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Trumps: A Novel
Chapter 85. Getting Ready
George William Curtis
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       _ CHAPTER LXXXV. GETTING READY
       Hope Wayne had not forgotten the threat which Abel had vaguely thrown out; but she supposed it was only an expression of disappointment and indignation. Could she have seen him a few evenings after the ball and his conversation with Mrs. Delilah Jones, she might have thought differently.
       He sat with the same woman in her room.
       "To-morrow, then?" she said, looking at him, hesitatingly.
       "To-morrow," he answered, grimly.
       "I hope all will go well."
       "All what?" he asked, roughly.
       "All our plans."
       "Abel Newt was not born to fail," he replied; "or at least General Belch said so."
       His companion had no knowledge of what Abel really meant to do. She only knew that he was capable of every thing, and as for herself, her little mask had fallen, and she did not even wish to pick it up again.
       They sat together silently for a long time. He poured freely and drank deeply, and whiffed cigar after cigar nervously away. The few bells of the city tolled the hours. Ele had come during the evening and knocked at the door, but Abel did not let him in. He and his companion sat silently, and heard the few bells strike.
       "Well, Kitty," he said at last, thickly, and with glazing eye. "Well, my Princess of the Mediterranean. We shall be happy, hey? You're not afraid even now, hey?"
       "Oh, we shall be very happy," she replied, in a low, wild tone, as if it were the night wind that moaned, and not a woman's voice.
       He looked at her for a few moments. He saw how entirely she was enthralled by him.
       "I wonder if I care any thing about you?" he said at length, leering at her through the cigar-smoke.
       "I don't think you do," she answered, meekly.
       "But my--my--dear Mrs. Jones--the su-superb Mrs. Delilah Jo-Jones ought to be sure that I do. Here, bring me a light: that dam--dam--cigar's gone out."
       She rose quietly and carried the candle to Abel. There was an inexpressible weariness and pathos in all her movements: a kind of womanly tranquillity that was touchingly at variance with the impression of her half-coarse appearance. As Abel watched her he remembered the women whom he had tried to marry. His memory scoured through his whole career. He thought of them all variously happy.
       "I swear! to think I should come to you!" he said at length, looking at his companion, with an indescribable bitterness of sneering.
       Kitty Dunham sat at a little distance from him on the end of a sofa. She was bowed as if deeply thinking; and when she heard these words her head only sank a little more, as if a palpable weight had been laid upon her. She understood perfectly what he meant.
       "I know I am not worth loving," she said, in the same low voice, "but my love will do you no harm. Perhaps I can help you in some way. If you are ill some day, I can nurse you. I shall be poor company on the long journey, but I will try."
       "What long journey?" asked Abel, suddenly and angrily.
       "Where we are going," she replied, gently.
       "D---- it, then, don't use such am-am-big-'us phrases. A man would think we were go-going to die."
       She said no more, but sat, half-crouching, upon the sofa, looking into the fire. Abel glanced at her, from time to time, with maudlin grins and sneers.
       "Go to bed," he said at length; "I've something to do. Sleep all you can; you'll need it. I shall stay here 'till I'm ready to go, and come for you in the morning."
       "Thank you," she answered, and rose quietly. "Good-night!" she said.
       "Oh! good-night, Mrs. De-de-liah--superb Jo-Jones!"
       He laughed as she went--sat ogling the fire for a little while, and then unsteadily, but not unconsciously, drew a pocket-book from his pocket and took out a small package. It contained several notes, amounting to not less than a hundred thousand dollars signed by himself, and indorsed by Lawrence Newt & Co.--at least the name was there, and it was a shrewd eye that could detect the difference between the signature and that which was every day seen and honored in the street.
       Abel looked at them carefully, and leered and glared upon them as if they had been windows through which he saw something--sunny isles, and luxury, and a handsome slave who loved him to minister to every whim.
       "'Tis a pretty game," he said, half aloud; "a droll turnabout is life. Uncle Lawrence plays against other people, and wins. I play against Uncle Lawrence, and win. But what's un-dred--sousand--to--him?"
       He said it drowsily, and his hands unconsciously fell. He was asleep in his chair.
       He sat there sleeping until the gray of morning. Kitty Dunham, coming into the room ready-dressed for a journey, found him there. She was frightened; for he looked as if he were dead. Going up to him she shook him, and he awoke heavily.
       "What the h----'s the matter?" said he, as he opened his sleepy eyes.
       "Why, it's time to go."
       "To go where?"
       "To be happy," she said, standing passively and looking in his face.
       He roused himself, and said:
       "Well, I'm all ready. I've only to stop at my room for my trunk."
       His hair was tangled, his eyes were bloodshot, his clothes tumbled and soiled.
       "Wouldn't you like to dress yourself?" she asked.
       "Why, no; ain't I dressed enough for you? No gentleman dresses when he's going to travel."
       She said no more. The carriage came as Abel had ordered, a private conveyance to take them quite through to New York. All the time before it came Kitty Dunham moved solemnly about the room, seeing that nothing was left. The solemnity fretted Abel.
       "What are you so sober about?" he asked impatiently.
       "Because I am getting ready for a long journey," she answered, tranquilly.
