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Mountain Blood: A Novel
Part Two   Part Two - Chapter 11
Joseph Hergesheimer
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       _ PART TWO
       CHAPTER XI
       On Sunday he strolled soon after breakfast in the direction of the priest's. Merlier was standing at the door to his house. Gordon noted that the other was growing heavier, folds dropped from the corners of his shaven lips, his eyes had retreated in fatty pouches. His gaze was still searchingly keen, but the priest was wearing out. Gordon stopped in response to his silent nod.
       "You ought to let up on yourself a little," he advised.
       "Why?" the other briefly queried.
       "'Why?', so's you will last longer."
       To this the priest made no reply. A short, awkward silence followed during which Gordon grew restive. "If I looked so glum about Greenstream," he continued, "I'd move out." It was as though he had not spoken. "I'd go back where I came from," he persisted sharply. The priest's lips moved, formed words:
       "'Che discese da Fiesole ab antico.'"
       His imperturbable manner offered Gordon not the slightest opening; and he continued uncomfortably on his way. There was a quality about that thick, black-clad figure which cast a shadow over the cloudless day, it blunted the anticipated pleasure of his meeting with Meta Beggs. There was about Merlier a smell of death like the smell of sooty smoke.
       The stream lay shining along its wooded course; the range greenly aflame with new foliage rose into radiant space; flickers hammered on resonant, dead wood. Gordon banished the somber memory of the priest. He was conscious of a sudden excitement, a keenness of response to living like a renewal of youth. He wished that Meta Beggs would appear; his direction to her had been vague; she might easily go astray and miss him. But he saw her, after what seemed an interminable period, leaving the road and crossing the strip of sod that bordered the stream. She had on a white dress that clung to her figure, and a broad, flapping straw hat wound with white. She saw him and waved. The brush rose thickly along the water, but there was a footway at its edge, with occasional, broader reaches of rough sod. In one of the latter she stooped, made a swift movement with the hem of her skirt.
       "See," she smiled; "I said you would like me in them."
       He attempted to catch her in his arms, but she eluded him. "Please," she protested coolly, "don't be tiresome.... We must talk."
       He followed her by the devious edge of the stream to the ruined mill. He could see the blurring impress of the black silk stockings through the web of her dress; the dress had shrunk from repeated washing, and drew tightly across her shoulders. She walked lightly and well, and sat with a graceful sweep on a fallen, moldering beam. Beyond them the broad expanse of the mill pond was paved with still shadows; a dust of minute insects swept above the clouded surface. The water ran slowly over the dam, everywhere cushioned with deep moss, and fell with an eternal splatter on the rocks below.
       Gordon rolled a cigarette from the muslin bag of Green Goose. "Why do you still smoke that grass?" she demanded curiously. "You could get the best cigars from Cuba." He explained, and she regarded him impatiently. "Can't you realize what possibilities you have!"
       "I might, with assistance."
       "If you once saw the world! I've been reading about Paris, the avenues and cafes and theaters. Why, in the cafes there they drink only champagne and dance all night. The women come with their lovers in little closed carriages, and go back to little closed rooms hung in brocade. They never wear anything but evening clothes, for they are never out but at night--satin gowns with trains and bare shoulders."
       He endeavored to picture himself in such a city, amid such a life, with Meta Beggs. He felt that she would be entirely in place in the little carriages, drinking champagne. "That's where they eat frogs," he remarked inanely. In the tensity of her feeling, the bitterness of her longing, her envy, she cursed him for a dull fool. Then, recovering her composure with a struggle:
       "I would make a man drunk with pleasure in a place like that. He would be proud of me, and all the other men would hate him; they would all want me."
       "Some would come pretty near getting you, too," he replied with a flash of penetration; "those with the fastest horses or longest pockets."
       "I would be true to whoever took me there," she declared; "out of gratitude."
       He drew a deep breath. "What would you say," he inquired, leaning toward her, "to a trip to--to Richmond? We could be gone the best part of a week."
       She laughed scornfully. "Do you think I am as cheap as that--to be bought over Sunday?" She rose, and stood before him, sharply outlined against the foliage, the water, the momentary, flittering insects, taunting, provocative, sensual.
       "Five years ago," he told her, "if you had tried this foolery, I would have choked you, and thrown what was left in the dam."
       "And now--" she jeered fearlessly.
