Tired of reading? Add this page to your Bookmarks or Favorites and finish it later.
|
|
The girl looked up. The suggestion was bold, bad, and momentarily
attractive. But she only said "No," apparently from habit, picked
up her doll, and the boy clambered to the front of the wagon. The
incomplete episode terminated at once with that perfect
forgetfulness, indifference, and irresponsibility common to all
young animals. If either could have flown away or bounded off
finally at that moment, they would have done so with no more
concern for preliminary detail than a bird or squirrel. The wagon
rolled steadily on. The boy could see that one of the teamsters
had climbed up on the tail-board of the preceding vehicle. The
other seemed to be walking in a dusty sleep.
"Kla'uns," said the girl.
The boy, without turning his head, responded, "Susy."
"Wot are you going to be?" said the girl.
"Goin' to be?" repeated Clarence.
"When you is growed," explained Susy.
Clarence hesitated. His settled determination had been to become a
pirate, merciless yet discriminating. But reading in a bethumbed
"Guide to the Plains" that morning of Fort Lamarie and Kit Carson,
he had decided upon the career of a "scout," as being more
accessible and requiring less water. Yet, out of compassion for
Susy's possible ignorance, he said neither, and responded with the
American boy's modest conventionality, "President." It was safe,
required no embarrassing description, and had been approved by
benevolent old gentlemen with their hands on his head.
|