[The Purchase Price by Emerson Hough]@TWC D-Link bookThe Purchase Price CHAPTER XXXI 43/61
I shall always call your hair 'dark as the night of disunion and separation'-- isn't that what the oriental poet called it ?--and your face, to me, always, always, always, will be 'fair as the days of union and delight.' No you've not changed.
You're still just a tall flower, in the blades of grass--that are cut down.
But wasted! What is in my mind now, when maybe it ought not to be here, is just this: What couldn't you and I have done together? Ah! Nothing could have stopped us!" "What could we not have done ?" she repeated slowly.
"I've done so little--in the world--alone." Something in her tone caught his ear, his senses, overstrung, vibrating in exquisite susceptibility, capable almost of hearing thought that dared not be thought.
He turned his blackened face, bent toward her, looking into her face with an intensity which almost annihilated the human limitations of flesh and blood.
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