登陆注册
19311500000259

第259章

This warmth was very profitable—as Scarlett had intended it to be. Many of the officers of the garrison, not knowing how long they would be stationed in Atlanta, had sent for their wives and families. As the hotels and boarding houses were overflowing, they were building small houses; and they were glad to buy their lumber from the gracious Mrs. Kennedy, who treated them more politely than anyone else in town. The Carpetbaggers and Scalawags also, who were building fine homes and stores and hotels with their new wealth, found it more pleasant to do business with her than with the former Confederate soldiers who were courteous but with a courtesy more formal and cold than outspoken hate.

So, because she was pretty and charming and could appear quite helpless and forlorn at times, they gladly patronized her lumber yard and also Frank’s store, feeling that they should help a plucky little woman who apparently had only a shiftless husband to support her. And Scarlett, watching the business grow, felt that she was safeguarding not only the present with Yankee money but the future with Yankee friends.

Keeping her relations with the Yankee officers on the plane she desired was easier man she expected, for they all seemed to be in awe of Southern ladies, but Scarlett soon found that their wives presented a problem she had not anticipated. Contacts with the Yankee women were not of her seeking. She would have been glad to avoid them but she could not, for the officers’ wives were determined to meet her. They had an avid curiosity about the South and Southern women, and Scarlett gave them their first opportunity to satisfy it. Other Atlanta women would have nothing to do with them and even refused to bow to them in church, so when business brought Scarlett to their homes, she was like an answer to prayer. Often when Scarlett sat in her buggy in front of a Yankee home talking of uprights and shingles with the man of the house, the wife came out to join in the conversation or insist that she come inside for a cup of tea. Scarlett seldom refused, no matter how distasteful the idea might be, for she always hoped to have an opportunity to suggest tactfully that they do their trading at Frank’s store. But her self-control was severely tested many times, because of the personal questions they asked and because of the smug and condescending attitude they displayed toward all things Southern.

Accepting Uncle Tom’s Cabin as revelation second only to the Bible, the Yankee women all wanted to know about the bloodhounds which every Southerner kept to track down runaway slaves. And they never believed her when she told them she had only seen one bloodhound in all her life and it was a small mild dog and not a huge ferocious mastiff. They wanted to know about the dreadful branding irons which planters used to mark the faces of their slaves and the cat-o’-nine-tails with which they beat them to death, and they evidenced what Scarlett felt was a very nasty and ill-bred interest in slave concubinage. Especially did she resent this in view of the enormous increase in mulatto babies in Atlanta since the Yankee soldiers had settled in the town.

Any other Atlanta woman would have expired in rage at having to listen to such bigoted ignorance but Scarlett managed to control herself. Assisting her in this was the fact that they aroused her contempt more than her anger. After all, they were Yankees and no one expected anything better from Yankees. So their unthinking insults to her state, her people and their morals, glanced off and never struck deep enough to cause her more than a well-concealed sneer until an incident occurred which made her sick with rage and showed her, if she needed any showing, how wide was the gap between North and South and how utterly impossible it was to bridge it.

While driving home with Uncle Peter one afternoon, she passed the house into which were crowded the families of three officers who were building their own homes with Scarlett’s lumber. The three wives were standing in the walk as she drove by and they waved to her to stop. Coming out to the carriage block they greeted her in accents that always made her feel that one could forgive Yankees almost anything except their voices.

“You are just the person I want to see, Mrs. Kennedy,” said a tall thin woman from Maine. “I want to get some information about this benighted town.”

Scarlett swallowed the insult to Atlanta with the contempt it deserved and smiled her best.

“And what can I tell you?”

“My nurse, my Bridget, has gone back North. She said she wouldn’t stay another day down here among the ‘nay-gurs’ as she calls them. And the children are just driving me distracted! Do tell me how to go about getting another nurse. I do not know where to apply.”

That shouldn’t be difficult,” said Scarlett and laughed. “If you can find a darky just in from the country who hasn’t been spoiled by the Freedmen’s Bureau, you’ll have the best kind of servant possible. Just stand at your gate here and ask every darky woman who passes and I’m sure—”

The three women broke into indignant outcries.

“Do you think I’d trust my babies to a black nigger?” cried the Maine woman. “I want a good Irish girl.”

“I’m afraid you’ll find no Irish servants in Atlanta,” answered Scarlett, coolness in her voice. “Personally, I’ve never seen a white servant and I shouldn’t care to have one in my house. And,” she could not keep a slight note of sarcasm from her words, “I assure you that darkies aren’t cannibals and are quite trustworthy.”

“Goodness, no! I wouldn’t have one in my house. The idea!”

“I wouldn’t trust them any farther than I could see them and as for letting them handle my babies ...”

Scarlett thought of the kind, gnarled hands of Mammy worn rough in Ellen’s service and hers and Wade’s. What did these strangers know of black hands, how dear and comforting they could be, how unerringly they knew how to soothe, to pat, to fondle? She laughed shortly.

“It’s strange you should feel that way when it was you all who freed them.”

