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the young trees that whinnied like colts impatient to be let freeโ โ€Šโ โ€ฆ On the particular night I have in mind, we were waiting for the top-floor light to go out. We wanted to see Avey leave the flat. This night she stayed longer than usual and gave us a chance to complete the plans of how we were going to stone and beat that feller on the top floor out of town. Ned especially had it in for him. He was about to throw a brick up at the window when at last the room went dark. Some minutes passed. Then Avey, as unconcerned as if she had been paying an old-maid aunt a visit, came out. I donโ€™t remember what she had on, and all that sort of thing. But I do know that I turned hot as bare pavements in the summertime at Nedโ€™s boast: โ€œHell, bet I could get her too if you little niggers werenโ€™t always spying and crabbing everything.โ€ I didnt say a word to him. It wasnt my way then. I just stood there like the others, and something like a fuse burned up inside of me. She never noticed us, but swung along lazy and easy as anything. We sauntered to the corner and watched her till her door banged to. Ned repeated what heโ€™d said. I didnt seem to care. Sitting around old Mush-Headโ€™s bread box, the discussion began. โ€œHang if I can see how she gets away with it,โ€ Doc started. Ned knew, of course. There was nothing he didnt know when it came to women. He dilated on the emotional needs of girls. Said they werent much different from men in that respect. And concluded with the solemn avowal: โ€œIt does em good.โ€ None of us liked Ned much. We all talked dirt; but it was the way he said it. And then too, a couple of the fellers had sisters and had caught Ned playing with them. But there was no disputing the superiority of his smutty wisdom. Bubs Sanborn, whose mother was friendly with Aveyโ€™s, had overheard the old ladies talking. โ€œAveyโ€™s motherโ€™s ont her,โ€ he said. We thought that only natural and began to guess at what would happen. Someone said sheโ€™d marry that feller on the top floor. Ned called that a lie because Avey was going to marry nobody but him. We had our doubts about that, but we did agree that sheโ€™d soon leave school and marry someone. The gang broke up, and I went home, picturing myself as married.

Nothing I did seemed able to change Aveyโ€™s indifference to me. I played basketball, and when Iโ€™d make a long clean shot sheโ€™d clap with the others, louder than they, I thought. Iโ€™d meet her on the street, and thereโ€™d be no difference in the way she said hello. She never took the trouble to call me by my name. On the days for drill, Iโ€™d let my voice down a tone and call for a complicated maneuver when I saw her coming. Sheโ€™d smile appreciation, but it was an impersonal smile, never for me. It was on a summer excursion down to Riverview that she first seemed to take me into account. The day had been spent riding merry-go-rounds, scenic-railways, and shoot-the-chutes. We had been in swimming and we had danced. I was a crack swimmer then. She didnt know how. I held her up and showed her how to kick her legs and draw her arms. Of course she didnt learn in one day, but she thanked me for bothering with her. I was also somewhat of a dancer. And I had already noticed that love can start on a dance floor. We danced. But though I held her tightly in my arms, she was way away. That college feller who lived on the top floor was somewhere making money for the next year. I imagined that she was thinking, wishing for him. Ned was along. He treated her until his money gave out. She went with another feller. Ned got sore. One by one the boysโ€™ money gave out. She left them. And they got sore. Every one of them but me got sore. This is the reason, I guess, why I had her to myself on the top deck of the Jane Mosely that night as we puffed up the Potomac, coming home. The moon was brilliant. The air was sweet like clover. And every now and then, a salt tang, a stale drift of seaweed. It was not my mindโ€™s fault if it went romancing. I should have taken her in my arms the minute we were stowed in that old lifeboat. I dallied, dreaming. She took me in hers. And I could feel by the touch of it that it wasnt a man-to-woman love. It made me restless. I felt chagrined. I didnt know what it was, but I did know that I couldnt handle it. She ran her fingers through my hair and kissed my forehead. I itched to break through her tenderness to passion. I wanted her to take me in her arms as I knew she had that college feller. I wanted her to love me passionately as she did him. I gave her one burning kiss. Then she laid me in her lap as if I were a child. Helpless. I got sore when she started to hum a lullaby. She wouldnt let me go. I talked. I knew damned well that I could beat her at that. Her eyes were soft and misty, the curves of her lips were wistful, and her smile seemed indulgent of the irrelevance of my remarks. I gave up at last and let her love me, silently, in her own way. The moon was brilliant. The air was sweet like clover, and every now and then, a salt tang, a stale drift of seaweedโ โ€Šโ โ€ฆ

The next time I came close to her was the following summer at Harpers Ferry.

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