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PinkMonkey Digital Library-Sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser


"Indeed it was. My wife enjoyed it very much."

Mrs. Hurstwood bit her lip.

"So," she thought, "that’s the way he does. Tells my friends I am
sick and cannot come."

She wondered what could induce him to go alone. There was
something back of this. She rummaged her brain for a reason.

By evening, when Hurstwood reached home, she had brooded
herself into a state of sullen desire for explanation and revenge.
She wanted to know what this peculiar action of his imported. She
was certain there was more behind it all than what she had heard,
and evil curiosity mingled well with distrust and the remnants of
her wrath of the morning. She, impending disaster itself, walked
about with gathered shadow at the eyes and the rudimentary
muscles of savagery fixing the hard lines of her mouth.

On the other hand, as we may well believe, the manager came
home in the sunniest mood. His conversation and agreement with
Carrie had raised his spirits until he was in the frame of mind of
one who sings joyously. He was proud of himself, proud of his
success, proud of Carrie. He could have been genial to all the
world, and he bore no grudge against his wife. He meant to be
pleasant, to forget her presence, to live in the atmosphere of youth
and pleasure which had been restored to him.

So now, the house, to his mind, had a most pleasing and
comfortable appearance. In the hall he found an evening paper,
laid there by the maid and forgotten by Mrs. Hurstwood. In the
dining-room the table was clean laid with linen and napery and
shiny with glasses and decorated china. Through an open door he
saw into the kitchen, where the fire was crackling in the stove and
the evening meal already well under way. Out in the small back
yard was George, Jr., frolicking with a young dog he had recently
purchased, and in the parlour Jessica was playing at the piano, the
sound of a merry waltz filling every nook and corner of the
comfort-

able home. Every one, like himself, seemed to have regained his
good spirits, to be in sympathy with youth and beauty, to be
inclined to joy and merry-making. He felt as if he could say a
good word all around himself, and took a most genial glance at
the spread table and polished sideboard before going upstairs to
read his paper in the comfortable arm-chair of the sitting-room
which looked through the open windows into the street. When he
entered there, however, he found his wife brushing her hair and
musing to herself the while.

He came lightly in, thinking to smooth over any feeling that might
still exist by a kindly word and a ready promise, but Mrs.
Hurstwood said nothing. He seated himself in the large chair,
stirred lightly in making himself comfortable, opened his paper,
and began to read. In a few moments he was smiling merrily over
a very comical account of a baseball game which had taken place
between the Chicago and Detroit teams.

The while he was doing this Mrs. Hurstwood was observing him
casually though the medium of the mirror which was before her.
She noticed his pleasant and contented manner, his airy grace and
smiling humour, and it merely aggravated her the more. She
wondered how he could think to carry himself so in her presence
after the cynicism, indifference, and neglect he had heretofore
manifested and would continue to manifest so long as she would
endure it. She thought how she should like to tell him-what stress
and emphasis she would lend her assertions, how she could drive
over this whole affair until satisfaction should

be rendered her. Indeed, the shining sword of her wrath was but
weakly suspended by a thread of thought.

In the meanwhile Hurstwood encountered a humorous item
concerning a stranger who had arrived in the city and became
entangled with a bunco-steerer. It amused him immensely, and at
last he stirred and chuckled to himself. He wished that he might
enlist his wife’s attention and read it to her.

"Ha, ha," he exclaimed softly, as if to himself, "that’s funny."

Mrs. Hurstwood kept on arranging her hair, not so much as
deigning a glance.

He stirred again and went on to another subject. At last he felt as
if his good-humour must find some outlet. Julia was probably still
out of humour over that affair of this morning, but that could
easily be straightened. As a matter of fact, she was in the wrong,
but he didn’t care. She could go to Waukesha right away if she
wanted to. The sooner the better. He would tell her that as soon as
he got a chance, and the whole thing would blow over.
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PinkMonkey Digital Library-Sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser



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