[The Firing Line by Robert W. Chambers]@TWC D-Link bookThe Firing Line CHAPTER IX 34/38
"I'll walk a little with James before I compose my aged bones to slumber....
Good night, dear. Will you come again soon ?" He said he would and took his leave of them in the long corridor, traversing it without noticing which direction he took until, awaking from abstraction, he found himself at the head of a flight of steps and saw the portico of the railroad station below him and the signal lamps, green and red and white, burning between the glistening rails. Without much caring where he went, but not desiring to retrace his steps over half a mile or so of carpet, he went out into the open air and along the picket fence toward the lake front. As he came to the track crossing he glanced across at the Beach Club where lights sparkled discreetly amid a tropical thicket and flowers lay in pale carpets under the stars. Portlaw had sent him a member's card; he took it out now and scanned it with faint curiosity.
His name was written on the round-cornered brown card signed by a "vice-president" and a "secretary," under the engraved notice: "To be shown when requested." But when he ascended the winding walk among the palms and orange blossoms, this "suicide's tag," as Malcourt called it, was not demanded of him at the door. The restaurant seemed to be gay and rather noisy, the women vivacious, sometimes beautiful, and often respectable.
A reek of cigarette smoke, wine, and orange blossoms hung about the corridors; the tiny glittering rotunda with its gaming-tables in a circle was thronged. He watched them lose and win and lose again.
Under the soft tumult of voices the cool tones of the house attaches sounded monotonously, the ball rattled, the wheels spun.
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