The Beautiful and Damned F. Scott Fitzgerald (top novels to read TXT) đ
- Author: F. Scott Fitzgerald
Book online «The Beautiful and Damned F. Scott Fitzgerald (top novels to read TXT) đ». Author F. Scott Fitzgerald
In October Anthonyâs letters multiplied, became almost franticâ âthen suddenly ceased. For a worried month it needed all her powers of control to refrain from leaving immediately for Mississippi. Then a telegram told her that he had been in the hospital and that she could expect him in New York within ten days. Like a figure in a dream he came back into her life across the ballroom on that November eveningâ âand all through long hours that held familiar gladness she took him close to her breast, nursing an illusion of happiness and security she had not thought that she would know again.
Discomfiture of the Generals
After a week Anthonyâs regiment went back to the Mississippi camp to be discharged. The officers shut themselves up in the compartments on the Pullman cars and drank the whiskey they had bought in New York, and in the coaches the soldiers got as drunk as possible alsoâ âand pretended whenever the train stopped at a village that they were just returned from France, where they had practically put an end to the German army. As they all wore overseas caps and claimed that they had not had time to have their gold service stripes sewed on, the yokelry of the seaboard were much impressed and asked them how they liked the trenchesâ âto which they replied âOh, boy!â with great smacking of tongues and shaking of heads. Someone took a piece of chalk and scrawled on the side of the train, âWe won the warâ ânow weâre going home,â and the officers laughed and let it stay. They were all getting what swagger they could out of this ignominious return.
As they rumbled on toward camp, Anthony was uneasy lest he should find Dot awaiting him patiently at the station. To his relief he neither saw nor heard anything of her and thinking that were she still in town she would certainly attempt to communicate with him, he concluded that she had goneâ âwhither he neither knew nor cared. He wanted only to return to Gloriaâ âGloria reborn and wonderfully alive. When eventually he was discharged he left his company on the rear of a great truck with a crowd who had given tolerant, almost sentimental, cheers for their officers, especially for Captain Dunning. The captain, on his part, had addressed them with tears in his eyes as to the pleasure, etc., and the work, etc., and time not wasted, etc., and duty, etc. It was very dull and human; having given ear to it Anthony, whose mind was freshened by his week in New York, renewed his deep loathing for the military profession and all it connoted. In their childish hearts two out of every three professional officers considered that wars were made for armies and not armies for wars. He rejoiced to see general and field-officers riding desolately about the barren camp deprived of their commands. He rejoiced to hear the men in his company laugh scornfully at the inducements tendered them to remain in the army. They were to attend âschools.â He knew what these âschoolsâ were.
Two days later he was with Gloria in New York.
Another Winter
Late one February afternoon Anthony came into the apartment and groping through the little hall, pitch-dark in the winter dusk, found Gloria sitting by the window. She turned as he came in.
âWhat did Mr. Haight have to say?â she asked listlessly.
âNothing,â he answered, âusual thing. Next month, perhaps.â
She looked at him closely; her ear attuned to his voice caught the slightest thickness in the dissyllable.
âYouâve been drinking,â she remarked dispassionately.
âCouple glasses.â
âOh.â
He yawned in the armchair and there was a momentâs silence between them. Then she demanded suddenly:
âDid you go to Mr. Haight? Tell me the truth.â
âNo.â He smiled weakly. âAs a matter of fact I didnât have time.â
âI thought you didnât go.â ââ ⊠He sent for you.â
âI donât give a damn. Iâm sick of waiting around his office. Youâd think he was doing me a favor.â He glanced at Gloria as though expecting moral support, but she had turned back to her contemplation of the dubious and unprepossessing out-of-doors.
âI feel rather weary of life today,â he offered tentatively. Still she was silent. âI met a fellow and we talked in the Biltmore bar.â
The dusk had suddenly deepened but neither of them made any move to turn on the lights. Lost in heaven knew what contemplation, they sat there until a flurry of snow drew a languid sigh from Gloria.
âWhatâve you been doing?â he asked, finding the silence oppressive.
âReading a magazineâ âall full of idiotic articles by prosperous authors about how terrible it is for poor people to buy silk shirts. And while I was reading it I could think of nothing except how I wanted a gray squirrel coatâ âand how we canât afford one.â
âYes, we can.â
âOh, no.â
âOh, yes! If you want a fur coat you can have one.â
Her voice coming through the dark held an implication of scorn.
âYou mean we can sell another bond?â
âIf necessary. I donât want to go without things. We have spent a lot, though, since Iâve been back.â
âOh, shut up!â she said in irritation.
âWhy?â
âBecause Iâm sick and tired of hearing you talk about what weâve spent or what weâve done. You came back two months ago and weâve been on some sort of a party practically every night since. Weâve both wanted to go out, and weâve gone. Well, you havenât heard me complain, have you? But all you do is whine, whine, whine. I donât care any more what we do or what becomes of us and at least Iâm consistent. But I will not tolerate your complaining and calamity-howlingâ ââ
âYouâre not very pleasant yourself sometimes, you know.â
âIâm under no obligations to be. Youâre not making any attempt to make things different.â
âBut I amâ ââ
âHuh! Seems
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