[The Common Law by Robert W. Chambers]@TWC D-Link bookThe Common Law CHAPTER XV 25/30
But I do not care for you that way." For an instant some inner flare of madness blinded his brain and vision. There was, in his face, something so terrible that Valerie unconsciously rose to her feet, bewildered, almost stunned. "I want you," he said slowly. "Jose! What in the world--" His dry lips moved, but no articulate sound came from them.
Suddenly he sprang to his feet, and out of his twisted, distorted mouth poured a torrent of passion, of reproach, of half-crazed pleading--incoherency tumbling over incoherency, deafening her, beating in upon her, till she swayed where she stood, holding her arms up as though to shield herself. The next instant she was straining, twisting in his arms, striving to cry out, to wrench herself free to keep her feet amid the crash of the overturned table and a falling chair. "Jose! Are you insane ?" she panted, tearing herself free and springing toward the door.
Suddenly she halted, uttered a cry as he jumped back to block her way.
The low window-ledge caught him under both knees; he clutched at nothing, reeled backward and outward and fell into space. For a second she covered her white face with both hands, then turned, dragged herself to the open window, forced herself to look out. He lay on his back on the grass in the rear yard, and the janitor was already bending over him.
And when she reached the yard Querida had opened both eyes. Later the ambulance came, and with its surgeon came a policeman. Querida, lying with his head on her lap, opened his eyes again: "I was--seated--on the window-ledge," he said with difficulty--"and overbalanced myself....
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