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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton


81

Beneath their wondering exclamations I felt a secret curiosity to
know what impressions I had received from my night in the Frome
household, and divined that the best way of breaking down their
reserve was to let them try to penetrate mine. I therefore confined
myself to saying, in a matter-of-fact tone, that I had been received
with great kindness, and that Frome had made a bed for me in a
room on the ground-floor which seemed in happier days to have
been fitted up as a kind of writing-room or study.

“Well,” Mrs. Hale mused, “in such a storm I suppose he felt he
couldn’t do less than take you in-but I guess it went hard with
Ethan. I don’t believe but what you’re the only stranger has set foot
in that house for over twenty years.

He’s that proud he don’t even like his oldest friends to go there;
and I don’t know as any do, any more, except myself and the
doctor...” “You still go there, Mrs. Hale?” I ventured.

“I used to go a good deal after the accident, when I was first
married; but after awhile I got to think it made ‘em feel worse to
see us. And then one thing and another came, and my own
troubles... But I generally make out to drive over there round about
New Year’s, and once in the summer. Only I always try to pick a
day when Ethan’s off somewheres. It’s bad enough to see the two
women sitting there-but his face, when he looks round that bare
place, just kills me... You see, I can look back and call it up in his
mother’s day, before their troubles.” Old Mrs. Varnum, by this
time, had gone up to bed, and her daughter and I were sitting
alone, after supper, in the austere seclusion of the horse-hair
parlour.

Mrs. Hale glanced at me tentatively, as though trying to see how
much footing my conjectures gave her; and I guessed that if she
had kept silence till now it was because she had been waiting,
through all the years, for some one who should see what she alone
had seen.

I waited to let her trust in me gather strength before I said: “Yes,
it’s pretty bad, seeing all three of them there together.” She drew
her mild brows into a frown of pain. “It was just awful from the
beginning. I was here in the house when they were carried up-
they laid Mattie Silver in the room you’re in. She and I were great
friends, and she was to have been my bridesmaid in the spring...
When she came to I went up to her and stayed all night. They gave
her things to quiet her, and she didn’t know much till to’rd
morning, and then all of a sudden she woke up just like herself,
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