Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
Book online «Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ». Author Sinclair Lewis
When Martin came home, Joyce faced him with, âSweet, I canât do it! The man must be mad. Really, dear, you just take care of him and let me go to bed. Besides: you two wonât want meâ âyouâll want to talk over old times, and Iâd only interfere. And with baby coming in two months now, I ought to go to bed early.â
âOh, Joy, Clifâd be awfully offended, and heâs always been so decent to me andâ âAnd youâve often asked me about my cub days. Donât you want,â plaintively, âto hear about âem?â
âVery well, dear. Iâll try to be a little sunbeam to him, but I warn you I shanât be a success.â
They worked themselves up to a belief that Clif would be raucous, would drink too much, and slap Joyce on the back. But when he appeared for dinner he was agonizingly polite and floweryâ âtill he became slightly drunk. When Martin said âdamn,â Clif reproved him with, âOf course Iâm only a hick, but I donât think a lady like the Princess here would like you to cuss.â
And, âWell, I never expected a rube like young Mart to marry the real bon-ton article.â
And, âOh, maybe it didnât cost something to furnish this dining-room, oh, not a-tall!â
And, âChampagne, heh? Well, youâre certainly doing poor old Clif proud. Your Majesty, just tell your High Dingbat to tell his valay to tell my secretary the address of your bootlegger, will you?â
In his cups, though he severely retained his moral and elegant vocabulary, Clif chronicled the jest of selling oil-wells unprovided with oil and of escaping before the law closed in; the cleverness of joining churches for the purpose of selling stock to the members; and the edifying experience of assisting Dr. Benoni Carr to capture a rich and senile widow for his sanitarium by promising to provide medical consultation from the spirit-world.
Joyce was silent through it all, and so superbly polite that everyone was wretched.
Martin struggled to make a liaison between them, and he had no elevating remarks about the strangeness of a manâs boasting of his own crookedness, but he was coldly furious when Clif blundered:
âYou said old Gottlieb was sort of down on his luck now.â
âYes, heâs not very well.â
âPoor old coot. But I guess youâve realized by now how foolish you were when you used to fall for him like seven and a half brick. Honestly, Lady Arrowsmith, this kid used to think Pa Gottlieb was the catâs pajamasâ âbegging your pardon for the slanguageness.â
âWhat do you mean?â said Martin.
âOh, Iâm onto Gottlieb! Of course you know as well as I do that he always was a self-advertiser, getting himself talked about by confidinâ to the whole ops terrara what a strict scientist he was, and putting on a lot of dog and emitting these wise cracks about philosophy and what fierce guys the regular docs were. But whatâs worse thanâ âOut in San Diego I ran onto a fellow that used to be an instructor in botany in Winnemac, and he told me that with all this antibody stuff of his, Gottlieb never gave any credit toâ âwell, he was some Russian that did most of it before and Pa Gottlieb stole all his stuff.â
That in this charge against Gottlieb there was a hint of truth, that he knew the great god to have been at times ungenerous, merely increased the rage which was clenching Martinâs fist in his lap.
Three years before, he would have thrown something, but he was an adaptable person. He had yielded to Joyceâs training in being quietly instead of noisily disagreeable; and his only comment was âNo, I think youâre wrong, Clif. Gottlieb has carried the antibody work way beyond all the others.â
Before the coffee and liqueurs had come into the drawing-room, Joyce begged, at her prettiest, âMr. Clawson, do you mind awfully if I slip up to bed? Iâm so frightfully glad to have had the opportunity of meeting one of my husbandâs oldest friends, but Iâm not feeling very well, and I do think Iâd be wise to have some rest.â
âMadam the Princess, I noticed you were looking peeked.â
âOh! Wellâ âGood night!â
Martin and Clif settled in large chairs in the drawing-room, and tried to play at being old friends happy in meeting. They did not look at each other.
After Clif had cursed a little and told three sound smutty stories, to show that he had not been spoiled and that he had been elegant only to delight Joyce, he flung:
âHuh! So that is that, as the Englishers remark. Well, I could see your Old Lady didnât cotton to me. She was just as chummy as an iceberg. But gosh, I donât mind. Sheâs going to have a kid, and of course women, all of âem, get cranky when theyâre that way. Butâ ââ
He hiccuped, looked sage, and bolted his fifth cognac.
âBut what I never could figure outâ âMind you, Iâm not criticizing the Old Lady. Sheâs as swell as they make âem. But what I canât understand is how after living with Leora, who was the real thing, you can stand a hoity-toity skirt like Joycey!â
Then Martin broke.
The misery of not being able to work, these months since Terry had gone, had gnawed at him.
âLook here, Clif. I wonât have you discuss my wife. Iâm sorry she doesnât please you, but Iâm afraid that in this particular matterâ ââ
Clif had risen, not too steadily, though his voice and his eyes were resolute.
âAll right. I figured out you were going to high-hat me. Of course I havenât got a rich wife to slip me money. Iâm just a plain old hobo. I donât belong in a place like this. Not smooth enough to be a butler. You are. All right. I wish you luck. And meanwhile you can go plumb to hell, my young friend!â
Martin did not pursue him into the hall.
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