The Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains by Owen Wister (children's ebooks online .txt) ๐
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- Author: Owen Wister
Read book online ยซThe Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains by Owen Wister (children's ebooks online .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Owen Wister
โI will be good,โ he whispered.
โYou must,โ she said. โYou looked so pale!โ
โYou are speakin' low like me,โ he answered. โBut we have no dream we can wake from.โ
Had she surrendered on this day to her cow-puncher, her wild man? Was she forever wholly his? Had the Virginian's fire so melted her heart that no rift in it remained? So she would have thought if any thought had come to her. But in his arms to-day, thought was lost in something more divine.
XXIX. WORD TO BENNINGTON
They kept their secret for a while, or at least they had that special joy of believing that no one in all the world but themselves knew this that had happened to them. But I think that there was one person who knew how to keep a secret even better than these two lovers. Mrs. Taylor made no remarks to any one whatever. Nobody on Bear Creek, however, was so extraordinarily cheerful and serene. That peculiar severity which she had manifested in the days when Molly was packing her possessions, had now altogether changed. In these days she was endlessly kind and indulgent to her โdeary.โ Although, as a housekeeper, Mrs. Taylor believed in punctuality at meals, and visited her offspring with discipline when they were late without good and sufficient excuse, Molly was now exempt from the faintest hint of reprimand.
โAnd it's not because you're not her mother,โ said George Taylor, bitterly. โShe used to get it, too. And we're the only ones that get it. There she comes, just as we're about ready to quit! Aren't you going to say NOTHING to her?โ
โGeorge,โ said his mother, โwhen you've saved a man's life it'll be time for you to talk.โ
So Molly would come in to her meals with much irregularity; and her remarks about the imperfections of her clock met with no rejoinder. And yet one can scarcely be so severe as had been Mrs. Taylor, and become wholly as mild as milk. There was one recurrent event that could invariably awaken hostile symptoms in the dame. Whenever she saw a letter arrive with the Bennington postmark upon it, she shook her fist at that letter. โWhat's family pride?โ she would say to herself. โTaylor could be a Son of the Revolution if he'd a mind to. I wonder if she has told her folks yet.โ
And when letters directed to Bennington would go out, Mrs. Taylor would inspect every one as if its envelope ought to grow transparent beneath her eyes, and yield up to her its great secret, if it had one. But in truth these letters had no great secret to yield up, until one dayโyes; one day Mrs. Taylor would have burst, were bursting a thing that people often did. Three letters were the cause of this emotion on Mrs. Taylor's part; one addressed to Bennington, one to Dunbarton, and the thirdโhere was the great excitementโto Bennington, but not in the little schoolmarm's delicate writing. A man's hand had traced those plain, steady vowels and consonants.
โIt's come!โ exclaimed Mrs. Taylor, at this sight. โHe has written to her mother himself.โ
That is what the Virginian had done, and here is how it had come about.
The sick man's convalescence was achieved. The weeks had brought back to him, not his whole strength yetโthat could come only by many miles of open air on the back of Monte; but he was strong enough now to GET strength. When a patient reaches this stage, he is out of the woods.
He had gone for a little walk with his nurse. They had taken (under the doctor's recommendation) several such little walks, beginning with a five-minute one, and at last to-day accomplishing three miles.
โNo, it has not been too far,โ said he. โI am afraid I could walk twice as far.โ
โAfraid?โ
โYes. Because it means I can go to work again. This thing we have had together is over.โ
For reply, she leaned against him.
โLook at you!โ he said. โOnly a little while ago you had to help me stand on my laigs. And nowโโ For a while there was silence between them. โI have never had a right down sickness before,โ he presently went on. โNot to remember, that is. If any person had told me I could ENJOY such a thingโโ He said no more, for she reached up, and no more speech was possible.
โHow long has it been?โ he next asked her.
She told him.
โWell, if it could be foreverโno. Not forever with no more than this. I reckon I'd be sick again! But if it could be forever with just you and me, and no one else to bother with. But any longer would not be doing right by your mother. She would have a right to think ill of me.โ
โOh!โ said the girl. โLet us keep it.โ
โNot after I am gone. Your mother must be told.โ
โIt seems soโcan't weโoh, why need anybody know?โ
โYour mother ain't 'anybody.' She is your mother. I feel mighty responsible to her for what I have done.โ
โBut I did it!โ
โDo you think so? Your mother will not think so. I am going to write to her to-day.โ
โYou! Write to my mother! Oh, then everything will be so different! They will allโโ Molly stopped before the rising visions of Bennington. Upon the fairy-tale that she had been living with her cow-boy lover broke the voices of the world. She could hear them from afar. She could see the eyes of Bennington watching this man at her side. She could imagine the ears of Bennington listening for slips in his English. There loomed upon her the round of visits which they would have to make. The ringing of the door-bells, the waiting in drawing-rooms for the mistress to descend and utter her prepared congratulations, while her secret eye devoured the Virginian's appearance, and his manner of standing and sitting. He would be wearing gloves, instead of fringed gauntlets of buckskin. In a smooth black coat and waistcoat, how could they perceive the man he was? During those short formal interviews, what would they ever find out of the things that she knew about him? The things for which she was proud of him? He would speak shortly and simply; they would say, โOh, yes!โ and โHow different you must find this from Wyoming!โโand then, after the door was shut behind his departing back they would sayโHe would be totally underrated, not in the least understood. Why should he be subjected to this? He should never be!
Now in all these half-formed, hurried, distressing thoughts which streamed through the girl's mind, she altogether forgot one truth. True it was
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