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PAGE 8

Sophy-As-She-Might-Have-Been
by [?]

“No, thanks,” said Sophy. “And it really doesn’t matter. You simply asked me what I’d like to do and I told you. Thanks. Good-night.”

“Now, now!” pleaded Max Tack in a panic. “Of course we’ll go. I just thought you’d rather do something fussier–that’s all. I’ve never gone down the river; but I think that’s a classy little idea–yes, I do. Now you run and get your hat and we’ll jump into a taxi and–“

“You don’t need to jump into a taxi; it’s only two blocks. We’ll walk.”

There was a little crowd down at the landing station. Max Tack noticed, with immense relief, that they were not half-bad-looking people either. He had been rather afraid of workmen in red sashes and with lime on their clothes, especially after Sophy had told him that a trip cost twenty centimes each.

“Twenty centimes! That’s about four cents! Well, my gad!”

They got seats in the prow. Sophy took off her hat and turned her face gratefully to the cool breeze as they swung out into the river. The Paris of the rumbling, roaring auto buses, and the honking horns, and the shrill cries, and the mad confusion faded away. There was the palely glowing sky ahead, and on each side the black reflection of the tree-laden banks, mistily mysterious now and very lovely. There was not a ripple on the water and the Pont Alexandre III and the golden glory of the dome of the Hotel des Invalides were ahead.

“Say, this is Venice!” exclaimed Max Tack.

A soft and magic light covered the shore, the river, the sky, and a soft and magic something seemed to steal over the little boat and work its wonders. The shabby student-looking chap and his equally shabby and merry little companion, both Americans, closed the bag of fruit from which they had been munching and sat looking into each other’s eyes.

The long-haired artist, who looked miraculously like pictures of Robert Louis Stevenson, smiled down at his queer, slender-legged little daughter in the curious Cubist frock; and she smiled back and snuggled up and rested her cheek on his arm. There seemed to be a deep and silent understanding between them. You knew, somehow, that the little Cubist daughter had no mother, and that the father’s artist friends made much of her and that she poured tea for them prettily on special days.

The bepowdered French girl who got on at the second station sat frankly and contentedly in the embrace of her sweetheart. The stolid married couple across the way smiled and the man’s arm rested on his wife’s plump shoulder.

So the love boat glided down the river into the night. And the shore faded and became grey, and then black. And the lights came out and cast slender pillars of gold and green and scarlet on the water.

Max Tack’s hand moved restlessly, sought Sophy’s, found it, clasped it. Sophy’s hand had never been clasped like that before. She did not know what to do with it, so she did nothing–which was just what she should have done.

“Warm enough?” asked Max Tack tenderly.

“Just right,” murmured Sophy.

The dream trip ended at St.-Cloud. They learned to their dismay that the boat did not return to Paris. But how to get back? They asked questions, sought direction–always a frantic struggle in Paris. Sophy, in the glare of the street light, looked uglier than ever.

“Just a minute,” said Max Tack. “I’ll find a taxi.”

“Nonsense! That man said the street car passed right here, and that we should get off at the Bois. Here it is now! Come on!”

Max Tack looked about helplessly, shrugged his shoulders and gave it up.

“You certainly make a fellow hump,” he said, not without a note of admiration. “And why are you so afraid that I’ll spend some money?” as he handed the conductor the tiny fare.

“I don’t know–unless it’s because I’ve had to work so hard all my life for mine.”