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Deliverance: A Romance of the Virginia Tobacco Fields, The
Book V - The Ancient Law   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter VI. Treats of the Tragedy Which Wears a Comic Mask
Ellen Glasgow
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       _ As she hastened on, Christopher's presence was still with
       her--his arm still enveloped her, his voice still spoke in her
       ears; and so rapt was the ecstasy in which she moved that it was
       with a positive shock that she found herself presently before the
       little area which led into the brick kitchen in the basement of
       the Hall. Here from the darkness her name was spoken in a stifled
       voice, while a hand reached out and clutched her by the shoulder.
       "I say, Maria, I've been waiting hours to speak to you."
       Forcing back the cry upon her lips, she opened the door and stole
       softly into the kitchen. Then, turning, she faced Will with a
       frightened gesture.
       "How reckless--how very reckless!" she exclaimed in a whisper.
       He closed the door that led up into the house, and coming over to
       the stove, where the remains of a fire still smouldered in a deep
       red glow, stood looking at her with nervous twitches of his
       reddened eyelids. There was a wildness in his face before which
       she fell back appalled, and his whole appearance, from the damp
       hair lying in streaks upon his forehead to his restless feet
       which he shuffled continually as he talked, betrayed an agitation
       so extreme as to cause her a renewed pang of foreboding.
       "Oh, Will, you have been drinking again!" she said, in the same
       frightened whisper.
       "And why not?" he demanded, throwing out his words between thick
       breaths. "What business is it of yours or of anybody else's if I
       have been? A pretty sister you are--aren't you?--to let a fellow
       rot away on a tobacco farm while you wear diamonds on your
       fingers."
       She looked at him steadily for a moment, and his shifting glance
       fell slowly to the floor.
       "If you are in any fresh trouble you may as well tell me at
       once," she said. "It is a mere waste of time and breath to
       reproach me. You can't possibly make me angry to-night, for I
       wear an armour of which you do not dream, and so little a thing
       as abuse does not even touch me. Besides, grandfather may hear us
       and come down at any moment. So speak quickly."
       Her coolness sobered him instantly, as if a splash of icewater
       had been thrown into his face, and his tone lost its
       aggressiveness and sank into a whimpering complaint.
       It was the same old thing, he went on, only worse and worse.
       Molly had been ill again, and the doctor ordered medicine he
       couldn't buy. Yes, he had tried to take the diamond from her, but
       she flew into hysterics at the mere mention of selling it. Once
       he had dragged it off her finger, and had given it back again
       because her wildness frightened him, "Why on earth did you ever
       let her have it?" he finished querulously.
       "Well, I never imagined she would be quite so silly," returned
       Maria, distressed by what she heard. "But it may be that jewels
       are really her passion, and the bravest of us, I suppose, are
       those who sacrifice most for their dearest desire. I really don't
       see what is to be done, Will. I haven't any money, and I don't
       dare ask grandfather, for he makes me keep a strict account of
       every cent I spend. Only yesterday he told me he couldn't allow
       me but two postage stamps a week, and yet I believe that he is
       worth considerably more than half a million dollars. Sometimes I
       think it is nothing short of pure insanity, he grows so miserly
       about little things. Aunt Saidie and I have both noticed that he
       would rather spend a hundred dollars--though it is like drawing
       out an eyetooth--than keep a pound of fresh butter from the
       market."
       "And yet he likes you?"
       "Oh, he tolerates me, as far as that goes; but I don't believe he
       likes anything on earth except his money. It's his great passion,
       just as Molly's love of jewelry is hers. There is something so
       tremendous about it that one can't help respect it. As for me, he
       only bears with my presence so long as I ask him for absolutely
       nothing. He knows I have my little property, and we had a
       dreadful scene when I refused to let him keep my check-book. I
       gave you all the interest of the last six months, you know, and
       the other isn't due until November. If he finds out that it goes
       to you, heaven help us!"
       "And there's not the faintest hope of his coming to his senses?
       Have you spoken of me again?"
       "I've mentioned your name twice, that was all. He rose and
       stamped out of the room, and didn't speak for days. Aunt Saidie
       and I have planned to bring the baby over when it comes. That may
       soften him--especially if it should be a boy."
