Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
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âLeora? Sandy. Meet me Grand lobby tomorrow, twelve-thirty. Must! Important! Fix ât somehowâ âyour auntâs sick.â
âAll right, dear. Gâ night,â was all she said.
It took him long minutes to get an answer from Madelineâs flat, then Mrs. Foxâs voice sounded, sleepily, quaveringly:
âYes, yes?â
âââS Martin.â
âWho is it? Who is it? What is it? Are you calling the Fox apartment?â
âYes, yes! Mrs. Fox, itâs Martin Arrowsmith speaking.â
âOh, oh, my dear! The phone woke me out of a sound sleep, and I couldnât make out what you were saying. I was so frightened. I thought maybe it was a telegram or something. I thought perhaps something had happened to Maddyâs brother. What is it, dear? Oh, I do hope nothingâs happened!â
Her confidence in him, the affection of this uprooted old woman bewildered in a strange land, overcame him; he lost all his whisky-colored feeling that he was a nimble fellow, and in a melancholy way, with all the weight of life again upon him, he sighed that no, nothing had happened, but heâd forgotten to tell Madeline somethingâ âso shorâ âso sorry call so lateâ âcould he speak Mad just minuteâ â
Then Madeline was bubbling, âWhy, Marty dear, what is it? I do hope nothing has happened! Why, dear, you just left hereâ ââ
âListen, d-dear. Forgot to tell you. Thereâs aâ âthereâs a great friend of mine in Zenith that I want you to meetâ ââ
âWho is he?â
âYouâll see tomorrow. Listen, I want you come in and meetâ âcome meet um at lunch. Going,â with ponderous jocularity, âgoing to blow you all to a swell feed at the Grandâ ââ
âOh, how nice!â
ââ âso I want you to meet me at the eleven-forty interurban, at College Square. Can you?â
Vaguely, âOh, Iâd love to butâ âI have an eleven oâclock, and I donât like to cut it, and I promised May Harmon to go shopping with herâ âsheâs looking for some kind of shoes that you can wear with her pink crepe de chine but that you can walk inâ âand we sort of thought maybe we might lunch at Ye Kollege Karavanseraiâ âand Iâd half planned to go to the movies with her or somebody, Mother says that new Alaska film is simply dandy, she saw it tonight, and I thought I might go see it before they take it off, though Heaven knows I ought to come right home and study and not go anywhere at allâ ââ
âNow listen! Itâs important. Donât you trust me? Will you come or not?â
âWhy, of course I trust you, dear. All right, Iâll try to be there. The eleven-forty?â
âYes.â
âAt College Square? Or at Bluthmanâs Book Shop?â
âAt College Square!â
Her gentle âI trust youâ and her wambling âIâll try toâ were warring in his ears as he plunged out of the suffocating cell and returned to Clif.
âWhatâs the grief?â Clif wondered. âWife passed away? Or did the Giants win in the ninth? Barney, our wandering-boy-tonight looks like a necropsy. Slip him another strawberry pop, quick. Say, Doctor, I think you better call a physician.â
âOh, shut up,â was all Martin had to say, and that without conviction. Before telephoning he had been full of little brightnesses; he had praised Clifâs pool-playing and called Barney âold Cimex lectulariusâ; but now, while the affectionate Clif worked on him, he sat brooding save when he grumbled (with a return of self-satisfaction), âIf you knew all the troubles I haveâ âall the doggone mess a fellow can get intoâ âyouâd feel down in the mouth!â
Clif was alarmed. âLook here, old socks. If youâve gotten in debt, Iâll raise the cash, somehow. If itâsâ âBeen going a little too far with Madeline?â
âYou make me sick! Youâve got a dirty mind. Iâm not worthy to touch Madelineâs hand. I regard her with nothing but respect.â
âThe hell you do! But never mind, if you say so. Gosh, wish there was something I could do for you. Oh! Have ânother shot! Barney! Come a-runninâ!â
By several drinks Martin was warmed into a hazy carelessness, and Clif solicitously dragged him home after he had desired to fight three large academic sophomores. But in the morning he awoke with a crackling skull and a realization that he was going to face Leora and Madeline at lunch.
VHis half-hour journey with Madeline into Zenith seemed a visible and oppressing thing, like a tornado cloud. He had not merely to get through each minute as it came; the whole grim thirty minutes were present at the same time. While he was practicing the tactful observation he was going to present two minutes from now, he could still hear the clumsy thing he had said two minutes before. He fought to keep her attention from the âgreat friend of hisâ whom they were to meet. With fatuous beaming he described a night at Barneyâs; without any success whatever he tried to be funny; and when Madeline lectured him on the evils of liquor and the evils of association with immoral persons, he was for once relieved. But he could not sidetrack her.
âWho is this man weâre going to see? What are you so mysterious about? Oh, Martin, is it a joke? Arenât we going to meet anybody? Did you just want to run away from Mama for a while and we have a bat at the Grand together? Oh, what fun! Iâve always wanted to lunch at the Grand. Of course I do think itâs too sort of rococo, but still, it is impressive, andâ âDid I guess it, darling?â
âNo, thereâs someoneâ âOh, weâre going to meet somebody, all right!â
âThen why donât you tell me who he is? Honestly, Mart, you make me impatient.â
âWell, Iâll tell you. It isnât a Him; itâs a Her.â
âOh!â
âItâsâ âYou know my work takes me to the hospitals, and some of the nurses at Zenith General have been awfully helpful.â He was panting. His eyes ached. Since the torture of the coming lunch was inevitable, he wondered why he should go on trying to resist his
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