[Stella Fregelius by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link bookStella Fregelius CHAPTER XII 20/22
Indeed, it is I who am in his debt for all the kindness he has shown to my father and myself.
To any little assistance that I can give him he is welcome." "I see," said Mr.Layard; "but I should have thought that was Mary Porson's job.
You know he is engaged to her, don't you ?" "Yes, but Miss Porson is not here; and if she were, perhaps she would not care for this particular work." Then came a pause, which, not knowing what this awkward silence might breed, Stella broke. "I suppose you saw my father," she said; "how did you find him looking ?" "Oh! better, I thought; but that leg of his still seems very bad." Then, with a gasp and a great effort, he went on: "I have been speaking to him about you." "Indeed," said Stella, looking at him with wondering eyes. "Yes, and he says that if--it suits us both, he is quite willing; that, in fact, he would be very pleased to see you so well provided for." Stella could not say that she did not understand, the falsehood was too obvious.
So she merely went on looking, a circumstance from which Mr. Layard drew false auguries. "You know what I mean, don't you ?" he jerked out. She shook her head. "I mean--I mean that I love you, that you have given me what this horrid thing was talking about just now--understanding to the heart; yes, that's it, understanding to the heart.
Will you marry me, Stella? I will make you a good husband, and it isn't a bad place, and all that, and though your father says he has little to leave you, you will be treated as liberally as though you were a lady in your own right." Stella smiled a little. "Will you marry me ?" he asked again. "I am afraid that I must answer no, Mr.Layard." Then the poor man broke out into a rhapsody of bitter disappointment, genuine emotion, and passionate entreaty. "It is no use, Mr.Layard," said Stella at last.
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