[The Younger Set by Robert W. Chambers]@TWC D-Link book
The Younger Set

CHAPTER IX
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That is only decent, you see--" "Who ever heard of the Government's gratitude ?" broke in Austin.
"Nonsense, Phil; you are wasting time!" "I've got to do it," said Selwyn; "you must see that, of course." "But I don't see it," began Lawn--"because you are not in the Government service now--" "Besides," added Austin, "you were not a West Pointer; you never were under obligations to the Government!" "Are we not all under obligation ?" asked Selwyn so simply that Austin flushed.
"Oh, of course--patriotism and all that--naturally--Confound it, I don't suppose you'd go and offer it to Germany or Japan before our own Government had the usual chance to turn it down and break your heart.
But why can't the Government make arrangements with Lawn's Company--if it desires to ?" "A man can't exploit his own Government; you all know that as well as I do," returned Selwyn, smiling.

"_Pro aris et focis_, you know--_ex necessitate rei_." "When the inventor goes to the Government," said Austin, with a shrug--"_vestigia nulla retrorsum_." "_Spero meliora_," retorted Selwyn, laughing; but there remained the obstinate squareness of jaw, and his amused eyes were clear and steady.
Young Lawn looked into them and the hope in him flickered; Austin looked, and shrugged; but as they all turned away to retrace their steps across the moors in the direction of Silverside, Lansing lightly hooked his arm into Selwyn's; and Gerald, walking thoughtfully on the other side, turned over and over in his mind the proposition offered him--the spectacle of a modern and needy man to whom money appeared to be the last consideration in a plain matter of business.

Also he turned over other matters in his mind; and moved closer to Selwyn, walking beside him with grave eyes bent on the ground.
* * * * * The matter of business arrangements apparently ended then and there; Lawn's company sent several men to Selwyn and wrote him a great many letters--unlike the Government, which had not replied to his briefly tentative suggestion that Chaosite be conditionally examined, tested, and considered.
So the matter remained in abeyance, and Selwyn employed two extra men and continued storage tests and experimented with rifled and smooth-bore tubes, watchfully uncertain yet as to the necessity of inventing a solvent to neutralise possible corrosion after a propelling charge had been exploded.
Everybody in the vicinity had heard about his experiments; everybody pretended interest, but few were sincere; and of the sincere, few were unselfishly interested--his sister, Eileen, Drina, and Lansing--and maybe one or two others.
However, the younger set, now predominant from Wyossett to Wonder Head, made up parties to visit Selwyn's cottage, which had become known as The Chrysalis; and Selwyn good-naturedly exploded a pinch or two of the stuff for their amusement, and never betrayed the slightest annoyance or boredom.

In fact, he behaved so amiably during gratuitous interruptions that he won the hearts of the younger set, who presently came to the unanimous conclusion that there was Romance in the air.

And they sniffed it with delicate noses uptilted and liked the aroma.
Kathleen Lawn, a big, leisurely, blond-skinned girl, who showed her teeth when she laughed and shook hands like a man, declared him "adorable" but "unsatisfactory," which started one of the Dresden-china twins, Dorothy Minster, and she, in turn, ventured the innocent opinion that Selwyn was misunderstood by most people--an inference that she herself understood him.


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