
- 559 pages
- English
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eBook - ePub
About this book
An "intimately limned" saga of passion and greed in the decade before the Civil Warāfrom the
New York Timesābestselling author of
Captains and the Kings (
Kirkus Reviews).
The Wide House is the story of two cousins from Ireland: Stuart Coleman, a shopkeeper who dreams of building a big white house and raising a family, and Janie Cauder, a young widow with four children, only one of whom she truly adores. When Janie arrives in Grandeville, New York, the two begin a surprising romanceābut happiness is not to be their fate.
Ā
Driven by ambition and haunted by self-doubt, Stuart spurns Janie for the beautiful daughter of a business rival. Janie, meanwhile, takes her disappointment out on her children and pursues new romantic opportunitiesāto diminishing returns. As the national mood turns increasingly antagonistic to outsiders, Stuart and Janie's inability to love will leave a bitter mark on their lives, and on generations to come.
Ā
A richly detailed portrait of a fascinating time in American history, The Wide House is a masterwork from an author whose "sheer power" has captivated millions of readers all over the world ( The New York Times).
Ā
The Wide House is the story of two cousins from Ireland: Stuart Coleman, a shopkeeper who dreams of building a big white house and raising a family, and Janie Cauder, a young widow with four children, only one of whom she truly adores. When Janie arrives in Grandeville, New York, the two begin a surprising romanceābut happiness is not to be their fate.
Ā
Driven by ambition and haunted by self-doubt, Stuart spurns Janie for the beautiful daughter of a business rival. Janie, meanwhile, takes her disappointment out on her children and pursues new romantic opportunitiesāto diminishing returns. As the national mood turns increasingly antagonistic to outsiders, Stuart and Janie's inability to love will leave a bitter mark on their lives, and on generations to come.
Ā
A richly detailed portrait of a fascinating time in American history, The Wide House is a masterwork from an author whose "sheer power" has captivated millions of readers all over the world ( The New York Times).
Ā
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Information
BOOK TWO
THE CHILDREN IN THE GATE
āHis children are far from safety, and they are crushed in the gate, neither is there any to deliver them.ā
āJob 5, Verse 4.
CHAPTER 26
Angus Cauder picked up his medical books from under the counter and laid them on top of it. He passed his thin hands over his face, and sighed. All the juice and life were squeezed out of him, so that he felt dry and brittle and flaxlike. Even his mind was dry and dusty, laid over with the grime of old despair and hopelessness and acquiescence. He moved his tongue in his mouth, to alleviate the parched sensation which came from his soul.
The last customer had gone. Even the clerks had long ago closed the door behind them. Angus ran his finger over the top of his books, and sighed again. Then, with a tragic gesture, he pushed the books aside, and went into the back room which served as the offices of the shops. He walked with a slight stoop, for he was not strong, and he was too tall and thin. Nor were his movements full of the vitality and sprightliness of youth. He walked like an old man, heavy with years and stiff with ancient dejection.
Stuart, frowning over the ledgers, looked up and saw the youth. He smiled slightly, leaning back in his chair. He, too, was very tired. He smoothed his hair with both hands; there were a few wiry streaks of gray in its heavy long blackness with the curling ends.
āFinished, Angus? But, of course, itās nearly seven. What are you doing here so late?ā
āThere were some bolts to rewind, Stuart, of the new foulard.ā
The lamp on the desk threw its pallid light over the ledgers, and over the new panelled walls, for even here Stuart must have his elegance, his reassurance of luxury. In that wan circle of illumination, Angus stood in silence, his gray eyes hidden, his pale and suffering face, lined even now though he was still so young, full of chronic reticence and pride. His mouth, always reserved and thin, was now a wide tight line with rigid corners, as if it was an iron gate forever barred against the spirit within and the joy without. His fine brown hair, sleek and longish, lay flaccidly on his narrow skull, and two or three strands streaked across his forehead with its noble contours and strong protuberances.
Stuart peered at him with furtive uneasiness. He lit a cheroot, and frowned at the panelled ceiling.
