An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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âOh, donât say eat to me!â exclaimed Greta Miller, who was surveying Clyde calmly as though she were debating with herself whether he was worthwhile game or not, and deciding that he was: âWith all the ice-cream and cake and pie and sandwiches weâll have to eat yet tonight. We was just going to warn Louise not to fill up too much. Kittie Keaneâs givinâ a birthday party, you know, Tom, and sheâll have a big cake anâ everythinâ. Youâre cominâ down, ainât you, afterwards?â she concluded, with a thought of Clyde and his possible companionship in mind.
âI wasnât thinkinâ of it,â calmly observed Ratterer. âMe and Clyde was thinkinâ of goinâ to a show after dinner.â
âOh, how foolish,â put in Hortense Briggs, more to attract attention to herself and take it away from Greta than anything else. She was still in front of the mirror, but turned now to cast a fetching smile on all, particularly Clyde, for whom she fancied her friend might be angling, âWhen you could come along and dance. I call that silly.â
âSure, dancing is all you three ever think ofâ âyou and Louise,â retorted Ratterer. âItâs a wonder you donât give yourselves a rest once in a while. Iâm on my feet all day anâ I like to sit down once in a while.â He could be most matter-of-fact at times.
âOh, donât say sit down to me,â commented Greta Miller with a lofty smile and a gliding, dancing motion of her left foot, âwith all the dates we got ahead of us this week. Oh, gee!â Her eyes and eyebrows went up and she clasped her hands dramatically before her. âItâs just terrible, all the dancinâ we gotta do yet, this winter, donât we, Hortense? Thursday night and Friday night and Saturday and Sunday nights.â She counted on her fingers most archly. âOh, gee! It is terrible, really.â She gave Clyde an appealing, sympathy-seeking smile. âGuess where we were the other night, Tom. Louise and Ralph Thorpe and Hortense and Bert Gettler, me and Willie Bassickâ âout at Pegrainâs on Webster Avenue. Oh, anâ you oughta seen the crowd out there. Sam Shaffer and Tillie Burns was there. And we danced until four in the morning. I thought my knees would break. I ainât been so tired in I donât know when.â
âOh, gee!â broke in Hortense, seizing her turn and lifting her arms dramatically. âI thought I never would get to work the next morning. I could just barely see the customers moving around. And, wasnât my mother fussy! Gee! She hasnât gotten over it yet. She donât mind so much about Saturdays and Sundays, but all these week nights and when I have to get up the next morning at sevenâ âgeeâ âhow she can pick!â
âAnâ I donât blame her, either,â commented Mrs. Ratterer, who was just then entering with a plate of potatoes and some bread. âYou twoâll get sick and Louise, too, if you donât get more rest. I keep tellinâ her she wonât be able to keep her place or stand it if she donât get more sleep. But she donât pay no more attention to me than Tom does, and thatâs just none at all.â
âOh, well, you canât expect a fellow in my line to get in early always, Ma,â was all Ratterer said. And Hortense Briggs added: âGee, Iâd die if I had to stay in one night. You gotta have a little fun when you work all day.â
What an easy household, thought Clyde. How liberal and indifferent. And the sexy, gay way in which these two girls posed about. And their parents thought nothing of it, evidently. If only he could have a girl as pretty as this Hortense Briggs, with her small, sensuous mouth and her bright hard eyes.
âTo bed twice a week early is all I need,â announced Greta Miller archly. âMy father thinks Iâm crazy, but moreân that would do me harm.â She laughed jestingly, and Clyde, in spite of the âwe wasâesâ and âI seenâs,â was most vividly impressed. Here was youth and geniality and freedom and love of life.
And just then the front door opened and in hurried Louise Ratterer, a medium-sized, trim, vigorous little girl in a red-lined cape and a soft blue felt hat pulled over her eyes. Unlike her brother, she was brisk and vigorous and more lithe and as pretty as either of these others.
âOh, look whoâs here!â she exclaimed. âYou two birds beat me home, didnja? Well, I got stuck tonight on account of some mix-up in my sales-book. And I had to go up to the cashierâs office. You bet it wasnât my fault, though. They got my writinâ wrong,â then noting Clyde for the first time, she announced: âI bet I know who this isâ âMr. Griffiths. Tomâs talked about you a lot. I wondered why he didnât bring you around here before.â And Clyde, very much flattered, mumbled that he wished he had.
But the two visitors, after conferring with Louise in a small front bedroom to which they all retired, reappeared presently and because of strenuous invitations, which were really not needed, decided to remain. And Clyde, because of their presence, was now intensely wrought up and alertâ âeager to make a pleasing impression and to be received upon terms of friendship here. And these three girls, finding him attractive, were anxious to be agreeable to him, so much so that for the first time in his life they put him at his ease with the opposite sex and caused him to find
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