[The Helpmate by May Sinclair]@TWC D-Link bookThe Helpmate CHAPTER IV 11/41
I wish he wouldn't garden quite so much, though.
It always makes his head ache." "Why does he do it, then ?" asked Anne calmly. Her calmness irritated Edith. "Oh, why does Walter do anything? Because he's an angel!" Anne's silence gave her the opening she was looking for. "You know, you used to think so, too." "Of course I did," said Anne evasively. "And equally of course, you don't, now you've married him ?" "I _have_ married him.
What more could I do to prove my appreciation ?" "Oh, heaps more.
Mere marrying's nothing.
Any woman can do that." "Do you think so? It seems to me that marrying--mere marrying--may be a great deal--about as much as many men have a right to ask." "Hasn't every man a right to ask for--what shall I say--a little understanding--from the woman he cares for ?" "Edith, what has he told you ?" "Nothing, my dear, that I hadn't seen for myself." "Did he tell you that I 'misunderstood' him ?" "Did he pose as _l'homme incompris_? No, he didn't." "Still--he told you," Anne insisted. "Of course he did." She brushed the self-evident aside and returned to her point.
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