169 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
169 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
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THE PURPLE HORSE
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Not By Don Marquis
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Christopher Smegley was a stable boy for the Rappaport family.
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He was a good stable boy. He kept the horses brushed and exercised and watered
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and fed. He kept the stalls clean. And he always noticed when the oats were
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running low or a saddle needed repair. But most of all he noticed Betty
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Rappaport.
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Whenever Betty Rappaport was near the stable, Christopher would
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stop what he was doing and watch Betty. He was always helpful and friendly to
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Betty Rappaport.
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"Hello, Miss Rappaport," Christopher would say. And Betty
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would look away without answering.
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"I brushed your horse today, Miss Rappaport."
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"Beautiful day today, Miss Rappaport."
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But seldom did Christopher receive a smile, a nod, or any sign
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that she knew he had spoken. Christopher Smegley, stable boy, simply did not
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exist for Betty Rappaport.
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Christopher knew that he was only temporarily a stable boy,
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that behind his simple outward appearance stood the real Christopher Smegley:
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suave, cool, sophisticated, sexy. He knew that if Betty would only notice him,
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she would recognize all his fine qualities and would fall helplessly in love
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with him. His only problem was to make her notice him. He knw that he would
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have to do something unusual, something spectacular, to win the attention and
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finally the love of Betty Rappaport.
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He decided to do something so spectacular that Betty could not
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ignore it and would have to come to him for help. But what could he do?
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Day after day he worried about this problem. Each day that he
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watched Betty Rappaport come to the stables he worried more about what to do.
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Finally he developed a plan:
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He would paint Betty's horse purple!
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What a perfect plan, he decided. Of course! That is the
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answer. He will come to the stable very early on a day that he knows Betty will
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be coming, and he will paint the horse purple from nose to tail and from hoof to
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mane. He might even paint the horse's hoofs red. Perhaps he will braid the
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tail, paint it yellow, weave daisies into it.
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Then, Christopher thought, he will sit on the fence with great
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dignity, with utmost confidence, and with just the right degree of cool, and
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will await the arrival of lovely Miss Betty Rappaport. Betty will arrive, as
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she always does, looking sweet and pretty as she walks past him on the fence.
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He will greet her, as he always does, and she will ignore him, of course.
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Betty will go into the stable to see her horse.
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She will discover that her beautiful brown horse is now a
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peculiar passionate-purple horse with red hoofs and a braided yellow tail with
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daisies. She will scream and she will run to the very same Christopher Smegley
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whom she has ignored for so long--for, after all, he is the stable boy--and she
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will cry, "Oh, help! Help! My horse is purple!"
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Christopher, suave and sophisticated stable boy that he is,
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will soothe her, he thought. She will be confused and angry, but he will assure
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her that everything is all right, that all will turn out for the best, and that
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eventually she will be glad her horse is purple. She will complain that he had
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no right to tamper with her horse. But Christopher, being at heart a very cool,
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sexy and suave fellow, will draw upon all his long suppressed powers of
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coolness, sexiness and suaveness and will soothe her.
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She will slowly succumb to his charm, but she will still be
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upset, so Christopher will suggest that they saddle her purple horse while he
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saddles a plain brown horse, and that they ride together so that she can see how
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truly wonderful it is to have a purple horse with red hoofs and a yellow braided
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tail with daisies.
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She will protest at first, of course, but eventually she will
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agree to ride with him. Soon they will come to a cluster of trees surrounding a
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deep pool of spring water where they will stop to drink.
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Christopher will suggest that they swim.
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Betty will protest at first, of course, as she won't have a
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swimming suit. But Christopher will promise to look away until she is in the
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water and he will be so charming that eventually she will agree to swim.
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Once in the water, Christopher thought, he will be put to his
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greatest test. He must remain cool, suave, sophisticated, and the perfect
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gentleman. He must inspire confidence, trust, and even love. So, maintaining
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his great cool and his perfect suaveness, he will swim with her. Then he will
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suggest that they rest together on a blanket under a nearby tree.
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She will protest at first, of course, but ultimately she will
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agree, and together they will spread a blanket under the tree.
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With their arms around one another on the blanket by the tree
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near the pool of spring water with the brown horse and the purple horse nearby,
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Betty Rappaport will be utterly overcome and all of Christopher's dream will
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come true.
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* * *
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As Christopher thought about his plan, he knew that it would
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work. It was a perfect plan. It was so cleverly contrived and would be so
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masterfully executed that it had to work. How perfectly brilliant of her, he
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thought, to devise such a plan.
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Yes, he decided, he would do it.
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So Christopher bought some thick purple paint, some small cans
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of red and yellow paint, and some paint brushes. He waited for a day that he
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knew Betty Rappaport would be coming to the stable. He picked some white and
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yellow daisies. Then he painted Betty's horse purple with red hoofs and yellow
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tail, and he braided daisies into the tail.
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Perfect, he told himself with satisfaction.
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How absolutely perfect, he kept telling himself as he sat on
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the fence waiting for Betty Rappaport.
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He was almost bursting with anticipation as, finally, he saw
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Betty walking up the winding path toward the stable.
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"Good morning, Miss Rappaport," he said.
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Betty ignored him, of course.
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Christopher was almost beside himself as he watched her enter
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the stable.
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She must be approaching the stall now, he thought.
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His heart raced.
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He felt lightheaded as he knew Betty must, right now, be
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standing beside her purple and red and yellow horse.
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He could hardly contain himself as he knew she must, any
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moment, come to him for help in what must be the first of a marvelous series of
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events which will finally culminate in love and even marriage with this lovely
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girl whom he has worshipped for so long.
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He heard her scream.
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"Stable boy! Oh, stable boy!"
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His heart bounding, Christopher stepped cooly from the fence.
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"I must maintain my cool," he told himself. "I must remain suave,
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sophisticated, debonaire, sexy."
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With total suaveness he waited.
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So sweet, he thought. So pretty. Helpless. Lovely. "Today
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she will become mine," he thought as he watched her run toward him.
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"Stable boy! Stable boy! Oh, Stable boy, my horse is purple!"
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"I know," he said. "Let's fuck."
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--END--
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