Tales of the Jazz Age (Classic Reprint) by F. Scott Fitzgerald


  The whiskey in the bathtub caught fire. The walls began to fall in.

  Jemina and the man from the settlements looked at each other.

  "Jemina," he whispered.

  "Stranger," she answered,

  "We will die together," he said. "If we had lived I would have taken you to the city and married you. With your ability to hold liquor, your social success would have been assured."

  She caressed him idly for a moment, counting her toes softly to herself. The smoke grew thicker. Her left leg was on fire.

  She was a human alcohol lamp.

  Their lips met in one long kiss and then a wall fell on them and blotted them out.

  "As One."

  When the Doldrums burst through the ring of flame, they found them dead where they had fallen, their arms about each other.

  Old Jem Doldrum was moved.

  He took off his hat.

  He filled it with whiskey and drank it off.

  "They air dead," he said slowly, "they hankered after each other. The fit is over now. We must not part them."

  So they threw them together into the stream and the two splashes they made were as one.

 


 

  F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tales of the Jazz Age (Classic Reprint)

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