Page:The Relentless City.djvu/100

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THE RELENTLESS CITY

is the least leisured of all. If you adore us, as you say, grant us the privilege of seeing you like that.'

There was something in this speech that rather touched her—something also that certainly pleased her, and that was the tone of honest deference in which he spoke.

' In fact, you want to be English,' she said, laughing it off, ' and I want to be American.' And she looked at him, smiling.

But he did not smile at all, only again his brown eyes grew hot and black. That, too, pleased her. Then suddenly she felt vaguely frightened; she had not definitely intended to give him his chance now, and she did not wish him to take it. So she rose.

' Take me back,' she said. ' Take me into a crowd of your people. I want to learn a little more.'