So Big Edna Ferber (most romantic novels txt) đ
- Author: Edna Ferber
Book online «So Big Edna Ferber (most romantic novels txt) đ». Author Edna Ferber
âItâs prairie chickensâ âthree of themâ âthat a farmer west of town brought Father. Mother fixes them with stuffing, and thereâs currant jell. Creamed onions and baked tomatoes. And for dessert, apple roll.â
Selina snapped the elastic holding her high-crowned hat under her chignon of hair in the back. She uttered a final and quavering groan. âOn Monday nights we have cold mutton and cabbage at Mrs. Tebbittâs. This is Monday.â
âWell then, silly, why not stay!â
âFather comes home at six. If Iâm not there heâs disappointed.â
Julie, plump, blonde, placid, forsook her soft white blandishments and tried steel against the steel of Selinaâs decision.
âHe leaves you right after supper. And youâre alone every night until twelve and after.â
âI donât see what that has to do with it,â Selina said, stiffly.
Julieâs steel, being low-grade, melted at once and ran off her in rivulets. âOf course it hasnât, Selie dear. Only I thought you might leave him just this once.â
âIf Iâm not there heâs disappointed. And that terrible Mrs. Tebbitt makes eyes at him. He hates it there.â
âThen I donât see why you stay. I never could see. Youâve been there four months now, and I think itâs horrid and stuffy; and oilcloth on the stairs.â
âFather has had some temporary business setbacks.â
Selinaâs costume testified to that. True, it was modish, and bustled, and basqued, and flounced; and her high-crowned, short-rimmed hat, with its trimming of feathers and flowers and ribbons had come from New York. But both were of last springâs purchasing, and this was September.
In the course of the afternoon they had been looking over the pages of Godeyâs Ladiesâ Book for that month. The disparity between Selinaâs costume and the creations pictured there was much as the difference between the Tebbitt meal and that outlined by Julie. Now Julie, fond though defeated, kissed her friend goodbye.
Selina walked quickly the short distance from the Hempel house to Tebbittâs, on Dearborn Avenue. Up in her second-floor room she took off her hat and called to her father, but he had not yet come in. She was glad of that. She had been fearful of being late. She regarded her hat now with some distaste, decided to rip off the faded spring roses, did rip a stitch or two, only to discover that the hat material was more faded than the roses, and that the uncovered surface showed up a dark splotch like a wall-spot when a picture, long hung, is removed. So she got a needle and prepared to tack the offending rose in its accustomed place.
Perched on the arm of a chair near the window, taking quick deft stitches, she heard a sound. She had never heard that sound beforeâ âthat peculiar soundâ âthe slow, ominous tread of men laden with a heavy inert burden; bearing with infinite care that which was well beyond hurting. Selina had never heard that sound before, and yet, hearing it, she recognized it by one of those pangs, centuries old, called womanâs instinct. Thudâ âshuffleâ âthudâ âshuffleâ âup the narrow stairway, along the passage. She stood up, the needle poised in her hand. The hat fell to the floor. Her eyes were wide, fixed. Her lips slightly parted. The listening look. She knew.
She knew even before she heard the hoarse manâs voice saying, âLift âer up there a little on the corner, now. Easyâ âe-e-easy.â And Mrs. Tebbittâs high shrill clamour: âYou canât bring it in there! You hadnât ought to bring it in here like this!â
Selinaâs suspended breath came back. She was panting now. She had flung open the door. A flat still burden partially covered with an overcoat carelessly flung over the face. The feet, in their square-toed boots, wobbled listlessly. Selina noticed how shiny the boots were. He was always very finicking about such things.
Simeon Peake had been shot in Jeff Hankinsâs place at five in the afternoon. The irony of it was that the bullet had not been intended for him at all. Its derelict course had been due to feminine aim. Sped by one of those over-dramatic ladies who, armed with horsewhip or pistol in tardy defence of their honour, spangled Chicagoâs dull â80s with their doings, it had been meant for a well-known newspaper publisher usually mentioned (in papers other than his own) as a bon vivant. The ladyâs leaden remonstrance was to have been proof of the fact that he had been more vivacious than bon.
It was, perhaps, because of this that the matter was pretty well hushed up. The publisherâs paperâ âwhich was Chicagoâs foremostâ âscarcely mentioned the incident and purposely misspelled the name. The lady, thinking her task accomplished, had taken truer aim with her second bullet, and had saved herself the trouble of trial by human jury.
Simeon Peake left his daughter Selina a legacy of two fine clear blue-white diamonds (he had had the gamblerâs love of them) and the sum of four hundred and ninety-seven dollars in cash. Just how he had managed to have a sum like this put by was a mystery. The envelope containing it had evidently once held a larger sum. It had been sealed, and then slit. On the outside was written, in Simeon Peakeâs fine, almost feminine hand: âFor my little daughter Selina Peake in case anything should happen to me.â It bore a date seven years old. What the original sum had been no one ever knew. That any sum remained was evidence of the almost heroic self-control practised by one to whom moneyâ âready money in any sum at allâ âmeant only fuel to feed the flames of his gaming fever.
To Selina fell the choice of earning her own living or of returning to the Vermont village and becoming a withered and sapless dried apple, with black fuzz and mould at
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