National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
Book online «National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ». Author Booth Tarkington
âI didnât mean that,â Mrs. Oliphant explained. âI meanâ âyou know what he said about motherâs hopingâ âI mean his saying he thought mother had those wild ideas about Lenaâs going away andâ âand Martha Shelbyâ ââ
âNo,â her husband said. âNo; I donât think so. It seems unlikely. I donât think your mother would haveâ ââ
âNo,â Mrs. Oliphant assented thoughtfully. âI canât believe she would. Of course there isnât any way of being sureâ ânow.â
âNo; but itâs probably just Harlanâs imagination. Heâs sensitive, and that always means imaginative, too. I donât think we need to dwell on it.â
âI suppose not. Especially as she couldnât have meant anything like that. You donât think she could, do you, dear?â
âNo, no; I donât think so,â he answered. âWeâd better be worrying over other matters, I suspect.â
âYou mean about getting Harlan to help Dan out?â
âYes.â
âOf course I can do something,â she said. âIâll help all I can with the income motherâs given me; weâve always managed to live very comfortably without it. But Harlanâ âwhy, I almost believe Dan could make a success of the Addition, if Harlan would do something substantial about it. Yes; we ought to be able to think of some way to get him to do it.â
XVIIIThey thought of many ways to get him to do it, but none of such ingenuity as to inspire them with confidence. Mrs. Oliphant made more suggestions than her husband did, and she put most of them into the form of little dramatic dialogues imagined as taking place between Mr. Oliphant and Harlan. Mr. Oliphant was to say such-and-such things to Harlan, who would necessarily reply in certain terms, which she sketched;â âwhereupon his father could triumphantly turn the words just uttered into proof that Harlan would not only be doing his duty by helping Dan, but at the same time would make great headway with Martha Shelby in a straightforward manner involving not the slightest pose.
Unfortunately, after each of these small dramas in turn, becoming eager in her opinion that âthis timeâ she had âgot it,â she was forced into pessimism by Mr. Oliphantâs pointing out that Harlan wouldnât say what she had sketched for him; but, on the contrary, was certain to express himself to an effect precisely the opposite.
Many times that afternoon the poor lady murmured, âNo, I suppose perhaps it wouldnât do after all,â and pondered again. âBut why donât you think of a way that would do?â she asked, with more spirit, after one of her failures. âYouâre a lawyer; you ought to be able to think of something.â
He laughed and made the gesture of a man helpless between opposing viewpoints of his own. âWhat provokes me is that I canât help seeing Harlanâs side of it, too. Thereâs a good deal to be said on his side, you know.â
âYes, indeed,â she readily assented. âHe thinks heâs perfectly right; but of course he isnât.â
âWell, why isnât he? After all, your mother trusted him to do just what weâre planning to get him not to do.â
âBut her will doesnât say he canât help Dan. So why shouldnât he?â
âNo,â Mr. Oliphant interrupted; âit doesnât say he mustnât; but thatâs what she counted on. In our hearts weâre blaming him for not betraying a trust, and for being unwilling to put money into the fire;â âhe honestly believes it would be putting it into the fire. And he wonât do it, even though he knows his refusing makes him look mean in the eyes of pretty much everybody he cares about, even in the eyes of the person he seems to care most about. Well, thereâs something rather fine in a stand like that, after all.â
âMarthaâd never forgive him!â Mrs. Oliphant said emphatically. âNever! If he doesnât help Dan, now that heâs got so much, sheâd always believe him terribly stingy. So you see we ought to persuade him for his own good, tooâ âif we could only think of a way.â
But they continued to find that elusive way beset by baffling afterthoughts; and when Dan came home from his excursion, successful and in high fettle, they spoke to him of the subject that had been engrossing themâ âand were straightway baffled again. Dan even declined the proffer of future assistance from his mother.
âNot a penny!â he said. âShe didnât have any faith in me, and she despised the whole idea of Ornaby. She gave me thirty-five hundred dollars of my ownâ âbless her for it! She gave me that to do with as I please, and itâs plenty. Why, tomorrow Iâm goinâ to fix up the interest on whatâs owed on the land, and then Iâve got to settle another little matter, and after that Iâ ââ
âWait, Dan,â his father interposed. âWhat other little matter is it you have to settle? I didnât know anything had been worrying you except the probable foreclosure.â
âIt didnât, sir. I didnât worry about this at all. I knew I could fix it all right, if I could just hold off the foreclosure. It seems Iâve never paid any of the taxes on the Additionâ âIâve had so many other things on my mind, it seems I just kind of neglected thatâ âand so somebodyâs got a tax title to it; but now I can settle with him tomorrow morning and clear it offâ âand then Iâm goinâ to turn up some sod out there! Iâm goinâ to get ready to lay the foundation for my first factory!â
âBut the money, dear!â his mother cried. âHow in the world do you expect even to lay the foundations unless we can get Harlanâ ââ
âNo, maâam! I wouldnât take a nickel of it if he begged me to! Iâve been pretty near where I was ready to steal to get money to pull me out of a hole; but Iâll never take one single cent of what grandma left Harlan, or of what she left you either. If sheâd meant me to have it sheâd have given it to me herself; but she didnât have any faith
Comments (0)