Main Street Sinclair Lewis (books to read romance TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
Book online «Main Street Sinclair Lewis (books to read romance TXT) đ». Author Sinclair Lewis
He came to the flat for breakfast, and washed the dishes. That was her only occasion for spite. Back home he never thought of washing dishes!
She took him to the obvious sightsâ âthe Treasury, the Monument, the Corcoran Gallery, the Pan-American Building, the Lincoln Memorial, with the Potomac beyond it and the Arlington hills and the columns of the Lee Mansion. For all his willingness to play there was over him a melancholy which piqued her. His normally expressionless eyes had depths to them now, and strangeness. As they walked through Lafayette Square, looking past the Jackson statue at the lovely tranquil façade of the White House, he sighed, âI wish Iâd had a shot at places like this. When I was in the U., I had to earn part of my way, and when I wasnât doing that or studying, I guess I was roughhousing. My gang were a great bunch for bumming around and raising Cain. Maybe if Iâd been caught early and sent to concerts and all thatâ âWould I have been what you call intelligent?â
âOh, my dear, donât be humble! You are intelligent! For instance, youâre the most thorough doctorâ ââ
He was edging about something he wished to say. He pounced on it:
âYou did like those pictures of G.P. pretty well, after all, didnât you!â
âYes, of course.â
âWouldnât be so bad to have a glimpse of the old town, would it!â
âNo, it wouldnât. Just as I was terribly glad to see the Haydocks. But please understand me! That doesnât mean that I withdraw all my criticisms. The fact that I might like a glimpse of old friends hasnât any particular relation to the question of whether Gopher Prairie oughtnât to have festivals and lamb chops.â
Hastily, âNo, no! Sure not. I undâstand.â
âBut I know it must have been pretty tiresome to have to live with anybody as perfect as I was.â
He grinned. She liked his grin.
VHe was thrilled by old negro coachmen, admirals, aeroplanes, the building to which his income tax would eventually go, a Rolls-Royce, Lynnhaven oysters, the Supreme Court Room, a New York theatrical manager down for the tryout of a play, the house where Lincoln died, the cloaks of Italian officers, the barrows at which clerks buy their box-lunches at noon, the barges on the Chesapeake Canal, and the fact that District of Columbia cars had both District and Maryland licenses.
She resolutely took him to her favorite white and green cottages and Georgian houses. He admitted that fanlights, and white shutters against rosy brick, were more homelike than a painty wooden box. He volunteered, âI see how you mean. They make me think of these pictures of an old-fashioned Christmas. Oh, if you keep at it long enough youâll have Sam and me reading poetry and everything. Oh say, dâ I tell you about this fierce green Jack Elderâs had his machine painted?â
VIThey were at dinner.
He hinted, âBefore you showed me those places today, Iâd already made up my mind that when I built the new house we used to talk about, Iâd fix it the way you wanted it. Iâm pretty practical about foundations and radiation and stuff like that, but I guess I donât know a whole lot about architecture.â
âMy dear, it occurs to me with a sudden shock that I donât either!â
âWellâ âanywayâ âyou let me plan the garage and the plumbing, and you do the rest, if you everâ âI meanâ âif you ever want to.â
Doubtfully, âThatâs sweet of you.â
âLook here, Carrie; you think Iâm going to ask you to love me. Iâm not. And Iâm not going to ask you to come back to Gopher Prairie!â
She gaped.
âItâs been a whale of a fight. But I guess Iâve got myself to see that you wonât ever stand G.P. unless you want to come back to it. I neednât say Iâm crazy to have you. But I wonât ask you. I just want you to know how I wait for you. Every mail I look for a letter, and when I get one Iâm kind of scared to open it, Iâm hoping so much that youâre coming back. Eveningsâ âYou know I didnât open the cottage down at the lake at all, this past summer. Simply couldnât stand all the others laughing and swimming, and you not there. I used to sit on the porch, in town, and Iâ âI couldnât get over the feeling that youâd simply run up to the drug store and would be right back, and till after it got dark Iâd catch myself watching, looking up the street, and you never came, and the house was so empty and still that I didnât like to go in. And sometimes I fell asleep there, in my chair, and didnât wake up till after midnight, and the houseâ âOh, the devil! Please get me, Carrie. I just want you to know how welcome youâll be if you ever do come. But Iâm not asking you to.â
âYouâreâ âItâs awfullyâ ââ
âââNother thing. Iâm going to be frank. I havenât always been absolutely, uh, absolutely, proper. Iâve always loved you more than anything else in the world, you and the kid. But sometimes when you were chilly to me Iâd get lonely and sore, and pike out andâ âNever intendedâ ââ
She rescued him with a pitying, âItâs all right. Letâs forget it.â
âBut before we were married you said if your husband ever did anything wrong, youâd want him to tell you.â
âDid I? I canât remember. And I canât seem to think. Oh, my dear, I do know how generously youâre trying to make me happy. The only thing isâ âI canât think. I donât know what I think.â
âThen listen! Donât think! Hereâs what I want you to do! Get a two-weeks leave from your office. Weatherâs beginning to get chilly here. Letâs run down to Charleston and Savannah and maybe Florida.
âA second honeymoon?â indecisively.
âNo. Donât even call it that. Call it a second wooing.
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