登陆注册
14726500000293

第293章

“She was layin’ with my brother. He got away. I ain’t sorry none that I kilt her. Loose women ought to be kilt. The law ain’t got no right to put a man in jail for that but I was sont.”

“But—how did you get out? Did you escape? Were you pardoned?”

“You might call it a pardon.” His thick gray brows writhed together as though the effort of stringing words together was difficult.

“ ‘Long in ‘sixty-four when Sherman come through, I was at Milledgeville jail, like I had been for forty years. And the warden he called all us prisoners together and he says the Yankees are a-comin’ a-burnin’ and a-killin’. Now if that’s one thing I hates worse than a nigger or a woman, it’s a Yankee.”

“Why? Had you— Did you ever know any Yankees?”

“No’m. But I’d beam tell of them. I’d beam tell they couldn’t never mind their own bizness. I hates folks who can’t mind their own bizness. What was they doin’ in Georgia, freein’ our niggers and burnin’ our houses and killin’ our stock? Well, the warden he said the army needed more soldiers bad, and any of us who’d jine up would be free at the end of the war—if we come out alive. But us lifers—us murderers, the warden he said the army didn’t want us. We was to be sont somewheres else to another jail. But I said to the warden I ain’t like most lifers. I’m just in for killin’ my wife and she needed killin’. And I wants to fight the Yankees. And the warden he saw my side of it and he slipped me out with the other prisoners.”

He paused and grunted.

“Huh. That was right funny. They put me in jail for killin’ and they let me out with a gun in my hand and a free pardon to do more killin’. It shore was good to be a free man with a rifle in my hand again. Us men from Milledgeville did good fightin’ and killin’—and a lot of us was kilt. I never knowed one who deserted. And when the surrender come, we was free. I lost this here leg and this here eye. But I ain’t sorry.”

“Oh,” said Scarlett, weakly.

She tried to remember what she had heard about the releasing of the Milledgeville convicts in that last desperate effort to stem the tide of Sherman’s army. Frank had mentioned it that Christmas of 1864. What had he said? But her memories of that time were too chaotic. Again she felt the wild terror of those days, heard the siege guns, saw the line of wagons dripping blood into the red roads, saw the Home Guard marching off, the little cadets and the children like Phil Meade and the old men like Uncle Henry and Grandpa Merriwether. And the convicts had marched out too, to die in the twilight of the Confederacy, to freeze in the snow and sleet of that last campaign in Tennessee.

For a brief moment she thought what a fool this old man was, to fight for a state which had taken forty years from his life. Georgia had taken his youth and his middle years for a crime that was no crime to him, yet he had freely given a leg and an eye to Georgia. The bitter words Rhett had spoken in the early days of the war came back to her, and she remembered him saying he would never fight for a society that had made him an outcast. But when the emergency had arisen he had gone off to fight for that same society, even as Archie had done. It seemed to her that all Southern men, high or low, were sentimental fools and cared less for their hides than for words which had no meaning.

She looked at Archie’s gnarled old hands, his two pistols and his knife, and fear pricked her again. Were there other ex-convicts at large, like Archie, murderers, desperadoes, thieves, pardoned for their crimes, in the name of the Confederacy? Why, any stranger on the street might be a murderer! If Frank ever learned the truth about Archie, there would be the devil to pay. Or if Aunt Pitty—but the shock would kill Pitty. And as for Melanie—Scarlett almost wished she could tell Melanie the truth about Archie. It would serve her right for picking up trash and foisting it off on her friends and relatives.

“I’m—I’m glad you told me, Archie. I—I won’t tell anyone. It would be a great shock to Mrs. Wilkes and the other ladies if they knew.”

“Huh. Miz Wilkes knows. I told her the night she fuss let me sleep in her cellar. You don’t think I’d let a nice lady like her take me into her house not knowin’?”

“Saints preserve us!” cried Scarlet, aghastMelanie knew this man was a murderer and a woman murderer at that and she hadn’t ejected him from her house. She had trusted her son with him and her aunt and sister-in-law and all her friends. And she, the most timid of females, had not been frightened to be alone with him in her house.

“Miz Wilkes is right sensible, for a woman. She lowed that I was all right She ‘lowed that a liar allus kept on lyin’ and a thief kept on stealin’ but folks don’t do more’n one murder in a lifetime. And she reckoned as how anybody who’d fought for the Confederacy had wiped out anything bad they’d done. Though I don’t hold that I done nothin’ bad, killin’ my wife. ... Yes, Miz Wilkes is right sensible, for a woman. ... And I’m tellin’ you, the day you leases convicts is the day I quits you.”

Scarlett made no reply but she thought,

“The sooner you quit me the better it will suit me. A murderer!”

How could Melly have been so—so— Well, there was no word for Melanie’s action in taking in this old ruffian and not telling her friends he Was a jailbird. So service in the army wiped out past sins! Melanie had that mixed up with baptism! But then Melly was utterly silly about the Confederacy, its veterans, and anything pertaining to them. Scarlett silently damned the Yankees and added another mark on her score against them. They were responsible for a situation that forced a woman to keep a murderer at her side to protect her.

