"Of course," she agreed. "But your father's always lived so
for his business and taken such pride in his sound investments; it's a passion
with him.
I--"
"Pshaw! He needn't worry! You tell him we'll look after him: we'll
build him a little stone bank in the backyard, if he busts up, and he can go
and put his pennies in it every morning. That'll keep him just as happy as he
ever was!" He kissed her. "Good-night, I'm going to tell Lucy
good-bye. Don't sit up for me."
She walked to the front gate with him, still holding his hand, and he told
her again not to "sit up" for him.
"Yes, I will," she laughed. "You won't be very late."
"Well--it's my last night."
"But I know Lucy, and she knows I want to see you, too, your last
night. You'll see: she'll send you home promptly at eleven!"
But she was mistaken: Lucy sent him home promptly at ten.
CHAPTER
XII
ISABEL'S uneasiness about her husband's health--sometimes reflected in her
letters to George during the winter that followed--had not been alleviated when
the accredited Senior returned for his next summer vacation, and she confided
to him in his room, soon after his arrival, that "something" the
doctor had said to her lately had made her more uneasy than ever.
"Still worrying over his rolling-mills investments?", George
asked, not seriously impressed.
"I'm afraid it's past that stage from what Dr. Rainey says. His worries
only aggravate his condition now. Dr. Rainey says we ought to get him
away."
"Well, let's do it, then."
"He won't go."
"He's a man awfully set in his ways; that's true," said George.
"I don't think there's anything much the matter with him, though, and he
looks just the same to me. Have you seen Lucy lately? How is she?"
"Hasn't she written you?"
"Oh, about once a month," he answered carelessly. "Never says
much about herself. How's she look?"
"She looks--pretty!" said Isabel. "I suppose she wrote you
they've moved?"
"Yes; I've got her address. She said they were building."
"They did. It's all finished, and they've been in it a month. Lucy is
so capable; she keeps house exquisitely. It's small, but oh, such a pretty
little house!"
"Well, that's fortunate," George said. "One thing I've always
felt they didn't know a great deal about is architecture."
"Don't they?" asked Isabel, surprised. "Anyhow, their house
is charming. It's way out beyond the end of Amberson Boulevard; it s quite near
that big white house with a gray-green roof somebody built out there a year or
so ago. There are any number of houses going up, out that way; and the
trolley-line runs within a block of them now, on the next street, and the
traction people are laying tracks more than three miles beyond. I suppose you'll
be driving out to see Lucy to-morrow."
"I thought--" George hesitated. "I thought perhaps I'd go
after dinner this evening."
At this, his mother laughed, not astonished. "It was only my feeble
joke about 'to-morrow,' Georgie! I was pretty sure you couldn't wait that long.
Did Lucy write you about the factory?"
"No. What factory?"
"The automobile shops. They had rather a dubious time at first, I'm
afraid, and some of Eugene's experiments turned out badly, but this spring
they've finished eight automobiles and sold them all, and they've got twelve
more almost finished, and they're sold already! Eugene's so gay over it!"
"What do his old sewing-machines look like? Like that first one he had
when they came here?"
"No, indeed! These have rubber tires blown up with air--pneumatic! And
they aren't so high; they're very easy to get into, and the engine's in
front--Eugene thinks that's a great improvement. They're very interesting to
look at; behind the driver's seat there's a sort of box where four people can
sit, with a step and a little door in the rear, and---"
"I know all about it," said George. "I've seen any number
like that, East. You can see all you want of 'em, if you stand on Fifth Avenue
half an hour, any afternoon. I've seen half-a-dozen go by almost at the same
time--within a few minutes, anyhow; and of course electric hansoms are a common
sight there any day. I hired one, myself, the last time I was there. How fast
do Mr. Morgan's machines go?"
"Much too fast! It's very exhilarating--but rather frightening; and
they do make a fearful uproar. He says, though, he thinks he sees a way to get
around the noisiness in time."
"I don't mind the noise," said George. "Give me a horse, for
mine, though, any day. I must get up a race with one of these things:
Pendennis'll leave it one mile behind in a two-mile run. How's
grandfather?"
"He looks well, but he complains sometimes of his heart: I suppose
that's natural at his age--and it's an Amberson trouble." Having mentioned
this, she looked anxious instantly. "Did you ever feel any weakness there,
Georgie?"
"No!" he laughed.
"Are you sure, dear?"
"No!" And he laughed again. "Did you?"
"Oh, I think not--at least, the doctor told me he thought my heart was
about all right. He said I needn't be alarmed."
"I should think not! Women do seem to be always talking about health: I
suppose they haven't got enough else to think of!"
"That must be it," she said gayly. "We're an idle lot!"
George had taken off his coat. "I don't like to hint to a lady,"
he said, "but I do want to dress before dinner."
"Don't be long; I've got to do a lot of looking at you, dear!" She
kissed him and ran away,
singing.
