National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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âââHurt me!âââ Dan exclaimed loudly. His face was aglow and his eyes were shining. âHurt me? Why, she didnât leave you anything, sir, and youâre not hurt. And just look what sheâs done for me! Why, even you and mother had begun to think I couldnât hold on to Ornaby this time, but grandmaâs left me not only enough to tide me over, but to go ahead with! Iâm goinâ to set out the stakes for that automobile factory tomorrow!â
He turned again toward the door as he spoke; and his father again mistook his intention. âDan, Iâ âI really wouldnât go up to talk to Lena just now. If we all just let her alone when sheâs in one of theseâ âahâ âthat is, Iâve noticed if we keep awayâ ââ
âYes, so have I,â Dan agreed heartily. âThatâs not where Iâm headed for, sir.â
His mother had retained his hand in spite of his movement to go, and now she tried to draw him nearer her. âStay with us, dear,â she pleaded. âYouâre so plucky, you poor boy, but I know it has hurt you. I know you want to get outdoors and walk and walk and grieve to yourself, but if youâd stay with your father and meâ ââ
âI canât,â he said, and detached his hand from hers though she still sought to keep it. âI got to go, mother.â
âBut where?â she begged. âWhere do you want to go at such a time as this, dear?â
âWhere?â he cried triumphantly. âWhy, to see those executors and get that money! Iâm goinâ to make George Rowe and old John P. Johns agree to advance it to me the first thing tomorrow morning. Grandmaâs saved Ornaby for me, God bless her!â
He waved an exultant hand over his head and departed at a long and rapid stride, leaving his father and mother to stare at one another with pathetic inquiry; but after a moment or two of this Mr. Oliphant laughed vaguely, sighed, shook his head, and said: âWhy, he means it!â
âYou donât think heâs just covering up what he feels? Pretendingâ ââ
âPretending? No!â her husband returned. âAll your motherâs will means to him is that he can go on with his Addition!â
âBut he canât. Thirty-five hundred dollars wonâtâ ââ
âNo, not long,â Mr. Oliphant admitted. âBut it looks like a million to him today, because it pulls him around this particular corner. Of course in a little while thereâll be another corner that he canât get pulled around, but he doesnât see that one now. All heâs thinking aboutâ ââ
âBut he expects to begin a factory!â she exclaimed. âI havenât a doubt heâll try to.â
âNeither have I; and thatâll bring the corner he canât turn just so much nearer.â
âIt seems so pitiful,â the mother lamented. âIâll help him all I can. Thereâs the income of what sheâs given meâ ââ
âIt wonât go very far,â Oliphant informed her, ruefully amused. âNot with the kind of plans Danâll be making now that heâs got hold of thirty-five hundred dollars!â
âWell, but then,â she said brightly, yet with a little timidity, âyou see, thereâs Harlan. Harlan couldâ ââ She hesitated; and both of them turned, though not confidently, toward their younger son who still continued to sit motionless in his chair, in the bay window, staring at the opposite wall. He seemed unaware that they were looking at him, until his mother addressed him directly. âHarlan, you would, wouldnât you?â
He merged from his deep interior of thought like a man blinking in the sun after exploring a cavern. âWhat?â
âI said, wouldnât youâ ââ
âOh, yes,â he interrupted. âYes, I heard what you said, though I was thinking of something else. I wonder if either of you understand just what grandma was up to.â
âIt seems to be plain enough,â his father said. âSheâd always been a pretty sharp business woman; she was convinced that your grandfatherâs success was mainly due to her advice, and I expect it was, myselfâ âanyhow a good deal of itâ âso she thought Dan ought toâve listened to her when she opposed his putting what your grandfather left him and all he could borrow besides into this real-estate venture. Iâm afraid she felt rather bitter when he went ahead with it in spite of all she said against it. So it seems pretty clear that she thought if she left him anything substantial it would all be thrown away on a scheme she thinks is bound to failâ âshe couldnât imagine the cityâs ever growing out that farâ âand she didnât want her money wasted. So she left it to you. I donât see anything particularly enigmatic about it, Harlan.â
âNo,â Harlan agreed, though his dry smile was evidence that he withheld his true thought on the matter; âI suppose not. At least, thereâs nothing enigmatic about it to me.â He was obviously not elated over his good fortune; and his mother saw fit to commend him for this.
âI thinkâ âI think itâs so sweet of you, dear,â she said timidly;â ââI mean especially while Dan was hereâ âyour not showing any pleasure in having so much come to you. I think itâs noble, Harlan.â
âYou do?â he asked, and he laughed briefly without any merriment. âPerhaps Iâd better explain what I believe grandma really meant. She never liked me, and she always adored Dan. Itâs curious, too, because Danâs disposition is like grandfatherâs, and she certainly never seemed to think much of grandfather! Well, she did hate Danâs throwing his money away on a wild scheme that canât possibly do anything in the end but leave him bankrupt; and she certainly understood himâ âshe knew no matter how much he could lay his hands on, heâd pour it all in after the restâ âand itâs true she didnât want her money wasted that way, and knew I wouldnât let it be wasted at all, if she left it to me; but that wasnât what she really had in mind. Lord, no!â
âWasnât it?â his father inquired gravely. âI donât see anything else.â
Harlan laughed again with the same dry brevity. âShe
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