National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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âHarlan!â his mother protested. âYou oughtnât to speak like that! Why, mother couldnât any more have thought of such a thing, when Dan was already marriedâ ââ
âShe died hoping it,â Harlan insisted. âI tell youâ ââ
Mr. Oliphant interrupted. âThat seems to me about as farfetched an idea as Iâve often heard, Harlan.â
âDoes it, sir? Didnât you ever hear grandmother express her opinion of Lena?â
âSomewhat frequently.â
âDid you ever hear her mention her conviction that Lena was entirely mercenary and married Dan because she thought he was rich?â
âShe talked that way sometimesâ âyes.â
âAnd didnât Lena just show us she thinks thatâs what the will means, herself?â
âPossibly,â Mr. Oliphant admitted. âBut that doesnât proveâ ââ
âYou might just read over that document of grandmaâs again,â Harlan suggested. âShe appears to leave me everything and Dan nothing, but gives mother a very comfortable living income, and she knew mother will take care of him when he needs it. Whatâs most significant, she provides that mother can leave the principal to anyone she pleases. Donât you suppose grandma knew it will naturally come to Dan eventually? Sheâs really taken care of him, and at the same time made it appear that heâs cut off with this thirty-five hundred dollars thatâll last him about a minute. She did it because she hoped Lena would leave him and get a divorce.â
âNo, no!â Mrs. Oliphant cried out. âMother wouldnât have had such a wicked thought. She had the strictest ideas about morality I everâ ââ
âYes, she did,â Harlan agreed. âYet thatâs just what she planned. You may not see it, but itâs as plain to me as if she had written it in her will. And thereâs something more than that in it, too.â
âWhat is it?â Mr. Oliphant inquired skeptically. âWhat is the something more thatâs hidden from every eye but yours?â
Harlan reddened and failed to reply at once;â âthen he said with a reluctant humour: âIâm afraid sheâs played it rather low down on me, sir.â
âWhat!â Mr. Oliphant stared at him. âYou call leaving you five or six hundred thousand dollars playing it rather low down?â
âYouâd say itâs a fantastic view, would you, sir?â
âYes, I believe I shouldâ âconsiderably!â
âMaybe so,â Harlan said. âYet there seems some ground for it. Grandma knewâ âthat is, I mean she thoughtâ âshe thought that I had certain hopes about Martha myself, and she told me pretty plainly Iâd better keep out of the way. Well, sheâs put me in a fine light before Martha, hasnât she? Hereâs Dan, all his life supposed to be the favourite, with great expectations, and now heâs cut off with a shilling, and I get it all! In the eyes of a sympathetic woman whoâs always liked him best anyhow, isnât he the suffering hero, and donât I play the role of the brother that undermined him and supplanted him?â
âThatâs nonsense,â his father said a little irritably. âYou donât suppose your grandmother deliberatelyâ ââ
âI donât suppose she meant unkindly by me,â Harlan interrupted. âNaturally I donât suppose my grandmother made me her residuary legatee for the purpose of injuring me. Probably she thought Iâd be consoled by what she was leaving me.â
âOh, Harlan!â his mother cried reproachfully.
But Harlan only smiled at her faintly and did not defend himself.
âSo Lena will leave Dan now, will she?â Mr. Oliphant inquired, with satire. âAnd then Dan will proceed in freedom to carry out the rest of this programme?â
âNo, sir; not at all.â
âBut havenât you just been sayingâ ââ
âIâve been saying what I see in the will,â Harlan explained. âIâve been saying what grandma hoped, and I think she was pretty shrewd, but I believe that her dislike of Lena led her into an error. I havenât the remotest idea that Lena will leave her husband.â
âI see!â Mr. Oliphant returned sharply. âYou mean you havenât any fantastic ideas yourself, Harlan; itâs only your grandmother who had them, though sheâs just left you a fortune!â
His tone was hard; and Harlan, looking at him gravely, pointed out a significance in the hardness. âThere it is, sir. Already Iâm a little more unpopular with you than usual, because you canât help sympathizing with Dan and feeling that Iâve got his share as well as my own. Donât you think other people may feel the same way?â
For a moment Mr. Oliphant looked slightly disconcerted by this bit of analysis, but, recovering himself, âNot necessarily,â he replied. âIâm not criticizing you because of your inheritance, but because it doesnât seem fair in you to impute all this surreptitious planning to a person whoâs shown such generosity to you. You donât seem to realizeâ ââ
âOh, but I do,â Harlan interrupted. âMother spoke of my not seeming elated and praised me for it. I donât deserve her praise. You see, if I donât feel much elated just at first itâs because to my mind the whole thing is another example of how much better grandma liked Dan and how much better other people are going to go on liking him. Naturally, Iâm glad to have the money; I know she meant well by me, and I appreciate it. I appreciate another thing, too. One of the reasons she left it to me was that she knew I put what I had from grandfather into the safest type of municipal bonds. She knew that Iâd understand the value of whatever she left me. She knew Iâd take care of it.â
He put a slight but sharp and dry emphasis upon the final words, âShe knew Iâd take care of it,â so that there was a hint of warning in them; and he added, making this note more definite: âShe was right about that, because I will take care of it.â
Upon that, he struck both arms of his chair decisively with the palms of his hands, and, as a continuation of this action, rose and turned to the window, his back to his parents. They glanced nervously at each other, each knowing that the other had the same hope and the same doubt; the glance
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