FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3443   3444   3445   3446   3447   3448   3449   3450   3451   3452   3453   3454   3455   3456   3457   3458   3459   3460   3461   3462   3463   3464   3465   3466   3467  
3468   3469   3470   3471   3472   3473   3474   3475   3476   3477   3478   3479   3480   3481   3482   3483   3484   3485   3486   3487   3488   3489   3490   3491   3492   >>   >|  
ghbor had begun to look coldly upon neighbor. Colonel Carvel beheld them from his armchair by the sitting-room window, and leaned forward with a start. His lips moved as he closed his Bible reverently and marked his place. At the foot of the stairs he surprised Jackson by waving him aside, for the Colonel himself flung open the door and held out his hand to his friend. The Judge released Virginia's arm, and his own trembled as he gave it. "Silas," said the Colonel, "Silas, we've missed you." Virginia stood by, smiling, but her breath came deeply. Had she done right? Could any good come of it all? Judge Whipple did not go in at the door--He stood uncompromisingly planted on the threshold, his head flung back, and actual fierceness in his stare. "Do you guess we can keep off the subject, Comyn?" he demanded. Even Mr. Carvel, so used to the Judge's ways, was a bit taken aback by this question. It set him tugging at his goatee, and his voice was not quite steady as he answered: "God knows, Silas. We are human, and we can only try." Then Mr. Whipple marched in. It lacked a quarter of an hour of dinner, --a crucial period to tax the resources of any woman. Virginia led the talk, but oh, the pathetic lameness of it. Her own mind was wandering when it should not, and recollections she had tried to strangle had sprung up once more. Only that morning in church she had lived over again the scene by Mr. Brinsmade's gate, and it was then that a wayward but resistless impulse to go to the Judge's office had seized her. The thought of the old man lonely and bitter in his room decided her. On her knees she prayed that she might save the bond between him and her father. For the Colonel had been morose on Sundays, and had taken to reading the Bible, a custom he had not had since she was a child. In the dining-room Jackson, bowing and smiling, pulled out the Judge's chair, and got his customary curt nod as a reward. Virginia carved. "Oh, Uncle Silas," she cried, "I am so glad that we have a wild turkey. And you shall have your side-bone." The girl carved deftly, feverishly, talking the while, aided by that most kind and accomplished of hosts, her father. In the corner the dreaded skeleton of the subject grinned sardonically. Were they going to be able to keep it off? There was to be no help from Judge Whipple, who sat in grim silence. A man who feels his soul burning is not given to small talk. Virginia alone had ever p
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3443   3444   3445   3446   3447   3448   3449   3450   3451   3452   3453   3454   3455   3456   3457   3458   3459   3460   3461   3462   3463   3464   3465   3466   3467  
3468   3469   3470   3471   3472   3473   3474   3475   3476   3477   3478   3479   3480   3481   3482   3483   3484   3485   3486   3487   3488   3489   3490   3491   3492   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
Virginia
 
Colonel
 
Whipple
 

smiling

 

subject

 

father

 

carved

 
Carvel
 

Jackson

 
prayed

custom

 

decided

 

bitter

 

morose

 
Sundays
 

burning

 

lonely

 

reading

 

thought

 

morning


church

 

strangle

 

sprung

 

impulse

 
resistless
 
office
 
seized
 

wayward

 
Brinsmade
 

grinned


sardonically

 
skeleton
 
recollections
 

turkey

 
dreaded
 

feverishly

 

talking

 

accomplished

 

deftly

 

corner


pulled

 

customary

 

bowing

 
dining
 

silence

 
reward
 

released

 

trembled

 

friend

 

missed