The Wheel of Life by Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow
page 130 of 447 (29%)
page 130 of 447 (29%)
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and he burst out in an exclamation of pleased surprise.
"You're Arnold Kemper and I'm Roger Adams," he said, laying his hand upon the other's arm. Kemper wheeled about immediately, while the smile of placid amusement in his face broadened into a laugh of delighted recognition. "Well, by Jove, it's great!" he responded, and the heartiness of his handshake sent a tingling sensation through Adams' arm. "I don't know when I've been so pleased for years. Been to luncheon?" "I've just had it," laughed Adams, remembering that fifteen years ago, when he last saw him, Kemper had extended a similar invitation with the same grasp of hearty good fellowship. Was it possible that the man had really kept his college memories alive? he wondered in a daze of admiration, or had he himself merely awakened by his reappearance a train of associations which had lain undisturbed since their last parting. Let it be as it might, Adams felt that the encounter was of the pleasantest. "I'm driven like a slave back to office drudgery," he added, "and I'm half inclined to envy you your freedom and your automobiles." Kemper's eyes shot back an intimate curiosity. "So you're editor of _The International Review_, I hear," he said. "Do you know I've had it in my mind for years to look you up, but there's such a confounded temptation to let things drift, you know." "I know," rejoined Adams, smiling. "I've drifted with them." |
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