[The Man and the Moment by Elinor Glyn]@TWC D-Link book
The Man and the Moment

CHAPTER XVII
7/23

I am a very strong man with tremendous passions which have always been in my race; but I am not altogether a brute--because, although I want you myself with more intensity than I have ever wanted anything in my life--I am going to give you up to Henry.

I have been through hell--ever since I came from France.

I have been weak, too, and could not face the final wrench--but I am determined at last to do what is straight, and to-morrow I will instruct my lawyers to begin proceedings, and I suppose in two months or less you will be free." Sabine grew white and cold--her voice was hardly audible as she asked, looking up at him: "What made you come here to-night ?" He took a step nearer to her, while he reclasped his hands, as though he feared that he might be tempted to touch her.
"I came--because I wanted to see you so that I could not stay away--I came because I wished to convince myself again that you loved Henry, so that there could be no shadow of uncertainty in what I intended to do." "Well ?" "I saw that, whether you love him or not, you desire that I shall think that you do--and so at dinner I played for my own pleasure, the die being cast, for something else had occurred before dinner which makes it of no consequence to my decision whether you do or do not love him now.
It is Henry's great love for you which is the factor, because to part from you he says would end his life.

I could not commit the frightful cruelty and dishonor of upsetting his plans, since you are originally to blame for concealing the truth from him, and I am to blame for abetting you.

He trusts us both as you said." Sabine was trembling; her whole fabric of peace and happiness in the future seemed to be falling to pieces like a pack of cards.
She could only look at Michael with piteous violet eyes out of which all the defiance had gone.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books