Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
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âWe got to say good night better than that!â he grumbled. âWith that damn Duerâ ââ
âSsssssh! Theyâd simply murder me if they caught you here. Do you want to get me fired?â
âWould you care, if it was because of me?â
âYesâ ânoâ âwellâ âbut theyâd probably fire you from medic school, my lad. Ifâ ââ His caressing hands could feel her shiver with anxiety. She peered along the corridor, and his quickened imagination created sneaking forms, eyes peering from doorways. She sighed, then, resolutely: âWe canât talk here. Weâll slip up to my roomâ âroommateâs away for the week. Stand there, in the shadow. If nobodyâs in sight upstairs, Iâll come back.â
He followed her to the floor above, to a white door, then breathlessly inside. As he closed the door he was touched by this cramped refuge, with its camp-beds and photographs from home and softly wrinkled linen. He clasped her, but with hand against his chest she forbade him, as she mourned:
âYou were jealous again! How can you distrust me so? With that fool! Women not like him? They wouldnât have a chance! Likes himself too well. And then you jealous!â
âI wasnâtâ âYes, I was, but I donât dare! To have to sit there and grin like a hyena, with him between us, when I wanted to talk to you, to kiss you! All right! Probably Iâll always be jealous. Itâs you that have got to trust me. Iâm not easygoing; never will be. Oh, trust meâ ââ
Their profound and unresisted kiss was the more blind in memory of that barren hour with Angus. They forgot that the superintendent of nurses might dreadfully come bursting in; they forgot that Angus was waiting. âOh, curse Angusâ âlet him go home!â was Martinâs only reflection, as his eyes closed and his long loneliness vanished.
âGood night, dear loveâ âmy love forever,â he exulted.
In the still ghostliness of the hall, he laughed as he thought of how irritably Angus must have marched away. But from the window he discovered Angus huddled on the stone steps, asleep. As he touched the ground, he whistled, but stopped short. He saw bursting from the shadow a bulky man, vaguely in a porterâs uniform, who was shouting:
âIâve caught yuh! Back you come into the hospital, and weâll find out what youâve been up to!â
They closed. Martin was wiry, but in the watchmanâs clasp he was smothered. There was a reek of dirty overalls, of unbathed flesh. Martin kicked his shins, struck at his boulder of red cheek, tried to twist his arm. He broke loose, started to flee, and halted. The struggle, in its contrast to the aching sweetness of Leora, had infuriated him. He faced the watchman, raging.
From the awakened Angus, suddenly appearing beside him, there was a thin sound of disgust. âOh, come on! Letâs get out of this. Why do you dirty your hands on scum like him?â
The watchman bellowed, âOh, Iâm scum, am I? Iâll show you!â
He collared Angus and slapped him.
Under the sleepy street-lamp, Martin saw a man go mad. It was not the unfeeling Angus Duer who stared at the watchman; it was a killer, and his eyes were the terrible eyes of the killer, speaking to the least experienced a message of death. He gasped only, âHe dared to touch me!â A penknife was somehow in his hands, he had leaped at the watchman, and he was busily and earnestly endeavoring to cut his throat.
As Martin tried to hold them he heard the agitated pounding of a policemanâs night stick on the pavement. Martin was slim but he had pitched hay and strung telephone wire. He hit the watchman, judiciously, beside the left ear, snatched Angusâs wrist, and dragged him away. They ran up an alley, across a courtyard. They came to a thoroughfare as an owl trolley glowed and rattled round the corner; they ran beside it, swung up on the steps, and were safe.
Angus stood on the back platform, sobbing. âMy God, I wish Iâd killed him! He laid his filthy hands on me! Martin! Hold me here on the car. I thought Iâd got over that. Once when I was a kid I tried to kill a fellowâ âGod, I wish Iâd cut that filthy swineâs throat!â
As the trolley came into the center of the city, Martin coaxed, âThereâs an all-night lunch up Oberlin Avenue where we can get some white mule. Come on. Itâll straighten you up.â
Angus was shaky and stumblingâ âAngus the punctilious. Martin led him into the lunchroom where, between catsup bottles, they had raw whisky in granite-like coffee cups. Angus leaned his head on his arm and sobbed, careless of stares, till he had drunk himself into obliteration, and Martin steered him home. Then to Martin, in his furnished room with Clif snoring, the evening became incredible and nothing more incredible than Angus Duer. âWell, heâll be a good friend of mine now, for always. Fine!â
Next morning, in the hall of the Anatomy Building, he saw Angus and rushed toward him. Angus snapped; âYou were frightfully stewed last night, Arrowsmith. If you canât handle your liquor better than that, you better cut it out entirely.â
He walked on, clear-eyed, unruffled.
VIII IAnd always Martinâs work went onâ âassisting Max Gottlieb, instructing bacteriological students, attending lectures and hospital demonstrationsâ âsixteen merciless hours to the day. He stole occasional evenings for original research or for peering into the stirring worlds of French and German bacteriological publications; he went proudly now and then to Gottliebâs cottage where, against rain-smeared brown wallpaper, were Blake drawings and a signed portrait of Koch. But the rest was nerve-gnawing.
Neurology, O.B., internal medicine, physical diagnosis; always a few pages more than he could drudge
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