[Therese Raquin by Emile Zola]@TWC D-Link book
Therese Raquin

CHAPTER XXX
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He fancied that her remorse had taken another form, and was now displayed by this mournful weariness he noticed in her.

This weariness seemed to him more alarming than the chattering despair she had overwhelmed him with previously.

She no longer spoke, she no longer quarrelled with him, she seemed to consign everything to the depths of her being.

He would rather have heard her exhausting her endurance than see her keep in this manner to herself.

He feared that one day she would be choking with anguish, and to obtain relief, would go and relate everything to a priest or an examining magistrate.
Then these numerous absences of Therese had frightful significance in his eyes.


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