The Prairie Child. Stringer Arthur

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Название The Prairie Child
Автор произведения Stringer Arthur
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4064066209766



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the Seventeenth

       Wednesday the Twenty-Third

       Thursday the Thirty-First

       Saturday the Second

       Tuesday the Fifth

       Friday the Ninth

       Monday the Eleventh

       Saturday the Sixteenth

       Monday the Eighteenth

       Thursday the Twenty-Eighth

       Friday the Twenty-Ninth

       Saturday the Thirtieth

       Sunday the First

       Tuesday the Third

       Thursday the Fifth

       Friday the Sixth

       Saturday the Seventh

       Two Hours Later

       Sunday the Eighth

       Thursday the Eleventh

       Sunday the Fourteenth

       Table of Contents

      “But the thing I can’t understand, Dinky-Dunk, is how you ever could.”

      “Could what?” my husband asked in an aerated tone of voice.

      I had to gulp before I got it out.

      “Could kiss a woman like that,” I managed to explain.

      Duncan Argyll McKail looked at me with a much cooler eye than I had expected. If he saw my shudder, he paid no attention to it.

      “On much the same principle,” he quietly announced, “that the Chinese eat birds’ nests.”

      “Just what do you mean by that?” I demanded, resenting the fact that he could stand as silent as a December beehive before my morosely questioning eyes.

      “I mean that, being married, you’ve run away with the idea that all birds’ nests are made out of 2 mud and straw, with possibly a garnish of horse hairs. But if you’d really examine these edible nests you’d find they were made of surprisingly appealing and succulent tendrils. They’re quite appetizing, you may be sure, or they’d never be eaten!”

      I stood turning this over, exactly as I’ve seen my Dinkie turn over an unexpectedly rancid nut.

      “Aren’t you, under the circumstances, being rather stupidly clever?” I finally asked.

      “When I suppose you’d rather see me cleverly stupid?” he found the heart to suggest.

      “But that woman, to me, always looked like a frog,” I protested, doing my best to duplicate his pose of impersonality.

      “Well, she doesn’t make love like a frog,” he retorted with his first betraying touch of anger. I turned to the window, to the end that my Eliza-Crossing-the-Ice look wouldn’t be entirely at his mercy. A belated March blizzard was slapping at the panes and cuffing the house-corners. At the end of a long winter, I knew, tempers were apt to be short. But this was much more than a matter of barometers. The man I’d wanted to live with like a second “Suzanne de Sirmont” in Daudet’s Happiness had not only cut me to the quick but was 3 rubbing salt in the wound. He had said what he did with deliberate intent to hurt me, for it was only too obvious that he was tired of being on the defensive. And it did hurt. It couldn’t help hurting. For the man, after all, was my husband. He was the husband to whom I’d given up the best part of my life, the two-legged basket into which I’d packed all my eggs of allegiance. And now he was scrambling that precious collection for a cheap omelette of amorous adventure. He was my husband, I kept reminding myself. But that didn’t cover the entire case. No husband whose heart is right stands holding another woman’s shoulder and tries to read her shoe-numbers through her ardently upturned eyes. It shows the wind is not blowing right in the home circle. It shows a rent in the dyke, a flaw in the blade, a breach in the fortress-wall of faith. For marriage, to the wife who is a mother as well, impresses me as rather like the spliced arrow of the Esquimos: it is cemented together with blood. It is a solemn matter. And for the sake of mutter-schutz, if for nothing else, it must be kept that way.

      There was a time, I suppose, when the thought of such a thing would have taken my breath away, would have chilled me to the bone. But I’d been 4 through my refining fires, in that respect, and you can’t burn the prairie over twice in the same season. I tried to tell myself it was the setting, and not the essential fact, that seemed so odious. I did my best to believe it wasn’t so much that Duncan Argyll McKail had stooped to make advances to this bandy-legged she-teacher whom I’d so charitably housed at Casa Grande since the beginning of the year—for I’d long since learned not to swallow the antique claim that of all terrestrial carnivora only man and the lion are truly monogamous—but more the fact it had been made such a back-stairs affair with no solitary redeeming touch of dignity.

      Dinky-Dunk, I suppose, would have laughed it away, if I hadn’t walked in on them with their arms about each other, and the bandy-legged one breathing her capitulating sighs into his ear. But there was desperation in the eyes of Miss Alsina Teeswater, and it was plain to see that if my husband had been merely playing with fire it had become a much more serious matter with the lady in the case. There was, in fact, something almost dignifying in that strickenly defiant face of hers. I was almost sorry for her when she turned and walked white-lipped out of the room. What I resented most, 5 as I stood facing my husband, was his paraded casualness, his refusal to take a tragic situation tragically. His attitude seemed to imply that we were about to have a difference over a small thing—over a small thing with brown eyes. He could even stand inspecting me with a mildly amused glance, and I might have forgiven his mildness, I suppose, if it had been without amusement, and that amusement in some way at my expense. He even managed to laugh as I stood there staring at him. It was neither an honest nor a natural laugh. It merely gave me the feeling that he was trying to entrench himself behind a raw mound of mirth, that any shelter was welcome until the barrage was lifted.

      “And what do you intend doing about it?” I asked, more quietly than I had imagined possible.

      “What would you