{"id":"01KG6FHT9SXE8MTA7H65B7183M","cid":"bafkreiawp4utjtxmkosfnwcxcsgngif52fd5l7oj6jsd6zxd5sc45zemoi","type":"file","properties":{"cid":"bafkreic2wwnmpquyal5ejdwhyxzsxq6thf5prxipk54tisnp7oeymftdly","content_type":"image/jpeg","filename":"Rye_page_0067.jpg","height":2400,"key":"pdf-page-1769744163163-it212yczfxq","label":"Rye_page_0067.jpg","page_number":67,"pdf_type":"born_digital","size":724905,"text":"while he was hanging stuff up in the closet--that it could kill you. Naturally, I never told\nhim I thought he was a terrific whistler. I mean you don't just go up to somebody and say,\n\"You're a terrific whistler.\" But I roomed with him for about two whole months, even\nthough he bored me till I was half crazy, just because he was such a terrific whistler, the\nbest I ever heard. So I don't know about bores. Maybe you shouldn't feel too sorry if you\nsee some swell girl getting married to them. They don't hurt anybody, most of them, and\nmaybe they're secretly all terrific whistlers or something. Who the hell knows? Not me.\nFinally, old Sally started coming up the stairs, and I started down to meet her. She\nlooked terrific. She really did. She had on this black coat and sort of a black beret. She\nhardly ever wore a hat, but that beret looked nice. The funny part is, I felt like marrying\nher the minute I saw her. I'm crazy. I didn't even like her much, and yet all of a sudden I\nfelt like I was in love with her and wanted to marry her. I swear to God I'm crazy. I admit\nit.\n\"Holden!\" she said. \"It's marvelous to see you! It's been ages.\" She had one of\nthese very loud, embarrassing voices when you met her somewhere. She got away with it\nbecause she was so damn good-looking, but it always gave me a pain in the ass.\n\"Swell to see you,\" I said. I meant it, too. \"How are ya, anyway?\"\n\"Absolutely marvelous. Am I late?\"\nI told her no, but she was around ten minutes late, as a matter of fact. I didn't give\na damn, though. All that crap they have in cartoons in the Saturday Evening Post and all,\nshowing guys on street corners looking sore as hell because their dates are late--that's\nbunk. If a girl looks swell when she meets you, who gives a damn if she's late? Nobody.\n\"We better hurry,\" I said. \"The show starts at two-forty.\" We started going down the\nstairs to where the taxis are.\n\"What are we going to see?\" she said.\n\"I don't know. The Lunts. It's all I could get tickets for.\"\n\"The Lunts! Oh, marvelous!\" I told you she'd go mad when she heard it was for\nthe Lunts.\nWe horsed around a little bit in the cab on the way over to the theater. At first she\ndidn't want to, because she had her lipstick on and all, but I was being seductive as hell\nand she didn't have any alternative. Twice, when the goddam cab stopped short in traffic,\nI damn near fell off the seat. Those damn drivers never even look where they're going, I\nswear they don't. Then, just to show you how crazy I am, when we were coming out of\nthis big clinch, I told her I loved her and all. It was a lie, of course, but the thing is, I\nmeant it when I said it. I'm crazy. I swear to God I am.\n\"Oh, darling, I love you too,\" she said. Then, right in the same damn breath, she\nsaid, \"Promise me you'll let your hair grow. Crew cuts are getting corny. And your hair's\nso lovely.\"\nLovely my ass.\nThe show wasn't as bad as some I've seen. It was on the crappy side, though. It\nwas about five hundred thousand years in the life of this one old couple. It starts out when\nthey're young and all, and the girl's parents don't want her to marry the boy, but she\nmarries him anyway. Then they keep getting older and older. The husband goes to war,\nand the wife has this brother that's a drunkard. I couldn't get very interested. I mean I\ndidn't care too much when anybody in the family died or anything. They were all just a\nbunch of actors. The husband and wife were a pretty nice old couple--very witty and all--","text_extracted_at":"2026-01-30T03:36:03.163Z","text_extracted_by":"pdf-processor","text_has_content":true,"text_source":"born_digital","uploaded":true,"width":1855},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KFHMJM2J9JHQAQM1Q9SKBJWF","predicate":"derived_from"},{"peer":"01KFF1K6A8V452X8SQKY55DD16","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG6FHT9M6F17GJMKDZD1BE1T","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG6FHT9QMP83ND2S0B30B914","predicate":"next"},{"peer":"01KG6FM3Y50K97MCSZ97BQKDBT","peer_label":"Rye_page_0067_medium.jpg","peer_type":"file","predicate":"has_derivative"},{"peer":"01KG6FM77Z3TCVST3EPD7469E9","peer_label":"Rye_page_0067_thumb.jpg","peer_type":"file","predicate":"has_derivative"},{"peer":"01KG6FT59BXAZ3C5HRJ6SW8F58","predicate":"has_assembly"}],"ver":6,"created_at":"2026-01-30T03:36:05.177Z","ts":"2026-01-30T03:40:41.683Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFFC4A8W8939TXGEXCK439ZK"}}