Capitolo 39
state--beautiful", she calmly affirmed, "or interesting-looking, in every way.
Mother would certainly have handled him--somehow; and I would have had to have a
you throw to fate of beaux--the young beaux of the men that I mean, as You. The friends of father are
all so grey!--Oh, I will clearly, get married me--she continued some duration",
uniformly. "I will get married me the British consul to Nunko-ninth.
He is a great friend of Father--and he wants me to help him to write a
you book on 'You Report Geologica of Melanesia to the Australian
Continent!'"
Obtusely his/her rose of voice to his/her monotony: "But I don't suppose--we am able
lives in a--the house", she lethargically complained him. "To the best it the wish
probably both only a moldy room or two on on the consulate--and more
probably that not it won't be anything except a hut of nipa and a
write-table car."
As if some muds of dust disturbed her/it, suddenly she rubbed the knuckles
of a hand through his/her eyes. "But we will perhaps have--his/her daughters,"
she intrepidly persisted. "And they will perhaps have houses!"
"Oh, hulls!" Barton uncomfortably said. "A--a house is not so a lot of!"
"It--it is not?" small asked Eve Edgarton incredulously. "Because--because--You
doesn't want to say--"
"Doesn't want to say--that that?" Confused Barton.
"Face--You--long live--in--a--the house?" small asked Eve Edgarton suddenly. His/her
hands were suddenly quiet in its womb, she put in disorder raising it makes a will this way never
slightly to a side, his/her indolent eyes incredibly dilated.
"Because, I clearly live in a house", laughed Barton.
"Or--h", small breathed Eve Edgarton. "King--the ally? It has to be
marvelous." Wiltingly that his/her eyes, its hands are bent again to her
discard-book again. "In--all--my--the life", she recapitulated monotonously, "I have
it never spent an only night--in a true house."
"Thing?" Questioned Barton.
"Oh, clearly", he/she obtusely explained the girl, "I have clearly spent anybody
end of nights in hotels and fields and huts and trains and steamboats