[Antonina by Wilkie Collins]@TWC D-Link bookAntonina CHAPTER 18 12/24
The various emotions pictured in her face became resolved into one sinister expression, and, without removing her eyes from the Goth, she slowly drew from the bosom-folds of her garment a long sharp knife. The flames alternately trembled into light and subsided into darkness as at first; Hermanric and Antonina yet continued in their old positions, absorbed in their thoughts and in themselves; and still Goisvintha remained unmoved as ever, knife in hand, watchful, steady, silent as before. But beneath the concealment of her outward tranquillity raged a contention under which her mind darkened and her heart writhed.
Twice she returned the knife to its former hiding-place, and twice she drew it forth again; her cheeks grew paler and paler, she pressed her clenched hand convulsively over her bosom, and leant back languidly against the wall behind her.
No thought of Antonina had part in this great strife of secret emotions; her wrath had too much of anguish in it to be spent against a stranger and an enemy. After the lapse of a few moments more, her strength returned--her firmness was aroused.
The last traces of grief and despair that had hitherto appeared in her eyes vanished from them in an instant.
Rage, vengeance, ferocity, lowered over them as she crept stealthily forward to the very side of the Goth, and, when the next gleam of the fire played upon him, drew the knife fiercely across the back of his hands. The cut was true, strong, and rapid--it divided the tendons from first to last--he was crippled for life. At that instant the fire touched the very heart of the log that had been laid on it.
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