登陆注册
5230700000094

第94章 CHAPTER XIII(7)

"It's just as I've said a hundred times," Ditmar retorted. "I can't afford to leave this mill a minute, I can't trust anybody --" and he broke out in another tirade against the intruders. "By God, I'll fix 'em for this--I'll crush 'em. And if any operatives try to walkout here I'll see that they starve before they get back--after all I've done for 'em, kept the mill going in slack times just to give 'em work. If they desert me now, when I've got this Bradlaugh order on my hands--" Speech became an inadequate expression of his feelings, and suddenly his eye fell on Janet. She had turned, but her look made no impression on him. "Call up the Chief of Police," he said.

Automatically she obeyed, getting the connection and handing him the receiver, standing by while he denounced the incompetence of the department for permitting the mob to gather in East Street and demanded deputies. The veins of his forehead were swollen as he cut short the explanations of the official and asked for the City Hall. In making an appointment with the Mayor he reflected on the management of the city government. And when Janet by his command obtained the Boston office, he gave the mill treasurer a heated account of the afternoon's occurrences, explaining circumstantially how, in his absence at a conference in the Patuxent Mill, the mob had gathered in East Street and attacked the Chippering; and he urged the treasurer to waste no time in obtaining a force of detectives, in securing in Boston and New York all the operatives that could be hired, in order to break the impending strike.

Save for this untimely and unreasonable revolt he was bent on stamping out, for Ditmar the world to-day was precisely the same world it had been the day before. It seemed incredible to Janet that he could so regard it, could still be blind to the fact that these workers whom he was determined to starve and crush if they dared to upset his plans and oppose his will were human beings with wills and passions and grievances of their own. Until to-day her eyes had been sealed. In agony they had been opened to the panorama of sorrow and suffering, of passion and evil; and what she beheld now as life was a vast and terrible cruelty. She had needed only this final proof to be convinced that in his eyes she also was but one of those brought into the world to minister to his pleasure and profit. He had taken from her, as his weed, the most precious thing a woman has to give, and now that she was here again at his side, by some impulse incomprehensible to herself--in spite of the wrong he had done her!--had sought him out in danger, he had no thought of her, no word for her, no use save a menial one: he cared nothing for any help she might be able to give, he had no perception of the new light which had broken within her soul.... The telephoning seemed interminable, yet she waited with a strange patience while he talked with Mr. George Chippering and two of the most influential directors. These conversations had covered the space of an hour or more. And perhaps as a result of self-suggestion, of his repeated assurances to Mr. Semple, to Mr. Chippering, and the directors of his ability to control the situation, Ditmar's habitual self-confidence was gradually restored. And when at last he hung up the instrument and turned to her, though still furious against the strikers, his voice betrayed the joy of battle, the assurance of victory.

"They can't bluff me, they'll have to guess again. It's that damned Holster--he hasn't any guts--he'd give in to 'em right now if I'd let him. It's the limit the way he turned the Clarendon over to them. I'll show him how to put a crimp in 'em if they don't turn up here to-morrow morning."

He was so magnificently sure of her sympathy! She did, not reply, but picked up her coat from the chair where she had laid it.

"Where are you going?" he demanded. And she replied laconically, "Home."

"Wait a minute," he said, rising and taking a step toward her.

"You have an appointment with the Mayor," she reminded him.

"I know," he said, glancing at the clock over the door. " Where have you been? --where were you this morning? I was worried about you, I--I was afraid you might be sick."

"Were you?" she said. "I'm all right. I had business in Boston."

同类推荐
  • 混元八景真经

    混元八景真经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Mysteries of Udolpho

    The Mysteries of Udolpho

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 幔亭集

    幔亭集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 送安律师

    送安律师

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说离垢施女经

    佛说离垢施女经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 丛林有公主

    丛林有公主

    太阳在西边的山头挂了不久,就落了下去。暮色开始降临。起初,还可以清楚地看见山头松树上那叫得很欢的鸟儿,但是,随着天空越来越暗,山上鸟儿的身影就彻底消失了,他们或嘹亮或低沉的声音彻底隐匿在了暮色中。
  • 控命记

    控命记

    一个卧底,他想改变自己的命运,做自己,仅此而已。可是很难。但他会走下去。
  • 妙手神医在都市

    妙手神医在都市

    山村少年王铮,自幼研习医术,在山中一十八年方才下山入世修行,自此纵横花丛,行医天下!
  • 天价弃妻,总裁别太渣

    天价弃妻,总裁别太渣

    推荐新文:《一念成瘾,莫少的大牌娇妻》【全本文】:为救父母的心血,她惹上了不该惹的人……贺以琛,贺氏集团唯一的继承人,H市女人都想攀上的男人。传言他性格冷漠,俊美无俦却不近女色,可偏偏对她特殊。直到他把她逼至墙角:“我贺以琛的女人只有一个身份,那就是妻子。”她情海深陷,他却牵着另个女人走进结婚礼堂……我的新浪微博:紫恋凡尘xs8推荐老文:→_→戳下面的链接《总裁的妻子》:《致命婚姻:女人,你只是棋子》:《粉粉老婆:女人,你要负责!》:
  • 退去的时光

    退去的时光

    从20世纪的七十年代未开始,在中国的乡,镇,市有这么一群人,在老百姓眼里,他们不务正业,游手好闲,打架斗殴,有的欺行霸市,有的坑蒙拐骗……这些人俗称“混混”,在南方某些省市称之为“流子”。本文讲述的是和我村里的一个青年从“小混混”,渐渐地成为名震一方的“大混混”的一系列故事。
  • 会吃的中老年人更长寿

    会吃的中老年人更长寿

    书中内容主要包括中老年人如何改善自身的营养,如何通过食疗养生和防病治病。对于每个具体的问题,会有问题产生的原因与调理方法的解释,会提供一个科学的饮食攻略,会推荐两三道改善和调理的食疗方,内容详实全面,实用性非常强。
  • 号角声声

    号角声声

    介绍了秦汉前后的各大战争,远古的战争、奴隶社会中的著名战役、秦汉时期的著名战役、三国两晋南北朝时期的著名战役、隋唐时期的经典战役、弱势两宋时期的战役、元的拓展疆土、明王朝的著名战役、满清的军事斗争
  • 蜀僚问答

    蜀僚问答

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 探险记系列2

    探险记系列2

    世界十大待解宝藏、太空、泰坦尼克……浩瀚宇宙,我们只不过是沧海一粟。对未知世界的探索,对神秘所在的探险,依然是一个历久弥新的话题。
  • 食道通天

    食道通天

    本书是作者李书崇花费数年时间创作的一部美食笔记。详述了中国博大精深、源远流长的中华美食文化。作为一位著名的文化学者和生长于成都的好吃嘴,作者目光不仅局限于川菜一隅,而是旁征博引,夹叙夹议,有史料有观点,有逸闻有亲历,将食之道上升为天之道,将中馈上升为家国,将以食为天的东方民族精神挥写得淋漓尽致。本书为读者了解中国饮食文化、感受美食魅力、领略美食家风采提供了一个很好的范本。