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but really, I'm so lucky. I have everything in the world any woman
could want."
"That's fine," said Rhett, suddenly grim. "And I intend to see
that you keep them."
When Scarlett came back from Tara, the unhealthy pallor had gone
from her face and her cheeks were rounded and faintly pink. Her
green eyes were alert and sparkling again, and she laughed aloud
for the first time in weeks when Rhett and Bonnie met her and Wade
and Ella at the depot--laughed in annoyance and amusement. Rhett
had two straggling turkey feathers in the brim of his hat and
Bonnie, dressed in a sadly torn dress that was her Sunday frock,
had diagonal lines of indigo blue on her cheeks and a peacock
feather half as long as she was in her curls. Evidently a game of
Indian had been in progress when the time came to meet the train
and it was obvious from the look of quizzical helplessness on
Rhett's face and the lowering indignation of Mammy that Bonnie had
refused to have her toilet remedied, even to meet her mother.
Scarlett said: "What a ragamuffin!" as she kissed the child and
turned a cheek for Rhett's lips. There were crowds of people in
the depot or she would never have invited this caress. She could
not help noticing, for all her embarrassment at Bonnie's
appearance, that everyone in the crowd was smiling at the figure
father and daughter cut, smiling not in derision but in genuine
amusement and kindness. Everyone knew that Scarlett's youngest had
her father under her thumb and Atlanta was amused and approving.
Rhett's great love for his child had gone far toward reinstating
him in public opinion.
On the way home, Scarlett was full of County news. The hot, dry
weather was making the cotton grow so fast you could almost hear it
but Will said cotton prices were going to be low this fall.
Suellen was going to have another baby--she spelled this out so the
children would not comprehend--and Ella had shown unwonted spirit
in biting Suellen's oldest girl. Though, observed Scarlett, it was
no more than little Susie deserved, she being her mother all over
again. But Suellen had become infuriated and they had had an
invigorating quarrel that was just like old times. Wade had killed
a water moccasin, all by himself. 'Randa and Camilla Tarleton were
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
one-armed man from Lovejoy and they and Hetty and Jim Tarleton were
raising a good cotton crop at Fairhill. Mrs. Tarleton had a brood
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!
Swarms of them and they actually owned it! They'd bought it in at
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!
Imagine that, after them living in the same house for so many
years! Everybody said it was a marriage of convenience because
people were beginning to gossip about them living there alone,
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
had any gumption she'd have caught her another man long ago,
instead of waiting for Alex to get money enough to marry her.
Scarlett chattered on cheerfully but there were many things about
the County which she suppressed, things that hurt to think about.
She had driven over the County with Will, trying not to remember
when these thousands of fertile acres had stood green with cotton.
Now, plantation after plantation was going back to the forest, and
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
plow. It was like moving through a dead land.
"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
to you and me, Scarlett, but it's a farm, a two-mule farm, not a
plantation. And the Fontaine place, it comes next to Tara and then
the Tarletons. They ain't makin' much money but they're gettin'
along and they got gumption. But most of the rest of the folks,
the rest of the farms--"
No, Scarlett did not like to remember the way the deserted County
looked. It seemed even sadder, in retrospect, beside the bustle
and prosperity of Atlanta.
"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
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,