The Heart of Rachael eBook

Kathleen Norris
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 503 pages of information about The Heart of Rachael.

The Heart of Rachael eBook

Kathleen Norris
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 503 pages of information about The Heart of Rachael.

“It was before my father died; we were up in the old Maine place,” he had said.  “Gosh, Bill was cute that day!  We went on a drive—­no motor cars then—­and took our lunch, and after lunch the kid comes and settles herself in my arms—­for a nap, if you please!  ’Say, look-a-here,’ I said, ‘what do you think I am—­a Pullman?’ I wanted a smoke, by George!  She wasn’t two, you know.  Her fat little legs were bare, we’d put her into socks, and her face was flushed, and she just looked up at me through her hair and said, ‘Hing!’ Well, it was good-bye smoke for me!  I sang all right, and she cuddled down as pleased as a kitten, and off she went!”

To-day Rachael’s eyes wandered from the picture to Clarence’s face.  She tried to study it dispassionately, but, still shaken by their recent conversation, and sitting there, as she knew she was sitting there, merely to prove that it had had no effect upon her, she felt this to be a little difficult.

What sort of a little boy had he been?  A fat little boy, of course.  She disliked fat little boys.  A spoiled little boy, never crossed in any way.  His mother made him go to Sunday-school, and dancing school, and to Miss Nesmith’s private academy, where he was coaxed and praised and indulged even more than at home.  And old Fanny, who was still with Florence, superintended his baths and took care of his clothes, and ran her finger over the bristles of his toothbrush every morning, to see if he had told her the truth.  He rarely did; they used to laugh about those old deceptions.  Clarence used to laugh as violently as the old woman when she accused him of occasional kicking and biting.

Other boys came in to play with him.  Was it because of his magic lantern and his velocipede, his unending supply of cream puffs and licorice sticks, or because they liked him?  Rachael knew only a detail here and there:  that he had danced a fancy dance with Anna Vanderwall when he was a fat sixteen, at a Kermess, and that he had given a stag dinner to twenty youths of his own age a few days before he went off to college, and that they had drunk a hundred and fifty dollars’ worth of champagne.  She knew that his allowance at college was three hundred dollars a month, and that he never stayed within it, and it was old Fanny’s boast that every stitch the boy ever wore from the day he was born came from London or Paris.  His underwear was as dainty as a bride’s; he had his first dress suit at fifteen; at college he had his suite of three big rooms furnished like showrooms, his monogrammed cigarettes, his boat, and his horse.

The thought of all these things used to distress his mother when she was old and much alone.  She attempted to belittle the luxury of Clarence’s boyhood.  She told Rachael that he was treated just as the other boys were.  Her conscience was never quite easy about his upbringing.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Heart of Rachael from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.