“That Kitty was capable of any deep grief was unbelievable. He had gradually grown to think of her as something unapproachable and callous. She would get a divorce, of course, and eventually she would marry again. He began to consider this. Whom would she marry? He laughed bitterly, stopped; a picture flashed before him — of Kitty's arms around some man whose face he could not see, of Kitty's lips pressed close to other lips in what was surely: passion.”
"The Lees of Happiness"
Quoted, Tales of the Jazz Age (1922)
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F. Scott Fitzgerald 411
American novelist and screenwriter 1896–1940Related quotes

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