. He smokes and stares into the distance. âClarisse is not my fatherâs child,â he says after a beat. âShe is Wenceslao Villa-Urrutiaâs by Paloma.â
Addie blinks. âWenceslaoâŠâ
âVilla-Urrutia. You have no idea who he isâŠ.â
She shakes her head. âI donât.â
âOf course you donât. How could you. How to put thisâŠâ He begins to pace again. âBriefly, Addie, Father, in his youth, displayed a mechanical ingenuityâone would almost have to say a geniusâthat led him, after some professional misadventures, into relations with a man named Charles Derosne. Together, they developed what subsequently became known as the Derosne mill. Father was instrumental in the design of the vacuum pan. Thatâs what first took him to Cuba, where he made his fortune. I feel certain Iâve mentioned this to you before.â
âIt has to do with sugar?â âExactly. The mill produced a new and iridescent form of it, of a quality no one had dreamed possible before. It long ago transformed the refining processâin Cuba and elsewhereâbut its early history was checkered. The machinery was complex, temperamental, and fabulously expensive. The prototype cost over sixty thousand dollars and was wholly unproved. In an effort to win acceptance, he and Charles traveled to Matanzas and personally installed the first one at La Mella, which was Wenceslaoâs hereditary estate.â
âVillaââ
âVilla-Urrutia. Yes, correct. Count Wenceslao Villa-Urrutia. Father served as chief machinist in La Mellaâs caldron and purga, the boiler house and refinery. Thatâs where he met Paloma. She was a housemaid at the hacienda, Villa-Urrutiaâs mistress. Father was smitten and tried to buy her. Prime wenches wentâin Cuba, in those daysâfor twenty onzas or a little more, around four hundred dollars. Father offered six, then eight, but the Conde, like many Cubans of his class, was an inveterate gambler and proposed a more sporting proposition. He offered to put Paloma against Fatherâs stake in the mill. Weâre talking two and a half years of work.â
âHe took the bet?â
âHe took the bet.â
âShe must have been something,â Addie says, with a slight smile.
âShe still is. Mucha mujer. Of course, sheâs old now, but youâll see. They made the wager in the purging house, over cigars, using the bocoyes of coarse sugar for a table. A single hand of faro, and Father won. When she came to him, Paloma was pregnant.â
âWith Jarry?â
Harlan wags a finger.
âClarisse!â she says. âClarisse?â
He smiles. âCorrect. She is Wenceslaoâs child. She was born in Cuba and raised in the Countâs household, educated like his other daughters.â
âAnd she came here?â
Harlan nods. âWhen I went down for my apprenticeship, I brought her back to help her mother with the house. Villa-Urrutia, you see, left her little but her wardrobe and expensive tastes. It was essentially an act of charity, Addie, something Father undertook for Palomaâs sake. Clarisse, you see, is not related to this family. She is Villa-Urrutiaâs upon Paloma.â
âSo you said.â
âDid I? Forgive me, Iâve lost my train of thought.â He turns away from her and stares into the shadows, as though what heâs misplaced might be lurking among the soft goods and comestibles in the dark, far corner of the room. âYou were telling me about your fatherâs promise to Jarry.â
âYes, thank you. He did this for Paloma, Addie. From our vantage here in proper South Carolina, it may be hard for you to understand, but Fatherâs racial views were formed when he was young.â
âIn CubaâŠâ
âIn Cuba. Yes. Things are different there.â Taking out his handkerchief, he dabs his brow and walks away from her. âThe races mix more freely. One meets people of mixed blood in society all the time, even in the highest circles, and it is expected, Addie, it is socially de rigueur, for one to treat these peopleâfor a young man, let us say, to treat these women, these well-connected mulatasâone calls them morenas there, âbrunettesââas one would treat women of good family here. In effect, as I treat you.â
âI see.â
âAnd perhaps you can also see how easy it might be for a young man to fall under the spell of Spanish decadence and so forget himselfâŠ.â
âAs your father did.â
âAs my father did.â He stops and faces her. His expression turns forlorn. âI myself, in my time thereâŠI was not perfect, Addie.â
âI appreciate your forthrightness, Harlan,â she replies, after a moment, when it appears an answer is required. âBut if you think to shock me, you must take a different tack. Iâm not a child.â
He smiles. âYou are good. The more I come to know you, the more convinced I am you will be good for me.â Absolved, he starts to pace again, smoking with complacent energy.
Addie is thoughtful over his revelation and a bit put off by the self-centeredness of his responseâonly a bit, though. Sheâs also half amused by it and curious to watch as he comes out. She hasnât seen him in this light.
âFortunately, I woke up from the spell in time,â he goes on. âFather, in all these years, never has. This, in a word, is why Wando Passo
Comments (0)