登陆注册
14726500000281

第281章

He turned and looked out of the window again and the shoulders presented to her gaze did not look quite so square. Scarlett waited a long moment in silence, hoping that Ashley would return to the mood in which he spoke of her beauty, hoping he would say more words that she could treasure. It had been so long since she had seen him and she had lived on memories until they were worn thin. She knew he still loved her. That fact was evident, in every line of him, in every bitter, self-condemnatory word, in his resentment at her bearing Frank’s child. She so longed to hear him say it in words, longed to speak words herself that would provoke a confession, but she dared not. She remembered her promise given last winter in the orchard, that she would never again throw herself at his head. Sadly she knew that promise must be kept if Ashley were to remain near her. One cry from her of love and longing, one look that pleaded for his arms, and the matter would be settled forever. Ashley would surely go to New York. And he must not go away.

“Oh, Ashley, don’t blame yourself! How could it be your fault? You will come to Atlanta and help me, won’t you?”

“No.”

“But, Ashley,” her voice was beginning to break with anguish and disappointment, “But I’d counted on you. I do need you so. Frank can’t help me. He’s so busy with the store and if you don’t come I don’t know where I can get a man! Everybody in Atlanta who is smart is busy with his own affairs and the others are so incompetent and—”

“It’s no use, Scarlett.”

“You mean you’d rather go to New York and live among Yankees than come to Atlanta?”

“Who told you that?” He turned and faced her, faint annoyance wrinkling his forehead.

“Will.”

“Yes, I’ve decided to go North. An old friend who made the Grand Tour with me before the war has offered me a position in his father’s bank. It’s better so, Scarlett. I’d be no good to you. I know nothing of the lumber business.”

“But you know less about banking and it’s much harder! And I know I’d make far more allowances for your inexperience than Yankees would!”

He winced and she knew she had said the wrong thing. He turned and looked out of the window again.

“I don’t want allowances made for me. I want to stand on my own feet for what I’m worth. What have I done with my life, up till now? It’s time I made something of myself—or went down through my own fault. I’ve been your pensioner too long already.”

“But I’m offering you a half-interest in the mill, Ashley! You would be standing on your own feet because—you see, it would be your own business.”

“It would amount to the same thing. I’d not be buying the half-interest I’d be taking it as a gift And I’ve taken too many gifts from you already, Scarlett—food and shelter and even clothes for myself and Melanie and the baby. And I’ve given you nothing in return.”

“Oh, but you have! Will couldn’t have—”

“I can split kindling very nicely now.”

“Oh, Ashley!” she cried despairingly, tears in her eyes at the jeering note in his voice. “What has happened to you since I’ve been gone? You sound so hard and bitter! You didn’t used to be this way.”

“What’s happened? A very remarkable thing, Scarlett. I’ve been thinking. I don’t believe I really thought from the time of the surrender until you went away from here. I was in a state of suspended animation and it was enough that I had something to eat and a bed to lie on. But when you went to Atlanta, shouldering a man’s burden, I saw myself as much less than a man—much less, indeed, than a woman. Such thoughts aren’t pleasant to live with and I do not intend to live with them any longer. Other men came out of the war with less than I had, and look at them now. So I’m going to New York.”

“But—I don’t understand! If it’s work you want, why won’t Atlanta do as well as New York? And my mill—”

“No, Scarlett This is my last chance. I’ll go North. If I go to Atlanta and work for you, I’m lost forever.”

The word “lost—lost—lost” dinged frighteningly in her heart like a death bell sounding. Her eyes went quickly to his but they were wide and crystal gray and they were looking through her and beyond her at some fate she could not see, could not understand.

“Lost? Do you mean—have you done something the Atlanta Yankees can get you for? I mean, about helping Tony get away or—or— Oh, Ashley, you aren’t in the Ku Klux, are you?”

His remote eyes came back to her swiftly and he smiled a brief smile that never reached his eyes.

“I had forgotten you were so literal. No, it’s not the Yankees I’m afraid of. I mean if I go to Atlanta and take help from you again, I bury forever any hope of ever standing alone.”

“Oh,” she sighed in quick relief, “if it’s only that!

“Yes,” and he smiled again, the smile more wintry than before. “Only that. Only my masculine pride, my self-respect and, if you choose to so call it, my immortal soul.”

“But,” she swung around on another tack, “you could gradually buy the mill from me and it would be your own and then—”

“Scarlett,” he interrupted fiercely, “I tell you, no! There are other reasons.”

“What reasons?”

“You know my reasons better than anyone in the world.”

“Oh—that? But—that’ll be all right,” she assured swiftly. “I promised, you know, out in the orchard, last winter and I’ll keep my promise and—”

“Then you are surer of yourself than I am. I could not count on myself to keep such a promise. I should not have said that but I had to make you understand. Scarlett, I will not talk of this any more. It’s finished. When Will and Suellen marry, I am going to New York.”

