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Adventures of Captain Horn, The
Chapter 27. Edna Makes Her Plans
Frank R Stockton
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       _ CHAPTER XXVII. EDNA MAKES HER PLANS
       When she had finished reading the many pages of the letter, Edna leaned
       back on the sofa and closed her eyes. Ralph sat upright in his chair and
       gazed intently before him.
       "So we are not to see the captain again," he said presently. "But I
       suppose that when a man has a thing to do, the best thing is to go
       and do it."
       "Yes," said his sister, "that is the best thing."
       "And what are we to do?"
       "I am now trying to decide," she answered.
       "Doesn't he say anything about it?"
       "Not a word," replied Edna. "I suppose he considered he had made his
       letter long enough."
       About an hour after this, when the two met again, Edna said: "I have been
       writing to Captain Horn, and am going to write to Mrs. Cliff. I have
       decided what we shall do. I am going to France."
       "To France!" cried Ralph. "Both of us?"
       "Yes, both of us. I made up my mind about this since I saw you."
       "What are you going to France for?" he exclaimed. "Come, let us have it
       all--quick."
       "I am going to France," said his sister, "because Captain Horn is going
       there, and when he arrives, I wish to be there to meet him. There is no
       reason for our staying here--"
       "Indeed, there is not," interpolated Ralph, earnestly.
       "If we must go anywhere to wait," continued his sister, "I should
       prefer Paris."
       "Edna," cried Ralph, "you are a woman of solid sense, and if the
       captain wants his gold divided up, he should get you to do it. And now,
       when are we going, and is Mrs. Cliff to go? What are you going to do
       with the two darkies?"
       "We shall start East as soon as the captain sails," replied his sister,
       "and I do not know what Mrs. Cliff will do until I hear from her, and as
       for Cheditafa and Mok, we shall take them with us."
       "Hurrah!" cried Ralph. "Mok for my valet in Paris. That's the best thing
       I have got out of the caves yet."
       Captain Horn was a strong man, prompt in action, and no one could know
       him long without being assured of these facts. But although Edna's
       outward personality was not apt to indicate quickness of decision and
       vigor of purpose, that quickness and vigor were hers quite as much as the
       captain's when occasion demanded, and occasion demanded them now. The
       captain had given no indication of what he would wish her to do during
       the time which would be occupied by his voyage to Peru, his work there,
       and his subsequent long cruise around South America to Europe. She
       expected that in his next letter he would say something about this, but
       she wished first to say something herself.
       She did not know this bold sailor as well as she loved him, and she was
       not at all sure that the plans he might make for her during his absence
       would suit her disposition or her purposes. Consequently, she resolved to
       submit her plans to him before he should write again. Above everything
       else, she wished to be in that part of the world at which Captain Horn
       might be expected to arrive when his present adventure should be
       accomplished. She did not wish to be sent for to go to France. She did
       not wish to be told that he was coming to America. Wherever he might
       land, there she would be.
       The point that he might be unsuccessful, and might never leave South
       America, did not enter into her consideration. She was acting on the
       basis that he was a man who was likely to succeed in his endeavors. If
       she should come to know that he had not succeeded, then her actions would
       be based upon the new circumstances.
       Furthermore, she had now begun to make plans for her future life. She had
       been waiting for Captain Horn to come to her, and to find out what he
       intended to do. Now she knew he was not coming to her for a long time,
       and was aware of what he intended to do, and she made her own plans. Of
       course, she dealt only with the near future. All beyond that was vague,
       and she could not touch it even with her thoughts. When sending his
       remittances, the captain had written that she and Mrs. Cliff must
       consider the money he sent her as income to be expended, not as principal
       to be put away or invested. He had made provisions for the future of all
       of them, in case he should not succeed in his present project, and what
       he had not set aside with that view he had devoted to his own
       operations, and to the maintenance, for a year, of Edna, Ralph, and Mrs.
       Cliff, in such liberal and generous fashion as might please them, and he
       had apportioned the remittances in a way which he deemed suitable. As
       Edna disbursed the funds, she knew that this proportion was three
       quarters for herself and Ralph, and one quarter for Mrs. Cliff.
       "He divides everything into four parts," she thought, "and gives me
       his share."
       Acting on her principle of getting every good thing out of life that
       life could give her, and getting it while life was able to give it to
       her, there was no doubt in regard to her desires. Apart from her wish to
       go where the captain expected to go, she considered that every day now
       spent in America was a day lost. If her further good fortune should
       never arrive, and the money in hand should be gone, she wished, before
       that time came, to engraft upon her existence a period of life in
       Europe--life of such freedom and opportunity as never before she had had
       a right to dream of.
