[Cobwebs and Cables by Hesba Stretton]@TWC D-Link bookCobwebs and Cables CHAPTER XIV 5/9
His ambition as well as his love had centred in her, the penniless daughter of the late Lord Riversford, an orphan, and dependent upon her father's brother and successor.
But to Roland his wife Felicita was immeasurably dearer than the girl Felicita Riversford had been.
All the happy days since he had won her, all the satisfied desires, all his successes were centred in her and represented by her. All his crime too. "I have loved you," he cried, "better than the whole world." There was no answer by word or look to his passionate words. "I have loved you," he said, more sadly, "better than God." "But you have brought me to shame!" she answered; "if I am tracked here--and who can tell that I am not ?--and if you are taken and tried and convicted, I shall be the wife of the fraudulent banker and condemned felon, Roland Sefton.
And Felix and Hilda will be his children." "It is true," he groaned; "I could not escape conviction." He buried his face in his hands, and rested them on the altar-rails.
Now his bowed-down head was immediately beneath her eyes, and she looked down upon it with a mournful gaze; it could not have been more mournful if she had been contemplating his dead face lying at rest in his coffin. How was all this shame and misery for him and her to end? "Felicita," he said, lifting up his head, and meeting the sorrowful farewell expression in her face, "if I could die it would be best for the children and you." "Yes," she answered, in the sweet, too dearly loved voice he had listened to in happy days. "I dare not open that door of escape for myself," he went on, "and God does not send death to me.
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