登陆注册
4615200000135

第135章

Home! The sprawling white house with fluttering white curtains at the windows, the thick clover on the lawn with the bees busy in it, the little black boy on the front steps shooing the ducks and turkeys from the flower beds, the serene red fields and the miles and miles of cotton turning white in the sun! Home!

If she had only gone home at the beginning of the siege, when everyone else was refugeeing! She could have taken Melanie with her in safety with weeks to spare.

“Oh, damn Melanie!” she thought a thousand times. “Why couldn’t she have gone to Macon with Aunt Pitty? That’s where she belongs, with her own kinfolks, not with me. I’m none of her blood. Why does she hang onto me so hard? If she’d only gone to Macon, then I could have gone home to Mother. Even now—even now, I’d take a chance on getting home in spite of the Yankees, if it wasn’t for this baby. Maybe General Hood would give me an escort. He’s a nice man, General Hood, and I know I could make him give me an escort and a flag of truce to get me through the lines. But I have to wait for this baby! ... Oh, Mother! Mother! Don’t die! ... Why don’t this baby ever come? I’ll see Dr. Meade today and ask him if there’s any way to hurry babies up so I can go home—if I can get an escort. Dr. Meade said she’d have a bad time. Dear God! Suppose she should die! Melanie dead. Melanie dead. And Ashley— No, I mustn’t think about that, it isn’t nice. But Ashley— No, I mustn’t think about that because he’s probably dead, anyway. But he made me promise I’d take care of her. But—if I didn’t take care of her and she died and Ashley is still alive— No, I mustn’t think about ‘that It’s sinful. And I promised God I’d be good if He would just not let Mother die. Oh, if the baby would only come. If I could only get away from here—get home—get anywhere but here.”

Scarlett hated the sight of the ominously still town now and once she had loved it. Atlanta was no longer the gay, the desperately gay place she had loved. It was a hideous place like a plague-stricken city so quiet, so dreadfully quiet after the din of the siege. There had been stimulation in the noise and the danger of the shelling. There was only horror in the quiet that followed. The town seemed haunted, haunted with fear and uncertainty and memories. People’s faces looked pinched and the few soldiers Scarlett saw wore the exhausted look of racers forcing themselves on through the last lap of a race already lost.

The last day of August came and with it convincing rumors that the fiercest fighting since the battle of Atlanta was taking place. Somewhere to the south. Atlanta, waiting for news of the turn of battle, stopped even trying to laugh and joke. Everyone knew now what the soldiers had known two weeks before—that Atlanta was in the last ditch, that if the Macon railroad fell, Atlanta would fall too.

On the morning of the first of September, Scarlett awoke with a suffocating sense of dread upon her, a dread she had taken to her pillow the night before. She thought, dulled with sleep: “What was it I was worrying about when I went to bed last night? Oh, yes, the fighting. There was a battle, somewhere, yesterday! Oh, who won?” She sat up hastily, rubbing her eyes, and her worried heart took up yesterday’s load again.

The air was oppressive even in the early morning hour, hot with the scorching promise of a noon of glaring blue sky and pitiless bronze sun. The road outside lay silent No wagons creaked by. No troops raised the red dust with their tramping feet. There were no sounds of negroes’ lazy voices in neighboring kitchens, no pleasant sounds of breakfasts being prepared, for all the near neighbors except Mrs. Meade and Mrs. Merriwether had refugeed to Macon. And she could hear nothing from their houses either. Farther down the street the business section was quiet and many of the stores and offices were locked and boarded up, while their occupants were somewhere about the countryside with rifles in their hands.

The stillness that greeted her seemed even more sinister this morning than on any of the mornings of the queer quiet week preceding it. She rose hastily, without her usual preliminary burrowings and stretchings, and went to the window, hoping to see some neighbor’s face, some heartening sight. But the road was empty. She noted how the leaves on the trees were still dark green but dry and heavily coated with red dust, and how withered and sad the untended flowers in the front yard looked.

As she stood, looking out of the window, there came to her ears a far-off sound, faint and sullen as the first distant thunder of an approaching storm.

“Rain,” she thought in the first moment, and her country-bred mind added, “we certainly need it.” But, in a split instant: “Rain? No! Not rain! Cannon!”

Her heart racing, she leaned from the window, her ear cocked to the far-off roaring, trying to discover from which direction it came. But the dim thundering was so distant that, for a moment, she could not tell. “Make it from Marietta, Lord!” she prayed. “Or Decatur. Or Peachtree Creek. But not from the south! Not from the south!” She gripped the window still tighter and strained her ears and the far-away booming seemed louder. And it was coming from the south.

Cannon to the south! And to the south lay Jonesboro and Tara—and Ellen.

Yankees perhaps at Tara, now, this minute! She listened again but the blood thudding in her ears all but blurred out the sound of far-off firing. No, they couldn’t be at Jonesboro yet. If they were that far away, the sound would be fainter, more indistinct. But they must be at least ten miles down the road toward Jonesboro, probably near the little settlement of Rough and Ready. But Jonesboro was scarcely more than ten miles below Rough and Ready.

