[Under the Red Robe by Stanley Weyman]@TWC D-Link bookUnder the Red Robe CHAPTER XIII 22/40
It is you who are heartless, Mademoiselle.
I have done much in the last three days to make things lighter for you, much to make things more easy; now I ask you to do something in return which can cost you nothing.' 'Nothing ?' she answered slowly--and she looked at me; and her eyes and her voice cut me as if they had been knives.
'Nothing? Do you think, Monsieur, it costs me nothing to lose my self-respect, as I do with every word I speak to you? Do you think it costs me nothing to be here when I feel every look you cast upon me an insult, every breath I take in your presence a contamination? Nothing, Monsieur ?' she continued with bitter irony.
'Nay, something! But something which I could not hope to make clear to you.' I sat for a moment confounded, quivering with pain.
It had been one thing to feel that she hated and scorned me, to know that the trust and confidence which she had begun to place in me were transformed to loathing.
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