首页 >出版文学> Materialist Conception of History>第59章
  Well,nevermind。Yes,I’llwrite,ofcourse。Ihope……No,I
  can’tsaythat,notnow。I’dbettergoatonce,Ithink,beforeI……Good-by。“
  Heseizedherhand,pressedittightly,tookhishatfromthetableandhisbagfromthefloorandswungoutofthedoor。Inthedoorwayshestoodlookingafterhim。Atthegateheturned,wavedhishand,andhurriedon。Hedidnotlookbackagain。
  Whenathalf-pastsixCaptainShadrach,havingleftAnnabelandtheboyinchargeofthestore,camehomeforsupper,Isaiahhadsomenewstotellhim。Itwassurprisingnews。
  “Youdon’tsay!“exclaimedtheCaptain。“Well,well,Iwanttoknow!AllthewayfromoutWest,eh?Sho!Whereishenow?“
  Isaiahshookhishead。“That’sthefunnypartofit,he’sgone,“hesaid。
  “Gone?Gonewhere?“
  “Idon’tknow。AllIknowishecomeandsaidhewantedtoseeMary-’Gusta——Iwentupandtoldherandshecomedowntoseehim。I
  stayedupalongofZoethuntilDebbyT。camebackfromhershoppin’
  cruise。ThenIcomedownstairsagainandhishatandbagwasgone。
  Therewan’tnobodyhere。“
  “WherewasMary-’Gusta?Whereisshenow?“
  “Upinherroom,Ical’late。Iheardhermovin’roundthereaspellago。“
  Shadrachwentupthestairs,alongthehall,andknockedatMary’sdoor。
  “Whoisit?“askedafaintvoicewithin。
  “It’syourUncleShad,Mary-’Gusta。CanIcomein?“
  “Yes。“
  Heentered。Therewasnolampandtheroomwasdark。
  “Whereareyou?“hedemanded。
  “Here,bythewindow,UncleShad。“
  Shewassittingintherockerbythewindow。Hecouldnotseeherface,butashebentandkissedhercheekhefounditwet。
  “Mercyonus!You’vebeencryin’!“hedeclared。
  “Oh——Oh,no,Ihaven’t!I——“
  “Rubbish!Yes,youhave,too。Settin’aloneuphereinthedarkandcryin’!Mary-’GustaLathrop,comehere!“
  Shehadrisenfromtherocking-chair,butheseizedherinhisarms,satdowninthechairhimself,andliftedhertohiskneejustasheusedtodowhenshewasthelittleMary-’Gusta。
  “Nowthere,dearie,“hesaid。“You’lltellyourUncleShad。Whatisit?“
  “Oh,nothing,UncleShad,dear。Iwas——I’mfeelingjustalittlesillythisafternoon,Iguess。Youmustn’taskme。“
  “Allright,Iwon’task——I’lltell。ThatyoungfellerfromoutWest,thefellerwiththeuncommonname——Brown——Jones——Oh,no,Smith,thatwasit——hecamecruisin’aroundhereand——“
  “UncleShad,howdidyouknow?“
  “Alittlebirdtoldme。Along-leggedbirdwithoutmuchhairontop——abald-headedeagle,Ical’latehemustbe。Hopsroundourkitchendaytimesandroostsintheatticnights。“
  “Isaiah!Ofcoursehewouldtell。“
  “Ofcoursehewould——BEIN’Isaiah。Well,thisSmithcritter,hecameand——and——well,Iguessyou’llhavetotellmetherest。“
  “Thereisn’tmuchtotell。Hecameand——andthenhewentawayagain。“
  “Wentaway——where?“
  “OuttoCarsonCity,Isuppose。“
  “Ain’thecomin’backanymore?“
  “No。“
  “Why?Don’tyouwanthimtocome,Mary-’Gusta?“
  “Oh,UncleShad,pleasedon’t。Idon’tfeelasifIcouldanswer。
  Don’taskme。“
  “There,there,dearie;don’tyouanswernothin’。Yousetstillhereandbemybaby。Iain’thadachancetobabyyouforalongspellanditseemsgood。“
  Silence。SuddenlytheCaptainfelttheheadwhichnestledagainsthisshoulderstir。
  “UncleShadrach,“saidMary-’Gusta,“whatdoyoudowhenyouwanttoforget?“
