His Family Ernest Poole (top ten books of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Ernest Poole
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Roger stopped abruptly. He groped for something more to say.
âOn the one side, all that,â he muttered, âand on the other, a lonely life which will soon grow old.â
There fell a dangerous silence. And sharply without warning, the influence, deep and invisible, of many generations of stolid folk in New England made itself felt in each of them. Father and daughter grew awkward, both. The talk had been too emotional. Each made, as by an instinct, a quick strong effort at self-control, and felt about for some way to get back upon their old easy footing. Roger turned to his daughter. Her head was still bent, her hands clasped tight, but she was frowning down at them now, although her face was still wet with tears. She drew a deep unsteady breath.
âWell, Deborah,â he said simply, âhere Iâve gone stumbling on like a fool. I donât know what Iâve said or how you have listened.â
âIâve listened,â she said thickly.
âI have tried,â he went on in a steadier tone, âto give you some feeling of what is aheadâ âand to speak for your mother as well as myself. And more than thatâ âmuch more than thatâ âfor the world has changed since she was here. God knows Iâve tried to be modern.â A humorous glint came into his eyes, âDownright modern,â he declared. âHave I asked you to give up your career? Not at all, Iâve asked you to marry Baird, and go right on with him in your work. And if you canât marry Allan Baird, after what he has done for you, how in Godâs name can you modern women ever marry anyone? Now what do you say? Will you marry him? Donât laugh at me! Iâm serious! Talk!â
But Deborah was laughingâ âalthough her father felt her hands still cold and trembling in his. Her gray eyes, bright and luminous, were shining up into his own.
âWhat a time youâve been having, havenât you, dear!â his daughter cried unsteadily. âFairly lying awake at night and racking your brains for everything modern Iâve ever saidâ âto turn it and twist it and use it against me!â
âWell?â he demanded. âHow does it twist?â
âIt twists hard, thank you,â she declared. âYouâve turned and twisted me about till I barely see how I can live at all!â
âYou can, though! Marry Allan Baird!â
âIâll think it overâ âlater on.â
âWhat is there left to think about? Can you point to one hole in all Iâve said?â
âYes, a good manyâ âand one right off.â
âOut with it!â
âYouâre not dying,â Deborah told him calmly, âI feel quite certain youâll live for years.â
âOh, you do, ehâ âthen see my physician!â
âI will, Iâll see him tomorrow. How long did you give yourself? Just a few months?â
âNo, he said it might be more,â admitted Roger grudgingly. âIf I had no worries to wear me outâ ââ
âMe, you mean.â
âExactly.â
âWell, youâve worried quite enough. Youâre going to leave it to me to decide.â
âVery well,â he agreed. He looked at her. âYou have listenedâ âhard?â he gruffly asked.
âYes, dear.â Her hands slowly tightened on his. âBut donât speak of this again. Youâre to leave it to me. You promise?â
âYes.â
And Roger left her.
He went to bed but he could not sleep. With a sudden sag in his spirits he felt what a bungler he had been. He was not used to these solemn talks, he told himself irately. What a fool to try it! And how had Deborah taken it all? He did not mind her laughter, nor that lighter tone of hers. It was only her way of ending the talk, an easy way out for both of them. But what had she thought underneath? Had his points gone home? He tried to remember them. Pshaw! He had been too excited, and he could recall scarcely anything. He had not meant to speak of Bairdâ âhe had meant to leave him out! Yes, how he must have bungled it! Doubtless she was smiling still. Even the news about himself she had not taken seriously.
But as he thought about that news, Rogerâs mood completely changed. The talk of the evening grew remote, his family no longer real, mere little figures, shadowy, receding swiftly far away.â ââ ⊠Much quieter now, he lay a long time listening to the life of the house, the occasional sounds from the various rooms. From the nursery adjoining came little Bruceâs piping laugh, and Roger could hear the nurse moving about. Afterwards for a long time he could hear only creaks and breathings. Never had the old house seemed so like a living creature. For nearly forty years it had held all that he had loved and known, all he had been sure of. Outside of it was the strange, the new, the uncertain, the vast unknown, stretching away to infinity.â ââ âŠ
Again he heard Bruceâs gay little laugh. What did it remind him of? He puzzled. Then he had it. Edith had been a baby here. Her cradle had been in this very room, close by the bed. And how she had laughed! What gurgles and ripples of bursting glee! The first child in his family.â ââ âŠ
XXXVIIOn the next day, which was Sunday, Deborah made an appointment with her fatherâs physician, and had a
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