[My Mother’s Rival by Charlotte M. Braeme]@TWC D-Link book
My Mother’s Rival

CHAPTER II
2/9

If Sir Roland neglected you, slighted you, treated you with indifference, harder to bear than hate, if he persisted in thrusting the presence of your rivals on you, what should you do ?" "Do you mean to ask me, really and truly, what I should do in that case ?" asked my dear mother.

"Oh, Isabel, I can soon tell you that; I should die." "Die--nonsense!" cried Lady Conyngham.

"What is the use of dying ?--the very thing they want.

I will not die;" but my mother had laid her fair head back on the velvet pillow, and her eyes lingered on the clear blue sky.

Was she looking for the angels who must have heard her voice?
"I am not as strong as you, Isabel," she said, gently, "and I love Sir Roland with my whole heart." "I loved my husband with my whole heart," sobbed the beautiful woman, "and I have done nothing in this world to deserve what I have suffered.
I loved him with a pure, great affection--what became of it?
Three days after we were married I saw him myself patting one of the maids--a good-looking one, you may be sure--on the cheek." "Perhaps he meant no harm," said my mother, consolingly; "you know that gentlemen do not attach so much importance as we do to these little trifles." "You try, Beatrice, how you would like it; you have been married ten years, and even at this date you would not like Sir Roland to do such a thing ?" "I am sure I should not; but then, you know, there are men and men.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books