āYouāve been here six months now, Angus. How dāyou like it, eh? The shops and all?ā
āVery well, Stuart. Itāitās very interesting. Isnāt it?ā
āIs it? You find it interesting, Angus?ā
Angus hesitated. He moved on his long thin feet. He wore the black broadcloth and white linen of the other clerks, and they gave his emaciated body a funereal look. Against that blackness his hands, so slender and tapered, appeared waxen and lifeless.
He spoke formally: āPeople are always interesting, Stuart.ā
āAre they?ā replied Stuart, wryly. He examined the end of his cheroot. āI think theyāre a damned nuisance, most of them. However, Iām glad you arenāt dissatisfied.
He knew that the young man had come to him for a specific purpose, and he wondered what it was. Angus never volunteered any communication between them; his attitude was entirely withdrawn and negative, as a rule, in his dealings with Stuart.
When Angus remained silent, Stuart looked at him directly.
āYou are satisfied, arenāt you, Angus?ā
Angus dropped his head. āPlease forgive me, Stuart, but Iām not. You see, Mama thinks I should have a little increase.ā
āAh. She does, eh? And what does Mama suggest?ā
At the note of irony in Stuartās voice, Angus flushed. He lifted his head and looked at Stuart arrogantly, though there was a faint quivering over his thin features. He said, and his voice trembled defensively, and with a pale affrighted anger: āMama says that as she is a partner in the shops, and that as I work here, I ought to receive more than the other clerks.ā He hesitated. āShe thinks I should receive at least three dollars more a week.ā
Stuart studied him curiously. āAnd what do you think, Angus?ā
The youth was resolute, however. His gray eyes suddenly gleamed in the lamplight. āI think it should be five more, Stuart.ā
Stuart suddenly turned his attention again to his cheroot. He scowled, and cursed inaudibly. āThe tobacco we get these days! Look at the damn thing!ā He removed the chimney of the lamp and applied the tip of the cheroot to the flame, which wavered and darkened. āYou have to have a conflagration to light cheroots now.ā He replaced the chimney, and puffed vigorously for a few moments. Angus watched him. A slight grim smile deepened, rather than alleviated, the hard straight corners of his young mouth. All at once he was complete steely hardness, and it was Stuart now who was on the defensive.
Stuart smiled on his young relative brilliantly. āVery well, then, I think I prefer your opinionāto your mamaās. We shall make it five, beginning Saturday. How is that?ā āThank you, Stuart, said Angus, coldly. He moved, preparing to leave. But Stuart turned to him fully, in his chair. As always, his movements were impetuous. Yet as he met Angusā hard gray eyes he was suddenly silent. He frowned, and it was not with annoyance. He coughed, with embarrassment.
āAngus, will you sit down a moment? I want to talk to you.ā
But Angus stiffened. āI am late now, Stuart. We dine at half past seven, you know. Mama will be annoyed if I delay her.ā
āOh, we mustnāt annoy Mama, of course! But I am expecting my carriage, and Iāll drive you home. In about five minutes. You couldnāt walk it so fast I wonāt keep you long.ā
Angus did not speak for a moment, and then into his voice, neutral and indifferent, there crept a proud note. āVery well.ā He sat down stiffly on the edge of a chair near by, and waited, looking at Stuart with a dimly inimical expression. Stuart saw it. His embarrassment increased. But also his pity.
āYouāll think it none of my business, certainly, Angus. But you and I were friends, once, a long time ago. I was always very fond of you. You know that, donāt you?ā
Angus was silent. But the harsh corners of his mouth moved in a repudiating smile, cynical and cold.
Stuart colored. He struck his palm on the desk. āYouāve listened to false tales, Angus! That is evident. You must believe me that Iāve always been fond of you.ā
The lad moved, as if affronted, and appeared to be about to rise. But he said nothing. His eyes were like pale and polished stone as he regarded Stuart, and waited.
Stuart was becoming excited. That was bad for his liver, he recalled angrily. Well, to hell with his liver just now! He would make one try only, to rescue this young fool, to break down his ridiculous defenses.
āWhen you were fourteen, Angus, you confided in me that you wished to be a physician. Aāfriend, urged me to look after you; he charged me with encouraging and helping you. I resented the charge. Nevertheless, for his sake I remembered itāand for yours. Last June you were graduated from your school. I was surprised when your mama requested that you be admitted to the shops.ā
He paused. His low forehead wrinkled uneasily. Angus had listened, in wary silence, and while Stuart had been speaking, his young face hardened, become like shining steel. He still waited, his eyes fixed on Stuart.
