The Magnificent Ambersons Booth Tarkington (reading like a writer txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
Book online «The Magnificent Ambersons Booth Tarkington (reading like a writer txt) đ». Author Booth Tarkington
George gulped painfully before he could speak. âYouâ âyou mean to sit there and tell me that if Iâd just let things go onâ âOh!â He swung away, walking the floor again. âI tell you I did the only right thing! If you donât think so, why in the name of heaven canât you say what else I should have done? Itâs easy enough to criticize, but the person who criticizes a man ought at least to tell him what else he should have done! You think I was wrong!â
âIâm not saying so,â she said.
âYou did at the time!â he cried. âYou said enough then, I think! Well, what have you to say now, if youâre so sure I was wrong?â
âNothing, George.â
âItâs only because youâre afraid to!â he said, and he went on with a sudden bitter divination: âYouâre reproaching yourself with what you had to do with all that; and youâre trying to make up for it by doing and saying what you think mother would want you to, and you think I couldnât stand it if I got to thinking I might have done differently. Oh, I know! Thatâs exactly whatâs in your mind: you do think I was wrong! So does Uncle George. I challenged him about it the other day, and he answered just as youâre answeringâ âevaded, and tried to be gentler. I donât care to be handled with gloves! I tell you I was right, and I donât need any coddling by people that think I wasnât! And I suppose you believe I was wrong not to let Morgan see her that last night when he came here, and sheâ âshe was dying. If you do, why in the name of God did you come and ask me? You could have taken him in! She did want to see him. Sheâ ââ
Miss Fanny looked startled. âYou thinkâ ââ
âShe told me so!â And the tortured young man choked. âShe saidâ ââjust once.â She said âIâd like to have seen himâ âjust once!â She meantâ âto tell him goodbye! Thatâs what she meant! And you put this on me, too; you put this responsibility on me! But I tell you, and I told Uncle George, that the responsibility isnât all mine! If you were so sure I was wrong all the timeâ âwhen I took her away, and when I turned Morgan outâ âif you were so sure, what did you let me do it for? You and Uncle George were grown people, both of you, werenât you? You were older than I, and if you were so sure you were wiser than I, why did you just stand around with your hands hanging down, and let me go ahead? You could have stopped it if it was wrong, couldnât you?â
Fanny shook her head. âNo, George,â she said slowly. âNobody could have stopped you. You were too strong, andâ ââ
âAnd what?â he demanded loudly.
âAnd she loved youâ âtoo well.â
George stared at her hard, then his lower lip began to move convulsively, and he set his teeth upon it but could not check its frantic twitching.
He ran out of the room.
She sat still, listening. He had plunged into his motherâs room, but no sound came to Fannyâs ears after the sharp closing of the door; and presently she rose and stepped out into the hallâ âbut could hear nothing. The heavy black walnut door of Isabelâs room, as Fannyâs troubled eyes remained fixed upon it, seemed to become darker and vaguer; the polished wood took the distant ceiling light, at the end of the hall, in dim reflections which became mysterious; and to Fannyâs disturbed mind the single sharp point of light on the bronze doorknob was like a continuous sharp cry in the stillness of night. What interview was sealed away from human eye and ear within the lonely darkness on the other side of that doorâ âin that darkness where Isabelâs own special chairs were, and her own special books, and the two great walnut wardrobes filled with her dresses and wraps? What tragic argument might be there vainly striving to confute the gentle dead? âIn Godâs name, what else could I have done?â For his motherâs immutable silence was surely answering him as Isabel in life would never have answered him, and he was beginning to understand how eloquent the dead can be. They cannot stop their eloquence, no matter how they have loved the living: they cannot choose. And so, no matter in what agony George should cry out, âWhat else could I have done?â and to the end of his life no matter how often he made that wild appeal, Isabel was doomed to answer him with the wistful, faint murmur:
âIâd like to have seen him. Justâ âjust once.â
A cheerful darkey went by the house, loudly and tunelessly whistling some broken thoughts upon women, fried food and gin; then a group of high school boys, returning homeward after important initiations, were heard skylarking along the sidewalk, rattling sticks on the fences, squawking hoarsely, and even attempting to sing in the shocking new voices of uncompleted adolescence. For no reason, and just as a poultry yard falls into causeless agitation, they stopped in front of the house, and for half an hour produced the effect of a noisy multitude in full riot.
To the woman standing upstairs in the hall, this was almost unbearable; and she felt that she would have to go down and call to them to stop; but she was too timid, and after a time went back to her room, and sat at her desk again. She left the door open, and frequently glanced out into the hall, but gradually became once more absorbed in the figures which represented her prospective income from her great plunge in electric lights for automobiles. She did not hear George return to his own room.
⊠A superstitious person might have thought it unfortunate that her partner in this speculative industry (as in Wilburâs
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