But his Aunt Fanny was not so fond; and at the dinner-table there came a
spark of liveliness into her eye when George patronizingly asked her what was
the news in her own "particular line of sport."
"What do you mean, Georgie?" she asked quietly.
"Oh I mean: What's the news in the fast set generally? You been causing
any divorces lately?"
"No," said Fanny, the spark in her eye getting brighter. "I
haven't been causing anything."
"Well, what's the gossip? You usually hear pretty much everything that
goes on around the nooks and crannies in this town, I hear. What's the last
from the gossips' corner, auntie?"
Fanny dropped her eyes, and the spark was concealed, but a movement of her
lower lip betokened a tendency to laugh, as she replied, "There hasn't
been much gossip lately, except the report that Lucy Morgan and Fred Kinney are
engaged--and that's quite old, by this time."
Undeniably, this bit of mischief was entirely successful, for there was a
clatter upon George's plate. "What--what do you think you're talking
about?" he gasped.
Miss Fanny looked up innocently. "About the report of Lucy Morgan's
engagement to Fred Kinney."
George turned dumbly to his mother, and Isabel shook her head reassuringly.
"People are always starting rumours," she said. "I haven't paid
any attention to this one."
"But you--you've heard it?" he stammered.
"Oh, one hears all sorts of nonsense, dear. I haven't the slightest
idea that it's true."
"Then you have heard it!"
"I wouldn't let it take my appetite," his father suggested drily.
"There are plenty of girls in the world!"
George turned pale.
"Eat your dinner, Georgie," his aunt sail sweetly. "Food will
do you good. I didn't say I knew this rumour was true. I only said I'd heard
it."
"When? When did you hear it!"
"Oh, months ago!" And Fanny found any further postponement of
laughter impossible.
"Fanny, you're a hard-hearted creature," Isabel said gently.
"You really are. Don't pay any attention to her, George. Fred Kinney's
only a clerk in his uncle's hardware place: he couldn't marry for ages--even if
anybody would accept him!"
George breathed tumultuously. "I don't care anything about 'ages'!
What's that got to do with it?" he said, his thoughts appearing to be
somewhat disconnected. "'Ages,' don't mean anything! I only want to
know--I want to know--I want--" He stopped.
"What do you want?" his father asked crossly. "Why don't you
say it? Don't make such a fuss."
"I'm not--not at all," George declared, pushing his chair back
from the table.
"You must finish your dinner, dear," his mother urged.
"Don't--"
"I have finished. I've eaten all I want. I don't want any more than I
wanted. I don't want--I--" He rose, still incoherent. "I prefer--I
want--Please excuse me!"
He left the room, and a moment later the screens outside the open front door
were heard to slam.
"Fanny! You shouldn't--"
"Isabel, don't reproach me. He did have plenty of dinner, and I only
told the truth: everybody has been saying--"
"But there isn't any truth in it."
"We don't actually know there isn't," Miss Fanny insisted,
giggling. "We've never asked Lucy."
"I wouldn't ask her anything so absurd!"
"George would," George's father remarked. "That's what he's
gone to do."
Mr. Minafer was not mistaken: that was what his son had gone to do. Lucy and
her father were just rising from their dinner table when the stirred youth arrived
at the front door of the new house. It was a cottage, however, rather than a
house; and Lucy had taken a free hand with the architect, achieving results in
white and green, outside, and white and blue, inside, to such effect of youth
and daintiness that her father complained of "too much spring-time!"
The whole place, including his own bedroom, was a young damsel's boudoir, he
said, so that nowhere could he smoke a cigar without feeling like a ruffian.
However, he was smoking when George arrived, and he encouraged George to join
him in the pastime, but the caller, whose air was both tense and preoccupied,
declined with something like agitation.
"I never smoke--that is, I'm seldom--I mean, no thanks," he said.
"I mean not at all. I'd rather not."
"Aren't you well, George?" Eugene asked, looking at him in
perplexity. "Have you been overworking at college? You do look rather
pa--"
"I don't work," said George. "I mean I don't work. I think,
but I don't work. I only work at the end of the term. There isn't much to
do."
Eugene's perplexity was little decreased, and a tinkle of the door-bell
afforded him obvious relief. "It's my foreman," he said, looking at
his watch. "I'll take him out in the yard to talk. This is no place for a
foreman." And he departed, leaving the "living room" to Lucy and
George. It was a pretty room, white panelled and blue curtained--and no place
for a foreman, as Eugene said. There was a grand piano, and Lucy stood leaning
back against it, looking intently at George, while her fingers, behind her,
absently struck a chord or two. And her dress was the dress for that room,
being of blue and white, too; and the high colour in her cheeks was far from
interfering with the general harmony of things--George saw with dismay that she
was prettier than ever, and naturally he missed the reassurance he might have
felt had he been able to guess that Lucy, on her part, was finding him better
looking than ever. For, however unusual the scope of George's pride, vanity of
beauty was not included; he did not think about his looks.
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