He Fell In Love With His Wife by Edward Payson Roe (best books to read for students TXT) đ
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and he stopped to watch her. It soon became evident that she was trying to
get his supper. His heart relented at once in spite of himself. âThe poor,
wronged child!â he muttered. âWhy should I be so hard on her for doing what
sheâs been brought up to do? Well, well, itâs too bad to send her away, but I
canât help it. Iâd lose my own reason if the mother were here much longer,
and if I kept Jane, her idiotic mother would stay in spite of me. If she
didnât, thereâd be endless talk and lawsuits, too, like enough, about
separating parent and child. Janeâs too young and little, anyway, to be here
alone and do the work. But Iâm sorry for her, I declare I am, and I wish I
could do something to give her a chance in the world. If my wife was only
living, weâd take and bring her up, disagreeable and homely as she is; but
thereâs no use of my trying to do anything alone. I fear, after all, that I
shall have to give up the old place and goâI donât know where. What is to
become of her?â
Chapter XVI. Mrs. Mumpsonâs Vicissitudes
Having completed her preparations for supper, Jane stole timidly up to
Holcroftâs room to summon him. Her first rap on his door was scarcely
audible, then she ventured to knock louder and finally to call him, but there
was no response. Full of vague dread she went to her motherâs room and said,
âHe wonât answer me. Heâs so awful mad that I donât know what heâll do.â
âI think he has left his apartment,â her mother moaned from the bed.
âWhy couldnât yer tell me so before?â cried Jane. âWhat yer gone to bed for?
If youâd only show some sense and try to do what he brought you here for, like
enough heâd keep us yet.â
âMy heartâs too crushed, Janeââ
âOh, bother, bother!â and the child rushed away. She looked into the dark
parlor and called, âMr. Holcroft!â Then she appeared in the kitchen again,
the picture of uncouth distress and perplexity. A moment later she opened the
door and darted toward the barn.
âWhat do you wish, Jane?â said Holcroft, emerging from a shadowy corner and
recalling her.
âSupâsupperâsâready,â sobbed the child.
He came in and sat down at the table, considerately appearing not to notice
her until she had a chance to recover composure. She vigorously used the
sleeve of both arms in drying her eyes, then stole in and found a seat in a
dusky corner.
âWhy donât you come to supper?â he asked quietly.
âDonât want any.â
âYou had better take some up to your mother.â
âShe oughtnât to have any.â
âThat doesnât make any difference. I want you to take up something to her,
and then come down and eat your supper like a sensible girl.â
âI aint been sensible, nor mother nuther.â
âDo as I say, Jane.â The child obeyed, but she couldnât swallow anything but
a little coffee.
Holcroft was in a quandary. He had not the gift of speaking soothing yet
meaningless words, and was too honest to raise false hopes. He was therefore
almost as silent and embarrassed as Jane herself. To the girlâs furtive
scrutiny he did not seem hardened against her, and she at last ventured, âSay,
I didnât touch them drawers after you told me not to do anything on the sly.â
âWhen were they opened? Tell me the truth, Jane.â
âMother opened them the first day you left us alone. I told her you wouldnât
like it, but she said she was housekeeper; she said how it was her duty to
inspect everything. I wanted to inspect, too. We was jesâ rummaginââthatâs
what it was. After the things were all pulled out, mother got the rocker and
wouldnât do anything. It was gettinâ late, and I was frightened and poked âem
back in a hurry. Mother wanted to rummage agâin the other day and I wouldnât
let her; then, she wouldnât let me have the keys so I could fix âem up.â
âBut the keys were in my pocket, Jane.â
âMother has a lot of keys. Iâve told you jesâ how it all was.â
âNothing was taken away?â
âNo. Mother aint got sense, but she never takes things. I nuther âcept when
Iâm hungry. Never took anything here. Say, are you goinâ to send us away?â
âI fear I shall have to, Jane. Iâm sorry for you, for I believe you would try
to do the best you could if given a chance, and I can see you never had a
chance.â
âNo,â said the child, blinking hard to keep the tears out of her eyes. âI aint
had no teachinâ. Iâve jesâ kinder growed along with the farm hands and rough
boys. Them that didnât hate me teased me. Say, couldnât I stay in your barn
and sleep in the hay?â
Holcroft was sorely perplexed and pushed away his half-eaten supper. He knew
himself what it was to be friendless and lonely, and his heart softened toward
this worse than motherless child.
