Pembroke eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about Pembroke.

Pembroke eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about Pembroke.

“Wasn’t Mr. Thayer there?”

“Yes, he was there, but he wouldn’t know what was goin’ on.  ’Tain’t very hard to pull the wool over Caleb Thayer’s eyes.”

“I don’t believe one word of it,” Charlotte said, again.  When she went up-stairs to bed that whisper of her mother’s seemed to sound through and above all her own trouble.  It was to her like a note of despair and shame, quite outside her own gamut of life.  She could not believe that she heard it at all.  Rebecca’s face as she had always known her came up before her.  “I don’t believe one word of it,” she said again to herself.

But that whisper which had shocked her ear had already begun to be repeated all over the village—­by furtive matrons, behind their hands, when the children had been sent out of the room; by girls, blushing beneath each other’s eyes as they whispered; by the lounging men in the village store; it was sent like an evil strain through the consciousness of the village, until everybody except Rebecca’s own family had heard it.

Barnabas saw little of other people, and nobody dared repeat the whisper to him, and they had too much mercy or too little courage to repeat it to Caleb or Deborah.  Indeed, it is doubtful if any woman in the village, even Hannah Berry, would have ventured to face Deborah Thayer with this rumor concerning her daughter.

Deborah had of late felt anxious about Rebecca, who did not seem like herself.  Her face was strangely changed; all the old meaning had gone out of it, and given place to another, which her mother could not interpret.  Sometimes Rebecca looked like a stranger to her as she moved about the house.  She said to many that Rebecca was miserable, and was incensed that she got so little sympathy in response.  Once when Rebecca fainted in meeting, and had to be carried out, she felt in the midst of her alarm a certain triumph.  “I guess folks will see now that I ain’t been fussin’ over her for nothin’,” she thought.  When Rebecca revived under a sprinkle of water, out in the vestibule, she said impatiently to the other women bending their grave, concerned faces over her, “She’s been miserable for some time.  I ain’t surprised at this at all myself.”

Deborah watched over Rebecca with a fierce, pecking tenderness like a bird.  She brewed great bowls of domestic medicines from nuts and herbs, and made her drink whether she would or not.  She sent her to bed early, and debarred her from the night air.  She never had a suspicion of the figure slipping softly as a shadow across the north parlor and out the front door night after night.

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Project Gutenberg
Pembroke from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.