"Didn't the fools ask you to dance? Ah! You needn't tell me.That's it.I've been here for the last three dances and you weren't in sight till you came to the window.Well, what do you care about that for?""I don't!" she answered."I don't!" Then suddenly, without being able to prevent it, she sobbed.
"No," he said, gently, "I see you don't.And you let yourself be a fool because there are a lot of fools in there."She gave way, all at once, to a gust of sorrow and bitterness; she bent far over and caught his hand and laid it against her wet cheek."Oh, Joe," she whispered, brokenly, "I think we have such hard lives, you and I! It doesn't seem right --while we're so young! Why can't we be like the others? Why can't we have some of the fun?"He withdrew his hand, with the embarrassment and shame he would have felt had she been a boy.
"Get out!" he said, feebly.
She did not seem to notice, but, still stooping, rested her elbows on her knees and her face in her hands."I try so hard to have fun, to be like the rest,--and it's always a mistake, always, always, always!" She rocked herself, slightly, from side to side."I am a fool, it's the truth, or I wouldn't have come to-night.I want to be attractive--Iwant to be in things.I want to laugh like they do--""To laugh just to laugh, and not because there's something funny?""Yes, I do, I do! And to know how to dress and to wear my hair--there must be some place where you can learn those things.I've never had any one to show me! Ah! Grandfather said something like that this afternoon--poor man!