       "It's different," he admitted moodily.
       It was. Somewhere the lash had been lost from the whip of his desire. He was still eager, tormented by the wish to feel her disdainful mouth against his. The recrudescence of spring burned in his veins; but, at the same time, there was a new reluctance upon his flesh. The inanimate, obese mask of the priest, Lettice's sleeping countenance faintly stamped with pain, hovered in his consciousness. "It's different," he repeated.
       "You are losing your hold on pleasure," she observed critically aloof.
       He leaned forward, and grasped her wrist, and, with a slight motion, forced her upon her knees. "If you are pleasure I'm not," he challenged.
       "You are hurting my arm," she said coldly. His grip tightened, and a small grimace crossed her lips. "Let go," she demanded; and then a swift passion shrilled her voice. "Let go, you are crushing my wrist. Damn you to hell! if you spoil my wrist I'll kill you."
       For a moment, as he held her, she reminded Gordon of a venomous snake; he had never seen such a lithe, wicked hatred in any other human being. "You are a gentle object," he satirized her, loosening his hold.
       She rose slowly and stood fingering her wrist. The emotion died from her countenance. "You see," she explained, "my body is all I have to take me out of this," she motioned to the slumbering water, the towering range, "and I can't afford to have it spoiled. You wouldn't like me if I were lame or crooked. Men don't. The religious squashes can say all they like about the soul, but a woman's body is the only really important thing to her. No one bothers about your soul, but they judge your figure across the street."
       "Yours hasn't done you much good."
       "It will," she returned somberly, "it must--real lace and wine and ease." She came very close to him; he could feel the faint jarring of her heart, the moisture of her breath. "And you could get them for me. I would make you mad with sensation."
       He kissed her again and again, crushing her to him. She abandoned herself to his arms, but she was as untouched, as impersonal, as a stuffed woman of cool satin. In the end he voluntarily released her.
       "You wouldn't take fire from a pine knot," he said unsteadily.
       Her deft hands rearranged her hat. "Some day a man will murder me," she replied in level tones; "perhaps I'll get a thrill from that." Her voice grew as cutting as a surgeon's polished knife. "Please don't think I'm the kind of woman men take out in the woods and kiss. You may have discovered that I don't like kissing. I'm going to be honester still--last year, when you were mending the minister's ice house, and hadn't a dollar, I wasn't the smallest bit interested in you; and this year I am.--Not on account of the money itself," she was careful to add, "but because of you and the money together. Don't you see--it changed you; it's perfectly right that it should, and that I should recognize it."
       "That sounds fair enough," he agreed. "Now the question is, what are we going to do together, you and me and the money?"
       "Would you do what I wanted?" she asked at his shoulder.
       "Would you?"
       "Yes."
       "We might try Richmond."
       "Don't fool yourself," she returned hardily; "I know all about those trial trips. Any man I go with has got to go far: I don't intend to be left at some pokey little way station with everything gone and nothing accomplished."
       "But," he objected, "a man who went with you could never come back."
       "Back to this wilderness," she scoffed; "any one should thank God for being taken out of it."
       "I've always lived here, my father too, and his before him; and back of that we came from mountains. We're mountain blood; I don't know if we could get used to anything else, live down yonder."
       "I'd civilize you," she promised him.
       "Perhaps--" he assented slowly.
       Suddenly from beyond the ruin came the stir of a horse moving in harness, the sound stopped and the voices of men grew audible. Instinctively Gordon and Meta Beggs drew behind a standing fragment of wall. Gordon could see, through the displaced, rotting boards, a buggy and two men standing at the side of the road. One, he recognized, was Valentine Simmons; he easily made out the small, alert figure. The other, with his back to the mill, held outspread a sheet of paper. There was something familiar about the carriage of the head, a glimpse of beard, a cigar from which were expelled copious volumes of smoke. Gordon vainly racked his memory for a clue to the latter, elusive personality. He heard Simmons say:
       "... by the South Fork entrance ... through the valley."
       The stranger partially turned, and Gordon instantly recalled where he had seen him before--it was the man he had driven from Stenton with the surprising foreknowledge of the County, who had been met by Pompey Hollidew. He replied to Simmons, "Exactly ... timber sidings at the principal depots."
