Part 27 (2/2)
I had been holding one of Zillah's hands during the interview, and she now pulled me down and whispered:
”What's the matter with thee, Richard Morton?”
”Heaven grant you may never know, little one. Good-by.” I had scarcely left the piazza, however, before Mrs. Yocomb called:
”Richard Morton, thee must be famished. Come to supper.”
CHAPTER II
”IT WAS INEVITABLE”
I ought to have had a ravenous appet.i.te but I had none at all. I ought to have been glad and thankful from the depths of my heart, but I was so depressed that everything I said was forced and unnatural. My head felt as if it were bursting, and I was enraged with myself and the wretched result of my bright dream. Indeed I found myself inclined to a spirit of recklessness and irritation that was wellnigh irresistible.
Miss Warren seemed as wholly free from any morbid, unnatural tendencies as Mr. Yocomb himself, and she did her utmost to make the hour as genial as it should have been. At first I imagined that she was trying to satisfy herself that I had recovered my senses, and that my unexpected words, spoken in the morning, were the result of a mood that was as transient as it was abnormal. I think I puzzled her; I certainly did not understand myself any better than did poor Adah, whose mind appeared to be in solution from the effects of the lightning, and I felt that I must be appearing worse than idiotic.
Miss Warren, resolutely bent on banis.h.i.+ng every unnatural constraint, asked Mr. Yocomb:
”How is my genuine friend, Old Plod? Did the lightning wake him up?”
”No, he plods as heavily as ever this morning. Thee only can wake him up.”
”You've no idea what a compliment that is,” she said, with a low laugh.
”Old Plod inspires me with a sense of confidence and stability that is very rea.s.suring in a world full of lightning flashes.”
”Yes,” I said, ”he is safe as a horse-block, and quite as exhilarating.
Give me Dapple.”
She looked at me quickly and keenly, and colored slightly. She evidently had some a.s.sociation in her mind with the old plow-horse that I did not understand.
”Exhilaration scarcely answers as a steady diet, Mr. Morton.”
”Little chance of its lasting long,” I replied, ”even in a world overcharged with electricity.”
”I prefer calm, steady suns.h.i.+ne to these wild alternations.”
”I doubt it; 'calm, steady suns.h.i.+ne' would make the world as dry and monotonous as a desert.”
”That's true, Richard Morton,” said Mr. Yocomb. ”I like peace and quiet more than most men, but even if we had all burned up last night, this part of the world would have been wonderfully the better for the storm.
I reckon it was worth a million or more dollars to the county.”
”That's the right way to look at it, Mr. Yocomb,” I said carelessly.
”The greatest good to the greatest number. Individuals are of no account.”
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