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Deliverance: A Romance of the Virginia Tobacco Fields, The
Book IV - The Awakening   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter VIII. Between Maria and Christopher
Ellen Glasgow
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       _ A little later, Maria, with a white scarf thrown over her head,
       came out of the Hall and passed swiftly along the road under the
       young green leaves which were putting out on the trees. When she
       reached the whitewashed gate before the Blake cottage she saw
       Christopher ploughing in the field on the left of the house, and
       turning into the little path which trailed through the tall weeds
       beside the "worm" fence, she crossed the yard and stood
       hesitating at the beginning of the open furrow he had left behind
       him. His gaze was bent upon the horses, and for a moment she
       watched him in attentive silence, her eyes dwelling on his
       massive figure, which cast a gigantic blue-black shadow across
       the April sunbeams. She saw him at the instant with a
       distinctness, a clearness of perception, that she had never been
       conscious of until to-day, as if each trivial detail in his
       appearance was magnified by the pale yellow sunshine through
       which she looked upon it. The abundant wheaten-brown hair, waving
       from the moist circle drawn by the hat he had thrown aside, the
       strong masculine profile burned to a faint terracotta shade from
       wind and sun, and the powerful hands knotted and roughened by
       heavy labour, all stood out vividly in the mental image which
       remained with her when she lowered her eyes.
       Aroused by a sound from the house, he looked up and saw her
       standing on the edge of the ploughed field, her lace scarf blown
       softly in the April wind. After a single minute of breathless
       surprise he tossed the long ropes on the ground, and, leaving the
       plough, came rapidly across the loose clods of upturned earth.
       "Did you come because I was thinking of you?" he asked simply,
       with the natural directness which had appealed so strongly to her
       fearless nature.
       "Were you thinking of me?" her faint smile shone on him for an
       instant; "and were your thoughts as grave, I wonder, as my reason
       for coming?"
       "So you have a reason, then?"
       "Did you think I should dare to come without one?"
       The light wind caught her scarf, blowing the long ends about her
       head. From the frame of soft white lace her eyes looked dark and
       solemn and very distant.
       "I had hoped that you had no other reason than kindness." He had
       lost entirely the rustic restraint he had once felt in her
       presence, and, as he stood there in his clothes of dull blue
       jean, it was easy to believe in the gallant generations at his
       back. Was the fret of their gay adventures in his blood? she
       wondered.
       "You will see the kindness in my reason, I hope," she answered
       quietly, while the glow of her sudden resolution illumined her
       face, "and at least you will admit the justice--though belated."
       He drew a step nearer. "And it concerns you--and me?" he asked.
       "It concerns you--oh, yes, yes, and me also, though very
       slightly. I have just learned--just a moment ago--what you must
       have thought I knew all along."
       As he fell back she saw that he paled slowly beneath his sunburn.
       "You have just learned--what?" he demanded.
       "The truth," she replied; "as much of the truth as one may learn
       in an hour: how it came that you are here and I am there--at the
       Hall."
       "At the Hall?" he repeated, and there was relief in the quick
       breath he drew; "I had forgotten the Hall."
       "Forgotten it? Why, I thought it was your dream, your longing,
       your one great memory."
       Smiling into her eyes, he shook his head twice before he
       answered.
       "It was all that--once."
       "Then it is not so now?" she asked, disappointed, "and what I
       have to tell you will lose half its value."
       "So it is about the Hall?"
       With one hand she held back the fluttering lace upon her bosom,
       while lifting the other she pointed across the ploughed fields to
       the old gray chimneys huddled amid the budding oaks.
       "Does it not make you homesick to stand here and look at it?" she
       asked. "Think! For more than two hundred years your people lived
       there, and there is not a room within the house, nor a spot upon
       the land, that does not hold some sacred association for those of
       your name." Startled by the passion in her words, he turned from
       the Hall at which he had been gazing.
       "What do you mean? " he demanded imperatively. "What do you wish
       to say?"
       "Look at the Hall and not at me while I tell you. It is this--now
       listen and do not turn from it for an instant. Blake Hall--I have
       just found it out--will come to me at grandfather's death, and
       when it does--when it does I shall return it to your family--the
       whole of it, every lovely acre. Oh, don't look at me--look at the
       Hall!"
