[Alice Adams by Booth Tarkington]@TWC D-Link bookAlice Adams CHAPTER II 12/17
Cheer up now! Au 'voir!" And with her pretty hand she waved further encouragement from the closing door as she departed. Lightsomely descending the narrow stairway, she whistled as she went, her fingers drumming time on the rail; and, still whistling, she came into the dining-room, where her mother and her brother were already at the table.
The brother, a thin and sallow boy of twenty, greeted her without much approval as she took her place. "Nothing seems to trouble you!" he said. "No; nothing much," she made airy response.
"What's troubling yourself, Walter ?" "Don't let that worry you!" he returned, seeming to consider this to be repartee of an effective sort; for he furnished a short laugh to go with it, and turned to his coffee with the manner of one who has satisfactorily closed an episode. "Walter always seems to have so many secrets!" Alice said, studying him shrewdly, but with a friendly enough amusement in her scrutiny. "Everything he does or says seems to be acted for the benefit of some mysterious audience inside himself, and he always gets its applause. Take what he said just now: he seems to think it means something, but if it does, why, that's just another secret between him and the secret audience inside of him! We don't really know anything about Walter at all, do we, mama ?" Walter laughed again, in a manner that sustained her theory well enough; then after finishing his coffee, he took from his pocket a flattened packet in glazed blue paper; extracted with stained fingers a bent and wrinkled little cigarette, lighted it, hitched up his belted trousers with the air of a person who turns from trifles to things better worth his attention, and left the room. Alice laughed as the door closed.
"He's ALL secrets," she said.
"Don't you think you really ought to know more about him, mama ?" "I'm sure he's a good boy," Mrs.Adams returned, thoughtfully.
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