Between Friends by Robert W. (Robert William) Chambers
page 50 of 77 (64%)
page 50 of 77 (64%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
career determined upon, death intervening dragging over her
isolation the steel meshes of destitution--the necessity for self-support, a friend who knew a painter who employed models--not anything unusual, not even dramatic. He nodded as she ended: "Have you saved anything?" "A hundred dollars." "That's fine." She smiled, then sighed unconsciously. "You are thinking," he said, "that youth is flying." She smiled wistfully. "Youth is the time to study. You were thinking that, too." She nodded. "You could have married." "Why?" she asked, troubled. "To obtain the means for a musical education." She gazed at him in amazement, then: "I could go out on the street, |
|