登陆注册
26260300000077

第77章 CHAPTER XI(9)

That we're going to pay 'em for work they don't do? The hands not paid by the piece are paid practically by the hour, not by the day. And there's got to be some limit to this thing. If these damned demagogues in the legislature keep on cutting down the hours of women and children every three years or so--and we can't run the mill without the women and children--we might as well shut down right now. Three years ago, when they made it fifty-six hours, we were fools to keep up the pay. I said so then, at the conference, but they wouldn't listen to me. They listened this time. Holster and one or two others croaked, but we shut 'em up. No, they won't get any more pay, not a damned cent."

Orcutt had listened patiently, lugubriously.

"I told them that."

"What did they say?"

"They said they thought there'd be a strike."

"Pooh! Strike!" exclaimed Ditmar with contemptuous violence. "Do you believe that? You're always borrowing trouble, you are. They may have a strike at one mill, the Clarendon. I hope they do, I hope Holster gets it in the neck--he don't know how to run a mill anyway. We won't have any strike, our people understand when they're well off, they've got all the work they can do, they're sending fortunes back to the old country or piling them up in the banks. It's all bluff."

"There was a meeting of the English branch of the I. W. W. last night.

A committee was appointed," said Orcutt, who as usual took a gloomy satisfaction in the prospect of disaster.

"The I. W. W.! My God, Orcutt, don't you know enough not to come in here wasting my time talking about the I. W. W.? Those anarchists haven't got any organization. Can't you get that through your head?"

"All right," replied Orcutt, and marched off. Janet felt rather sorry for him, though she had to admit that his manner was exasperating. But Ditmar's anger, instead of cooling, increased: it all seemed directed against the unfortunate superintendent.

"Would you believe that a man who's been in this mill twenty-five years could be such a fool?" he demanded. "The I. W. W.! Why not the Ku Klux?

He must think I haven't anything to do but chin. I don't know why I keep him here, sometimes I think he'll drive me crazy."

His eyes seemed to have grown small and red, as was always the case when his temper got the better of him. Janet did not reply, but sat with her pencil poised over her book.

"Let's see, where was I?" he asked. "I can't finish that letter now. Go out and do the others."

Mundane experience, like a badly mixed cake, has a tendency to run in streaks, and on the day following the incident related above Janet's heart was heavy. Ditmar betrayed an increased shortness of temper and preoccupation; and the consciousness that her love had lent her a clairvoyant power to trace the source of his humours though these were often hidden from or unacknowledged by himself--was in this instance small consolation. She saw clearly enough that the apprehensions expressed by Mr. Orcutt, whom he had since denounced as an idiotic old woman, had made an impression, aroused in him the ever-abiding concern for the mill which was his life's passion and which had been but temporarily displaced by his infatuation with her. That other passion was paramount. What was she beside it? Would he hesitate for a moment to sacrifice her if it came to a choice between them? The tempestuousness of these thoughts, when they took possession of her, hinting as they did of possibilities in her nature hitherto unguessed and unrevealed, astonished and frightened her; she sought to thrust them away, to reassure herself that his concern for the successful delivery of the Bradlaugh order was natural. During the morning, in the intervals between interviews with the superintendents, he was self-absorbed, and she found herself inconsistently resenting the absence of those expressions of endearment--the glances and stolen caresses--for indulgence in which she had hitherto rebuked him: and though pride came to her rescue, fuel was added to her feeling by the fact that he did not seem to notice her coolness. Since he failed to appear after lunch, she knew he must be investigating the suspicions Orcutt had voiced; but at six o'clock, when he had not returned, she closed up her desk and left the office. An odour of cheap perfume pervading the corridor made her aware of the presence of Miss Lottie Myers.

"Oh, it's you!" said that young woman, looking up from the landing of the stairs. "I might have known it you never make a get-away until after six, do you?"

"Oh, sometimes," said Janet.

"I stayed as a special favour to-night," Miss Myers declared. "But I'm not so stuck on my job that I can't tear myself away from it."

"I don't suppose you are," said Janet.

For a moment Miss Myers looked as if she was about to be still more impudent, but her eye met Janet's, and wavered. They crossed the bridge in silence. "Well, ta-ta," she said. "If you like it, it's up to you.

