His Family Ernest Poole (top ten books of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Ernest Poole
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And though he saw little of Deborah, slowly, almost unawares to them both, she assumed the old place she had had in his homeâ âas the one who had been right here in the house through all the years since her mother had died, the one who had helped and never asked help, keeping her own troubles to herself. He fell back into his habit of going before dinner to his daughterâs bedroom door to ask whether she would be home that night. At one such time, getting no response and thinking Deborah was not there, he opened the door part way to make sure. And he saw her at her dresser, staring at herself in the glass, rigid as though in a trance. Later in the dining room he heard her step upon the stairs. She came in quietly and sat down; and as soon as dinner was over, she said her good nights and left the house. But when she came home at midnight, he was waiting up for her. He had foraged in the kitchen, and on his study table he had set out some supper. While she sat there eating, her father watched her from his chair.
âThings going badly in school?â he inquired.
âYes,â she replied. There was silence.
âWhatâs wrong?â
âTonight we had a line of mothers reaching out into the street. They had come for food and coalâ âbut we had to send most of them home empty-handed. Some of them criedâ âand one of them fainted. Sheâs to have a baby soon.â
âCanât you get any money uptown?â he asked.
âI have,â she answered grimly. âIâve been a beggarâ âheaven knowsâ âon every friend I can think of. And Iâve kept a press agent hard at work trying to make the public see that Belgium is right here in New York.â She stopped and went on with her supper. âBut itâs a bad time for work like mine,â she continued presently. âIf weâre to keep it going we must above all keep it cheap. Thatâs the keynote these days, keep everything cheapâ âat any costâ âso that men can expensively kill one another.â Her voice had a bitter ring to it. âYou try to talk peace and they bowl you over, with facts on the need of preparednessâ âfor the defence of your country. And that doesnât appeal to me very much. I want a bigger preparednessâ âfor the defence of the whole worldâ âfor democracy, and human rights, no matter who the people are! Iâd like to train every child to that!â
âWhat do you mean?â her father asked.
âTo teach him what his life can be!â she replied in a hard quivering tone. âA fight? Oh yes! So long as he livesâ âand even with guns if it must be so! But a fight for all the people on earth!â âand a world so full of happy lives that men will think hardâ âbefore ever again letting themselves be led by the noseâ âinto war and deathâ âfor a place in the sun!â She rose from her chair, with a weary smile: âHere I am making a speech again. Iâve made so many lately itâs become a habit. Iâm tired out, dad, Iâm going to bed.â Her father looked at her anxiously.
âYouâre seeing things out of proportion,â he said. âYouâve worked so hard youâre getting stale. You ought to get out of it for a while.â
âI canât!â she answered sharply. âYou donât knowâ âyou donât even guessâ âhow it takes every hourâ âall the demands!â
âWhereâs Allan these days?â
âWorking,â was her harsh reply. âTrying to keep his hospital going with half its staff. The woman who was backing him is giving her money to Belgium instead.â
âDo you see much of him?â
âEvery day. Letâs drop it. Shall we?â
âAll right, my dearâ ââ
And they said good nightâ ââ âŠ
In the meantime, in the house, Edith had tried to scrimp and save, but it was very difficult. Her children had so many needs, they were all growing up so fast. Each month brought fresh demands on her purse, and the fund from the sale of her belongings had been used up long ago. Her sole resource was the modest allowance her father gave her for running the house, and she had not asked him for more. She had put off trouble from month to month. But one evening early in March, when he gave her the regular monthly check, she said hesitatingly:
âIâm very sorry, father dear, but Iâm afraid weâll need more money this month.â He glanced up from his paper:
âWhatâs the matter?â She gave him a forced little smile, and her father noticed the gray in her hair.
âOh, nothing in particular. Goodness knows Iâve tried to keep down expenses, butâ âwell, weâre a pretty large household, you knowâ ââ
âYes,â said Roger kindly, âI know. Are the monthâs bills in?â
âYes.â
âLet me see them.â She brought him the bills and he looked relieved. âNot so many,â he ventured.
âNo, but theyâre large.â
âWhy, look here, Edith,â he said abruptly, âthese are bills for two monthsâ âsome for three, even four!â
âI knowâ âthatâs just the trouble. I couldnât meet them at the time.â
âWhy didnât you tell me?â
âLaura was hereâ âand I didnât want to bother youâ âyou had enough on your mind as it was. Iâve done the best I could, father dearâ âIâve sold everything, you knowâ âbut Iâve about come to the end of my rope.â And her manner said clearly, âIâve done my part. Iâm only a woman. Iâll have to leave the rest to you.â
âI seeâ âI see.â And Roger knitted his heavy brows. âI presume I can get it somehow.â This would play the very devil with things!
âFather.â Edithâs voice was low. âWhy donât you let Deborah help you? She does very little, it seems to meâ âcompared to the size of her salary.â
âShe canât do any more than sheâs doing now,â was his decisive answer. Edith looked at him, her color high. She hesitated, then burst out:
âI saw her check book the other day, she had left it on the table! Sheâs spending thousandsâ âevery month!â
âThatâs not her own money,â Roger said.
âNoâ âitâs money she gets for her fadsâ âher work for
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