Egypt!â And then the horse began snorting and rearing and she said: âGet out of here! Canât you see heâs nervous, the big darling? Iâll tend to you four in the morning!â So we went to bed, and this morning we got away before she could catch us and left Boyd to handle her.â
âDo you suppose sheâll hit Boyd?â Scarlett, like the rest of the County, could never get used to the way small Mrs. Tarleton bullied her grown sons and laid her riding crop on their backs if the occasion seemed to warrant it.
Beatrice Tarleton was a busy woman, having on her hands not only a large cotton plantation, a hundred negroes and eight children, but the largest horse-breeding farm in the state as well. She was hot-tempered and easily plagued by the frequent scrapes of her four sons, and while no one was permitted to whip a horse or a slave, she felt that a lick now and then didnât do the boys any harm.
âOf course she wonât hit Boyd. She never did beatBoyd much because heâs the oldest and besides heâs the runt of the litter,â said Stuart, proud of his six feet two. âThatâs why we left him at home to explain things to her. Godâlmighty, Ma ought to stop licking us! Weâre nineteen and Tomâs twenty-one, and she acts like weâre six years old.â
âWill your mother ride the new horse to the Wilkes barbecue tomorrow?â
âShe wants to, but Pa says heâs too dangerous. And, anyway, the girls wonât let her. They said they were going to have her go to one party at least like a lady, riding in the carriage.â
âI hope it doesnât rain tomorrow,â said Scarlett. âItâs rained nearly every day for a week. Thereâs nothing worse than a barbecue turned into an indoor picnic.â
âOh, itâll be clear tomorrow and hot as June,â said Stuart. âLook at that sunset. I never saw one redder. You can always tell weather by sunsets.â
They looked out across the endless acres of Gerald OâHaraâs newly plowed cotton fields toward the red horizon. Now that the sun was setting in a welter of crimson behind the hills across the Flint River, the warmth of the April day was ebbing into a faint but balmy chill.
Spring had come early that year, with warm quick rains and sudden frothing of pink peach blossoms and dogwood dappling with white stars the dark river swamp and far-off hills. Already the plowing was nearly finished, and the bloody glory of the sunset colored the fresh-cut furrows of red Georgia clay to even redder hues. The moist hungry earth, waiting upturned for the cotton seeds, showed pinkish on the sandy tops of furrows, vermilion and scarlet and maroon where shadows lay along the sides of the trenches. The whitewashed brick plantationhouse seemed an island set in a wild red sea, a sea of spiraling, curving, crescent billows petrified suddenly at the moment when the pink-tipped waves were breaking into surf. For here were no long, straight furrows, such as could be seen in the yellow clay fields of the flat middle Georgia country or in the lush black earth of the coastal plantations. The rolling foothill country of north Georgia was plowed in a million curves to keep the rich earth from washing down into the river bottoms.
It was a savagely red land, blood-colored after rains, brick dust in droughts, the best cotton land in the world. It was a pleasant land of white houses, peaceful plowed fields and sluggish yellow rivers, but a land of contrasts, of brightest sun glare and densest shade. The plantation clearings and miles of cotton fields smiled up to a warm sun, placid, complacent. At their edges rose the virgin forests, dark and cool even in the hottest noons, mysterious, a little sinister, the soughing pines seeming to wait with an age-old patience, to threaten with soft sighs: âBe careful! Be careful! We had you once. We can take you back again.â
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