[The Lookout Man by B. M. Bower]@TWC D-Link book
The Lookout Man

CHAPTER ELEVEN
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It certainly would be keen to listen to them and know more about it than any of them." "Oh, would it! I'm glad it strikes you that way--it don't me." What a fool a fellow was when he went spilling his troubles into a girl's ears! He got up and walked glumly down to the niche in the rocks where he hid from tourists, and stood there with his hands in his pockets, glowering down at the fierce, ember-threaded waves of flame that surged through the forest.

Dusk only made the fire more terrible to him.

Had this new trouble not launched itself at him, he would be filled with a sick horror of the destruction, but as it was he only stared at it dully, not caring much about it one way or the other.
Well, he asked himself, what kind of a fool would he make of himself next?
Unloading his secret and his heartache to a girl that only thought it would be "keen" to have a bandit treed up here at the lookout station! Why couldn't he have kept his troubles to himself?
He'd be hollering it into the phone, next thing he knew.

They'd care, down there in the office, as much as she did, anyway.

And the secret would probably be safer with them than it would be with her.
He had a mental picture of her hurrying to tell Fred: "What do you know about it?
Jack Corey, the bandit, is treed up at the lookout station! He told me all the inside dope--" The thought of her animated chatter to Fred on the subject of his one real tragedy, made him clench his hands.
The very presence of her brought it back too vividly, though that had not struck him at first, when his hunger for human sympathy had been his keenest emotion.


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