The Magnificent Ambersons

The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington Page A

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Authors: Booth Tarkington
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gaieties, when he encountered his Aunt Fanny. He stopped her. "Look here!" he said.
    "What in the world is the matter with you?" she demanded, regarding him with little amiability. "You look as if you were rehearsing for a villain in a play. Do change your expression!"
    His expression gave no sign of yielding to the request; on the contrary, its somberness deepened. "I suppose you don't know why father doesn't want to go tonight," he said solemnly. "You're his only sister, and yet you don't know!"
    "He never wants to go anywhere that I ever heard of," said Fanny. "What is the matter with you?"
    "He doesn't want to go because he doesn't like this man Morgan."
    "Good gracious!" Fanny cried impatiently. "Eugene Morgan isn't in your father's thoughts at all, one way or the other. Why should he be?"
    George hesitated. "Well--it strikes me--Look here, what makes you and --and everybody--so excited over him?"
    "Excited!" she jeered. "Can't people be glad to see an old friend without silly children like you having to make a to-do about it? I've just been in your mother's room suggesting that she might give a little dinner for them--"
    "For who?"
    "For whom, Georgie! For Mr. Morgan and his daughter."
    "Look here!" George said quickly. "Don't do that! Mother mustn't do that. It wouldn't look well."
    "Wouldn't look well!" Fanny mocked him; and her suppressed vehemence betrayed a surprising acerbity. "See here, Georgie Minafer, I suggest that you just march straight on into your room and finish your dressing! Sometimes you say things that show you have a pretty mean little mind!"
    George was so astounded by this outburst that his indignation was delayed by his curiosity. "Why, what upsets you this way?" he inquired.
    "I know what you mean," she said, her voice still lowered, but not decreasing in sharpness. "You're trying to insinuate that I'd get your mother to invite Eugene Morgan here on my account because he's a widower!"
    "I am?" George gasped, nonplussed. "I'm trying to insinuate that you're setting your cap at him and getting mother to help you? Is that what you mean?"
    Beyond a doubt that was what Miss Fanny meant. She gave him a white- hot look. "You attend to your own affairs!" she whispered fiercely, and swept away.
    George, dumfounded, returned to his room for meditation.
    He had lived for years in the same house with his Aunt Fanny, and it now appeared that during all those years he had been thus intimately associating with a total stranger. Never before had he met the passionate lady with whom he had just held a conversation in the hall. So she wanted to get married! And wanted George's mother to help her with this horseless-carriage widower!
    "Well, I will be shot!" he muttered aloud. "I will--I certainly will be shot!" And he began' to laugh. "Lord 'lmighty!"
    But presently, at the thought of the horseless-carriage widower's daughter, his grimness returned, and he resolved upon a line of conduct for the evening. He would nod to her carelessly when he first saw her; and, after that, he would notice her no more: he would not dance with her; he would not favour her in the cotillion--he would not go near her!
    He descended to dinner upon the third urgent summons of a coloured butler, having spent two hours dressing--and rehearsing.
    Chapter IX
    The Honourable George Amberson was a congressman who led cotillions-- the sort of congressman an Amberson would be. He did it negligently, tonight, yet with infallible dexterity, now and then glancing humorously at the spectators, people of his own age. They were seated in a tropical grove at one end of the room whither they had retired at the beginning of the cotillion, which they surrendered entirely to the twenties and the late 'teens. And here, grouped with that stately pair, Sydney and Amelia Amberson, sat Isabel with Fanny, while Eugene Morgan appeared to bestow an amiable devotion impartially upon the three sisters-in-law. Fanny watched his face eagerly, laughing at everything he

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