登陆注册
20053400000025

第25章 CHAPTER VII OUT OF THE BAG(1)

"I'm married, and I've got a wife livin'," continued Seth; adding hurriedly and fiercely, "don't you say nothin' to me! Don't you put me out. I'm goin' to tell you! I'm goin' to tell you all of it-- all, by time! I am, if I die for it."

He was speaking so rapidly that the words were jumbled together. He knocked his hat from his forehead with a blow of his fist and actually panted for breath. Brown had never before seen him in this condition.

"Hold on! Wait," he cried. "Atkins, you needn't do this; you mustn't. I am asking no questions. We agreed to--"

"Hush up!" Seth waved both hands in the air. "DON'T you talk! Let me get this off my chest. Good heavens alive, I've been smotherin' myself with it for years, and, now I've got started, I'll blow off steam or my b'iler'll bust. I'm GOIN' to tell you. You listen--"Yes, sir, I'm a married man," he went on. "I wa'n't always married, you understand. I used to be single once. Once I was single; see?"

"I see," said Brown, repressing a smile.

Seth was not aware that there was anything humorous in his statement.

"Yes," he said, "I was single and--and happy, by jiminy! I was skipper of a mack'rel schooner down Cape Ann way, never mind where, and Seth Atkins is only part of my name; never mind that, neither.

I sailed that schooner and I run that schooner--I RUN her; and when I said 'boo' all hands aboard jumped, I tell you. When I've got salt water underneath me, I'm a man. But I told you that afore.

"However, this is what I didn't tell you nor nobody else in this part of the state: I stayed single till I got to be past forty.

Everybody set me down as an old bach. Then I met a woman; yes, sir, I met a woman."

He made this assertion as if it was something remarkable. His companion on the bench made no comment.

"She was a widow woman," went on Seth, "and she had a little property left her by her first husband. Owned a house and land, she did, and had some money in the bank. Some folks cal'lated I married her for that, but they cal'lated wrong. I wanted her for herself.

And I got her. Her name was Emeline. I always thought Emeline was a sort of pretty name."

He sighed. Brown observed that Emeline was a very pretty name, indeed.

"Um-hm. That's what I thought, and Emeline was a real pretty woman, for her age and heft--she was fleshy. She had some consider'ble prejudice against my goin' to sea, so I agreed to stay on shore a spell and farm it, as you might say. We lived in the house she owned and was real happy together. She bossed me around a good deal, but I didn't mind bein' bossed by her. 'Twas a change, you see, for I'd always been used to bossin' other folks. So I humored her. And, bein' on land made me lose my--my grip or somethin';'cause I seemed to forget how to boss. But we was happy, and then-- then Bennie D. come. Consarn him!"

His teeth shut with a snap, and he struck his knee with his fist.

"Consarn him! " he repeated, and was silent.

The substitute assistant ventured to jog his memory.

"Who was Bennie D.?" he asked.

"What? Hey? Bennie D.? Oh, he was her brother-in-law, her husband's brother from up Boston way. He was a genius--at least, he said he was--and an inventor. The only invention I ever could l'arn he'd invented to a finish was how to live without workin', but he'd got that brought to a science. However, he was forever fussin' over some kind of machine that was sartin sure to give power to the universe, when 'twas done, and Emeline's husband--his name was Abner--thought the world and all of him. 'Fore he died he made Emeline promise to always be kind to Bennie D., and she said she would. Abner left him a little money, and he spent it travelin'

'for his health.' I don't know where he traveled to, but, wherever 'twas, the health must have been there. He was the healthiest critter ever I see--and the laziest.

"Well, his travels bein' over, down he comes to make his sister-in- law a little visit. And he stays on and stays on. He never took no shine to me--I judge he figgered I hadn't no business sharin'

Abner's property--and I never took to him, much.

"Emeline noticed Bennie D. and me wa'n't fallin' on each other's necks any to speak of, and it troubled her. She blamed me for it.

Said Bennie was a genius, and geniuses had sensitive natures and had to be treated with consideration and different from other folks.

And that promise to Abner weighed on her conscience, I cal'late.

