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The Pace Of Youth
by
Finally, the being who was born to attend at this tragedy said that she wished to sit down and gaze at the sea, alone.
They politely urged her to walk on with them, but she was obstinate. She wished to gaze at the sea, alone. The young man swore to himself that he would be her friend until he died.
And so the two young lovers went on without her. They turned once to look at her.
“Jennie’s awful nice,” said the girl.
“You bet she is,” replied the young man, ardently.
They were silent for a little time.
At last the girl said–
“You were angry at me yesterday.”
“No, I wasn’t.”
“Yes, you were, too. You wouldn’t look at me once all day.”
“No, I wasn’t angry. I was only putting on.”
Though she had, of course, known it, this confession seemed to make her very indignant. She flashed a resentful glance at him.
“Oh, you were, indeed?” she said with a great air.
For a few minutes she was so haughty with him that he loved her to madness. And directly this poem, which stuck at his lips, came forth lamely in fragments.
When they walked back toward the other girl and saw the patience of her attitude, their hearts swelled in a patronizing and secondary tenderness for her.
They were very happy. If they had been miserable they would have charged this fairy scene of the night with a criminal heartlessness; but as they were joyous, they vaguely wondered how the purple sea, the yellow stars, the changing crowds under the electric lights could be so phlegmatic and stolid.
They walked home by the lakeside way, and out upon the water those gay paper lanterns, flashing, fleeting, and careering, sang to them, sang a chorus of red and violet, and green and gold; a song of mystic bands of the future.
One day, when business paused during a dull sultry afternoon, Stimson went up town. Upon his return, he found that the popcorn man, from his stand over in a corner, was keeping an eye upon the cashier’s cage, and that nobody at all was attending to the wooden arm and the iron rings. He strode forward like a sergeant of grenadiers.
“Where in thunder is Lizzie?” he demanded, a cloud of rage in his eyes.
The popcorn man, although associated long with Stimson, had never got over being dazed.
“They’ve–they’ve–gone
round to th’–th’–house,” he said with difficulty, as if he had just been stunned.
“Whose house?” snapped Stimson.
“Your–your house, I s’pose,” said the popcorn man.
Stimson marched round to his home. Kingly denunciations surged, already formulated, to the tip of his tongue, and he bided the moment when his anger could fall upon the heads of that pair of children. He found his wife convulsive and in tears.
“Where’s Lizzie?”
And then she burst forth–“Oh–John–John–they’ve run away, I know they have. They drove by here not three minutes ago. They must have done it on purpose to bid me good-bye, for Lizzie waved her hand sadlike; and then, before I could get out to ask where they were going or what, Frank whipped up the horse.”
Stimson gave vent to a dreadful roar.
“Get my revolver–get a hack–get my revolver, do you hear–what the devil–” His voice became incoherent.
He had always ordered his wife about as if she were a battalion of infantry, and despite her misery, the training of years forced her to spring mechanically to obey; but suddenly she turned to him with a shrill appeal.
“Oh, John–not–the–revolver.”
“Confound it, let go of me!” he roared again, and shook her from him.
He ran hatless upon the street. There were a multitude of hacks at the summer resort, but it was ages to him before he could find one. Then he charged it like a bull.