       "Oh, the bottom will drop out of things by that time," he
       returned savagely, tearing pieces of straw from his worn
       hat-brim. "If this keeps up much longer, Maria, I warn you now
       I'll run away. I'll go off some day on a freight train and hide
       my head until he dies; then I'll come back to enjoy his precious
       money."
       She sighed, thinking hopelessly of the altered will.
       "And Molly?" she questioned, for lack of a more effectual
       argument.
       "I can't stop to think of Molly: it drives me mad. What use am I
       to her, anyway, I'd like to know? She'd be quite as well off
       without me, for we do nothing but quarrel now night and day; and
       yet I love her--I love her awfully," he added in a drunken
       whimper.
       "Oh, Will, Will, be a man for her sake!"
       "I can't; I can't," he protested, his voice rising in anger. "I
       can't stand the squalor of this life; it's killing me. Why, look
       at the way I was brought up, never stopping an instant to ask
       whether I could have a thing I wanted. He had no right to
       accustom me to luxuries till I couldn't do without them and then
       throw me out upon the world like this!"
       "Hush! Hush! Your voice is too loud. It will bring him down."
       "I'll be hanged if I care!" he retorted, but involuntarily he
       lowered his tone.
       "You mustn't stay here five minutes longer," urged Maria. "I'll
       give you a diamond brooch I still have left, and you may take it
       to town yourself and sell it. Only promise me on your honour that
       you will spend the money on the things Molly needs."
       "Oh, I promise," he replied roughly. "Where is it?"
       "In my room. I must get it now. Be perfectly quiet until I
       return."
       Opening the door and closing it carefully behind her, she stole
       noiselessly up the dark staircase, while Will, twitching
       nervously, paced restlessly up and down the brick floor. A pile
       of walnuts which Miss Saidie had been shelling for cake lay on
       the hearth, and, picking up the heavy old hammer she had used, he
       cracked a nut and ate it hurriedly. Hungry as he was--for he had
       not been home to supper--he found difficulty in swallowing, and,
       laying the hammer down upon the bricks, he rose and stood waiting
       beside the stove. Though the night was warm, a shiver ran
       suddenly through him, and, stirring the fading embers with a
       splinter of resinous pine, he held out his shaking hands to the
       blaze.
       In a moment Maria entered and handed him the brooch in a little
       box.
       "Try to keep up courage, Will," she said, pushing him into the
       area under the back steps; "and above all things, do not come
       here again. It is so unsafe."
       He promised lightly that he would not, and then told her good-by
       with an affectionate pat upon the arm.
       "Well, you are a bully good chap, after all," he added, as he
       stepped out into the night.
       For a while Maria stood looking after him across the moonlit
       fields, and then, even as she turned to enter the house, the last
       troubled hour was blotted from her consciousness, and she lived
       over again the moment of Christopher's embrace. With that
       peculiar power to revive and hold within the memory an instant's
       emotion which is possessed by ardent and imaginative women, she
       experienced again all the throbbing exhilaration, all the fulness
       of being, which had seemed to crowd the heartbeats of so many
       ordinary years into the single minute that was packed with life.
       That minute was hers now for all time; it was a possession of
       which no material loss, no untoward fate could defraud her; and
       as she felt her steps softly up the dark staircase, it seemed to
       her that she saw her way by the light of the lamp that was
       burning in her bosom.
       To her surprise, as she reached the dining-room a candle was
       thrust out before her, and, illuminated by the trembling flame,
       she saw the face of Fletcher, hairy, bloated, sinister, with the
       shadow of evil impulses worked into the mouth and eyes. For a
       moment he wagged at her in silence, and in the flickering
       radiance she saw each swollen vein, each gloomy furrow, with
       exaggerated distinctness. He reminded her vaguely of some hideous
       gargoyle she had seen hanging from an early Gothic cathedral.
       "So you've taken to gallivanting, like the rest," he observed
       with coarse pleasantry. "I'd thought you were a staid and
       sober-minded woman for your years, but it seems that you are of a
       bunch with all the others."
       "I've been out in the moonlight," answered Maria, while a
       sensation of sickness stole over her.
       "It is as bright as day, but I thought you were in bed long ago."
