Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
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As he grumped across the medical campus next day, he came unexpectedly upon Angus and he was smitten with the guiltiness and embarrassment one has toward a person who has borrowed money and probably will not return it. Mechanically he began to blurt âHello,â but he checked it in a croak, scowled, and stumbled on.
âOh, Mart,â Angus called. He was dismayingly even. âRemember speaking to me last evening? It struck me when I was going out that you looked huffy. I was wondering if you thought Iâd been rude. Iâm sorry if you did. Fact is, I had a rotten headache. Look. Iâve got four tickets for As It Listeth, in Zenith, next Friday eveningâ âoriginal New York cast! Like to see it? And I noticed you were with a peach, at the dance. Suppose she might like to go along with us, she and some friend of hers?â
âWhyâ âgoshâ âIâll phone herâ âdarn nice of you to ask usâ ââ
It was not till melancholy dusk, when Leora had accepted and promised to bring with her a probationer-nurse named Nelly Byers, that Martin began to brood:
âWonder if he did have a headache last night?
âWonder if somebody gave him the tickets?
âWhy didnât he ask Dad Silvaâs daughter to go with us? Does he think Leora is some tart Iâve picked up?
âSure, he never really quarrels with anybodyâ âwants to keep us all friendly, so weâll send him surgical patients some day when weâre hick G.P.s and heâs a Great and Only.
âWhy did I crawl down so meekly?
âI donât care! If Leora enjoys itâ âMe personally, I donât care two hoots for all this trotting aroundâ âThough of course it isnât so bad to see pretty women in fine clothes, and be dressed as good as anybodyâ âOh, I donât know!â
VIIn the slightly Midwestern city of Zenith, the appearance of a play âwith the original New York castâ was an event. (What play it was did not much matter.) The Dodsworth Theatre was splendid with the aristocracy from the big houses on Royal Ridge. Leora and Nelly Byers admired the bloodsâ âgraduates of Yale and Harvard and Princeton, lawyers and bankers, motor-manufacturers and inheritors of real estate, virtuosi of golf, familiars of New Yorkâ âwho with their shrill and glistening women occupied the front rows. Miss Byers pointed out the Dodsworths, who were often mentioned in Town Topics.
Leora and Miss Byers bounced with admiration of the hero when he refused the governorship; Martin worried because the heroine was prettier than Leora; and Angus Duer (who gave an appearance of knowing all about plays without having seen more than half a dozen in his life) admitted that the set depicting âJack Vanduzenâs Camp in the Adirondacks: Sunset, the Next Dayâ was really very nice.
Martin was in a mood of determined hospitality. He was going to give them supper and that was all there was to it. Miss Byers explained that they had to be in the hospital by a quarter after eleven, but Leora said lazily, âOh, I donât care. Iâll slip in through a window. If youâre there in the morning, the Old Cat canât prove you got in late.â Shaking her head at this lying wickedness, Miss Byers fled to a trolley car, while Leora, Angus, and Martin strolled to Epsteinâs Alt Nuremberg CafĂ© for beer and Swiss cheese sandwiches flavored by the sight of German drinking mottos and papier-mĂąchĂ© armor.
Angus was studying Leora, looking from her to Martin, watching their glances of affection. That a keen young man should make a comrade of a girl who could not bring him social advancement, that such a thing as the boy and girl passion between Martin and Leora could exist, was probably inconceivable to him. He decided that she was conveniently frail. He gave Martin a refined version of a leer, and set himself to acquiring her for his own uses.
âI hope you enjoyed the play,â he condescended to her.
âOh, yesâ ââ
âJove, I envy you two. Of course I understand why girls fall for Martin here, with his romantic eyes, but a grind like me, I have to go on working without a single person to give me sympathy. Oh, well, I deserve it for being shy of women.â
With unexpected defiance from Leora: âWhen anybody says that, it means theyâre not shy, and they despise women.â
âDespise them? Why, child, honestly, I long to be a Don Juan. But I donât know how. Wonât you give me a lesson?â Angusâs aridly correct voice had become lulling; he concentrated on Leora as he would have concentrated on dissecting a guinea pig. She smiled at Martin now and then to say, âDonât be jealous, idiot. Iâm magnificently uninterested in this conceited hypnotist.â But she was flustered by Angusâs sleek assurance, by his homage to her eyes and wit and reticence.
Martin twitched with jealousy. He blurted that they must be goingâ âLeora really had to be backâ âThe trolleys ran infrequently after midnight and they walked to the hospital through hollow and sounding streets. Angus and Leora kept up a high-strung chatter, while Martin stalked beside them, silent, sulky, proud of being sulky. Skittering through a garage alley they came out on the mass of Zenith General Hospital, a block long, five stories of bleak windows with infrequent dim blotches of light. No one was about. The first floor was but five feet from the ground, and they lifted Leora up to the limestone ledge of a half-open corridor window. She slid in, whispering, âGâ night! Thanks!â
Martin felt empty, dissatisfied. The night was full of a chill mournfulness. A light was suddenly flickering in a window above them, and there was a womanâs scream breaking down into moans. He felt the tragedy of partingâ âthat in the briefness of life he should lose one moment of her living presence.
âIâm going in after her; see she gets there safe,â he said.
The frigid edge
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