Shifting Sands
156 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
156 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

Novelist Sara Ware Bassett made a name for herself as one of the foremost chroniclers of life in small-town New England. In this charming novel, rugged newcomer Stanley Heath falls in love with beautiful widow Marcia Howe -- but a mysterious cache of jewels may prove to be the undoing of their budding romance.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 octobre 2015
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781776591497
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0134€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

SHIFTING SANDS
* * *
SARA WARE BASSETT
 
*
Shifting Sands First published in 1933 Epub ISBN 978-1-77659-149-7 Also available: PDF ISBN 978-1-77659-150-3 © 2013 The Floating Press and its licensors. All rights reserved. While every effort has been used to ensure the accuracy and reliability of the information contained in The Floating Press edition of this book, The Floating Press does not assume liability or responsibility for any errors or omissions in this book. The Floating Press does not accept responsibility for loss suffered as a result of reliance upon the accuracy or currency of information contained in this book. Do not use while operating a motor vehicle or heavy equipment. Many suitcases look alike. Visit www.thefloatingpress.com
Contents
*
Chapter I Chapter II Chapter III Chapter IV Chapter V Chapter VI Chapter VII Chapter VIII Chapter IX Chapter X Chapter XI Chapter XII Chapter XIII Chapter XIV Chapter XV Chapter XVI Chapter XVII Chapter XVIII Chapter XIX Chapter XX Chapter XXI Chapter XXII
*
Our lives are like the ever shifting sands Which ocean currents whirl in the ebb and flow Of their unresisting tides
Chapter I
*
The Widder lived on the spit of sand jutting out into Crocker's Cove.
Just why she should have been singled out by this significant sobriquetwas a subtle psychological problem. There were other women in Belleportand in Wilton, too, who had lost husbands. Maria Eldridge was a widowand so was Susan Ann Beals. Indeed death had claimed the head of manya household in the community, for to follow the sea was a treacherousbusiness.
Nevertheless, despite the various homes in which solitary women reigned,none of their owners was designated by the appellation allotted toMarcia Howe.
Moreover, there seemed in the name the hamlet had elected to bestow uponher a ring of satisfaction, even of rejoicing, rather than the note ofcondolence commonly echoing in the term. Persons rolled it on theirtongues as if flaunting it triumphantly on the breeze.
"Marcia ought never to have married Jason Howe, anyway," asserted AbbieBrewster when one day she reminiscently gossiped with her friend,Rebecca Gill. "She was head an' shoulders above him. Whatever coaxed herinto it I never could understand. She could have had her pick of half adozen husbands. Why take up with a rollin' stone like him?"
"She was nothin' but a slip of a thing when she married. Mebbe she hadthe notion she could reform him," Rebecca suggested.
"Mebbe," agreed Abbie. "Still, young as she was, she might 'a' knownshe couldn't. Ten years ago he was the same, unsteady, drinkin' idlerhe proved himself to be up to the last minute of his life. He hadn'tchanged a hair. Such men seldom do, unless they set out to; an' JasonHowe never set out to do, or be, anything. He was too selfish an' toolazy. Grit an' determination was qualities left out of him. Well,he's gone, an' Marcia's well rid of him. For 'most three years now,she's been her own mistress an' the feelin' that she is must be highlyenjoyable."
"Poor Marcia," sighed Rebecca.
"Poor Marcia?" Abbie repeated. "Lucky Marcia, I say. 'Most likely she'dsay so herself was she to speak the truth. She never would, though.Since the day she married, she's been close-mouthed as an oyster. Whatshe thought of Jason, or didn't think of him, she's certainly kept toherself. Nobody in this village has ever heard her bewail her lot. Shemade her bargain an' poor as 'twas she stuck to it."
"S'pose she'll always go on livin' there on that deserted strip ofsand?" speculated Rebecca. "Why, it's 'most an island. In fact, it is anisland at high tide."
"So 'tis. An' Zenas Henry says it's gettin' to be more an' more so everyminute," Abbie replied. "The tide runs through that channel swift asa race horse an' each day it cuts a wider path 'twixt Marcia an' theshore. Before long, she's goin' to be as completely cut off from themainland at low water as at high."
"It must be a terrible lonely place."
"I wouldn't want to live there," shrugged the sociable Abbie. "Butthere's folks that don't seem to mind solitude, an' Marcia Howe's oneof 'em. Mebbe, after the life she led with Jason, she kinder relishesbein' alone. 'Twould be no marvel if she did. Furthermore, dynamitecouldn't blast her out of that old Daniels Homestead. Her father an'her grandfather were born there, an' the house is the apple of her eye.It is a fine old place if only it stood somewheres else. Of course,when it was built the ocean hadn't et away the beach, an' instead ofbein' narrow, the Point was a wide, sightly piece of land. Who'd 'a'foreseen the tides would wash 'round it 'til they'd whittled it downto little more'n a sand bar, an' as good as detached it from the coastaltogether?"