       "Perhaps not so long," he said, sharply--"not if I choose to leave you behind."
       "But you won't."
       "How do you know?"
       "Because you will want somebody, and I'm the only person in the world left to you."
       She spoke in the same sober way. Abel knew perfectly well that she spoke the truth, but he had never thought of it before. Was he then going so long a journey without a friend, unless she went with him? Was she the only one left of all the world?
       As his mind pondered the question his eye fell upon a newspaper of the day before, in which he saw his name. He took it up mechanically, and read a paragraph praising him and his speech; foretelling "honor and troops of friends" for a young man who began his public career so brilliantly.
       "There; hear this!" said he, as he read it aloud and looked at his companion. "Troops of friends, do you see? and yet you talk of being my only dependence in the world! Fie! fie! Mrs. Delilah Jones."
       It was melancholy merriment. He did not smile, and the woman's face was quietly sober.
       "For the present, then, Mr. Speaker and fellow-citizens," said Abel Newt, waving his hand as he saw that every thing was ready, and that the carriage waited only for him and his companion, "I bid these scenes adieu! For the present I terminate my brief engagement. And you, my fellow-members, patterns of purity and pillars of truth, farewell! Disinterested patriots, I leave you my blessing! Pardon me that I prefer the climate of the Mediterranean to that of the District, and the smiles of my Kitty to the intelligent praises of my country. Friends of my soul, farewell! I kiss my finger tips! Boo--hoo!"
       He made a mock bow, and smiled upon an imaginary audience. Then offering his arm with grave ceremony to his companion as if a crowd had been looking on, he went down stairs. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. School Begins
Chapter 2. Hope Wayne
Chapter 3. Ave Maria!
Chapter 4. Night
Chapter 5. Peewee Preaching
Chapter 6. Experimentum Crucis
Chapter 7. Castle Dangerous
Chapter 8. After The Battle
Chapter 9. News From Home
Chapter 10. Beginning To Sketch
Chapter 11. A Verdict And A Sentence
Chapter 12. Help, Ho!
Chapter 13. Society
Chapter 14. A New York Merchant
Chapter 15. A School-Boy No Longer
Chapter 16. Philosophy
Chapter 17. Of Girls And Flowers
Chapter 18. Old Friends And New
Chapter 19. Dog-Days
Chapter 20. Aunt Martha
Chapter 21. The Campaign
Chapter 22. The Fine Arts
Chapter 23. Boniface Newt, Son, And Co., Dry Goods On Commission
Chapter 24. "Queen And Huntress"
Chapter 25. A Statesman--And Stateswoman
Chapter 26. The Portrait And The Miniature
Chapter 27. Gabriel At Home
Chapter 28. Born To Be A Bachelor
Chapter 29. Mr. Abel Newt, Grand Street
Chapter 30. Check
Chapter 31. At Delmonico's
Chapter 32. Mrs. Theodore Kingfisher At Home. On Dansera
Chapter 33. Another Turn In The Waltz
Chapter 34. Heaven's Last Best Gift
Chapter 35. Mother-In-Law And Daughter-In-Law
Chapter 36. The Back Window
Chapter 37. Abel Newt, Vice Sligo Moultrie Removed
Chapter 38. The Day After The Wedding
Chapter 39. A Field-Day
Chapter 40. At The Round Table
Chapter 41. A Little Dinner
Chapter 42. Clearing And Cloudy
Chapter 43. Walking Home
Chapter 44. Church Going
Chapter 45. In Church
Chapter 46. In Another Church
Chapter 47. Death
Chapter 48. The Heiress
Chapter 49. A Select Party
Chapter 50. Wine And Truth
Chapter 51. A Warning
Chapter 52. Breakers
Chapter 53. Sligo Moultrie Vice Abel Newt
Chapter 54. Clouds And Darkness
Chapter 55. Arthur Merlin's Great Picture
Chapter 56. Redivivus
Chapter 57. Dining With Lawrence Newt
Chapter 58. The Health Of The Junior Partner
Chapter 59. Mrs. Alfred Dinks
Chapter 60. Politics
Chapter 61. Gone To Protest
Chapter 62. The Crash, Up Town
Chapter 63. Endymion
Chapter 64. Diana
Chapter 65. The Will Of The People
Chapter 66. Mentor And Telemachus
Chapter 67. Wires
Chapter 68. The Industrious Apprentice
Chapter 69. In And Out
Chapter 70. The Representative Of The People
Chapter 71. Riches Have Wings
Chapter 72. Good-By
Chapter 73. The Belch Platform
Chapter 74. Midnight
Chapter 75. Reminiscence
Chapter 76. A Social Glass
Chapter 77. Face To Face
Chapter 78. Finishing Pictures
Chapter 79. The Last Throw
Chapter 80. Clouds Breaking
Chapter 81. Mrs. Alfred Dinks At Home
Chapter 82. The Lost Is Found
Chapter 83. Mrs. Delilah Jones
Chapter 84. Prospects Of Happiness
Chapter 85. Getting Ready
Chapter 86. In The City
Chapter 87. A Long Journey
Chapter 88. Waiting
Chapter 89. Dust To Dust
Chapter 90. Under The Misletoe