That surprised Kedzie. It was not the sort of talk she expected from a world which was stranger to her than the movie studio to him. He was perfectly natural, and that threw her into a spasm of artificiality.
He sat staring down at her. He put his hands under his knees and sat on them to keep them from touching her, as they wanted to. For all he knew, she was covered with fresh paint. That made her practically irresistible. Would it come off if he kissed her? He had to find out.
Finally he said, so helplessly, passively, that it would be more accurate to say it was said by him:
“Say, Miss Adair, I'm a dead-goner if you don't gimme a kiss.”
Kedzie was horrified. Skip Magruder would have been eleganter than that. She answered, with dignity:
“Certainly, if you so desire.”
That ought to have chaperoned him back to his senses, but he was too far gone. His long arms shot out, went round her, gathered her up to his breast. His high head came down like a swan's, and his lips pressed hers.
Whatever her soul was, her flesh was all girlhood in one flower of lithe stem, leaf, petal, sepal, and perfume. There was nothing of the opiate poppy, the ominous orchid, or even that velvet voluptuary, the rose. She was like a great pink, sweet, shy, fragrant, common wild honeysuckle blossom.
Jim Dyckman was so whelmed by the youth and flavor of her that his rapture exploded in an unsmothered gasp:
“Golly! but you're great!”