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firmed Mr. Bross with conviction, "and some show, too, if you wanta know. I could sit through it twicet. Say, I couldn't quit thinkin' what a grand young time I'd start in this old burg if I could only con this _Kismet_ thing into slippin' me _my_ Day of Days. Believe me or not, there would be _a_ party." "What would you do?" asked Molly Lessing, smiling. "Well, the first flop I'd nail down all the coin that was handy, and then I'd buy me a flock of automobiles--and have a table reserved for me at the Knickerbocker for dinner every night--and...." Imagination flagged. "Well," he concluded defensively, "I can tell you one thing I wouldn't do." "What?" demanded Violet. "I wouldn't let any ward politician like that there _Wazir_, or whatever them A-rabs called him, kid me into trying to throw a bomb at Charlie Murphy--or anythin' like that. No-oh! Not this infant. That's where your friend _Hajj the Beggar's_ foot slipped on him. Up to then he had everythin' his own way. If he'd only had sense enough to stall, he'd've wound up in a blaze of glory." "But, you bonehead," Violet argued candidly, "he had to. That was his part: it was written in the play." "G'wan. If he'd just stalled round and refused to jump through, the author'd 've framed up some other way out. Why--blame it!--he'd've _had_ to!" "That will be about all for me," said Violet. "I don't feel strong enough to-night to stand any more of your dramatic criticism. Lead me home--and please talk baseball all the way." With a resentful grunt, Mr. Bross clamped a warm, moist hand round the plump arm of his charmer, and with masterful address propelled her from the curb in front of the theatre, where the little party had paused, to the northwest corner of Broadway: their progress consisting in a series of frantic rushes broken by abrupt pauses to escape annihilation in the roaring after-theatre crush of motor-cars. P. Sybarite, moving instinctively to follow, leaped back to the sidewalk barely in time to save his toes a crushing beneath the tires of a hurtling taxicab. He smiled a furtive apology at Molly Lessing, who had demonstrated greater discretion, and she returned his smile in the friendliest manner. His head was buzzing--and her eyes were kind. Neither spoke; but for an instant he experienced a breathless sense of sympathetic isolation with her, there on that crowded corner, elbowed and shouldered in the eddy caused by the junction of the outp
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