       But he looked neither at her nor at the Hall, for his gaze
       dropped to the ground and hung blankly upon a clod of dry brown
       earth. She saw him grow pale to the lips and dark blue circles
       come out slowly about his eyes.
       "It is but common justice; you see that," she urged.
       At this he raised his head and returned her look.
       "And what of Will?" he asked.
       Her surprise showed in her face, and at sight of it he repeated
       his question with a stubborn insistence: "But what of Will? What
       has been done for Will?"
       "Oh, I don't know; I don't know. The break is past mending. But
       it is not of him that I must speak to you now--it is of yourself.
       Don't you see that the terrible injustice has bowed me to the
       earth? What am I better than a dependent--a charity ward who has
       lived for years upon your money? My very education, my little
       culture, the refinements you see in me--these even I have no real
       right to, for they belong to your family. While you have worked
       as a labourer in the field I have been busy squandering the
       wealth which was not mine."
       His face grew gentle as he looked at her.
       "If the Blake money has made you what you are, then it has not
       been utterly wasted," he replied.
       "Oh, you don't understand--you don't understand," she repeated,
       pressing her hands upon her bosom, as if to quiet her fluttering
       breath. "You have suffered from it all along, but it is I who
       suffer most to-day--who suffer most because I am upon the side of
       the injustice. I can have no peace until you tell me that I may
       still do my poor best to make amends--that when your home is mine
       you will let me give it back to you."
       "It is too late," he answered with bitter humour. "You can't put
       a field-hand in a fine house and make him a gentleman. It is too
       late to undo what was done twenty years ago. The place can never
       be mine again--I have even ceased to want it. Give it to Will."
       "I couldn't if I wanted to," she replied; "but I don't want to--I
       don't want to. It must go back to you and to your sisters. Do you
       think I could ever be owner of it now? Even if it comes to me
       when I am an old woman, I shall always feel myself a stranger in
       the house, though I should live there day and night for fifty
       years. No, no; it is impossible that I should ever keep it for an
       instant. It must go back to you and to the Blakes who come after
       you."
       "There will be no Blakes after me," he answered. "I am the last."
       "Then promise me that if the Hall is ever mine you will take it."
       "From you? No: not unless I took it to hand on to your brother.
       It is an old score that you have brought up--one that lasted
       twenty years before it was settled. It is too late to stir up
       matters now."
       "It is not too late," she said earnestly. "It is never too late
       to try to undo a wrong."
       "The wrong was not yours; it must never touch you," he replied.
       "If my life was as clean as yours, it would, perhaps, not be too
       late for me either. Ten years ago I might have felt differently
       about it, but not now."
       He broke off hurriedly, and Maria, with a hopeless gesture,
       turned back into the path.
       "Then I shall appeal to your sisters when the time comes," she
       responded quietly.
       Catching the loose ends of her scarf, he drew her slowly around
       until she met his eyes. "And I have said nothing to you--to you,"
       he began, in a constrained voice, which he tried in vain to
       steady, "because it is so hard to say anything and not say too
       much. This, at least, you must know--that I am your servant now
       and shall be all my life."
       She smiled sadly, looking down at the scarf which was crushed in
       his hands.
       "And yet you will not grant the wish of my heart," she said.
       "How could I? Put me back in the Hall, and I should be as
       ignorant and as coarse as I am out here. A labourer is all I am
       and all I am fit to be. I once had a rather bookish ambition, you
       know, but that is over--I wanted to read Greek and translate 'The
       Iliad' and all that--and yet to-day I doubt if I could write a
       decent letter to save my soul. It's partly my fault, of course,
       but you can't know you could never know--the abject bitterness
       and despair of those years when I tried to sink myself to the
       level of the brutes--tried to forget that I was any better than
       the oxen I drove. No, there's no pulling me up again; such things
       aren't lived over, and I'm down for good."
       Her tears, which she had held back, broke forth at his words, and
       he saw them fall upon her bosom, where her hands were still
       tightly clasped.
       "And it is all our fault," she said brokenly.
