[The Younger Set by Robert W. Chambers]@TWC D-Link bookThe Younger Set CHAPTER V 44/53
But beauty in distress knocked him flat--as it does every wholesome boy who is worth his salt. And he said so in his own naive fashion; and the more eloquent he grew the more excited he grew and the deeper and blacker appeared her wrongs to him. At first she humoured him, and rather enjoyed his fresh, eager sympathy; after a little his increasing ardour inclined her to laugh; but it was very splendid and chivalrous and genuine ardour, and the inclination to laugh died out, for emotion is contagious, and his earnestness not only flattered her legitimately but stirred the slackened tension of her heart-strings until, tightening again, they responded very faintly. "I had no idea that _you_ were lonely," he declared. "Sometimes I am, a little, Gerald." She ought to have known better. Perhaps she did. "Well," he began, "couldn't I come and--" "No, Gerald." "I mean just to see you sometimes and have another of these jolly talks--" "Do you call this a jolly talk ?"--with deep reproach. "Why--not exactly; but I'm awfully interested, Mrs.Ruthven, and we understand each other so well--" "I don't understand _you_", she was imprudent enough to say. This was delightful! Certainly he must be a particularly sad and subtle dog if this clever but misunderstood young matron found him what in romance is known as an "enigma." So he protested with smiling humility that he was quite transparent; she insisted on doubting him and contrived to look disturbed in her mind concerning the probable darkness of that past so dear to any young man who has had none. As for Alixe, she also was mildly flattered--a trifle disdainfully perhaps, but still genuinely pleased at the honesty of this crude devotion.
She was touched, too; and, besides, she trusted him; for he was clearly as transparent as the spring air.
Also most women lugged a boy about with them; she had had several, but none as nice as Gerald.
To tie him up and tack his license on was therefore natural to her; and if she hesitated to conclude his subjection in short order it was that, far in a corner of her restless soul, there hid an ever-latent fear of Selwyn; of his opinions concerning her fitness to act mentor to the boy of whom he was fond, and whose devotion to him was unquestioned. Yet now, in spite of that--perhaps even partly because of it, she decided on the summary taming of Gerald; so she let her hand fall, by accident, close to his on the cushioned seat, to see what he'd do about it. It took him some time to make up his mind; but when he did he held it so gingerly, so respectfully, that she was obliged to look out of the window.
Clearly he was quite the safest and nicest of all the unfledged she had ever possessed. "Please, don't," she said sadly. And by that token she took him for her own. * * * * * She was very light-hearted that evening when she dropped him at the Stuyvesant Club and whizzed away to her own house, for he had promised not to play again on her premises, and she had promised to be nice to him and take him about when she was shy of an escort.
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