The Real Adventure by Henry Kitchell Webster
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page 15 of 717 (02%)
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where half a dozen more prospective passengers were waiting. They were
in a hurry, too, since it had begun in very downright fashion to rain. The conductor had been chanting, "Up in the car, please," in a perfunctory cry all along. But at this crisis, his voice got a new urgency. "Come on, now," he proclaimed, "you'll have to get inside!" From the step the new arrivals pushed, the conductor pushed, and finally he was able to give the signal for starting the car. The obvious necessity of making room for those who'd be waiting at the next corner, kept him at the task of herding them inside and the sheep-like docility of an American crowd helped him. Regretfully, with the rest, Rose made her way to the door. "Fare, please," he said sharply as she came along. She told him she had paid her fare, but for some reason, perhaps because he was tired at the end of a long run, perhaps because he saw some one else he suspected of being a spotter, he elected not to believe her. "When did you pay it?" he demanded. "A block back," she said, "when all those other people got on." "You didn't pay it to me," he said truculently. "Come along! Pay your fare or get off the car." "I paid it once," she said quietly, "and I'm not going to pay it again." With that she started forward toward the door. |
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