       They were, evidently, discussing a projected road. Gordon subconsciously exclaimed, half aloud, "Railroad!" A swift illumination bathed in complete comprehension the whole affair--the connection, of Simmons, old Pompey's options and the stranger. This railroad, the coming of which would increase enormously the timber values of Greenstream County, had been the covert reason for Simmons' desire to purchase the options held by the Hollidew estate; it had been, during Pompey Hollidew's life, the reason for the acquisition of such extended timber interests. Hollidew, Simmons and Company had joined in a conspiracy to purchase them throughout the county at a nominal sum and reap the benefits of the large enhancement. The death of the former had interrupted that satisfactory scheme; now Valentine Simmons had conceived the plan of gathering all the profit to himself. And, Gordon admitted, he had nearly succeeded ... nearly. A slow smile crossed Gordon Makimmon's features as he realized what a pleasant conversation he would have with Simmons at the latter's expense. He had never conceived the possibility of getting the astute storekeeper into such a satisfactory, retaliatory position. He would extract the last penny of profit and enjoyment from the other's surprise.
       The men beyond re-entered the buggy and drove toward the village.
       "What is it?" Meta Beggs asked; "you look pleased."
       "Oh, I fell on a little scheme," he replied evasively; "a trifle ... worth a hundred thousand or more to me."
       Her eyes widened with avidity. "I didn't know the whole, God forsaken place was worth a thousand," she remarked. "A hundred thousand," the mere repetition of that sum brought a new shine into her gaze, instinctively drew her closer to Gordon's side.
       "Just that alone would be enough--" she said, and paused.
       He ignored this opening in the anticipated pleasure of his coming interview with Valentine Simmons.
       A palpable annoyance took possession of her at Gordon's absorption. "It must be near dinner at Peterman's," she remarked; "on Sunday you've got to be on time."
       In response to her suggestion he turned toward the road. They walked back silently until they were opposite the priest's. "I'd better go on alone," she decided. Her hands clung to his shoulders and she sought his lips. "Soon again," she murmured. "Don't desert me; I am entirely alone except for you."
       She left him and swiftly crossed the green to the road. _
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本书目录

Part One
   Part One - Chapter 1
   Part One - Chapter 2
   Part One - Chapter 3
   Part One - Chapter 4
   Part One - Chapter 5
   Part One - Chapter 6
   Part One - Chapter 7
   Part One - Chapter 8
   Part One - Chapter 9
   Part One - Chapter 10
   Part One - Chapter 11
   Part One - Chapter 12
   Part One - Chapter 13
   Part One - Chapter 14
   Part One - Chapter 15
   Part One - Chapter 16
   Part One - Chapter 17
   Part One - Chapter 18
   Part One - Chapter 19
   Part One - Chapter 20
   Part One - Chapter 21
   Part One - Chapter 22
   Part One - Chapter 23
   Part One - Chapter 24
   Part One - Chapter 25
   Part One - Chapter 26
   Part One - Chapter 27
Part Two
   Part Two - Chapter 1
   Part Two - Chapter 2
   Part Two - Chapter 3
   Part Two - Chapter 4
   Part Two - Chapter 5
   Part Two - Chapter 6
   Part Two - Chapter 7
   Part Two - Chapter 8
   Part Two - Chapter 9
   Part Two - Chapter 10
   Part Two - Chapter 11
   Part Two - Chapter 12
   Part Two - Chapter 13
   Part Two - Chapter 14
   Part Two - Chapter 15
   Part Two - Chapter 16
   Part Two - Chapter 17
   Part Two - Chapter 18
   Part Two - Chapter 19
   Part Two - Chapter 20
   Part Two - Chapter 21
Part Three
   Part Three - Chapter 1
   Part Three - Chapter 2
   Part Three - Chapter 3
   Part Three - Chapter 4
   Part Three - Chapter 5
   Part Three - Chapter 6
   Part Three - Chapter 7
   Part Three - Chapter 8
   Part Three - Chapter 9
   Part Three - Chapter 10
   Part Three - Chapter 11
   Part Three - Chapter 12
   Part Three - Chapter 13
   Part Three - Chapter 14
   Part Three - Chapter 15
   Part Three - Chapter 16
   Part Three - Chapter 17
   Part Three - Chapter 18
   Part Three - Chapter 19
   Part Three - Chapter 20
   Part Three - Chapter 21
   Part Three - Chapter 22
   Part Three - Chapter 23
   Part Three - Chapter 24