Five o'clock for mine,"--and walked away, up the canal, swinging her hips defiantly. And Janet, gazing after her, grew hot with indignation and apprehension. Her relations with Ditmar were suspected, after all, made the subject of the kind of comment indulged in, sotto voce, by Lottie Myers and her friends at the luncheon hour. She felt a mad, primitive desire to run after the girl, to spring upon and strangle her and compel her to speak what was in her mind and then retract it; and the motor impulse, inhibited, caused a sensation of sickness, of unhappiness and degradation as she turned her steps slowly homeward. Was it a misinterpretation, after all--what Lottie Myers had implied and feared to say?...

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 西域寻夫记

    西域寻夫记

    通过一位东汉士族女子,西行西域寻找丈夫的故事,向读者展示了东汉时期波澜壮阔的历史画卷,试图对纠缠于整个两汉期间,汉与匈奴两个民族的对抗和和解进行了一些思考。
  • 负暄野录

    负暄野录

    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。
  • 飘(青少版)

    飘(青少版)

    斯佳丽是一个漂亮、任性、果断的美国南方女子,爱上了另一庄园主的儿子阿希利,但阿希利却选择了温柔善良的玫兰妮。斯佳丽赌气嫁给玫兰妮的弟弟查尔斯。南北战争爆发后,查尔斯上前线战死。斯佳丽和风度翩翩的商人瑞特相识,瑞特开始追求郝思嘉,但遭到她的拒绝。南方军战败,亚特兰大一片混乱。不巧玫兰妮孕期将至,斯佳丽只好留下来照顾她。战后斯佳丽在绝望中去找瑞特借钱,偶遇本来要迎娶她妹妹的暴发户弗兰克。为了保住家园,她勾引弗兰克跟她结婚。弗兰克因反政府活动遭北方军击毙,斯佳丽再次成为寡妇……
  • 妖尸异闻录

    妖尸异闻录

    主角是一个超没用的大叔老僵尸,但是这位大叔却见证了一个又一个可怕的故事,那便是这僵尸一生的纪录,名曰:妖尸异闻录。
  • 强者为尊:重生之我本彪悍

    强者为尊:重生之我本彪悍

    黎易倾重生了,黎易倾是谁?她是一朵只可远观而不可亵玩的霸王花!权势滔天?名利场只是游乐场,钱权势,你要哪个?打折出售!以力量为墙,表世界,权势相逐;里世界,强者为尊。重生的黎易倾悠然游走在中间的灰色地带,让那权势俯首,力量称臣!本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 穿越之暗黑女王

    穿越之暗黑女王

    从末日穿越而来的人造人5302号,沉默而强大,冰冷而无情。将军府的大小姐,胆小又懦弱,只懂得逃避。当两人合二为一,且看她怎样搅乱这个世界!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 棋落无悔:天下亦为局

    棋落无悔:天下亦为局

    前世,她与自己的挚爱自相残杀;今生,她在大婚之夜被夫君杀死。顾蝶舞啊顾蝶舞,你怎么能在同一个地方摔两次呢,呵呵,你可真是笨啊,不过......终于可以休息了......
  • 喋血武帝

    喋血武帝

    生前及时行乐,哪管死后洪水滔天!在世为人,当翱翔九天之上,俯瞰蝼蚁众生!
  • 长安薄荷凉

    长安薄荷凉

    在你年轻的时候,是不是也曾深爱一个人,爱他爱到了骨子却始终没能在一起;你喜不喜欢薄荷,就像爱情,辛辣却又带着清凉的气息。我不认为自己写得有多好,可我爱的他都在这里。
  • 众美男小心:我爸是皇上

    众美男小心:我爸是皇上

    【爆笑穿越】她莫小九好人了一辈子却竟然在暗恋的人向自己表白时心脏病突发死翘翘?!好吧,死了就死了,没想这么个死法竟然是为了偿还前一世的情债?倒!最让她诧异的事情是,地府竟然也有刮刮乐?……哇,竟然中了一等奖,奖励三个愿望!!!啧啧,既然这样,想她莫小九这辈子平凡了一辈子,下辈子她非要来一次华丽的穿越,还要出身不凡,最好老爸是皇上,让天下美男都无法无视她的存在!!!