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"
Why
,
we
're
a
handsome
people
,
"
thought
Scarlett
with
pleasure
.
Yes
,
as
Rhett
had
prophesied
,
marriage
could
be
a
lot
of
fun
.
Not
only
was
it
fun
but
she
was
learning
many
things
.
That
was
odd
in
itself
,
because
Scarlett
had
thought
life
could
teach
her
no
more
.
Now
she
felt
like
a
child
,
every
day
on
the
brink
of
a
new
discovery
.
First
,
she
learned
that
marriage
with
Rhett
was
a
far
different
matter
from
marriage
with
either
Charles
or
Frank
.
They
had
respected
her
and
been
afraid
of
her
temper
.
They
had
begged
for
favors
and
if
it
pleased
her
,
she
had
bestowed
them
.
Rhett
did
not
fear
her
and
,
she
often
thought
,
did
not
respect
her
very
much
either
.
What
he
wanted
to
do
,
he
did
,
and
if
she
did
not
like
it
,
he
laughed
at
her
.
She
did
not
love
him
but
he
was
undoubtedly
an
exciting
person
to
live
with
.
The
most
exciting
thing
about
him
was
that
even
in
his
outbursts
of
passion
which
were
flavored
sometimes
with
cruelty
,
sometimes
with
irritating
amusement
,
he
seemed
always
to
be
holding
himself
under
restraint
,
always
riding
his
emotions
with
a
curb
bit
.
"
I
guess
that
's
because
he
is
n't
really
in
love
with
me
,
"
she
thought
and
was
content
enough
with
the
state
of
affairs
.
"
I
should
hate
for
him
to
ever
turn
completely
loose
in
any
way
.
"
But
still
the
thought
of
the
possibility
teased
her
curiosity
in
an
exciting
way
.
Living
with
Rhett
,
she
learned
many
new
things
about
him
,
and
she
had
thought
she
knew
him
so
well
.
She
learned
that
his
voice
could
be
as
silky
as
a
cat
's
fur
one
moment
and
crisp
and
crackling
with
oaths
the
next
.
He
could
tell
,
with
apparent
sincerity
and
approval
,
stories
of
courage
and
honor
and
virtue
and
love
in
the
odd
places
he
had
been
,
and
follow
them
with
ribald
stories
of
coldest
cynicism
.
She
knew
no
man
should
tell
such
stories
to
his
wife
but
they
were
entertaining
and
they
appealed
to
something
coarse
and
earthy
in
her
.
He
could
be
an
ardent
,
almost
a
tender
,
lover
for
a
brief
while
,
and
almost
immediately
a
mocking
devil
who
ripped
the
lid
from
her
gunpowder
temper
,
fired
it
and
enjoyed
the
explosion
.
She
learned
that
his
compliments
were
always
two
edged
and
his
tenderest
expressions
open
to
suspicion
.
In
fact
,
in
those
two
weeks
in
New
Orleans
,
she
learned
everything
about
him
except
what
he
really
was
.
Some
mornings
he
dismissed
the
maid
and
brought
her
the
breakfast
tray
himself
and
fed
her
as
though
she
were
a
child
,
took
the
hairbrush
from
her
hand
and
brushed
her
long
dark
hair
until
it
snapped
and
crackled
.
Yet
other
mornings
she
was
torn
rudely
out
of
deep
slumber
when
he
snatched
all
the
bed
covers
from
her
and
tickled
her
bare
feet
.
Sometimes
he
listened
with
dignified
interest
to
details
of
her
businesses
,
nodding
approval
at
her
sagacity
,
and
at
other
times
he
called
her
somewhat
dubious
tradings
scavenging
,
highway
robbery
and
extortion
.
He
took
her
to
plays
and
annoyed
her
by
whispering
that
God
probably
did
n't
approve
of
such
amusements
,
and
to
churches
and
,
sotto
voce
,
retailed
funny
obscenities
and
then
reproved
her
for
laughing
.
He
encouraged
her
to
speak
her
mind
,
to
be
flippant
and
daring
.
She
picked
up
from
him
the
gift
of
stinging
words
and
sardonic
phrases
and
learned
to
relish
using
them
for
the
power
they
gave
her
over
other
people
.
But
she
did
not
possess
his
sense
of
humor
which
tempered
his
malice
,
nor
his
smile
that
jeered
at
himself
even
while
he
was
jeering
others
.
He
made
her
play
and
she
had
almost
forgotten
how
.
Life
had
been
so
serious
and
so
bitter
.
He
knew
how
to
play
and
swept
her
along
with
him
.
But
he
never
played
like
a
boy
;
he
was
a
man
and
no
matter
what
he
did
,
she
could
never
forget
it
.
She
could
not
look
down
on
him
from
the
heights
of
womanly
superiority
,
smiling
as
women
have
always
smiled
at
the
antics
of
men
who
are
boys
at
heart
.
This
annoyed
her
a
little
,
whenever
she
thought
of
it
.
It
would
be
pleasant
to
feel
superior
to
Rhett
.
All
the
other
men
she
had
known
she
could
dismiss
with
a
half-contemptuous
"
What
a
child
!
"
Her
father
,
the
Tarleton
twins
with
their
love
of
teasing
and
their
elaborate
practical
jokes
,
the
hairy
little
Fontaines
with
their
childish
rages
,
Charles
,
Frank
,
all
the
men
who
had
paid
court
to
her
during
the
war
--
everyone
,
in
fact
,
except
Ashley
.
Only
Ashley
and
Rhett
eluded
her
understanding
and
her
control
for
they
were
both
adults
,
and
the
elements
of
boyishness
were
lacking
in
them
.