同类推荐
  • 宗玄先生文集

    宗玄先生文集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 蒙训

    蒙训

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 伏魔经坛谢恩醮仪

    伏魔经坛谢恩醮仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 古画品录

    古画品录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 史氏菊谱

    史氏菊谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 证据游戏

    证据游戏

    来自英国的畅销小说:萨拉·纽比系列第一部《证据游戏》,为你解开一个个悬而未决的疑团……
  • 一分钟推理

    一分钟推理

    人的大脑就像一把刀子,你越磨砺它,它就越锋利。能让人的大脑达到这一满意效果的就是罪犯和警察之间的博弈游戏。探案是一种高智商的活动,受“道高一尺,魔高一丈”规律制约,游戏的参与者总是在制造更新更绝妙的方法,企图制服对方。书中汇集中外经典推理故事,精中选精,以新奇、精致、逻辑力强为鲜明特征,言简意赅,妙趣横生,在独飨趣味盎然的推理文字盛宴的同时,既可锻炼读者的观察能力、分析能力、推理能力和创造能力,又可满足读者的好奇之心。
  • 只有我知道

    只有我知道

    所有的秘密,只有我一个人知道。所谓沉沦不过是一场一场的爱恋······
  • 强娶豪夺

    强娶豪夺

    很多很多年以后,世界著名某杂志采访司空夫妇时,突然问道他们多年恩爱相处的秘诀是什么?司空先生只说了四个字:放手,成全。司空夫人沉默了会儿,笑靥如花:爱到极致是放手,是成全,也是变态。众人一听哗然,难道司空先生是个变态吗?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 月谈赋

    月谈赋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 不是爱情的爱情

    不是爱情的爱情

    三月下旬的一天,许雯总算在电话里听到了史蒙的声音。和平常一样,藏匿了近两个月之久的他不知又从哪冒出来。他说刚下飞机,正在机场的餐厅吃东西。还问许雯想不想过去一起吃?跑到机场吃饭?亏他想得出。对史蒙的即兴之举,许雯倒是司空见惯。但屁颠屁颠地一听他的声音就赶过去,做女人也不能太没分。何况,临走前他们还吵了一架呢。“恐怕不行,我正上班呐。”她声音颤颤的说。“唔,我有两个月没说人话了。”他说。“没错,你从来都只说鬼话。”许雯泄愤似地甩了一句。
  • 燃爱

    燃爱

    ★豪门、禁忌恋★他和她、是同父异母,她和他、是同母异父.无论他和她,还是她和他,都有实实在在的血缘关系^^^她,韩透,帝国集团的公主,人人呵护的宝贝。他,韩彻,帝国集团的唯一法定继承人。阴狠毒辣、对敌人从不手软。他的势力横跨商、政、黑三界,早已超过帝国集团今日的地位。然而这样一个阴毒狠戾的男人却无可救药的爱上了那个同父异母的妹妹。他说:“韩透,你只能属于我,管他什么道德廉耻,就算下地狱,我也要拉着你一起!”^^^他,游烨,商界后起之秀中的翘楚,沉稳干练。支持他的信念就是要足够强大,然后带着母亲和妹妹永远摆脱帝国。然而,他成功了,却来不及带走心爱的她,为了爱她,甚至连性命都不要。他说:“透透,不爱你我做不到,在禁忌之门开启之时,我就沉沦了!”^^^他,蓝玉,蓝欧跨国集团的皇太子,身家外貌无以匹敌的他,却只为她生,只为她死。他活着的信念就是爱她,给她幸福。他说:“透透,你是我的女王,你可以主宰我的一切,包括我的命,只求你,把爱分给我一点!”【强推完结文】:《狂情哥哥》《哥哥求你放了我》强推新文:《妆·嗜宠》(稳定更新)
  • 横赌

    横赌

    二十世纪三十年代,关东赌场上流行两种赌法。一种是顺赌,赌财、赌房、赌地,一掷千金,这是豪赌、大赌。然而,也有另一种赌法,没财、没钱、也没地,身无分文,就是硬赌,赌妻儿老小、赌自己的命。在赌场上把自己的命置之不顾,甚至自己妻儿的生命,用人当赌资,这种赌法被称为横赌。横赌自然是几十年前的往事了,故事就从这里开始。一身无分文的冯山在赌桌上苦熬了五天五夜,不仅熬红了眼睛,而且熬得气短身虚。杨六终于轰然一声倒在了炕上。他在倒下的瞬间,有气无力地说:冯山,文竹是你的了。然后杨六就倒下了,倒下的杨六便昏睡过去。
  • 半妖天下:魔君大人万万岁

    半妖天下:魔君大人万万岁

    秦御天修仙路上小小道士一枚,为了温柔黑衣男神努力修仙。路遇面瘫炸毛皇子一只,捡起来,纨绔小侯爷一只,捡起来,霸气外露夜阑王一只,捡起来……温柔男神立马变猛虎,咆哮道:秦御天,你有完没完。秦御天很没骨气的答道:就完了。凤玉夜黑着脸,嗯了一声。(嗯字二声)我和他们一点关系都没有。
  • 观音经持验记

    观音经持验记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。