[The Firing Line by Robert W. Chambers]@TWC D-Link book
The Firing Line

CHAPTER X
17/27

Look at these birds--both cocks.

Are they not funny--these quaint little black quail of the semi-tropics?
We'll need all we can get, too.

But now that you are your resistless self again I shall cease to dread the alternative of starvation or a resort to alligator tail." So with a gay exchange of badinage they took their turns when the dogs rounded up singles; and sometimes he missed shamefully, and sometimes he performed with credit, but she never amended his misses nor did more than match his successes, and he thought that in all his life he had never witnessed more faultless field courtesy than this young girl instinctively displayed.

Nothing in the world could have touched him more keenly or convinced him more thoroughly.

For it is on the firing line that character shows; a person is what he is in the field--even though he sometimes neglects to live up to it in less vital moments.
Generous and quick in her applause, sensitive under his failures, cool in difficulties, yielding instantly the slightest advantage to him, holding her fire when singles rose or where there could be the slightest doubt--that was his shooting companion under the white noon sun that day.


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