       "Not yours, surely."
       "It is not too late," she went on passionately, laying her hand
       upon his arm and looking up at him with a misty brightness. "Oh,
       if you would let me make amends--let me help you!"
       "Is there any help?" he asked, with his eyes on the hand upon his
       arm.
       "If you will let me, I will find it. We will take up your study
       where you broke it off--we will come up step by step, even to
       Homer, if you like. I am fond of books, you know, and I have had
       my fancy for Greek, too. Oh, it will be so easy--so easy; and
       when the time comes for you to go back to the Hall, I shall have
       made you the most learned Blake of the whole line."
       He bent quickly and kissed the hand which trembled on his sleeve.
       "Make of me what you please," he said; "I am at your service."
       For the second time he saw the wonderful light--the fervour--
       illumine her face, and then fade slowly, leaving a still, soft
       radiance of expression.
       "Then I may teach you all that you haven't learned," she said
       with a happy little laugh. "How fortunate that I should have been
       born a bookworm. Shall we begin with Greek?"
       He smiled. "No; let's start with English--and start low."
       "Then we'll do both; but where shall it be? Not at the Hall."
       "Hardly. There's a bench, though, down by the poplar spring that
       looks as if it were meant to be in school. Do you know the place?
       It's in my pasture by the meadow brook?"
       "I can find it, and I'll bring the books to-morrow at this hour.
       Will you come?"
       "To-morrow--and every day?"
       "Every day."
       For an instant he looked at her in perplexity. "I may as well
       tell you," he said at last, "that I'm one of the very biggest
       rascals on God's earth. I'm not worth all this, you know; that's
       honest."
       "And so are you," she called back gaily, as she turned from him
       and went rapidly along the little path. _
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LIST OF CHARACTERS
Book I- The Inheritance
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter I. The Man in the Field
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter II. The Owner of Blake Hall
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter III. Showing That a Little Culture Entails Great Care
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter IV. Of Human Nature in the Raw State
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter V. The Wreck of the Blakes
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter VI. Carraway Plays Courtier
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter VII. In Which a Stand Is Made
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter VIII. Treats of a Passion That Is Not Love
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter IX. Cynthia
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter X. Sentimental and Otherwise
Book II - The Temptation
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter I. The Romance That Might Have Been
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter II. The Romance That Was
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter III. Fletcher's Move and Christopher's Counterstroke
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter IV. A Gallant Deed That Leads to Evil
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter V. The Glimpse of a Bride
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter VI. Shows Fletcher in a New Light
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter VII. In Which Hero and Villain Appear as One
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter VIII. Between the Devil and the Deep Sea
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter IX. As the Twig Is Bent
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter X. Powers of Darkness
Book III - The Revenge
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter I. In Which Tobacco Is Hero
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter II. Between Christopher and Will
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter III. Mrs. Blake Speaks Her Mind on Several Matters
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter IV. In Which Christopher Hesitates
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter V. The Happiness of Tucker
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter VI. The Wages of Folly
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter VII. The Toss of a Coin
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter VIII. In Which Christopher Triumphs
Book IV - The Awakening
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter I. The Unforeseen
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter II. Maria Returns to the Hall
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter III. The Day Afterward
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter IV. The Meeting in the Night
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter V. Maria Stands on Christopher's Ground
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter VI. The Growing Light
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter VII. In which Carraway Speaks the Truth to Maria
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter VIII. Between Maria and Christopher
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter IX. Christopher Faces Himself
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter X. By the Poplar Spring
Book V - The Ancient Law
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter I. Christopher Seeks an Escape
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter II. The Measure of Maria
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter III. Will's Ruin
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter IV. In Which Mrs. Blake's Eyes are Opened
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter V. Christopher Plants by Moonlight
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter VI. Treats of the Tragedy Which Wears a Comic Mask
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter VII. Will Faces Desperation and Stands at Bay
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter VIII. How Christopher Comes into His Revenge
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter IX. The Fulfilling of the Law
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter X. The Wheel of Life