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but really, I'm so lucky. I have everything in the world any woman
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could want."
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"That's fine," said Rhett, suddenly grim. "And I intend to see
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that you keep them."
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When Scarlett came back from Tara, the unhealthy pallor had gone
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from her face and her cheeks were rounded and faintly pink. Her
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green eyes were alert and sparkling again, and she laughed aloud
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for the first time in weeks when Rhett and Bonnie met her and Wade
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and Ella at the depot--laughed in annoyance and amusement. Rhett
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had two straggling turkey feathers in the brim of his hat and
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Bonnie, dressed in a sadly torn dress that was her Sunday frock,
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had diagonal lines of indigo blue on her cheeks and a peacock
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feather half as long as she was in her curls. Evidently a game of
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Indian had been in progress when the time came to meet the train
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and it was obvious from the look of quizzical helplessness on
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Rhett's face and the lowering indignation of Mammy that Bonnie had
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refused to have her toilet remedied, even to meet her mother.
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Scarlett said: "What a ragamuffin!" as she kissed the child and
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turned a cheek for Rhett's lips. There were crowds of people in
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the depot or she would never have invited this caress. She could
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not help noticing, for all her embarrassment at Bonnie's
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appearance, that everyone in the crowd was smiling at the figure
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father and daughter cut, smiling not in derision but in genuine
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amusement and kindness. Everyone knew that Scarlett's youngest had
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her father under her thumb and Atlanta was amused and approving.
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Rhett's great love for his child had gone far toward reinstating
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him in public opinion.
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On the way home, Scarlett was full of County news. The hot, dry
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weather was making the cotton grow so fast you could almost hear it
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but Will said cotton prices were going to be low this fall.
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Suellen was going to have another baby--she spelled this out so the
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children would not comprehend--and Ella had shown unwonted spirit
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in biting Suellen's oldest girl. Though, observed Scarlett, it was
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no more than little Susie deserved, she being her mother all over
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again. But Suellen had become infuriated and they had had an
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invigorating quarrel that was just like old times. Wade had killed
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a water moccasin, all by himself. 'Randa and Camilla Tarleton were
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teaching school and wasn't that a joke? Not a one of the Tarletons
|
had ever been able to spell cat! Betsy Tarleton had married a fat
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one-armed man from Lovejoy and they and Hetty and Jim Tarleton were
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raising a good cotton crop at Fairhill. Mrs. Tarleton had a brood
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mare and a colt and was as happy as though she had a million
|
dollars. And there were negroes living in the old Calvert house!
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Swarms of them and they actually owned it! They'd bought it in at
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the sheriff's sale. The place was dilapidated and it made you cry
|
to look at it. No one knew where Cathleen and her no-good husband
|
had gone. And Alex was to marry Sally, his brother's widow!
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Imagine that, after them living in the same house for so many
|
years! Everybody said it was a marriage of convenience because
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people were beginning to gossip about them living there alone,
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since both Old Miss and Young Miss had died. And it had about
|
broken Dimity Munroe's heart. But it served her right. If she'd
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had any gumption she'd have caught her another man long ago,
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instead of waiting for Alex to get money enough to marry her.
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Scarlett chattered on cheerfully but there were many things about
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the County which she suppressed, things that hurt to think about.
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She had driven over the County with Will, trying not to remember
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when these thousands of fertile acres had stood green with cotton.
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Now, plantation after plantation was going back to the forest, and
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dismal fields of broomsedge, scrub oak and runty pines had grown
|
stealthily about silent ruins and over old cotton fields. Only one
|
acre was being farmed now where once a hundred had been under the
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plow. It was like moving through a dead land.
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"This section won't come back for fifty years--if it ever comes
|
back," Will had said. "Tara's the best farm in the County, thanks
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to you and me, Scarlett, but it's a farm, a two-mule farm, not a
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plantation. And the Fontaine place, it comes next to Tara and then
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the Tarletons. They ain't makin' much money but they're gettin'
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along and they got gumption. But most of the rest of the folks,
|
the rest of the farms--"
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No, Scarlett did not like to remember the way the deserted County
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looked. It seemed even sadder, in retrospect, beside the bustle
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and prosperity of Atlanta.
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"Has anything happened here?" she asked when they were finally home
|
and were seated on the front porch. She had talked rapidly and
|
continuously all the way home, fearing that a silence would fall.
|
She had not had a word alone with Rhett since that day when she
|
fell down the steps and she was none too anxious to be alone with
|
him now. She did not know how he felt toward her. He had been
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kindness itself during her miserable convalescence, but it was the
|
kindness of an impersonal stranger. He had anticipated her wants,
|
kept the children from bothering her and supervised the store and
|
the mills. But he had never said: "I'm sorry." Well, perhaps he
|
wasn't sorry. Perhaps he still thought that child that was never
|
born was not his child. How could she tell what went on in the
|
mind behind the bland dark face? But he had showed a disposition
|
to be courteous, for the first time in their married life, and a
|
desire to let life go on as though there had never been anything
|
unpleasant between them--as though, thought Scarlett, cheerlessly,
|
as though there had never been anything at all between them. Well,
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