His eyes, wide and stormy, met hers for an instant and then he went swiftly across the room. His hand was on the door knob. Scarlett stared at him in agony. The interview was ended and she had lost. Suddenly weak from the strain and sorrow of the last day and the present disappointment, her nerves broke abruptly and she screamed: “Oh, Ashley!” And, flinging herself down on the sagging sofa, she burst into wild crying.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 成功时看得起别人,失败时看得起自己

    成功时看得起别人,失败时看得起自己

    本书是一本讲述人生智慧的哲理书,从成功与失败两方面阐述如何调整心态,恰当的为人处世,使读者深受启发。
  • 蜂蝶恋

    蜂蝶恋

    本篇小说主要写了一对青梅竹马的好朋友,雨蝶、昔蜂的故事。他们相爱后被迫分开但是种种困难也没有难道他们在一起的决心。。。。。。
  • 佛说阿耨颰经

    佛说阿耨颰经

    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。
  • 尘世兽妃:殿下乖乖跟我走

    尘世兽妃:殿下乖乖跟我走

    在华夏让无数杀手都闻风丧胆的她,在准备金盆洗手的时候被第一杀手组织“暗月”以训练新人的理由召回。她回去了,用了一个月的时间颠覆了这个在华夏最大最强的杀手组织。以一己之力,用一生来换取的颠覆。时空轮回。她被不知名的力量卷到异世,以兽族重生,强大的力量却又害死了身边亲近之人。有河……忘川。跳下去,你的痛苦就会消散。“如果,这就是天给我的命运,我将不择手段来翻了这天!”天道吗?呵呵,就让她以绝对的力量来告诉这个世界,什么是天道!一代王者就此崛起。
  • 一千零一夜全集(四)

    一千零一夜全集(四)

    《一千零一夜》中文又译作《天方夜谭》。相传在古代印度与中国之间有一个萨桑国,国王山鲁亚尔因为痛恨王后与人私通,就将王后杀死了。此后,国王怀着满腔仇恨,每天娶一少女,第二天早晨就将其杀掉,许多无辜女子惨遭杀害。宰相的女儿山鲁佐德为拯救无辜的女子,自愿嫁给国王,用每夜讲故事的办法,不断引起国王的兴趣,她的故事讲了一千零一夜,不仅自己免遭杀戮,而且把国王也感化了。
  • 一见云英便爱卿

    一见云英便爱卿

    14岁,周颖见慕卿的第一句话便是“你是一见云英便爱卿的卿么”,自此两人的生活便因琴生情……20岁,周颖质问慕卿“与卿俱是江南客,你是不是我的过客”……这是一个爱情与责任的故事,我们不能因披上爱情的外衣,就可以肆无忌惮的伤害爱我们的人。
  • 狂执傲世

    狂执傲世

    怀着修仙梦想的小青年,却要时刻防着体内的不明力量,二者谁会是支配者呢?
  • 最兄弟

    最兄弟

    阳大姬二唐三是一个头叩到地的三个结义兄弟,在灵界号称丹器阵三圣,当姬二在家族争斗中之时,唐三选择了带姬二之子姬松求生,而阳大和姬二双双战死。万幸的是,当阳大自爆之后,竟然夺舍重生了,千差万错,被夺舍的人竟然是姬二之子姬松。曾经的兄弟,一个个离去,身负血海深仇的阳大如何一步步成长,报仇雪恨。
  • 醒名花

    醒名花

    《醒名花》十六回,系清初小说。书叙才子湛翌王与梅杏娘婚姻事:已故梅御史之女杏娘,自号醒名花,独居别墅园中,湛翌王慕其名而欲结情缘,因杏娘之兄妒害,颠沛流离。因大盗贾龙的救助,梅杏娘得于尼庵避居;湛翌王被淫尼匿藏庵中经年。后湛翌王随陶药侯平寇立功,终与梅杏娘成为夫妻。
  • 地狱名媛

    地狱名媛

    曾经,她是W市叱咤风云的豪门一姐,强势的个性加上超高的智商让无数青年才俊在她面前自叹不如。传闻只要是她出现的场合,就永远不会有别的女人出头的机会。可偏偏就是这样一个让骄傲高贵的顶级名媛,在挑老公这方面,却栽了个大跟头。放弃家族为她匹配的最佳良缘,她一意孤行嫁给了一个名不见经传的凤凰男。新婚前夕,大腹便便的小三找上门,一时间,她成为了上流社会的笑柄。不仅如此,她更无辜深陷谋杀案,最终难逃牢狱之灾。米悦从监狱中走出来的那一刻,她的字典里只剩下两个字——“复仇”!手撕渣男,吊打小三,洗去污名,她要把自己曾经丢失的光环,一个个慢慢捡起来。她更要让那个害她坐了三年冤狱的人,细细品尝失去自由的滋味……