āYouāve done good work in the shops, Angus. You have a keen mind and an understanding one. Youāve helped me with the books, and I look forward to turning more and more of them over to you. I find them onerous. Sam usually attends to them, but as you know, he hasnāt been well since his lung fever last March. It will be some time before he can do a full dayās work on the ledgers.
āYes, you are doing well. You will eventually do excellently. But that isnāt what I had hoped for, for you. Youāve left school now, and I fully expected that you would go to study with some good doctor. Like Dr. Dexter. I spoke to him last Spring, and he agreed to take you. You know that. What changed your mind? Arenāt you interested in medicine any longer?ā
Angus was still. But Stuart saw with what a convulsion his hands suddenly clasped themselves together in a movement as if he were wringing them. And then his hands were still, also, though still rigidly clasped together.
He said, in a voice without intonation: āIt doesnāt matter whether I am interested or not, or what I had wanted, or planned, Stuart. Mama canāt afford to keep me in idleness any longer, and it is my duty to assist her.ā
āDamned nonsense!ā cried Stuart, with his quick rage. āYour mama is receiving nearly six thousand dollars a year from her investment! Why, last year, if I remember correctly, it was over that. She hasnāt touched her principal at all. Then, two years ago, when her father died, she received ten thousand dollars as her legacy. She has tucked that away, too, in her damned strong boxes. She can very well afford to let you do what you had always dreamt of doing.ā
Angus had straightened in his chair. His eyes sparkled with bitter affront. āStuart, you donāt know all my motherās affairs, and IāI consider it presumptuous of you to criticize her. You have forgotten there are three other children. She canāt afford to pamper me. Bertie is only seventeen, Robbie is not yet sixteen, and there is Laurie, who is only eleven. The boys arenāt finished with their school. Mama is sometimes very pressed. I must help her. It is my duty. To complain would be immoral. We must each put aside our hopes when they conflict with duty. We cannot ask others to suffer for us, and to deny themselves. Such selfishness is sinful and cruel.ā
Stuartās full face was dark with congested blood. āYou mean you consider it sinful and cruel to oppose the unfeeling and insensible demands of a rapacious woman? Just because she is your mother?ā
Angus rose. He had begun to breathe in short breaths. āGood night, Cousin Stuart.ā
But Stuart rose also, and stood before the door. āAngus, by God! This is the last time I shall appeal to you, and try to make you see what your mother is doing to you. I will have my say, and then you can go, and be damned to you!
āYour mother has always disliked you. Youāve never admitted it, in your fatuous devotion to her. She intends to ruin your life. She has already made you a dirty little money-grubber. Look at you! Youāre sick to death, to the very depths of you, you puppy! Iāve watched you in the shops, from this door. Iāve probed to your heart; Iāve seen your misery. Angus, you are dying on your feet. It wouldnāt matter so much if it were only your damned miserable flesh. But youāre dying inside, Angus. And youāre letting a woman who hates you, who enjoys thwarting and murdering you, do this thing to you. To the idiot thing you call your soul. She is using your best instincts, your devotion and honesty and sense of duty, to destroy you.ā
He stopped, running out of breath. His treacherous heart was pounding in his chest, with great pain. Now, curse it, he would have to forego his whiskey tonight. He put his hand to his chest, and pushed it there, with instinctive pressure.
Angus had retreated from him, to the other side of the desk, and now only the lower part of his body was in the light. His face was in shadow. But out of that shadow the gray steel of his eyes flashed with scorn and cold outrage.
Stuart was trembling with violence. He drew a deep breath, tried for his own sake to control the vehemence of his voice, and said:
āYou speak of duty. Damn it, you would agree with me that a man has only one soul. He must guard and protect it, lest he die. You will agree with me, there? And to guard and protect it, he must yield to its instincts. He must never step aside. You have always wanted to be a physician. You have the emotions of a devoted man, self-sacrificing and dedicated. That is the temper of your soul.