"Who'd 'a' foreseen lots of pranks the sea's played? The Cape's a-swirlwith shiftin' sands. They drift out here, they pile up there. What'sterra firma today is swallered up tomorrow. Why, even Wilton Harbor'sfillin' in so fast that 'fore we know it there won't be a channel deepenough to float a dory left us. We'll be land-locked."
"Well, say what you will against the sea an' the sand, they did a goodturn for Marcia all them years of her married life. At least they helpedher keep track of Jason. Once she got him on the Point with the tiderunnin' strong 'twixt him and the village, she'd padlock the skiff an'there he'd be! She had him safe an' sound," Abbie chuckled.
"Yes," acquiesced Rebecca. "But the scheme worked both ways. Let Jasonwalk over to town across the flats an' then let the tide rise an' therehe be, too! Without a boat there was no earthly way of his gettin' home.Marcia might fidget 'til she was black in the face. He had the best ofexcuses for loiterin' an' carousin' ashore."
"Well, he don't loiter and carouse here no longer. Marcia knows where heis now," declared Abbie with spirit. "I reckon she's slept more durin'these last three years than ever she slept in the ten that went before'em. She certainly looks it. All her worries seem to have fallen awayfrom her, leavin' her lookin' like a girl of twenty. She's pretty as apicture."
"She must be thirty-five if she's a day," Rebecca reflected.
"She ain't. She's scarce over thirty. I can tell you 'xactly when shewas born," disputed the other woman. "But thirty or even more, she don'tlook her age."
"S'pose she'll marry again?" ventured Rebecca, leaning forward anddropping her voice.
"Marry? There you go, 'Becca, romancin' as usual."
"I ain't romancin'. I was just wonderin'. An' I ain't the only personin town askin' the question, neither," retorted Mrs. Gill with asniff. "There's scores of others. In fact, I figger the thought is theuppermost one in the minds of 'most everybody."
Abbie laughed.
"Mebbe. In fact, I reckon 'tis," conceded she. "It's the thought thatcome to everyone quick as Jason was buried. 'Course, 'twouldn't bedecent to own it—an' yet I don't know why. Folks 'round about here arefond of Marcia an' feel she's been cheated out of what was her rightfuldue. They want her to begin anew an' have what she'd oughter have hadyears ago—a good husband an' half a dozen children. There's nothin' tobe ashamed of in a wish like that. I ain't denyin' there are certainpersons who are more self-seekin'. I ain't blind to the fact that onceJason was under the sod, 'bout every widower in town sorter spruced upan' began to take notice; an' before a week was out every bachelor hadbought a new necktie. Eben Snow told me so an' he'd oughter know bein'the one that sells 'em."
"Abbie!"
"It's true. An' why, pray, shouldn't the men cast sheep's eyes atMarcia? Can you blame 'em? She'd be one wife in a hundred could a bodywin her. There ain't a thing she can't do from shinglin' a barn down totrimmin' a hat. She's the match of any old salt at sailin' a boat an'can pull an oar strong as the best of 'em. Along with that she can sew,cook, an' mend; plow an' plant; paper a room. An' all the time, whatevershe's doin', she'd bewitch you with her smile an' her pretty ways. It'sa marvel to me how she's kept out of matrimony long's this with so manymen millerin' 'round her."
"She certainly's takin' her time. She don't 'pear to be in no hurry toget a husband," smiled Rebecca.
"Why should she be? Her parents left her with money in the bank an' theHomestead to boot, an' Marcia was smart enough not to let Jason makeducks and drakes of her property. She dealt out to him what she thoughthe better have an' held fast to the rest. As a result, she's uncommonwell-off."
"All men mightn't fancy havin' a wife hold the tiller, though."
Rebecca Gill pursed her lips.
"Any man Marcia Howe married would have to put up with it," Abbieasserted, biting off a needleful of thread with a snap of her finewhite teeth. "Marcia's always been captain of the ship an' she alwayswill be."
Gathering up her mending, Rebecca rose.
"Well, I can't stay here settlin' Marcia's future," she laughed. "I'vegot to be goin' home. Lemmy'll be wantin' his supper. He can't, though,accuse me of fritterin' the afternoon away. I've darned every pair ofstockin's in this bag an' there was scores of 'em. You turn off suchthings quicker when you're in good company."
A scuffling on the steps and the sound of men's voices interrupted thewords.
The kitchen door swung open and Zenas Henry's lanky form appeared on thethreshold. Behind him, like a foreshortened shadow, tagged his crony,Lemuel Gill.
"Well, well, 'Becca, if here ain't Lemmy come to fetch you!" Abbiecried. "'Fraid your wife had deserted you, Lemmy? She ain't. She wasjust this minute settin' out for home."
"I warn't worryin' none," grinned Lemuel.
"What you two been doin'?" Abbie inquired of her husband.
"Oh, nothin' much," answered the big, loose-jointed fellow, shufflinginto the room. "We've been settin' out, drinkin' in the air."
The carelessness of the reply was a trifle overdone, and instantlyaroused the keen-eyed Abbie's suspicions.
She glanced into his face.
"Guess we're goin' to have rain,"

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents