Lynn looked at him with suddenly arrested attention: "I'm sorry," she said, "I didn't mean to be rude. But possibly you've

come to the heart of the matter. I am not of your world. You know

there's a great deal in not being able to get another's point of view.

I hope I haven't done you an injustice. I haven't meant to. But you're

wrong in saying I don't know who you are or anything about you. You are

the son of William J. Shafton--the only son, isn't that so? Then you

are the one I mean. There can't be any mistake. And I do know something

about you. In fact I've been very angry at you, and wished I might meet

you and tell you what I thought of you."

"You don't say!" said Laurie getting up excitedly and moving over to a

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chair next to hers regardless of his lame ankle, "This certainly is

interesting! What the deuce have I been doing to get myself in your bad

graces? I better repent at once before I hear what it is?"

"You are the one who owns the block of warehouses down on ---- street and

won't sell at any price to give the little children in all that region

a place to get a bit of fresh air, the grass and a view of the sky. You

are the one who won't pull down your old buildings and try new and

improved ways of housing the poor around there so that they can grow up

decently clean and healthy and have a little chance in this world. Just

because you can't have as many apartments and get as much money from

your investment you let the little children crowd together in rooms

that aren't fit for the pigs to live in, they are so dark and airless,

and crowded already. Oh, I know you keep within the law! You just skin

through without breaking it, but you won't help a little bit, you won't

even let your property help if someone else is willing to take the

bother! Oh, I've been so boiling at you ever since I heard your name

that I couldn't hardly keep my tongue still, to think of that great

beautiful car out there and how much it must have cost, and to hear you

speak of one of your other cars as if you had millions of them, and to

think of little Carmela living down in the basement room of Number 18

in your block, growing whiter and whiter every day, with her great blue

eyes and her soft fine wavy hair, and that hungry eager look in her

face. And her mother, sewing, sewing, all day long at the little cellar

window, and going blind because you won't put in a bigger one; sewing

on coarse dark vests, putting in pockets and buttonholes for a living

for her and Carmela, and you grinding her down and running around in

cars like that and taking it out of little Carmela, and little

Carmela's mother! Oh! How can I help feeling aloof from a person like

that?"