Children of the Whirlwind eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 380 pages of information about Children of the Whirlwind.

Children of the Whirlwind eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 380 pages of information about Children of the Whirlwind.

Having nothing else to do for an hour and a half, he thought of a note he had received from the Duchess in that morning’s mail asking him to come down to see her when he was next in town.  Thirty minutes later he was in the familiar room behind the pawnshop.  The Duchess asked him if he had eaten, and on his reply that he had not and did not care to, instead of proceeding to the business of her letter she mumbled something and went into the pawnshop.

She left Larry for the very simple reason that now that she had him here she was uncertain what she should say, and how far she should go.  Unknown to either, one thread of the drama of Larry and Maggie was being spun in the brain and heart of the Duchess; and being spun with pain to her, and in very great doubt.  True, she had definitely decided, for Larry’s welfare, that the facts about Maggie’s parentage should never be known from her—­and since the only other person who could tell the truth was Jimmie Carlisle, and his interests were all apparently in favor of silence, then it followed that the truth would never be known from any one.  But having so decided, and decided definitely and finally, the Duchess had proceeded to wonder if she had decided wisely.

Day and night this had been the main subject of her thought.  Could she be wrong in her estimate of Maggie’s character, and what she might turn out to be?  Could she be wrong in her belief that, given enough time, Larry would outgrow his infatuation for Maggie?  And since she was in such doubt about these two points, had she any right, and was it for the best, to suppress a fact that might so gravely influence both matters?  She did not know.  What she wanted was whatever was best for Larry—­and so in her doubt she had determined to talk again to Larry, hoping that the interview might in some way replace her uncertainty with stability of purpose.

Presently she returned to the inner room, and in her direct way and using the fewest possible words, which had created for her her reputation of a woman who never spoke and who was packed with strange secrets, she asked Larry what he had done concerning Maggie.  He told her of the plan he had evolved, of Maggie’s visit to Cedar Crest, of his ignorance of Maggie’s reactions.  To all this his grandmother made response neither by word nor by change of expression.  He then went on to tell her of what he had just learned from Casey of Barney’s maneuvering his misfortunes.

The old head nodded.  “Yes, Barney’s just that sort,” she said in her flat monotone.

And then she came to the purpose of her sending for him.  “How do you feel about Maggie now?”

“The same as before.”

“You love her?”

“Yes—­and always will,” he said firmly.

She was silent once more.  Then, “What are you going to do next?”

“Break things up between her and Barney and her father.  Get her away from them.”

She asked no further questions.  Larry was as settled as a man could be.  But was Maggie worth while?—­that was the great question still unanswered.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Children of the Whirlwind from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.