National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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Dan listened absently, his mind on a new customer for a lot. âWho you talkinâ about now?â
âYou know! That big girl of yours.â
âMartha?â he said, his tone a weary one instantly. âHow often have I told you she never was any girl of mine, big or little? Whatâs started you on that again?â
âI shouldnât think youâd expect it would take much to start me,â Lena exclaimed, âwhen you remember you gave me your sacred promise I should have a year in Europeâ ââ
âOh, Lordy! Have we got to go all over that again?â
ââ âAnd when you remember you deliberately broke your word to me,â Lena went on, âand havenât ever even made the slightest effort to keep it! You hold me here, suffocating in this place, year after yearâ ââ
âNow, see here,â he interrupted; âjust think a minute, please! Is that fair? Havenât you been back to New York every year for at least two or threeâ ââ
But Lena almost shouted her interruption. âYes! Two or three weeks! To visit my family! Do you think it means happiness for me to be with them?â âand all of âem watching to see how I take care of my baby! Is that keeping your word to take me abroad? Oh,â she cried, with bitter laughter, âdoesnât it seem ironical even to you? That big creature next door was so jealous of me because I had what she wanted she couldnât bear to stay where she had to look at it, so she goes away and gets what I wanted! Isnât it ironical, Dan? Donât you see it at all?â
âI see youâve got your imagination all stirred up again, thatâs all.â
âImagination!â she cried. âYes; I should think my imagination would get âall stirred up!â Why, itâs funny! She can go and take what I want, but it canât be any good to her; she hasnât culture enough to see it or to feel it or to hear it. I can see her carrying that accent around Europe, and asking waiters for âice wat-urrâ and âplease to pass the but-urr!â Yet she can go and I canât!â
âBut I didnât send her,â Dan explained, since his wife clearly implied his responsibility. âYou talk as if Iâ ââ
âNo; but you had no right not to send me after giving me your sacredâ ââ
Dan interrupted her genially; he smiled and patted her pretty little shoulder, though it twitched away from his touch. âLena, look here: Iâve got some big deals on, and Iâm just about certain theyâre goinâ to work out the right way. You see up to now the troubleâs been that all the money cominâ in had to be put right out again almost before Iâd get hold of it. If it hadnât been for that, Iâd had that factory up and running long ago. But as I look ahead now, everything is mighty goodâ âmighty good! If I can just put these deals throughâ ââ
âYes; itâs always âif,âââ she reminded him. âWhen have I ever talked to you that you werenât just about to put through some âmighty big dealsâ? You said exactly the same last year.â
âWell, but this is a better year than last year. Why, Iâve done twice the businessâ âyes, betterân that; itâs more like four times what I did last year. If Ornaby keeps on like this, why, a few years from nowâ ââ
She stopped him; informing him that sheâd long since heard more than enough about âa few years from nowâ; whereupon, being full of the subject, he went down to the library to tell his father and mother what was inevitable within a few years. No skepticism dampened his library prophecies now; Harlan was no longer there to listen, staring with dry incredulity through his glasses.
Harlan had not sold Mrs. Savageâs old house, but had moved into it, and kept as precise a routine there as she had kept, and with the same servants. He had two bedrooms upstairs made into a library, but changed nothing on the lower floor; and often the old lady seemed still to be there in authority. At twilight, before Nimbus lit the electric table lamp in the âsouth front parlour,â the room to which she had always descended from her afternoon nap, it was not difficult to imagine that she was sitting in the stiff chair beside the plate-glass window. Of course Nimbus believed that he saw her there when he came in to light the lamp; and he often mumbled to herâ âalways upon the same theme. He was grateful for the one hundred and thirty-five dollars she had left him, but considered the sum inadequate.
âNoâm, indeed,â he said to the figure he saw in the stiff chair. âI thank you kindly, but didnâ I used you right all my days? How much it cost you slip down ten hunderd thirty-five on that paper, âstead of one hunderd thirty-five? You ainât got it, are you? Ainât doinâ you no good, do it? Noâm, indeedy! âTainât no use you beinâ sorry, neither. Make all the fuss you want to; you too late; nobody ainât goinâ pay no âtention to you!â
And in the kitchen he would discuss the apparition with his fourth wife, the fat cook, Myrtle. âLook to me like she canât keep away,â he would say. âSet there same as ever. Set up straight in that stiff chair. See her plain as I see you, till I git that lamp lit.â
âLandy me, Nimbus, I wouldnâ go in that room unlessen the light bright as day if you give me trottinâ horse anâ gole harniss! How you keep from hollerinâ?â
At this the tall, thin old fellow would laugh without making a sound; deep wrinkles in the design of half of a symmetrical cobweb appearing on each side of his face. Some profoundly interior secret of his might have been betrayed, it seemed, if he had allowed his merriment to become vocal; and this noiseless laugh of his awed his wife in much the
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