Alice Adams Booth Tarkington (ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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Alice stopped, then laughed ruefully, exclaiming, âBut this is dreadful of me!â
âIs it?â
âBlackguarding her to you when sheâs giving a big party for you! Just the way Henrietta would blackguard me to youâ âheaven knows what she wouldnât say if she talked about me to you! It would be fair, of course, butâ âwell, Iâd rather she didnât!â And with that, Alice let her pretty hand, in its white glove, rest upon his arm for a moment; and he looked down at it, not unmoved to see it there. âI want to be unfair about just this,â she said, letting a troubled laughter tremble through her appealing voice as she spoke. âI wonât take advantage of her with anybody, except justâ âyou! Iâd a little rather you didnât hear anybody blackguard me, and, if you donât mindâ âcould you promise not to give Henrietta the chance?â
It was charmingly done, with a humorous, faint pathos altogether genuine; and Russell found himself suddenly wanting to shout at her, âOh, you dear!â Nothing else seemed adequate; but he controlled the impulse in favour of something more conservative.
âImagine anyone speaking unkindly of youâ ânot praising you!â
âWho has praised me to you?â she asked, quickly.
âI havenât talked about you with anyone; but if I did, I know theyâdâ ââ
âNo, no!â she cried, and went on, again accompanying her words with little tremulous runs of laughter. âYou donât understand this town yet. Youâll be surprised when you do; weâre different. We talk about one another fearfully! Havenât I just proved it, the way Iâve been going for Henrietta? Of course I didnât say anything really very terrible about her, but thatâs only because I donât follow that practice the way most of the others do. They donât stop with the worst of the truth they can find: they make up thingsâ âyes, they really do! And, oh, Iâd rather they didnât make up things about meâ âto you!â
âWhat difference would it make if they did?â he inquired, cheerfully. âIâd know they werenât true.â
âEven if you did know that, theyâd make a difference,â she said. âOh, yes, they would! Itâs too bad, but we donât like anything quite so well thatâs had specks on it, even if weâve wiped the specks off;â âitâs just that much spoiled, and some things are all spoiled the instant theyâre the least bit spoiled. What a man thinks about a girl, for instance. Do you want to have what you think about me spoiled, Mr. Russell?â
âOh, but thatâs already far beyond reach,â he said, lightly.
âBut it canât be!â she protested.
âWhy not?â
âBecause it never can be. Men donât change their minds about one another often: they make it quite an event when they do, and talk about it as if something important had happened. But a girl only has to go downtown with a shoestring unfastened, and every man who sees her will change his mind about her. Donât you know thatâs true?â
âNot of myself, I think.â
âThere!â she cried. âThatâs precisely what every man in the world would say!â
âSo you wouldnât trust me?â
âWellâ âIâll be awfully worried if you give âem a chance to tell you that Iâm too lazy to tie my shoestrings!â
He laughed delightedly. âIs that what they do say?â he asked.
âJust about! Whatever they hope will get results.â She shook her head wisely. âOh, yes; we do that here!â
âBut I donât mind loose shoestrings,â he said. âNot if theyâre yours.â
âTheyâll find out what you do mind.â
âBut suppose,â he said, looking at her whimsically; âsuppose I wouldnât mind anythingâ âso long as itâs yours?â
She courtesied. âOh, pretty enough! But a girl whoâs talked about has a weakness thatâs often a fatal one.â
âWhat is it?â
âItâs this: when sheâs talked about she isnât there. Thatâs how they kill her.â
âIâm afraid I donât follow you.â
âDonât you see? If Henriettaâ âor Mildredâ âor any of âemâ âor some of their mothersâ âoh, we all do it! Well, if any of âem told you I didnât tie my shoestrings, and if I were there, so that you could see me, youâd know it wasnât true. Even if I were sitting so that you couldnât see my feet, and couldnât tell whether the strings were tied or not just then, still you could look at me, and see that I wasnât the sort of girl to neglect my shoestrings. But that isnât the way it happens: theyâll get at you when Iâm nowhere around and canât remind you of the sort of girl I really am.â
âBut you donât do that,â he complained. âYou donât remind me you donât even tell meâ âthe sort of girl you really are! Iâd like to know.â
âLetâs be serious then,â she said, and looked serious enough herself. âWould you honestly like to know?â
âYes.â
âWell, then, you must be careful.â
âââCarefulâ?â The word amused him.
âI mean careful not to get me mixed up,â she said. âCareful not to mix up the girl you might hear somebody talking about with the me I honestly try to make you see. If you do get those two mixed upâ âwell, the whole showâll be spoiled!â
âWhat makes you think so?â
âBecause itâsâ ââ She checked herself, having begun to speak too impulsively; and she was disturbed, realizing in what tricky stuff she dealt. What had been on her lips to say was, âBecause itâs happened before!â She changed to, âBecause itâs so easy to spoil anythingâ âeasiest of all to spoil anything thatâs pleasant.â
âThat might depend.â
âNo; itâs so. And if you care at all aboutâ âabout knowing a girl whoâd like someone to know herâ ââ
âJust âsomeoneâ? Thatâs disappointing.â
âWellâ âyou,â she said.
âTell me how âcarefulâ you want me to be, then!â
âWell, donât you think it would be nice if you didnât give anybody the chance to talk about me the wayâ âthe way Iâve just been talking about Henrietta Lamb?â
With that they laughed together, and he said, âYou may be cutting me off from a great deal of information, you know.â
âYes,â Alice admitted. âSomebody might begin to praise me
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