12/15 It means your freedom, Sabine, and then you will be able to marry Henry. He absolutely worships the ground you tread on, and if anything had gone wrong, I think it would have simply killed him quite." "Yes, I know," returned Sabine. "That thought is with me day and night." "What do you mean, darling ?" "I mean that Henry's love frightens me, Morri. How shall I ever be able to live up to being the ideal creature he thinks that I am ?" and Sabine gave a forced laugh. "A man would be very hard to please if he was not quite satisfied with you!" Moravia's own pain about the whole thing never clouded her sense of justice. |