āYet you are allowing this woman to destroy your soul, to make a grasping and greedy animal of you, an avaricious miser. Iāve seen you fondle the gold pieces that passed over the counter to you! Iāve seen you jingle them in your hands, and smile. Youāve put them away, lovingly. Iāve watched you. But they didnāt put any light in your miserable face. They put ugliness there. The ugliness of a dying soul, Angus.ā
He had to stop. His breath failed him again. But his black and restless eyes, usually so careless and selfish, were bright with earnestness now, and impatient anger, and pleading.
Angus looked at him in silence. Stuart could hardly see his face. But he felt the boyās implacability and contempt.
Then he heard Angusā voice, thin but firm, and harsh. āCousin Stuart, you speak to me of āsouls.ā But you donāt believe in souls, or in God. You are a bad man, and you know that in your heart, Cousin Stuart. I canāt listen to you. Your words mean nothing to me.ā
He paused, while Stuart stared at him with incredulous hopelessness and fury.
āIāve done my duty here, Cousin Stuart. Iāll continue to do it, if you allow me to stay after this. You can always trust me. I want to learn the business, as my mother is one of your partners. I intend to make the shops my lifework. I want it that way. That is all I want. And I canāt listen to anyone, least of all you, who would lead me astray, away from God and what I know is my duty. Holy exhortations never came from a faithless instrument. I canāt believe that from you would ever come any sound advice or righteous guidance. What your motive is I do not rightly know, but I do sense that you are advising me to repudiate and defy my poor mother, who has devoted her life to her orphaned children. You are advising me to turn aside from my duty, and selfishly to pursue my own frivolous and unsanctified desires.ā
At this imbecility, Stuart was not freshly angered, but only sick with despair. He lifted his hand, as if to brush aside a swarm of gnats that meaninglessly buzzed and stung. He said, with passionate quietness:
āAngus, if your mother should refuse to allow you to study medicine, and you are afraid you will be left penniless, and thrown out of her house, you can come to me, with pleasure. I will help you. You can live in my house, and study with Dr. Dexter.
āI am your friend. I have never urged good deeds on anyone else but you. It is distasteful to me. A man should choose his own life. But you are so badgered, so confused, so fatuous, that you need help. I am offering you this help, from my heart.ā
But Angus cried, in a thin and shaking voice: āYou have no heart, Stuart! You are a bad and faithless man! It is a sin to listen to you!ā
He caught up his hat, and plunged towards Stuart, who instinctively moved aside, aghast. The boy seized the door handle, wrenched open the door, and fled. Stuart, standing there in the office, heard his wild and retreating footsteps running through the empty shops. He heard one last cry, as the outer door opened and shut.
He moved slowly towards his desk. He fell into his chair. His face was damp. He wiped it. Then he began to curse aloud, viciously, to curse himself and his folly. He felt weak and sick, after this encounter with this blinded young man, whom he had tried to help.
He opened a drawer in his desk, and recklessly produced a bottle of whiskey. He drank long and copiously. He needed it. He put the bottle away, and cursed aloud again, with richness and despair and rage. Oh, the damned young idiot, the cursed imbecile! Damn him to hell, and his mother with him! He deserved nothing better.
He locked up the desk. It infuriated him that his hand was shaking.
CHAPTER 27
Stuart went out into the dead and ashen quiet of the November evening. A faint fog had drifted in from the Lakes, and every street-lamp floated in a rainbowed aura. The board walks were slippery and dark with moisture; the cobbled streets gleamed with a wet black luster. Every house showed rectangles of orange light. From a distance, carriages and wagons rumbled faintly, and with dim echoes. Not a soul could be seen.
Stuart, locking up the doors, glared at his full block of shops with that swelling rich satisfaction which never failed him. During the past five years or so, he had torn down the uneven line of chaotic little shops and rebuilt them on an even height of three stories, so that they appeared one long shining establishment. Indeed, he had cut doors in the walls so that one could travel from the main shop to the last on the street, without stepping outside. One could pass from the ladiesā luxurious establishment into the boot shop, where ladies, choosing their own fine leathers, could be fitted for excellent boots by expert shoemakers and where their husbands and children could also be fitted; and from the ...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Dedication
- BOOK ONE
- BOOK TWO
- BOOK THREE
- A Biography of Taylor Caldwell
- Copyright