[The Long Night by Stanley Weyman]@TWC D-Link book
The Long Night

CHAPTER XIV
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As Anne ascended the stairs she felt that the end was coming, was come.

Strive as she might, war as she might, with all the instinct, all the ferocity, of a mother defending her young, the end was come.

The secret could not be kept long.

Even while she administered the medicine with shaking hands, while with tears in her voice she strove to still the patient and silence her wild words, even while she restrained by force the feeble strength that would and could not, while in a word she omitted no precaution, relaxed no effort, her heart told her with every pulsation that the end was come.
And presently, when Madame was quiet and slept, the girl bowed her head over the unconscious object of her love and wept, bitterly, passionately, wetting with her tears the long grey hair that strewed the pillow, as she recalled with pitiful clearness all the stages of concealment, all the things which she had done to avert this end.
Vainly, futilely, for it was come.

The dark mornings of winter recurred to her mind, those mornings when she had risen and dressed herself by rushlight, with this fear redoubling the chill gloom of the cold house; the nights, too, when all had been well, and in the last hour before sleep, finding her mother sane and cheerful, she had nursed the hope that the latest attack might be the last.


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