The Fruit of the Tree | Page 8

Edith Wharton
"How are all these
investigations going to help you?"
Their eyes rested on each other for a moment; then he said coldly:
"You are afraid I am going to lose my place."
She flushed like a girl and murmured: "It's not the kind of place I ever
wanted to see you in!"
"I know it," he returned in a gentler tone, clasping one of the hands on
his chair-back. "I ought to have followed a profession, like my
grandfather; but my father's blood was too strong in me. I should never
have been content as anything but a working-man."
"How can you call your father a working-man? He had a genius for
mechanics, and if he had lived he would have been as great in his way
as any statesman or lawyer."
Amherst smiled. "Greater, to my thinking; but he gave me his
hard-working hands without the genius to create with them. I wish I
had inherited more from him, or less; but I must make the best of what
I am, rather than try to be somebody else." He laid her hand caressingly
against his cheek. "It's hard on you, mother--but you must bear with
me."
"I have never complained, John; but now you've chosen your work, it's
natural that I should want you to stick to it."
He rose with an impatient gesture. "Never fear; I could easily get
another job----"
"What? If Truscomb black-listed you? Do you forget that Scotch
overseer who was here when we came?"
"And whom Truscomb hounded out of the trade? I remember him,"

said Amherst grimly; "but I have an idea I am going to do the hounding
this time."
His mother sighed, but her reply was cut short by the noisy opening of
the outer door. Amherst seemed to hear the sound with relief. "There's
Duplain," he said, going into the passage; but on the threshold he
encountered, not the young Alsatian overseer who boarded with them,
but a small boy who said breathlessly: "Mr. Truscomb wants you to
come down bimeby."
"This evening? To the office?"
"No--he's sick a-bed."
The blood rushed to Amherst's face, and he had to press his lips close
to check an exclamation. "Say I'll come as soon as I've had supper," he
said.
The boy vanished, and Amherst turned back to the sitting-room.
"Truscomb's ill--he has sent for me; and I saw Mrs. Westmore arriving
tonight! Have supper, mother--we won't wait for Duplain." His face
still glowed with excitement, and his eyes were dark with the
concentration of his inward vision.
"Oh, John, John!" Mrs. Amherst sighed, crossing the passage to the
kitchen.

III
AT the manager's door Amherst was met by Mrs. Truscomb, a large
flushed woman in a soiled wrapper and diamond earrings.
"Mr. Truscomb's very sick. He ought not to see you. The doctor
thinks--" she began.
Dr. Disbrow, at this point, emerged from the sitting-room. He was a
pale man, with a beard of mixed grey-and-drab, and a voice of the same

indeterminate quality.
"Good evening, Mr. Amherst. Truscomb is pretty poorly--on the edge
of pneumonia, I'm afraid. As he seems anxious to see you I think you'd
better go up for two minutes--not more, please." He paused, and went
on with a smile: "You won't excite him, of course--nothing
unpleasant----"
"He's worried himself sick over that wretched Dillon," Mrs. Truscomb
interposed, draping her wrapper majestically about an indignant bosom.
"That's it--puts too much heart into his work. But we'll have Dillon all
right before long," the physician genially declared.
Mrs. Truscomb, with a reluctant gesture, led Amherst up the
handsomely carpeted stairs to the room where her husband lay, a prey
to the cares of office. She ushered the young man in, and withdrew to
the next room, where he heard her coughing at intervals, as if to remind
him that he was under observation.
The manager of the Westmore mills was not the type of man that
Amherst's comments on his superior suggested. As he sat propped
against the pillows, with a brick-red flush on his cheek-bones, he
seemed at first glance to belong to the innumerable army of American
business men--the sallow, undersized, lacklustre drudges who have
never lifted their heads from the ledger. Even his eye, now bright with
fever, was dull and non-committal in daily life; and perhaps only the
ramifications of his wrinkles could have revealed what particular
ambitions had seamed his soul.
"Good evening, Amherst. I'm down with a confounded cold."
"I'm sorry to hear it," the young man forced himself to say.
"Can't get my breath--that's the trouble." Truscomb paused and gasped.
"I've just heard that Mrs. Westmore is here--and I want you to go
round--tomorrow morning--" He had to break off once more.

"Yes, sir," said Amherst, his heart leaping.
"Needn't see her--ask for
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 183
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.