you can listen!" he said. 
The Traveling Salesman was no fool. People as well as lisle thread 
were a specialty of his. Even in his very first smiling estimate of the 
Youngish Girl's face, neither vivid blond hair nor luxuriantly ornate 
furs misled him for an instant. Just as a Preacher's high waistcoat 
passes him, like an official badge of dignity and honor, into any 
conceivable kind of a situation, so also does a woman's high forehead 
usher her with delicious impunity into many conversational experiences 
that would hardly be wise for her lower-browed sister. 
With an extra touch of manners the Salesman took off his neat brown 
derby hat and placed it carefully on the vacant seat in front of him. 
Then, shifting his sample-case adroitly to suit his new twisted position, 
he began to stick cruel little prickly price marks through alternate 
meshes of pink and blue lisle. 
"Why, sure you can listen!" he repeated benignly. "Traveling alone's 
awful stupid, ain't it? I reckon you were glad when the busted heating 
apparatus in the sleeper gave you a chance to come in here and size up 
a few new faces. Sure you can listen! Though, bless your heart, we 
weren't talking about anything so very specially interesting," he
explained conscientiously. "You see, I was merely arguing with my 
young friend here that if a woman really loves you, she'll follow you 
through any kind of blame or disgrace--follow you anywheres, I 
said--anywheres!" 
"Not anywheres," protested the Young Electrician with a grin. "'Not up 
a telegraph pole!'" he requoted sheepishly. 
"Y-e-s--I heard that," acknowledged the Youngish Girl with blithe 
shamelessness. 
"Follow you 'anywheres,' was what I said," persisted the Traveling 
Salesman almost irritably. "Follow you 'anywheres'! Run! Walk! Crawl 
on her hands and knees if it's really necessary. And yet--" Like a 
shaggy brown line drawn across the bottom of a column of figures, his 
eyebrows narrowed to their final calculation. "And yet--" he estimated 
cautiously, "and yet--there's times when I ain't so almighty sure that her 
following you is any more specially flattering to you than if you was a 
burglar. She don't follow you so much, I reckon, because you are her 
love as because you've got her love. God knows it ain't just you, 
yourself, she's afraid of losing. It's what she's already invested in you 
that's worrying her! All her pinky-posy, cunning kid-dreams about 
loving and marrying, maybe; and the pretty-much grown-up winter she 
fought out the whisky question with you, perhaps; and the summer you 
had the typhoid, likelier than not; and the spring the youngster was 
born--oh, sure, the spring the youngster was born! Gee! If by 
swallowing just one more yarn you tell her, she can only keep on 
holding down all the old yarns you ever told her--if, by forgiving you 
just one more forgive-you, she can only hang on, as it were, to the 
original worth-whileness of the whole darned business--if by--" 
"Oh, that's what you meant by the 'whole darned business,' was it?" 
cried the Youngish Girl suddenly, edging away out to the front of her 
seat. Along the curve of her cheeks an almost mischievous smile began 
to quicken. "Oh, yes! I heard that, too!" she confessed cheerfully. "But 
what was the beginning of it all? The very beginning? What was the 
first thing you said? What started you talking about it? Oh, please, 
excuse me for hearing anything at all," she finished abruptly; "but I've
been traveling alone now for five dreadful days, all the way down from 
British Columbia, and--if--you--will--persist--in--saying interesting 
things--in trains--you must take the consequences!" 
There was no possible tinge of patronage or condescension in her voice, 
but rather, instead, a bumpy, naive sort of friendliness, as lonesome 
Royalty sliding temporarily down from its throne might reasonably 
contend with each bump, "A King may look at a cat! He may! He 
may!" 
Along the edge of the Young Electrician's cheek-bones the red began to 
flush furiously. He seemed to have a funny little way of blushing just 
before he spoke, and the physical mannerism gave an absurdly 
italicized sort of emphasis to even the most trivial thing that he said. 
"I guess you'll have to go ahead and tell her about 'Rosie,'" he 
suggested grinningly to the Traveling Salesman. 
"Yes! Oh, do tell me about 'Rosie,'" begged the Youngish Girl with 
whimsical eagerness. "Who in creation was 'Rosie'?" she persisted 
laughingly. "I've been utterly mad about 'Rosie' for the last half-hour!" 
"Why, 'Rosie' is nobody at all--probably," said the Traveling Salesman 
a trifle wryly. 
"Oh, pshaw!" flushed the Young Electrician, crinkling up all the little 
smile-tissue around his blue eyes. "Oh, pshaw! Go ahead and tell her 
about 'Rosie.'" 
"Why, I tell you it wasn't anything so specially interesting," protested 
the Traveling Salesman diffidently. "We simply    
    
		
	
	
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