Short Fiction Kate Chopin (best e reader for android .txt) đ
- Author: Kate Chopin
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That was the year Alcée LaballiÚre put nine hundred acres in rice. It was putting a good deal of money into the ground, but the returns promised to be glorious. Old Madame LaballiÚre, sailing about the spacious galleries in her white volante, figured it all out in her head. Clarisse, her goddaughter, helped her a little, and together they built more air-castles than enough. Alcée worked like a mule that time; and if he did not kill himself, it was because his constitution was an iron one. It was an everyday affair for him to come in from the field well-nigh exhausted, and wet to the waist. He did not mind if there were visitors; he left them to his mother and Clarisse. There were often guests: young men and women who came up from the city, which was but a few hours away, to visit his beautiful kinswoman. She was worth going a good deal farther than that to see. Dainty as a lily; hardy as a sunflower; slim, tall, graceful, like one of the reeds that grew in the marsh. Cold and kind and cruel by turn, and everything that was aggravating to Alcée.
He would have liked to sweep the place of those visitors, often. Of the men, above all, with their ways and their manners; their swaying of fans like women, and dandling about hammocks. He could have pitched them over the levee into the river, if it hadnât meant murder. That was AlcĂ©e. But he must have been crazy the day he came in from the rice-field, and, toil-stained as he was, clasped Clarisse by the arms and panted a volley of hot, blistering love-words into her face. No man had ever spoken love to her like that.
âMonsieur!â she exclaimed, looking him full in the eyes, without a quiver. AlcĂ©eâs hands dropped and his glance wavered before the chill of her calm, clear eyes.
âPar exemple!â she muttered disdainfully, as she turned from him, deftly adjusting the careful toilet that he had so brutally disarranged.
That happened a day or two before the cyclone came that cut into the rice like fine steel. It was an awful thing, coming so swiftly, without a momentâs warning in which to light a holy candle or set a piece of blessed palm burning. Old madame wept openly and said her beads, just as her son Didier, the New Orleans one, would have done. If such a thing had happened to Alphonse, the LaballiĂšre planting cotton up in Natchitoches, he would have raved and stormed like a second cyclone, and made his surroundings unbearable for a day or two. But AlcĂ©e took the misfortune differently. He looked ill and gray after it, and said nothing. His speechlessness was frightful. Clarisseâs heart melted with tenderness; but when she offered her soft, purring words of condolence, he accepted them with mute indifference. Then she and her nĂ©naine wept afresh in each otherâs arms.
A night or two later, when Clarisse went to her window to kneel there in the moonlight and say her prayers before retiring, she saw that Bruce, AlcĂ©eâs negro servant, had led his masterâs saddle-horse noiselessly along the edge of the sward that bordered the gravel-path, and stood holding him near by. Presently, she heard AlcĂ©e quit his room, which was beneath her own, and traverse the lower portico. As he emerged from the shadow and crossed the strip of moonlight, she perceived that he carried a pair of well-filled saddlebags which he at once flung across the animalâs back. He then lost no time in mounting, and after a brief exchange of words with Bruce, went cantering away, taking no precaution to avoid the noisy gravel as the negro had done.
Clarisse had never suspected that it might be AlcĂ©eâs custom to sally forth from the plantation secretly, and at such an hour; for it was nearly midnight. And had it not been for the telltale saddlebags, she would only have crept to bed, to wonder, to fret and dream unpleasant dreams. But her impatience and anxiety would not be held in check. Hastily unbolting the shutters of her door that opened upon the gallery, she stepped outside and called softly to the old negro.
âGreât Peter! Miss Clarisse. I was nâ sho it was a ghosâ oâ wâat, stanâinâ up dah, plumb in de night, dataway.â
He mounted halfway up the long, broad flight of stairs. She was standing at the top.
âBruce, wâere has Monsieur AlcĂ©e gone?â she asked.
âWây, he gone âbout he business, I reckin,â replied Bruce, striving to be noncommittal at the outset.
âWâere has Monsieur AlcĂ©e gone?â she reiterated, stamping her bare foot. âI wonât stanâ any nonsense or any lies; mine, Bruce.â
âI donâ ricâlie ez I eva tole you lie yit, Miss Clarisse. Mista AlcĂ©e, he all broke up, sho.â
âWâereâ âhasâ âhe gone? Ah, Sainte Vierge! faut de la patience! butor, va!â
âWâen I was in he room, a-breshinâ off he cloâes today,â the darkey began, settling himself against the stair-rail, âhe look dat speechless anâ down, I say, âYou âpear tu me like some pussun wâat gwine have a spell oâ sickness, Mista AlcĂ©e.â He say, âYou reckin?â âI dat he git up, go look hisseâf stiddy in de glass. Den he go to de chimbly anâ jerk up de
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