Short Fiction Ernest Hemingway (best books for students to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Ernest Hemingway
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But my old man said one day, in the dressing room, when he was getting into his street clothes. âNone of these things are horses, Joe. Theyâd kill that bunch of skates for their hides and hoofs up at Paris.â That was the day heâd won the Premio Commercio with Lantorna shooting her out of the field the last hundred meters like pulling a cork out of a bottle.
It was right after the Premio Commercio that we pulled out and left Italy. My old man and Holbrook and a fat wop in a straw hat that kept wiping his face with a handkerchief were having an argument at a table in the Galleria. They were all talking French and the two of them were after my old man about something. Finally he didnât say anything any more but just sat there and looked at Holbrook, and the two of them kept after him, first one talking and then the other, and the fat wop always butting in on Holbrook.
âYou go out and buy me a Sportsman, will you, Joe?â my old man said, and handed me a couple of soldi without looking away from Holbrook.
So I went out of the Galleria and walked over to in front of the Scala and bought a paper, and came back and stood a little way away because I didnât want to butt in and my old man was sitting back in his chair looking down at his coffee and fooling with a spoon and Holbrook and the big wop were standing and the big wop was wiping his face and shaking his head. And I came up and my old man acted just as though the two of them werenât standing there and said, âWant an ice, Joe?â Holbrook looked down at my old man and said slow and careful, âYou son of a bâ âžș,â and he and the fat wop went out through the tables.
My old man sat there and sort of smiled at me, but his face was white and he looked sick as hell and I was scared and felt sick inside because I knew something had happened and I didnât see how anybody could call my old man a son of a bâ âžș, and get away with it. My old man opened up the Sportsman and studied the handicaps for a while and then he said, âYou got to take a lot of things in this world, Joe.â And three days later we left Milan for good on the Turin train for Paris, after an auction sale out in front of Turnerâs stables of everything we couldnât get into a trunk and a suit case.
We got into Paris early in the morning in a long, dirty station the old man told me was the Gare de Lyon. Paris was an awful big town after Milan. Seems like in Milan everybody is going somewhere and all the trams run somewhere and there ainât any sort of a mix-up, but Paris is all balled up and they never do straighten it out. I got to like it, though, part of it, anyway, and say itâs got the best race courses in the world. Seems as though that were the thing that keeps it all going and about the only thing you can figure on is that every day the buses will be going out to whatever track theyâre running at, going right out through everything to the track. I never really got to know Paris well, because I just came in about once or twice a week with the old man from Maisons and he always sat at the CafĂ© de la Paix on the Opera side with the rest of the gang from Maisons and I guess thatâs one of the busiest parts of the town. But, say, it is funny that a big town like Paris wouldnât have a Galleria, isnât it?
Well, we went out to live at Maisons-Lafitte, where just about everybody lives except the gang at Chantilly, with a Mrs. Meyers that runs a boarding house. Maisons is about the swellest place to live Iâve ever seen in all my life. The town ainât so much, but thereâs a lake and a swell forest that we used to go off bumming in all day, a couple of us kids, and my old man made me a sling shot and we got a lot of things with it but the best one was a magpie. Young Dick Atkinson shot a rabbit with it one day and we put it under a tree and were all sitting around and Dick had some cigarettes and all of a sudden the rabbit jumped up and beat it into the brush and we chased it but we couldnât find it. Gee, we had fun at Maisons. Mrs. Meyers used to give me lunch in the morning and Iâd be gone all day. I learned to talk French quick. Itâs an easy language.
As soon as we got to Maisons, my old man wrote to Milan for his license and he was pretty worried till it came. He used to sit around the CafĂ© de Paris in Maisons with the gang, there were lots of guys heâd known when he rode up at Paris, before the war, lived at Maisons, and thereâs a lot of time to sit around because the work around a racing stable, for the jocks, that is, is all cleaned up by nine oâclock in the morning. They take the first batch of skins out to gallop them at 5:30 in the morning and they work the second lot
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