[The Common Law by Robert W. Chambers]@TWC D-Link book
The Common Law

CHAPTER XI
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And I'll tell you why, Lily; it's because she does not care to meet you." "What!" "I have told you the plain truth.

She sees no reason for knowing you, or for knowing my parents, or any woman in a world that would never tolerate her, never submit to her entrance, never receive her as one of them!--a world that might shrug and smile and endure her as my wife--and embitter my life forever." As he spoke he was not aware that he merely repeated Valerie's own words; he remained still unconscious that his decision was in fact merely her decision; that his entire attitude had become hers because her nature and her character were as yet the stronger.
But in his words his sister's quick intelligence perceived a logic and a conclusion entirely feminine and utterly foreign to her brother's habit of mind.

And she realised with a thrill of fear that she had to do, not with her brother, but with a woman who was to be reckoned with.
"Do you--or does Miss West think it likely that I am a woman to wound, to affront another--no matter who she may be?
Surely, Louis, you could have told her very little about me--" "I never mention you to her." Lily caught her breath.
"Why ?" "Why should I ?" "That is unfair, Louis! She has the right to know about your own family--otherwise how can she understand the situation ?" "It's like all situations, isn't it?
You and father and mother have your own arbitrary customs and traditions and standards of respectability.
You rule out whom you choose.

Valerie West knows perfectly well that you would rule her out.

Why should she give you the opportunity ?" "Is she afraid of me ?" He smiled: "I don't think so." And his smile angered his sister.
"Very well," she said, biting her lip.
For a few moments she sat there deliberating, her pointed patent-leather toe tapping the polished floor.


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