Anyhow, she petted that blame inventor, and it made me mad. And yet I didn't say much--not so much as I'd ought to, I guess. And Bennie D. was always heavin' out little side remarks about Emeline's bein' fitted for better things than she was gettin', and how, when his invention was 'perfected,' HE'D see that she didn't slave herself to death, and so on and so on. And he had consider'ble to say about folks tryin' to farm when they didn't know a cucumber from a watermelon, and how 'farmin'' was a good excuse for doin' nothin', and such. And I didn't have any good answer to that, 'cause I do know more about seaweed than I do cucumbers, and the farm wasn't payin' and I knew it.

"If he'd said these things right out plain, I guess likely I'd have give him what he deserved. But he didn't; he just hinted and smiled and acted superior and pityin'. And if I got mad and hove out a little sailor talk by accident, he'd look as sorry and shocked as the Come-Outer parson does when there's a baby born to a Universalist family. He'd get up and shut the door, as if he was scart the neighbors' morals would suffer--though the only neighbor within hearin' was an old critter that used to run a billiard saloon in Gloucester, and HIS morals had been put out of their misery forty years afore--and he'd suggest that Emeline better leave the room, maybe. And then I'd feel ashamed and wouldn't know what to do, and 'twould end, more'n likely, by my leavin' it myself.

"You can see how matters was driftin'. I could see plain enough, and I cal'late Emeline could, too--I'll give her credit for that.

同类推荐
  • The Rhythm of Life and Other Essays

    The Rhythm of Life and Other Essays

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 游禁苑幸临渭亭遇雪

    游禁苑幸临渭亭遇雪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 江南闻见录

    江南闻见录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 重修凤山县志

    重修凤山县志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 题新昌所居

    题新昌所居

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 最强宠婚:总裁私宠小娇妻

    最强宠婚:总裁私宠小娇妻

    上班第一天,她把热咖啡不小心泼在了他身上,他并没有责怪她,反倒对她一见钟情。一场突如其来的失忆,把所有的美好打破,他又一次遇见她,到底是福还是祸?他们的感情能否回归原位?
  • 都市之修真奇才

    都市之修真奇才

    一代修真奇才散人韩飞,被围攻无奈兵解重生于都市之中,从此走上一条阅尽万花,无尽荣华的极品修真奇才之路。
  • 花千骨之绝情丹

    花千骨之绝情丹

    这是花千骨续集,当花千骨变成落十一的徒弟,白子画重新收徒,当白子画重新收的徒弟再次爱上他,会发生什么事呢,敬请期待
  • 大圣的小弟

    大圣的小弟

    自盘古开天辟地以来,世间还没出现过如此贱人……如果雷同,你弄西我。
  • 与理科男的恋爱

    与理科男的恋爱

    根据同名漫画改编,花痴女姚小姚入学第一天就因为迷路搭讪了帅气的理科学长,几天后公交车站再次相遇竟然撞伤了学长。几天后意外得知学长竟然是自己学姐室友的表弟,两人不断相处后摩擦出爱的火花。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 二货王妃难再逃

    二货王妃难再逃

    她被爱欺骗,水中失足意外穿越,撞上不孕不育的纳兰王被囚示爱!在后母跟异妹的居心叵测下险些丧命。尔虞我诈中她努力置身事外寻求自己的归宿,最后却被毒瞎双眼,他的爱是否依然不变?
  • 如果不曾爱过你

    如果不曾爱过你

    被前男友抛弃,一次酒醉,她却有了他的孩子!本以为终于可以拥有自己的幸福,可是却被人告知,这不过是一场精心策划的阴谋……情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 盗墓之王者传奇

    盗墓之王者传奇

    在跟随吴老大去云南大理云岭山腹的初次盗墓过程中,我无意中得到了一块红玉扳指,令人匪夷所思的意外随之发生了。血罗刹、阴阳铃、八荒冢、盗天命······在无边的黑暗中我浴血而战,开始了一段叱咤盗墓界的传奇经历。
  • 灰蒙蒙下的羞涩

    灰蒙蒙下的羞涩

    曾经的少年时的羞涩,爱的懵懂无知,害怕,同学之间的嘲笑,手忙脚乱的解释。曾经在学校里的各种搞怪,同学之间的矛盾,恋情和学生时代的生活通过本书主人公体现出来,带大家重新回归校园,重启学生时代
  • 黄宗羲梨洲文

    黄宗羲梨洲文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。