[The Avalanche by Gertrude Franklin Horn Atherton]@TWC D-Link book
The Avalanche

CHAPTER VI
2/17

He could saunter and think undisturbed.
What was he to hear?
And what bearing would it be found to have on his wife's conduct?
He had gone to sleep last night as sure as a man may be of anything that his wife was no more interested in Doremus than in any other of the young men who found time to dance attendance upon idle, bored, but virtuous wives.
If the man knew her secret and were endeavoring to exact blackmail he would pay his price with joy--after thrashing him, for he would have sacrificed the half of his fortune never to experience again not only the demoralizing attack of jealous madness of the night before, which had brought in its wake the uneasy doubt if civilization were as far advanced as he had fondly imagined, but the sensation of amazed contempt which had swept over him at the dinner table as he had seen his wife, whom he had believed to be a woman of instinctive taste and fastidiousness, manifestly upon intimate terms with a creature who should have been walking on four legs.

Better, perhaps, the desire to kill a woman than to despise her-- He slammed the door when he entered the little room reserved for him, and barely restrained himself from flinging his hat into a corner and breaking a chair on the table.

His languor had vanished.
Spaulding followed him immediately.
"Howdy," he said genially, as he pushed his own hat on the back of his head and bit hungrily at the end of a cigar.

"Suppose you've been impatient--unless too busy to think about it." "I'd like to know what you've found out as quickly as you can tell me." "Well, to begin with the kid.

I had some trouble at the convent.


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