Diane of the Green Van by Leona Dalrymple
page 59 of 383 (15%)
page 59 of 383 (15%)
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him frequently to mock and gibe at death, with the wheel in his hand
and a song on his lips, and now wind and storm were tempting him to ride with the devil. So, dashing wildly through the whirl of dirt and wind, heavy with the odor of burnt oil, he bent to the wheel, every nerve alert and leaping. As the great car jumped to its limit of speed, he fell to singing an elaborate sketch of opera in an insolent, dare-devil voice of splendid timbre, the exhaust, unmuffled, pounding forth an obligato. The lightning flared. It glittered wickedly upon the unlighted lamps of a car rolling rapidly toward him. With a squirt of mud and a scatter of flying pebbles, Carl swung far to the side of the road and slammed on his brakes, skidding dangerously. The other car, heading wildly to the left, went crashing headlong into a ditch from which a man crawled, cursing viciously in a foreign tongue. "You damned fool!" thundered Carl in a flash of temper. "Where are your lights?" The man did not reply. Carl, whose normal instincts were friendly, sprang solicitously from the car. "I beg your pardon," said he carelessly. "Are you hurt?" "No," said the other curtly. "French," decided Carl, marking the European intonation. "Badly shaken |
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