The Danger Mark by Robert W. (Robert William) Chambers
page 158 of 584 (27%)
page 158 of 584 (27%)
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"Oh, Lord, you're a world-wise graduate at twenty-two! Truth won't shock you, more's the pity.... As for the game--I'm done with it; I can't stand it. The amusement I extract doesn't pay. Good God! and you wonder why I kiss a few of you for distraction's sake, press a finger-tip or two, brush a waist with my sleeve!" He laughed unpleasantly, and bent forward in the darkness, clasped hands hanging between his knees. "Duane," she said in astonishment, "what do you mean? Are you trying to quarrel with me, just when, for the first time, something in this new forest country seemed to be drawing us together, making us the comrades we once were?" "We're too old to be comrades. That's book rubbish. Men and women have nothing in common, intellectually, unless they're in love. For company, for straight conversation, for business, for sport, a man would rather be with men. And either you and I are like everybody else or we're going to really care for each other. Not for your pretty face and figure, or for my grin, my six feet, and thin shanks; I can care for face and figure in any woman. What's the use of marrying for what you'll scarcely notice in a month?... If you _are you_, Geraldine, under all your attractive surface there's something else which you have never given me." "Wh--what?" she asked faintly. "Intelligent interest in me." |
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