The Cromptons eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 405 pages of information about The Cromptons.

The Cromptons eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 405 pages of information about The Cromptons.

Her mind was misty still, but Eloise felt a crisis was past, and that in time the films which had clouded her mother’s brain would clear away, not wholly, perhaps, for she was a Harris, and “all the Harrises,” Jake said, “were quar.”  She was very quiet now, and listened as they talked, but could recall nothing of her mother or the funeral, which Mr. Mason had attended.  She seemed very tired, and at Eloise’s suggestion lay clown upon the lounge and soon fell asleep, while Jack put question after question to Jake, hoping some light would be thrown upon the mystery they had come to unravel.

CHAPTER VIII

THE LITTLE HAIR TRUNK

Jake could tell them but little more than he had told Mr. Mason on a former visit.  This he repeated with some additions, while Eloise listened, sometimes with indignation at Col.  Crompton, and sometimes with shame and a thought as to what Jack would think of it.  Her mother’s family history was being unrolled before her, and she did not like it.  There was proud blood in her veins, and she felt it coming to the surface and rebelling against the family tree of which she was a branch,—­the Harrises, the Crackers, and, more than all, the uncertainty as to her mother’s legitimacy, which she began to fear must remain an uncertainty.  It was not a very desirable ancestry, and she glanced timidly at Jack to see how he was taking it.  His face was very placid and unmoved as he questioned Jake of the relatives in Georgia, whom Amy’s mother had visited.

“We must find them,” he said.  “Do you know anything of them?  Were they Harrises, or what?”

Jake said they were “Browns an’ Crackers; not the real no ’counts.  Thar’s a difference, an’ I’m shu’ ole Miss Lucy was fust class, ’case Miss Dory was a lady bawn.”

“Are there no papers anywhere to tell us who they were?” Jack asked, and Jake replied, “Thar’s papers in de little har trunk whar I keeps de writin’ book Miss Dory used, an’ de book she read in to learn, but dem’s no ‘count.  Some receipts an’ bills an’ some letters ole Mas’r Harris writ to Miss Lucy ‘fo’ they was married,—­love letters, in course, which I seen Miss Dory tie up wid a white ribbon.  I’ve never opened dem, ’case it didn’t seem fittin’ like to read what a boy writ to a gal.”

“Why, Jake,” Jack exclaimed, “don’t you see those letters may tell us where Miss Lucy lived in Georgia? and that is probably where Miss Dory visited.  Bring us the trunk.”

“’Clar for’t.  I never thought of that,” Jake said, rising with alacrity and going into the room where he slept.

Mr. Mason, too, stepped out for a few moments, leaving Eloise alone with Jack.  Now was her time, and, going up to him, she said, “Jack, I want to tell you now, you mustn’t marry me!”

“Mustn’t marry you!” Jack repeated.  “Are you crazy?”

“Not yet,” Eloise answered with a sob, “but I may be in time, or queer, like all the Harrises,—­mother and her mother and ‘old Miss.’  We are all Harrises, and,—­and,—­oh, Jack, I know what a Cracker is now; mother is one; I am one, and it is all so dreadful; and mother nobody, perhaps.  I can’t bear it, and you must not marry me.”

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The Cromptons from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.