[The Shadow of a Crime by Hall Caine]@TWC D-Link bookThe Shadow of a Crime CHAPTER IV 10/29
Rotha stood aside, her hands covering her face. "And, at last, when you could not meet me here, you went to Fornside for Rotha to seek me ?" asked Ralph. "Yes, I did.
Don't despise me--don't do that." Then in a supplicating tone he added,-- "I couldn't bear it from you, Ralph." The tears came again.
The direful agony of Sim's soul seemed at length to conquer him, and he fell to the ground insensible.
In an instant Rotha was on her knees in the hardening road at her father's side; but she did not weep. "We have no choice now," she said in a broken voice. "None," answered Ralph.
"Let me carry him in." When the door of the inn had closed behind Ralph as he went out with Rotha, old Matthew Branthwaite, who had recovered his composure after Monsey's song, and who had sat for a moment with his elbow on his knee, his pipe in his hand and his mouth still open, from which the shaft had just been drawn, gave a knowing twitch to his wrinkled face as he said,-- "So, so, that's the fell the wind blows frae!" "Blow low, my black feutt," answered Monsey, "and don't blab." "When the whins is oot of blossom, kissing's oot o' fashion--nowt will come of it," replied the sage on reflection. "Wrong again, great Solomon!" said Monsey.
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