I replied gallantly, “Whateryou know about it?”
“Ah, you men, you men,” murmured Miss Sellars; “you're all alike.”
This suggested a personal aspersion on my character. “Not allus,” I murmured.
“You don't know what love is,” said Miss Sellars. “You're not old enough.”
The O'Kelly had passed on to Sullivan's “Sweethearts,” then in its first popularity.
“Oh, love for a year—a week—a day!
But oh for the love that loves al-wa-ays!”
Miss Sellars' languishing eyes were fixed upon me; Miss Sellars' red lips pouted and twitched; Miss Sellars' white bosom rose and fell. Never, so it seemed to me, had so large an amount of beauty been concentrated in one being.
“Yeserdo,” I said. “I love you.”
I stooped to kiss the red lips, but something was in my way. It turned out to be a cold cigar. Miss Sellars thoughtfully removed it, and threw it away. Our lips met. Her large arms closed about my neck and held me tight.