同类推荐
  • Count Bunker

    Count Bunker

    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。
  • 全宋文

    全宋文

    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。
  • 山水纯全集

    山水纯全集

    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。
  • 十剂表

    十剂表

    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。
  • 禅林备用清规

    禅林备用清规

    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。
热门推荐
  • 梦圆江河

    梦圆江河

    本书为作者黄河、长江等众多水域的游记散文。分别包括:峡江情、难舍三峡一江水、路、“海”之恋等等。
  • 妖娆皇后:皇上等等我

    妖娆皇后:皇上等等我

    每一个杀手都有一颗淡定的心,她们不畏生死,不贪功名。而苏沐语身为其中一员,她以为这辈子会一直在这无限的杀与辈杀之中度过,可直到遇到这么一个人,他霸道,故意搂着她在某人面前炫耀,“沐沐,你真美。”他自恋,抱着她的手臂不肯放开,“沐沐,全天下只有我这般娇人儿才配的上你。”他轻狂,撸起袖子,“沐沐,你要什么,支一声,我马上给你拿来。”他以一颗热忱之心,打动她的冰冷。她想:一辈子,大概只能遇到一个这样的人吧。
  • 宠妻无度:你好,老公送上门

    宠妻无度:你好,老公送上门

    他是刚直正派的上校大人,自从遇到她后,没节操没底线。“冷执,不会叠豆腐块。”“好,咱走后门。”......“冷执,动作不会做”“好,我教你。”......教就教了靠我这么近,还牵我的手?我挽下胳膊总行了吧,我穿得军装。干柴烈火拦住了我,好不计较;第二回,这都流鼻血了,还忍得住,好你个柳下惠还跑了,老娘不伺候了。......恋爱咱不会,送东西总讨女孩欢喜,送乌龟,到了老爹手里;送小狗,又送到他手里;自己上阵总没错吧,人家还不要了,有新欢了?......
  • 混在大马的日子1

    混在大马的日子1

    出国留学的去向要视留学生的目的而定——公派留学并且将来想成为教授的,英国是最佳选择;想学业有成外加移民的,自然是去美国,澳洲,加拿大;想以留学的名义打工为国家赚取大量外汇给社会主义建设添砖加瓦的,日本是首选;对于想趁着青春年少游山玩水,在自己的生命中留下些甜蜜回忆,再顺便镀层金的中国“游学生”们,风光秀丽的马来西亚实在是个不错的地方。马来西亚最大的私立学院——如来学院(这真的不是一间佛学院!)以‘爱玩’为第一主人公的‘有志青年们’的故事,嬉笑谩骂,待看人生。
  • 天下横刀

    天下横刀

    英雄悲遗世,泣血并长歌。片片轻灵羽,换了朱颜。述的是江湖事,论的是不平人,霸业、江湖、我的侠义道...
  • EXO之青春的颜色

    EXO之青春的颜色

    EXO成员灿烈被公司安排到贵族学校上学,并在校内,认识了一名女同学,并与她展开了一段故事。。。
  • 野性首领,请自重

    野性首领,请自重

    在冷凌陌的订婚宴上,情人高调出席。她费劲手段,让自己成为宴会的主角。用尽心机,破坏婚礼。她冷眼相望,眼看新娘容貌尽毁。他将她逼上绝境,她却逢凶化吉。他将她作为“礼物”送给别人,结果发现被卖出去的是自己。他一步一步将她推进深渊,她却一步一步让他失心。你,我本无心,却输了爱情。“我爱上了你。”“爱上了你。”“上了你。”
  • 守候瞬间的永恒

    守候瞬间的永恒

    若琳代替好友馨语相亲,谁知遇到极品男人韩皓轩,阴差阳错的是韩皓轩居然看上了冒牌馨语。真相终究会浮出水面,韩皓轩得知若琳并非馨语,却仍旧为若琳着迷。就在此时,若琳的母亲生病了,而对她伸出援手却是她多年来的暗恋对象穆景言。如果说若琳是灰姑娘,那么韩皓轩无疑是白马王子的典范,后来出场并且魅力不亚于韩皓轩的穆景言就算得上一匹黑马了。
  • 大秦谋略

    大秦谋略

    月下灯客所著的《大秦谋略》是一部历史小说,还原真实的战国。韩赵魏楚燕齐七国是战国时期强大的诸侯国,排除了周王室,这七国统治着华夏大地大部分的土地,虽然还有一些如卫国、陈国这样的小诸侯国,但是却无法与这七颗璀璨的明珠相比。本书以战国时期为背景,写那时候的人物与战国故事,让读者更好地学习那段时期的历史。
  • 孩子尿床怎么办

    孩子尿床怎么办

    要了解孩子尿床该怎么办,得先从尿床的基本知识说起:如什么样的尿床算病?什么样的尿床不算病?尿床与遗尿症是什么关系?尿床分哪些类型?尿液从生成到排出有什么程序?什么样的疾病可引发尿床?尿床能不能完全治好?本章将对这些基本概念做一介绍。