âJane,â he said kindly, âIâm just as sorry for you as I can be, but you donât
know the difficulties in the way of what you wish, and I fear I canât make you
understand them. Indeed, it would not be best to tell you all of them. If I
could keep you at all, you should stay in the house, and Iâd be kind to you,
but it canât be. I may not stay here myself. My future course is very
uncertain. Thereâs no use of my trying to go on as I have. Perhaps some day
I can do something for you, and if I can, I will. I will pay your mother her
three monthsâ wages in full in the morning, and then I want you both to get
your things into your trunk, and Iâll take you to your Cousin Lemuelâs.â
Driven almost to desperation, Jane suggested the only scheme she could think
of. âIf you stayed here and I run away and came back, wouldnât you keep me?
Iâd work all day and all night jesâ for the sake of stayinâ.â
âNo, Jane,â said Holcroft firmly, âyouâd make me no end of trouble if you did
that. If youâll be a good girl and learn how to do things, Iâll try to find
you a place among kind people some day when youâre older and can act for
yourself.â
âYouâre afraid âfiâs here motherâd come a-visitin,â said the girl keenly.
âYouâre too young to understand half the trouble that might follow. My plans
are too uncertain for me to tangle myself up. You and your mother must go
away at once, so I can do what I must do before itâs too late in the season.
Hereâs a couple of dollars which you can keep for yourself,â and he went up to
his room, feeling that he could not witness the childâs distress any longer.
He fought hard against despondency and tried to face the actual condition of
his affairs. âI might have known,â he thought, âthat things would have turned
out somewhat as they have, with such women in the house, and I donât see much
chance of getting better ones. Iâve been so bent on staying and going on as I
used to that Iâve just shut my eyes to the facts.â He got out an old account
book and pored over it a long time. The entries therein were blind enough,
but at last he concluded, âItâs plain that Iâve lost money on the dairy ever
since my wife died, and the prospects now are worse than ever. That Weeks
tribe will set the whole town talking against me and it will be just about
impossible to get a decent woman to come here. I might as well have an
auction and sell all the cows but one at once. After that, if I find I canât
make out living alone, Iâll put the place in better order and sell or rent. I
can get my own meals after a fashion, and old Jonathan Johnsonâs wife will do
my washing and mending. Itâs time it was done better than it has been, for
some of my clothes make me look like a scarecrow. I believe Jonathan will
come with his cross dog and stay here too, when I must be away. Well, well,
itâs a hard lot for a man; but Iâd be about as bad off, and a hundred-fold
more lonely, if I went anywhere else.
âI can only feel my way along and live a day at a time. Iâll learn what can
be done and what canât be. One thing is clear: I canât go on with this Mrs.
Mumpson in the house a day longer. She makes me creep and crawl all over, and
the first thing I know I shall be swearing like a bloody pirate unless I get
rid of her.
âIf she wasnât such a hopeless idiot Iâd let her stay for the sake of Jane,
but I wonât pay her good wages to make my life a burden a day longer,â and
with like self-communings he spent the evening until the habit of early
drowsiness overcame him.
The morning found Jane dispirited and a little sullen, as older and wiser
people are apt to be when disappointed. She employed herself in getting
breakfast carelessly and languidly, and the result was not satisfactory.
âWhereâs your mother?â Holcroft asked when he came in.
âShe told me to tell you she was indisposed.â
âIndisposed to go to Lemuel Weeksâ?â
âI âspect she means sheâs sick.â
He frowned and looked suspiciously at the girl. Here was a new complication,
and very possibly a trick.
âWhatâs the matter with her?â
âDunno.â
âWell, she had better get well enough to go by this afternoon,â he remarked,
controlling his irritation with difficulty, and nothing more was said.
Full of his new plans he spent a busy forenoon and then came to dinner. It
was the same old story. He went up and knocked at Mrs. Mumpsonâs door, saying
that he wished to speak with her.
âIâm too indisposed to transact business,â she replied feebly.
âYou must be ready tomorrow morning,â he called. âI have business plans which
canât be delayed,â and he turned away muttering rather sulphurous words.
âHe will relent; his hard heart will soften at lastââ But we shall not weary
the reader with the long soliloquies with which she beguiled her politic
seclusion, as she regarded it. Poor, unsophisticated Jane made matters worse.
The condition of life among her much-visited relatives now existed again. She
was not wanted, and her old sly, sullen, and furtive manner reasserted itself.
Much of Holcroftâs sympathy was thus alienated, yet he partially understood
and pitied her. It became, however, all the more clear that he must get rid
of both mother and child, and that further relations with either of them could
only lead to trouble.
The following morning only Jane appeared. âIs your mother really sick?â he
asked.
âSâpose so,â was the laconic reply.
âYou havenât taken much pains with the breakfast, Jane.â
ââTaint no use.â
With knitted brows he thought deeply, and silently ate the wretched meal which
had been prepared. Then, remarking that he might do some writing, he went up
to a small attic room which had been used occasionally by a hired man. It
contained a covered pipe-hole leading into the chimney flue. Removing the
cover, he stopped
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