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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton


31

line. It was formed of Zeena’s obstinate silence, of Mattie’s sudden
look of warning, of the memory of just such fleeting imperceptible
signs as those which told him, on certain stainless mornings, that
before night there would be rain.

His dread was so strong that, man-like, he sought to postpone
certainty. The hauling was not over till mid-day, and as the lumber
was to be delivered to Andrew Hale, the Starkfield builder, it was
really easier for Ethan to send Jotham Powell, the hired man, back
to the farm on foot, and drive the load down to the village himself.
He had scrambled up on the logs, and was sitting astride of them,
close over his shaggy grays, when, coming between him and their
streaming necks, he had a vision of the warning look that Mattie
had given him the night before.

“If there’s going to be any trouble I want to be there,” was his
vague reflection, as he threw to Jotham the unexpected order to
unhitch the team and lead them back to the barn.

It was a slow trudge home through the heavy fields, and when the
two men entered the kitchen Mattie was lifting the coffee from the
stove and Zeena was already at the table. Her husband stopped
short at sight of her. Instead of her usual calico wrapper and
knitted shawl she wore her best dress of brown merino, and above
her thin strands of hair, which still preserved the tight undulations
of the crimping-pins, rose a hard perpendicular bonnet, as to which
Ethan’s clearest notion was that he had to pay five dollars for it at
the Bettsbridge Emporium. On the floor beside her stood his old
valise and a bandbox wrapped in newspapers.

“Why, where are you going, Zeena?” he exclaimed.
“I’ve got my shooting pains so bad that I’m going over to
Bettsbridge to spend the night with Aunt Martha Pierce and see
that new doctor,” she answered in a matter-of-fact tone, as if she
had said she was going into the store-room to take a look at the
preserves, or up to the attic to go over the blankets.

In spite of her sedentary habits such abrupt decisions were not
without precedent in Zeena’s history. Twice or thrice before she
had suddenly packed Ethan’s valise and started off to Bettsbridge,
or even Springfield, to seek the advice of some new doctor, and her
husband had grown to dread these expeditions because of their
cost. Zeena always came back laden with expensive remedies, and
her last visit to Springfield had been commemorated by her paying
twenty dollars for an electric battery of which she had never been
able to learn the use. But for the moment his sense of relief was so
great as to preclude all other feelings. He had now no doubt that
Zeena had spoken the truth in saying, the night before, that she
had sat up because she felt “too mean” to sleep: her abrupt resolve
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton



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