Across the River and Into the Trees

Across the River and Into the Trees by Ernest Hemingway Page A

Book: Across the River and Into the Trees by Ernest Hemingway Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ernest Hemingway
Tags: Fiction, Literary, General, Classics
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“You would not throw me off any high cliffs.”
    “No,” the Colonel agreed. “And forgive me for talking badly.”
    “You didn’t talk very badly and I didn’t believe it anyway,” the girl told him. “Now should I go to the women’s room to comb my hair and make myself presentable, or should I come up to your room?”
    “Which do you wish?”
    “To come to your room, of course, and see how you live and how things are there.”
    “What about the hotel?”
    “Everything is known in Venice anyway. But it is also known who my family are and that I am a good girl. Also they know it is you and it is I. We have some credit to exhaust.”
    “Good,” the Colonel said. “By stairs or elevator?”
    “By elevator,” she said, and he heard the change in her voice. “You can call a boy or we can run it ourselves.”
    “We run it ourselves,” the Colonel said. “I checked out on elevators long ago.”
    It was a good ride with a slight bump, and a rectification at the end, and the Colonel thought: Checked out, eh? You better be checked out again.
    The corridor was now not simply beautiful, but exciting, and putting the key into the lock was not a simple process, but a rite.
    “Here it is,” the Colonel said when he swung the door open. “What there is of it.”
    “It is charming,” the girl said. “But it is awfully cold with the windows open.”
    “I’ll close them.”
    “No, please. Leave them open if you like it that way.”
    The Colonel kissed her and felt her wonderful, long, young, lithe and properly built body against his own body, which was hard and good, but beat-up, and as he kissed her he thought of nothing.
    They kissed for a long time, standing straight, and kissing true, in the cold of the open windows that were onto the Grand Canal.
    “Oh,” she said. Then, “Oh.”
    “We owe nothing,” the Colonel said. “Not a thing.”
    “Will you marry me and will we have the five sons?”
    “I will! I will.”
    “The thing is that, would you?”
    “Of course.”
    “Kiss me once again and make the buttons of your uniform hurt me but not too much.”
    They stood there and kissed each other true. “I have a disappointment for you, Richard,” she said. “I have a disappointment about everything.”
    She said it as a flat statement and it came to the Colonel in the same way as a message came from one of the three battalions, when the battalion commander spoke the absolute truth and told you the worst.
    “You are positive?”
    “Yes.”
    “My poor Daughter,” he said.
    Now there was nothing dark about the word and she was his Daughter, truly, and he pitied her and loved her.
    “No matter,” he said. “You comb yourself and make a new mouth and all that, and we will have a good dinner.”
    “Say once more, first, that you love me and make the buttons very tight.”
    “I love you,” the Colonel said quite formally.
    Then he whispered into her ear as gently as he knew how to whisper, as his whisper was when they are fifteen feet away and you are a young lieutenant on a patrol, “I love you only, my best and last and only and one true love.”
    “Good,” she said, and kissed him hard so he could feel the sweet salt of the blood inside his lip. And I like that too, he thought.
    “Now I will comb my hair and make my mouth new and you can watch me.”
    “Do you want me to shut the windows?”
    “No,” she said. “We will do it all in the cold.”
    “Who do you love?”
    “You,” she said. “And we don’t have too much luck do we?”
    “I don’t know,” the Colonel said. “Go ahead and comb your hair.”
    The Colonel went into the bathroom to wash up for dinner. The bathroom was the only disappointing part of the room. Due to the exigencies of the Gritti having been built as a palace, there had been no site for bathrooms at the time of building, and, later, when they were introduced, they had been built down the corridor and those entitled to use them gave due warning

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