[The Guilty River by Wilkie Collins]@TWC D-Link book
The Guilty River

CHAPTER XII
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"You are deceived by a false friend who lies to you and hates you." The man she was speaking of turned the corner of the new cottage.

He waved his hand gaily, and approached us along the road.
"Go!" she said.

"Your guardian angel has forgotten you.

It's too late now." Instead of letting me precede her, as I had anticipated, she ran on before me--made a sign to the deaf man, as she passed him, not to stop her--and disappeared through the open door of her father's side of the cottage.
I was left to decide for myself.

What should I have done, if I had been twenty years older?
Say that my moral courage would have risen superior to the poorest of all fears, the fear of appearing to be afraid, and that I should have made my excuses to my host of the evening--how would my moral courage have answered him, if he had asked for an explanation?
Useless to speculate on it! Had I possessed the wisdom of middle life, his book of leaves would not have told him, in my own handwriting, that I believed in his better nature, and accepted his friendly letter in the spirit in which he had written.
Explain it who can--I knew that I was going to drink tea with him, and yet I was unwilling to advance a few steps, and meet him on the road! "I find a new bond of union between us," he said, as he joined me.


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