登陆注册
20004700000100

第100章 The Awakening (18)

Throwing herself back into her chair, Maria lay for a time looking thoughtfully at the hickory log, which crumbled and threw out a shower of red sparks.Her face was grave, but there was no hint of indecision upon it, and it struck Carraway very forcibly at the instant that she knew her own mind quite clearly and distinctly upon this as upon most other matters.

"It may surprise you," she said presently, speaking with sudden passion, "but by right the Hall ought not to be mine, and I do not want it.I have never loved it because it has never for a moment seemed home to me, and our people have always appeared strangers upon the land.How we came here I do not know, but it has not suited us, and we have only disfigured a beauty into which we did not fit.Its very age is a reproach to us, for it shows off our newness--our lack of any past that we may call our own.Will might feel himself master here, but I cannot."Carraway took off his glasses and rubbed patiently at the ridge they had drawn across his nose.

"And yet, why not?" he asked."The place has been in your grandfather's possession now for more than twenty years.""For more than twenty years," repeated Maria scornfully, "and before that the Blakes lived here--how long?"He met her question squarely."For more than two hundred."Without shifting her steady gaze which she turned upon his face, she leaned forward, clasping her hands loosely upon the knees.

"There are things that I want to know, Mr.Carraway," she said, "many things, and I believe that you can tell me.Most of all, Iwant to know why we ever came to Blake Hall? Why the Blakes ever left it? And, above all, why they have hated us so heartily and so long?"She paused and sat motionless, while she hung with suspended breath upon his reply.

For a moment the lawyer hesitated, nervously twirling his glasses between his thumb and forefinger; then he slowly shook his head and looked from her to the fire.

"Twenty years are not as a day, despite your scorn, my dear young lady, and many facts become overlaid with fiction in a shorter time.""But you know something--and you believe still more.""God forbid that I should convert you to any belief of mine."She put out a protesting hand, her eyes still gravely insistent.

"Tell me all--I demand it.It is my right; you must see that.""A right to demolish sand houses--to scatter old dust.""A right to hear the truth.Surely you will not withhold it from me?""I don't know the truth, so I can't enlighten you.I know only the stories of both sides, and they resemble each other merely in that they both center about the same point of interest.""Then you will tell them to me--you must," she said earnestly.

"Tell me first, word for word, all that the Blakes believe of us."With a laugh, he put on his glasses that he might bring her troubled face the more clearly before him.

"A high spirit of impartiality, I admit," he observed.

"That I should want to hear the other side?""That, being a woman, you should take for granted the existence of the other side."She shook her head impatiently."You can't evade me by airing camphor-scented views of my sex," she returned."What I wish to know--and I still stick to my point, you see--is the very thing you are so carefully holding back.""I am holding back nothing, on my honour," he assured her."If you want the impression which still exists in the county--only an impression--I must make plain to you at the start (for the events happened when the State was in the throes of reconstruction, when each man was busy rebuilding his own fortunes, and when tragedies occurred without notice and were hushed up without remark)--if you want merely an impression, I repeat, then you may have it, my dear lady, straight from the shoulder.""Well?" her voice rose inquiringly, for he had paused.

"There is really nothing definite known of the affair," he resumed after a moment, "even the papers which would have thrown light into the darkness were destroyed--burned, it is said, in an old office which the Federal soldiers fired.It is all mystery--grim mystery and surmise; and when there is no chance of either proving or disproving a case I dare say one man's word answers quite as well as another's.At all events, we have your grandfather's testimony as chief actor and eye-witness against the inherited convictions of our somewhat Homeric young neighbour.For eighteen years before the war Mr.Fletcher was sole agent--a queer selection, certainly--for old Mr.Blake, who was known to have grown very careless in the confidence he placed.When the crash came, about three years after the war, the old gentleman's mind was much enfeebled, and it was generally rumoured that his children were kept in ignorance that the place was passing from them until it was auctioned off over their heads and Mr.Fletcher became the purchaser.How this was, of course, Ido not pretend to say, but when the Hall finally went for the absurd sum of seven thousand dollars life was at best a hard struggle in the State, and I imagine there was less surprise at the sacrifice of the place than at the fact that your grandfather should have been able to put down the ready money.The making of a fortune is always, I suppose, more inexplicable than the losing of one.The Blakes had always been accounted people of great wealth and wastefulness, but within five years from the close of the war they had sunk to the position in which you find them now --a change, I dare say, from which it is natural much lingering bitterness should result.The old man died almost penniless, and his children were left to struggle on from day to day as best they could.It is a sad tale, and I do not wonder that it moves you," he finished slowly, and looked down to wipe his glasses.

"And grandfather?" asked the girl quietly.Her gaze had not wavered from his face, but her eyes shone luminous through the tears which filled them.

同类推荐
  • 三命指迷赋

    三命指迷赋

    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。
  • 九曜斋笔记

    九曜斋笔记

    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。
  • E021

    E021

    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。
  • 大方广如来不思议境界经

    大方广如来不思议境界经

    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。
  • 仇史

    仇史

    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
  • 李勣:与大佬们过招的日子

    李勣:与大佬们过招的日子

    茫茫乱世,英雄逐鹿。纷纷义族,几易其主。在名将如星河般的隋末唐初,为什么他能历事三朝,出将入相,屡经变故屹立不倒,最终成就不朽事功?
  • 鸢尾花的泪光

    鸢尾花的泪光

    两岸文学PK大赛岚沐组织近年最为优秀的商业间谍桑蓝接受最后一个任务,进入卓氏企业盗取生产链,却意外与卓氏企业少爷卓季宸订婚···二十一年前的一面给他一辈子照顾她的承诺,但是她的心却始终恋着他死去已久的哥哥···情扯多年,鸢尾花的恋爱季节,还是自杀季节?
  • 信念之塔

    信念之塔

    我没有放弃我会再来这一次让我看到了很多不足这条路不是那么顺畅但关键是我没有放弃……
  • 左手战魂

    左手战魂

    他们是国之利器,他们也柔情似水。他们是军中杀手,他们也只杀该杀之人。世间事,人间事,不尽人意者皆是。姓氏难语,将来难明。血泣……那这又算的了什么???没有姓氏,没有将来,战魂依旧是战魂为战而生,依旧战天动地。。。
  • 汉末浮生记之袤原驰骋(下)

    汉末浮生记之袤原驰骋(下)

    因为一个机器人和一次事故,郁郁不得志的颜鹰奇异地回到了古代,从此开始了新的人生。但背叛、责难、攻击,重重阴影围绕在他的身边,他被迫为生活而努力,为生存而战斗。经过不懈的努力,他终于冲破了重重迷障,在昏乱的汉末,成为一颗冉冉升起的明星……
  • 我要征服三界

    我要征服三界

    重生的魔王与他的征服之路。。。。爆笑神经
  • 仙孽之今生不负

    仙孽之今生不负

    前世,一个痴情女子为他挑起战争,被他无情杀戮。“我说过,我今生只爱宛琴一人!”大战的尾声,宛琴成为了他的武器。绝望的他,舍己之命,保她入轮回。今生,他只留给了宛琴一段回忆。
  • 月光彩公主

    月光彩公主

    这是和樱园一样内容的,偶Qq:3292294450^_^请大家多多支持
  • 樱花草的诀别

    樱花草的诀别

    樱花树下,她与他相遇……樱花树下,他与她诀别
  • 青春雕像

    青春雕像

    本书主要内容为:红玫瑰,少女,读你, 知音,星,网,你的眼睛,你的眼睛,颤栗,季节。