       "Thar's not much sleep for me during tobacco planting, I kin tell
       you," rejoined Fletcher; "but as for you, I reckon thar's more
       beneath your words than you like to own to. You've been over to
       see that young scamp, ain't you?"
       "I saw him, but I did not go out for that purpose."
       "It's the truth, I reckon, for I've never known you to lie, and
       I'll be hanged if it ain't that I like about you, after all.
       You're the only person I kin spot, man or woman, who speaks the
       truth jest for the darn love of it."
       "And yet I lived a lie for five years," returned Maria quietly.
       "Maybe so, maybe so; but it set on you like the burr on a
       chestnut, somehow, and when it rolled off thar you were, as clean
       as ever. Well, you're an honest and spunky woman, and I can't
       help your traipsing over thar even if I wanted to. But thar's one
       thing I tell you now right flat--if that young rascal wants to
       keep a whole skin he'd better stay off this place. I'd shoot him
       down as soon as I would a sheep-killing hound."
       "Oh, he won't come here," said Maria faintly; and, going into the
       dining-room, she dropped into a chair and lay with her arms
       outstretched upon the table. The second shock to her emotional
       ecstasy had been too much, and the furniture and Fletcher's face
       and the glare of the candle all spun before her in a sickening
       confusion.
       After looking at her anxiously an instant, Fletcher poured out a
       glass of water and begged her to take a swallow. "Thar, thar, I
       didn't mean to skeer you," he said kindly. "You mustn't mind my
       rough-and-ready ways, for I'm a plain man, God knows. If you are
       sure you feel fainty," he added, "I'll git you a sip of whisky,
       but it's a pity to waste it unless you have a turn."
       "Oh, I'm all right," answered Maria, sitting up, and returning
       his inquiring gaze with a shake of the head. "My ankle is still
       weak, you know, and I felt a sudden twinge from standing on it.
       What were you looking for at this hour?"
       "Well, I've been out in the air sense supper, and I feel kind of
       gone. I thought I'd like a bite of something--maybe a scrap of
       that cold jowl we had for dinner. But I can't find it. Do you
       reckon Saidie is such a blamed fool as to throw the scraps away?"
       "There's Malindy, you know; she must eat."
       "I'd like to see one nigger eat up half a jowl," grumbled
       Fletcher, rooting among the dishes in the sideboard. "Thar was a
       good big hunk of it left, for you didn't touch it. You don't seem
       to thrive on our victuals," he added bluntly, turning to peer
       into her face.
       "I'm a small eater; it makes little difference."
       "Well, we mustn't starve you," he said, as he went back to his
       search; "and if it's a matter of a pound of fresh butter, or a
       spring chicken, even, I won't let it stand in your way. Why,
       what's this, I wonder?"
       Ripping out an oath with an angry snort, he drew forth Miss
       Saidie's walnut cake and held it squarely before the candle. "I
       declar, if she ain't been making walnut cake agin, and I told her
       last week I wan't going to have her wasting all my eggs. Look at
       it, will you? If she's beat up one egg in that cake she's beat up
       a dozen, to say nothing of the sugar!"
       "Don't scold her, grandfather. She has a sweet tooth, you know,
       and it's so hard for her not to make desserts."
       "Pish! Tush! I don't reckon her tooth's any sweeter than mine.
       I've a powerful taste for trash myself, and always had since the
       time I overate ripe honey-shucks when I was six months old; but
       the taste don't make me throw away good money. I'll have no more
       of this, I tell you, and I've said my say. She can bake a bit of
       cake once a week if she'll stint herself to an egg or two, but
       when it comes to mixing up a dozen at a time, I'll be darned if
       I'll allow it."
       Lifting the plate in one hand, he stood surveying the big cake
       with disapproving yet admiring eyes. "It would serve her right if
       I was to eat up every precious crumb," he remarked at last.
       "Suppose you try it," suggested Maria pleasantly. "It would
       please Aunt Saidie."
       "It ain't to please her," sourly responded Fletcher, as he drove
       the knife with a lunge into the yellow loaf. "She's a thriftless,
       no-account housekeeper, and I'll tell her so tomorrow."
       Still holding the knife in his clenched fist, he sat munching the
       cake with a relish which brought a smile to Maria's tired eves.
       "Yes, I've a powerful sweet tooth myself," he added, as he cut
       another slice. _
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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