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tmare. What was the matter with her tongue, her brain? Was it because she didn't know Jim well enough to talk to him? Surely not, for she had met strange boys before and not felt like this. Was it because it was night? Did you always feel like this when you were all dressed up and going home from an evening party? Creak! creak! said the shoes. Another block lay behind them. Missy, fighting that sensation of stupidity, in anguished resolution spoke again: "Just look at the moon--how big it is!" Jim followed her upward glance. "Yes, it's great," he agreed. Creak! creak! said the shoes. A heavy, regularly punctuated pause. "Don't you love moonlight nights?" persisted Missy. "Yes--when my shoes don't squeak." He tried to laugh. Missy tried to laugh too. Creak! creak! said the shoes. Another block lay behind them. "Moonlight always makes me feel--" She paused. What was it moonlight always made her feel? Hardly hearing what she was saying, she made herself reiterate banalities about the moon. Her mind flew upward to the moon--Jim's downward to his squeaking shoes. She lived at the other end of town from Raymond Bonner's house, and the long walk was made up of endless intermittent perorations on the moon, on squeaking shoes. But the song of the shoes never ceased. Louder and louder it waxed. It crashed into the innermost fibres of her frame, completely deafened her mental processes. Never would she forget it: creak-creak-creak-creak! And the moon, usually so kind and gentle, grinned down derisively. At last, after eons, they reached the corner of her own yard. How unchanged, how natural everything looked here! Over there, across the stretch of white moonlight, sat the summerhouse, symbol of peace and every day, cloaked in its fragrant ramblers. Ramblers! A sudden remembrance darted through Missy's perturbed brain. Her poor flowers--were they still out there? She must carry them into the house with her! On the impulse, without pausing to reflect that her action might look queer, she exclaimed: "Wait a minute!" and ran fleetly across the moonlit yard. In a second she had the bouquet out of the pitcher and was back again beside him, breathless. "I left them out there," she said. "I--I forgot them. And I didn't want to leave them out there all night." Jim bent down and sniffed at the roses. "They smell awfully sweet, don't they?" he said. Suddenly, without premeditation, Missy extended them to h
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