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They
even
stood
Rhett
,
a
more
difficult
matter
,
for
Rhett
saw
through
them
and
they
knew
it
.
He
had
no
hesitation
about
stripping
them
verbally
,
even
under
his
own
roof
,
always
in
a
manner
that
left
them
no
reply
.
Unashamed
of
how
he
came
by
his
fortune
,
he
pretended
that
they
,
too
,
were
unashamed
of
their
beginnings
and
he
seldom
missed
an
opportunity
to
remark
upon
matters
which
,
by
common
consent
,
everyone
felt
were
better
left
in
polite
obscurity
.
There
was
never
any
knowing
when
he
would
remark
affably
,
over
a
punch
cup
:
"
Ralph
,
if
I
'd
had
any
sense
I
'd
have
made
my
money
selling
gold-mine
stocks
to
widows
and
orphans
,
like
you
,
instead
of
blockading
.
It
's
so
much
safer
.
"
"
Well
,
Bill
,
I
see
you
have
a
new
span
of
horses
Been
selling
a
few
thousand
more
bonds
for
nonexistent
railroads
?
Good
work
,
boy
!
"
"
Congratulations
,
Amos
,
on
landing
that
state
contract
.
Too
bad
you
had
to
grease
so
many
palms
to
get
it
.
"
The
ladies
felt
that
he
was
odiously
,
unendurably
vulgar
.
The
men
said
,
behind
his
back
,
that
he
was
a
swine
and
a
bastard
.
New
Atlanta
liked
Rhett
no
better
than
old
Atlanta
had
done
and
he
made
as
little
attempt
to
conciliate
the
one
as
he
had
the
other
.
He
went
his
way
,
amused
,
contemptuous
,
impervious
to
the
opinions
of
those
about
him
,
so
courteous
that
his
courtesy
was
an
affront
in
itself
.
To
Scarlett
,
he
was
still
an
enigma
but
an
enigma
about
which
she
no
longer
bothered
her
head
.
She
was
convinced
that
nothing
ever
pleased
him
or
ever
would
please
him
,
that
he
either
wanted
something
badly
and
did
n't
have
it
,
or
never
had
wanted
anything
and
so
did
n't
care
about
anything
.
He
laughed
at
everything
she
did
,
encouraged
her
extravagances
and
insolences
,
jeered
at
her
pretenses
--
and
paid
the
bills
.
Rhett
never
deviated
from
his
smooth
,
imperturbable
manners
,
even
in
their
most
intimate
moments
.
But
Scarlett
never
lost
the
old
feeling
that
he
was
watching
her
covertly
,
knew
that
if
she
turned
her
head
suddenly
she
would
surprise
in
his
eyes
that
speculative
,
waiting
look
,
that
look
of
almost
terrible
patience
that
she
did
not
understand
.
Sometimes
,
he
was
a
very
comfortable
person
to
live
with
,
for
all
his
unfortunate
habit
of
not
permitting
anyone
in
his
presence
to
act
a
lie
,
palm
off
a
pretense
or
indulge
in
bombast
.
He
listened
to
her
talk
of
the
store
and
the
mills
and
the
saloon
,
the
convicts
and
the
cost
of
feeding
them
,
and
gave
shrewd
hard-headed
advice
.
He
had
untiring
energy
for
the
dancing
and
parties
she
loved
and
an
unending
supply
of
coarse
stories
with
which
he
regaled
her
on
their
infrequent
evenings
alone
when
the
table
was
cleared
and
brandy
and
coffee
before
them
.
She
found
that
he
would
give
her
anything
she
desired
,
answer
any
question
she
asked
as
long
as
she
was
forthright
,
and
refuse
her
anything
she
attempted
to
gain
by
indirection
,
hints
and
feminine
angling
.
He
had
a
disconcerting
habit
of
seeing
through
her
and
laughing
rudely
.
Contemplating
the
suave
indifference
with
which
he
generally
treated
her
,
Scarlett
frequently
wondered
,
but
with
no
real
curiosity
,
why
he
had
married
her
.
Men
married
for
love
or
a
home
and
children
or
money
but
she
knew
he
had
married
her
for
none
of
these
things
.
He
certainly
did
not
love
her
.
He
referred
to
her
lovely
house
as
an
architectural
horror
and
said
he
would
rather
live
in
a
well-regulated
hotel
than
a
home
.
And
he
never
once
hinted
about
children
as
Charles
and
Frank
had
done
.
Once
when
trying
to
coquet
with
him
she
asked
why
he
married
her
and
was
infuriated
when
he
replied
with
an
amused
gleam
in
his
eyes
:
"
I
married
you
to
keep
you
for
a
pet
,
my
dear
.
"
No
,
he
had
n't
married
her
for
any
of
the
usual
reasons
men
marry
women
.
He
had
married
her
solely
because
he
wanted
her
and
could
n't
get
her
any
other
way
.
He
had
admitted
as
much
the
night
he
proposed
to
her
.
He
had
wanted
her
,
just
as
he
had
wanted
Belle
Watling
.
This
was
not
a
pleasant
thought
.
In
fact
,
it
was
a
barefaced
insult
.
But
she
shrugged
it
off
as
she
had
learned
to
shrug
off
all
unpleasant
facts
.
They
had
made
a
bargain
and
she
was
quite
pleased
with
her
side
of
the
bargain
.
She
hoped
he
was
equally
pleased
but
she
did
not
care
very
much
whether
he
was
or
not
.
But
one
afternoon
when
she
was
consulting
Dr.
Meade
about
a
digestive
upset
,
she
learned
an
unpleasant
fact
which
she
could
not
shrug
off
.
It
was
with
real
hate
in
her
eyes
that
she
stormed
into
her
bedroom
at
twilight
and
told
Rhett
that
she
was
going
to
have
a
baby
.