Broken to the Plow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 276 pages of information about Broken to the Plow.

Broken to the Plow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 276 pages of information about Broken to the Plow.

His plans were hazy, nebulous, in fact.  He was not quite sure as to his next move.  It seemed useless to attempt to flee from Storch’s shelter.  He had no money and scarcely strength enough to tackle any job that would be open to him.  Even if he elected to become a strike breaker he would have to qualify at least with brawn.  The prospect of snaring a berth from Hilmer had a certain fascination.  It would be interesting to stare defiantly at his enemy at close range, to speak with him again man to man, to lure him into further bravados.  And then, if Storch’s plans for Hilmer had any merits...  He stopped short, a bit frightened at the realization that the idea had presented itself to him with such directness...  He had a sudden yearning to talk to some human being who would understand.  If he could only see Ginger!

He had a feeling that somehow she must have experienced every exaltation and every degradation in the calendar.  Tenderness and passion and the gift of murder itself were ever the mixed language of the street.  He remembered the gesture he first had made to her almost timid advances toward helping him.  He had been outwardly polite, but inwardly how scornful of her suggestions!  And once he even had hesitated to let her carry a message to his wife!  Now he was ready to stand or fall upon the bitter fruits of her experience.  He felt, curiously, on common ground with her.  And yet there were certain intangibilities he had never attempted to make positive.  Somehow the mere fact of her existence had enveloped him like warm currents of air which he could feel, but not visualize.  But at this moment he felt the need of a contact more personal.  Suddenly, out of a clear sky, it came to him that Mrs. Hilmer could tell him something of Ginger’s whereabouts.  Mrs. Hilmer?  Well, why not?  The more he thought the idea over the more it appealed to him.  He ended by turning his steps in the direction of the Hilmer home.

The maid who opened the door eyed him with more curiosity than caution, and her protests that Mrs. Hilmer could see no one seemed rather tentative and perfunctory.  Fred had a curious feeling that she was demanding a more or less conventional excuse for admitting him, and in the end he flung out as a chance: 

“Tell Mrs. Hilmer I have a message from Sylvia Molineaux.”

The girl’s pale-blue eyes sparkled with a curious glint of humor, and without further protest she went away, and came back as swiftly with an invitation for him to step inside.  There was something inexplainable about this maid who veiled her eagerness to admit him with such transparencies.  Even a fool would scarcely have left so forbidding a character to dawdle about the living room while she went to fetch her mistress.

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Broken to the Plow from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.