How well he could imagine the half-annoyed,
half-contemptuous smile which would rise to her beautiful face, if
he were so foolish as to become sentimental with her! That, he felt,
would be a look not easy to bear. Humiliation he dreaded.
When eight o'clock came, he was leaning over the end of the pier, at
the appointed spot, still busy in thought. There came a touch on his
arm.
"Well, are you thinking how you can make a book out of my story?"
The touch, the voice, the smile,--how all his sophistry was swept
away in a rush of tenderness and delight!
"I must wait for the end of it," he returned, holding out his hand,
which she did not take.
"The end?--Oh, you must invent one. Ends in real life are so
commonplace and uninteresting."
"Commonplace or not," said Waymark, with some lack of firmness in
his voice, "the end of your story should not be an unhappy one, if I
had the disposing of it. And I might have--but for one thing."
"What's that?" she asked, with sudden interest.
"My miserable poverty. If I only had money--money"--
"Money!" she exclaimed, turning away almost angrily. Then she added,
with the coldness which she did not often use, but which, when she
did, chilled and checked him--"I don't understand you.
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