Fane thought himself a good-looking fellow, and he regarded his figure with pleasure, as it was set off by the suit of fine gray check that he wore habitually; but he thought Gregory's educational advantages told in his face. His own education had ended at a commercial college, where he acquired a good knowledge of bookkeeping, and the fine business hand he wrote, but where it seemed to him sometimes that the earlier learning of the public school had been hermetically sealed within him by several coats of mathematical varnish. He believed that he had once known a number of things that he no longer knew, and that he had not always been so weak in his double letters as he presently found himself.
One night while Gregory sat on a high stool and rested his elbow on the desk before it, with his chin in his hand, looking down upon Fane, who sprawled sadly in his chair, and listening to the last dance playing in the distant parlor, Fane said. “Now, what'll you bet that they won't every one of 'em come and look for a letter in her box before she goes to bed? I tell you, girls are queer, and there's no place like a hotel to study 'em.”
“I don't want to study them,” said Gregory, harshly.
“Think Greek's more worth your while, or know 'em well enough already?” Fane suggested.
“No, I don't know them at all,” said the student.
“I don't believe,” urged the clerk, as if it were relevant, “that there's a girl in the house that you couldn't marry, if you gave your mind to it.”
Gregory twitched irascibly. “I don't want to marry them.”
“Pretty cheap lot, you mean? Well, I don't know.”
“I don't mean that,” retorted the student. “But I've got other things to think of.”
“Don't you believe,” the clerk modestly urged, “that it is natural for a man—well, a young man—to think about girls?”