[A Man and a Woman by Stanley Waterloo]@TWC D-Link book
A Man and a Woman

CHAPTER IX
15/20

I want you to teach me how to catch bass in the river.

I heard some one say once you knew better than any one else how that is done.

Is not this a good idea of mine?
It will help both of us kill time." She sat there on the sofa, half stretched out, yet not carelessly nor ungracefully, but in an assumed laziness of real felinishness, a woman just ten years older than the man she was addressing, yet in all the lushness of magnificent womanhood, and emanating all magnetism.
Harlson said he would call for her and that they would go fishing.

And they went.
The light is tawny upon the lily-pods in shady places on the river.
And rods, such as are used for bass, are light upon the wrist, and, in the lazy hours of mid-afternoon, when bass bite rarely, demand but slight attention.

And two people idling in a boat get very close in thought together and come soon to know each other well.


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