  “Eh?Wanttoforget?Oh,Idon’tknow!Cal’lateIturntoandsailinandworkalittleharder,maybe。Why?“
  “Oh,nothing……ButIammuchobligedforthesuggestion。NowI
  amgoingtowork。Ishallbegintomorrowmorning。Iwishitwastomorrowrightnow。“
  “Don’t。Jumpin’fire!Don’twishtimeaway;someofusain’tgottoomuchtospare。Butain’tyouBEENworkin’,formercysakes?I
  shouldsayyouhad。“
  Anotherintervalofsilence。ThenMarysaid:
  “UncleShad,agoodwhileago,whenyouaskedmeabout——abouthim,I
  promisedyouIwouldtellwhentherewasanythingtotell。Iamgoingtokeepmypromise。Hecametodayandaskedme——askedmetomarryhim——notnow,ofcourse,butbyandby。“
  Shadrachwasnotgreatlysurprised。Neverthelessitwasamomentbeforehespoke。Maryfelthisarmstightenaboutherandsherealizedalittleofthestrugglehewasmaking。Yethistonewasbraveandcheerful。
  “Yes,“hesaid。“Well,I——Ikindofcal’latedthatwouldcomesomedayorother。It’sallright,Mary’-Gusta。Zoethandmehavetalkeditoverandallwewantistoseeyouhappy。Ifyousaidyestohim,ZoethandI’llsay’Godblessyou’tobothofyou。“
  Shereachedforhishandandliftedittoherlips。“Iknowyouwould,“shesaid。“Allyourlivesyouhavebeenthinkingofothersandnotofyourselves。ButIdidn’tsayyes,UncleShad。Iamnotgoingtobemarriednoworbyandby。Idon’twanttobe。IamthesilentpartnerofHamiltonandCompany。IamabusinesswomanandI
  amgoingtowork——REALLYwork——fromnowon。No,youmustn’taskmeanymorequestions。We’lltrytoforgetitall。Kissme,UncleShad,dear。That’sit。Nowyougodowntosupper。Ishallstayhere;Iamnothungrytonight。“
  CHAPTERXXVI
  CaptainShaddidaskmorequestions,ofcourse。Heaskednomorethatevening——hejudgeditwisestnottodoso;butthenextday,seizinganopportunitywhenheandhisniecewerealone,heendeavoredtolearnalittlemoreconcerningherreasonsfordismissingCrawford。TheCaptainlikedyoungSmith,hehadbelievedMarylikedhimverymuch,and,althoughhecouldnothelpfeelingaguiltysenseofreliefbecausethedangerthatheandZoethmighthavetoshareheraffectionswithsomeoneelsewas,forthetimeatleast,outoftheway,hewaspuzzledandtroubledbytheabruptnessofthedismissal。Therewassomething,hefeltsure,whichhedidnotunderstand。
  “Ofcourse,Mary-’Gusta,“hesaid,“Iain’taskin’anything——thatis,Idon’tmeantoputmyoarinaboutwhatyoutoldmelastnight,but——well,yousee,Zoethandmewasbeginnin’tofeelthat’twasprettynighasettledthingbetweenyouandthatyoungman。“
  Marywassittingatthedesk——sheandherunclewereatthestoretogether——andshelookedupfromtheledgeroverwhichshehadbeenbendingandshookherheadreproachfully。Shelookedtiredandworn,soitseemedtoCaptainShadrach,asifshehadnotsleptwellthenightbefore,orperhapsforseveralnights。
  “UncleShad,“shesaid,“whatdidItellyou?“
  “Eh?Why,youtoldme——Youknowwhatyoutoldme,Mary-’Gusta。
  Whatdoyouaskthatfor?“
  “BecauseIthinkyouhaveforgottenthemostimportantpartofit。
  Itoldyouweweregoingtoforgetitall。Andweare。Wearenotgoingtospeakofitagain。“
  “But,Mary-’Gusta,why——“
  “No,UncleShad。“
  “Butdojusttellmethismuch;ifyoudon’tIshan’trestinpeace:
  youdidn’tsendhimawayonaccountofZoethandme?Itwan’tjustbecauseyouthoughtweneededyou?“
  “No,UncleShad。“
  “Then——“