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.

It was not that Storch was unable to discover a score of men ready and willing to murder Hilmer, but he was finding an ironic diversion in shoving a weary soul to the brink.  He liked to confirm his faith in the power of sorrow and misery and bitterness ... he liked to triumph over that healing curse of indifference which time accomplished with such subtlety.  He took a delight in cutting the heart and soul out of his victims and reducing them to puppets stuffed with sawdust, answering the slightest pressure of his hands.  How completely Fred Starratt understood all this now!  And in the blinding flash of this realization he saw also the hidden spring that had answered Storch’s pressure.  Storch may have been prodding for rancor, but he really had touched the mainspring of all false and empty achievement—­vanity.

“Losing a wife isn’t of such moment ... but to be laughed at—­that is another matter!”

The words with which Storch had held him up to the scorn of the crowd swept him now with their real significance.  He had been afraid to seem uncourageous.

Thus also had Mrs. Hilmer prodded him with her sly “What do men do in such cases?”

Thus, also, had the terrible realization of his love for Sylvia Molineaux been turned to false account with a wish to still the stinging wounds of pride forever.

He had made just such empty gestures when he had battled for an increase in salary, using Hilmer’s weapons instead of his own, and again when he had committed himself to Fairview with such a theatrical flourish.  He had performed then, he was performing now, with an eye to his audience.  And his audience had done then, and was doing now, what it always did—­treated him with the scorn men feel for any and all who play down to them.

Already Storch was sneering with the contempt of a man too sure of his power.  He would not have risked the details of his plan otherwise.  And deep down Fred Starratt knew that the first duty to his soul was to be rid of Storch at any cost—­after that, perhaps, it would not matter whether he had one or six or a hundred victims marked for destruction.  He was afraid of Storch and he had now to prove his courage to himself.

It was at the blackest hour before dawn that this realization grew to full stature.  He raised himself upon his elbow, listening to the heavy breathing of Storch.  He rose cautiously.  Now was his chance.  He would escape while his conviction was still glistening with the freshness of crystallization.  Moving with a catlike tread toward the door, he put his hand upon the knob.  It turned noisily.  He heard Storch leap to his feet.  He stood quite still until Storch came up to him.

“Go back to bed ... where you belong!” Storch was commanding, coolly, with a shade of menace in his voice.

He shuffled back to his couch.  He was no longer afraid of Storch, but a certain craftiness suddenly possessed him.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Broken to the Plow from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.