       Across this golden outlook there came a shadow. If he had wished to come
       to her, she would have waited for him anywhere, or if he had wished her
       to go to him, she would have gone anywhere. But it seemed as if that mass
       of gold, which brought them together, must keep them apart, a long time
       certainly, perhaps always. Nothing that had happened had had any element
       of certainty about it, and the future was still less certain. If he had
       come to her before undertaking the perilous voyage now before him, there
       would have been a certainty in her life which would have satisfied her
       forever. But he did not come. It was plainly his intention to have
       nothing to do with the present until the future should be settled, so far
       as he could settle it.
       In a few days after she had written to Captain Horn, informing him of the
       plans she had made to go to France, Edna received an answer which
       somewhat disappointed her. If the captain's concurrence in her proposed
       foreign sojourn had not been so unqualified and complete, if he had
       proposed even some slight modification, if he had said anything which
       would indicate that he felt he had authority to oppose her movements if
       he did not approve of them,--in fact, even if he had opposed her
       plan,--she would have been better pleased. But he wrote as if he were her
       financial agent, and nothing more. The tone of his letter was kind, the
       arrangements he said he had made in regard to the money deposited in San
       Francisco showed a careful concern for her pleasure and convenience, but
       nothing in his letter indicated that he believed himself possessed in any
       way of the slightest control over her actions. There was nothing like a
       sting in that kind and generous letter, but when she had read it, the
       great longing of Edna's heart turned and stung her. But she would give no
       sign of this wound. She was a brave woman, and could wait still longer.
       The captain informed her that everything was going well with his
       enterprise--that Burke had arrived, and had agreed to take part in the
       expedition, and that he expected that his brig, the _Miranda_, would be
       ready in less than a week. He mentioned again that he was extremely busy
       with his operations, but he did not say that he was sorry he was unable
       to come to take leave of her. He detailed in full the arrangements he had
       made, and then placed in her hands the entire conduct of the financial
       affairs of the party until she should hear from him again. When he
       arrived in France, he would address her in care of his bankers, but in
       regard to two points only did he now say anything which seemed like a
       definite injunction or even request. He asked Edna to urge upon Mrs.
       Cliff the necessity of saying nothing about the discovery of the gold,
       for if it should become known anywhere from Greenland to Patagonia, he
       might find a steamer lying off the Rackbirds' cove when his slow
       sailing-vessel should arrive there. The other request was that Edna keep
       the two negroes with her if this would not prove inconvenient. But if
       this plan would at all trouble her, he asked that they be sent to him
       immediately.
       In answer to this letter, Edna merely telegraphed the captain, informing
       him that she would remain in San Francisco until she had heard that he
       had sailed when she would immediately start for the East, and for France,
       with Ralph and the two negroes.
       Three days after this she received a telegram from Captain Horn, stating
       that he would sail in an hour, and the next day she and her little party
       took a train for New York. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. An Introductory Disaster
Chapter 2. A New Face In Camp
Chapter 3. A Change Of Lodgings
Chapter 4. Another New Face
Chapter 5. The Rackbirds
Chapter 6. Three Wild Beasts
Chapter 7. Gone!
Chapter 8. The Alarm
Chapter 9. An Amazing Narration
Chapter 10. The Captain Explores
Chapter 11. A New Hemisphere
Chapter 12. A Tradition And A Waistcoat
Chapter 13. "Mine!"
Chapter 14. A Pile Of Fuel
Chapter 15. The Cliff-Maka Scheme
Chapter 16. On A Business Basis
Chapter 17. "A Fine Thing, No Matter What Happens"
Chapter 18. Mrs. Cliff Is Amazed
Chapter 19. Left Behind
Chapter 20. At The Rackbirds' Cove
Chapter 21. In The Gates
Chapter 22. A Pack-Mule
Chapter 23. His Present Share
Chapter 24. His Fortune Under His Feet
Chapter 25. At The Palmetto Hotel
Chapter 26. The Captain's Letter
Chapter 27. Edna Makes Her Plans
Chapter 28. "Home, Sweet Home"
Chapter 29. A Committee Of Ladies
Chapter 30. At The Hotel Boileau
Chapter 31. Waiting
Chapter 32. A Mariner's Wits Take A Little Flight
Chapter 33. The "Miranda" Takes In Cargo
Chapter 34. Burke And His Chisel
Chapter 35. The Captain Writes A Letter
Chapter 36. A Horse-Dealer Appears On The Scene
Chapter 37. The "Arato"
Chapter 38. The Coast Of Patagonia
Chapter 39. Shirley Spies A Sail
Chapter 40. The Battle Of The Golden Wall
Chapter 41. The "Arato" Anchors Nearer Shore
Chapter 42. Inkspot Has A Dream Of Heaven
Chapter 43. Mok As A Vocalist
Chapter 44. Mr. Banker's Speculation
Chapter 45. Mental Turmoils
Chapter 46. A Problem
Chapter 47. A Man-Chimpanzee
Chapter 48. Enter Captain Horn
Chapter 49. A Golden Afternoon
Chapter 50. A Case Of Recognition
Chapter 51. Banker Does Some Important Business
Chapter 52. The Captain Takes His Stand
Chapter 53. A Little Gleam Afar