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.
have been swept away when, through an opening in the trees, he caught sight of a slender girlish figure, clad in the homely garments of what Ted called poorwhite trash, and of which he had some knowledge.  There was, however, a certain grace in the movements of the girl which moved him a little, for he was not blind to any point of beauty in a woman, and the beauty of this girl, hurrying on so fast, had been his ruin, as he in one sense had been hers.

“Eudora!” he said, with a groan, and with a half resolve to turn back rather than go on.

Tom Hardy in their talk while the boat waited for them at Palatka, had told him what not to do, and he was there to follow Tom’s advice—­though, to do him justice, there was a thought in his heart that possibly he might do what he knew he ought to do, in spite of Tom.

“I’ll wait and see, and if—­” he said at last, as he began to pick his way over the palmetto stumps and ridges of sand till he came upon the clearing.

It was an open space of two or three acres, cleared from tanglewood and dwarf palmettoes.  In the centre was a log-house, larger and more pretentious than many log-houses which he had seen in the South.  A Marshal Niel had climbed up one corner to the roof, and twined itself around the chimney, giving a rather picturesque effect to the house, and reminding the stranger of some of the cabins he had seen in Ireland, with ivy growing over them.  There was an attempt at a flower garden where many roses were blooming.  Some one was fond of flowers, and the thought gave the stranger a grain of comfort, for a love of flowers was associated in his mind with an innate refinement in the lover, and there was for a moment a tinge of brightness in the darkness settling upon his future.  Around the house there was no sign of life or stir, except a brood of well-grown chickens, which, with their mother, were huddled on the door step, evidently contemplating an entrance into the house, the door of which was open, as were the shutters to the windows, which were minus glass, as was the fashion of many old Florida houses in the days before the Civil War.  With a shoo to the chickens, which sent some into the house and others flying into the yard, the stranger stepped to the door and knocked, once very gently, then more decidedly—­then, as there came no response, he ventured in, and driving out the chickens, one of which had mounted upon a table and was pecking at a few crumbs of bread left there, he sat down and looked about him.  In the loft which could hardly be dignified with the name chamber, he heard a low murmur of voices, and the sound of footsteps moving rapidly, as if some one were in a hurry.  The room in which he sat was evidently living and dining-room both, and was destitute of everything which he deemed necessary to comfort.  He had been in a Cracker’s house before, and it seemed to him now that his heart turned over when he recalled his visits there, and his utter disregard of his surroundings.

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The Cromptons from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.