同类推荐
  • 元始天王欢乐经

    元始天王欢乐经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 西湖水利考

    西湖水利考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 滴天髓

    滴天髓

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Barnaby Rudge

    Barnaby Rudge

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 黄箓破狱灯仪

    黄箓破狱灯仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 网游之剑道独尊

    网游之剑道独尊

    从山里走出的少年,带着师父的叮嘱,走向了《苍穹》的世界,从而在艾尔泽斯这块大陆上,少年和他的剑,将演绎剑惊全球!【剑魂】+9;剑者的精魄得到了升华,让你具有超神般的力量。等级:9职业:剑尊;伤害吸收:43%;伤害加深:43%;生命强化:增加450点生命值;邪恶攻击:对其他玩家进行攻击时,额外增加21%的伤害加成;灵魂震慑:4.0%几率使敌人眩晕4轮(1轮为3秒),每轮敌人只有25%的几率挣脱;灵魂一击:10%几率对目标造成当前生命值的10%灵魂伤害;聚魔:增加200点魔力值;强壮:增加200点生命力。
  • 我的鬼女友

    我的鬼女友

    我年少时误入过一个不该是活人进入的世界,竟然奇迹般地回来了,从此后,我的人生便充斥了太多无法常人无法理解的事情。很多超出常识的东西围绕着我,算命的说我身上有它们感兴趣的东西,这一世我都别想太平,而且还包括我死后.....
  • 殇之祸水倾国

    殇之祸水倾国

    我本是个公主,却因上一辈的过错生活在牢笼里,终于,他来了,他承诺我总有一日会带我脱离牢笼,他愿做树干,努力汲取养分,让我这朵红梅娇艳绽放,我信他,等他。十年光阴,冗长的等待,终于他来了,他信守诺言,将我带出牢笼,但十年的离别改变了一切,他脱离了树干的颜色整日着绿衣,或许他早把当初的童言忘记了。可是,一切远没有那么简单,大概从我踏出牢笼的那一步起,我就已经进入了一张由谎言编织的网里,无论怎么挣脱也逃不开。直到那时我才明白,曾经的牢笼,原来是最安全的保护伞,好想回到那里,却有太多的身不由己,将自己囚禁在另一个牢笼里。我对梅独舞,暗自思忖,我们就像风与蒲公英,他带给我自由,同时又将我送入另一处牢狱。
  • 花开花落易满楼

    花开花落易满楼

    陌上人如玉,君子世无双翩翩公子,温润如玉。对生命充满热爱,对未来充满希望。有四条眉毛的陆小凤,不爱麻烦却时时招惹麻烦,身为他的好友,花满楼表示很无奈,却还是一如既往帮忙花开花落易满楼。作者君在这里想给花满楼一个圆满的结局,女主是穿越,嘿嘿,敬请期待。。。
  • 鬼医圣手:绝色小毒萝

    鬼医圣手:绝色小毒萝

    十四岁的皇室傻公主,一朝睁开嗜血的双眸!说她脑子不行?开玩笑!敢问世间几个人比的上她;说她的手无寸铁之力,只是个无用废材?胤王朝这么小根本容不下她!之前为了生存步步为营,设下无数陷阱,现在药毒无双,雪域霸主只恨不能把一颗真心给她狠狠蹂躏,天塌下来,不过是她半句话的事儿。王位她不稀罕,天下还得她给出规矩!
  • 青灯诡谜

    青灯诡谜

    【巅峰聚焦—品牌佳作—强推阅读】一篇往事,一盏青灯,讲述近代阴阳两界不可破解的秘密。人鬼谜奸,商运魂魄,义庄赶尸,村中跳鬼,这背后到底隐藏着什么不可告人的秘密……天边惊现诡霞,这是天意弄人?或是天谴之灾?而看小人物携盏灯拯救苍生,青灯冥火,听我指令!
  • 疏雨吹梧桐

    疏雨吹梧桐

    舟车之行,一路风尘。浮浮沉沉,纷纷扰扰,一切都重要,一切又显得那么无足轻重。曾经为刀光剑影而一往情深,曾经对江湖的快意恩仇而深醉其中......且看一位少年医生如何闯荡江湖,抱得美人归!
  • 流浪的武仙

    流浪的武仙

    与慕容君华一战,破碎了仙界虚空,两人被吸入虚无。刘芒带着上一世仙界第一武仙的魂魄记忆,转世轮回到了凡尘。体内神魂残破,前世修为尽失。且看他如何一步步踏上仙途,重回巅峰!引气,炼化,心动,归一,元神,返虚,问道。新人新书,求点击推荐收藏!
  • 魔王小道士

    魔王小道士

    “师父!让我进去啊!我裤子都还没穿呢!”一个霸气的小道士,很不情愿的出了深山,来到了让他眼花缭乱的都市之中。本来只是想挣点钱,然后回山的他,却发现……都市里面竟然有着很多肮脏的一面,藏着很多的妖魔鬼怪。妖者~妩媚众生……魔者~屠戳天下……鬼者~怨气冲天……怪者~恩,想不到了,反正你进来看吧……
  • 成长就是将你哭声调成静音

    成长就是将你哭声调成静音

    一个女孩的成长的故事,包含了心酸,快乐。