Page:The Better Sort (New York, Charles Scribners Sons, 1903).djvu/35

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BROKEN WINGS

"Yes," her companion laughed; "once they really don't know you enough———!"

"They treat you as old friends. But what do we want now of courage?" she went on.

He wondered. "Yes, after all, what?"

"To keep up, I mean. Why should we keep up?"

It seemed to strike him. "I see. After all, why? The courage not to keep up———"

"We have that, at least," she declared, "haven't we?" Standing there at her little high-perched window, which overhung grey housetops, they let the consideration of this pass between them in a deep look, as well as in a hush of which the intensity had some thing commensurate. "If we're beaten!" she then continued.

"Let us at least be beaten together!" He took her in his arms; she let herself go, and he held her long and close for the compact. But when they had recovered themselves enough to handle their agreement more responsibly, the words in which they confirmed it broke in sweetness as well as sadness from both together: "And now to work!"