[The Red Acorn by John McElroy]@TWC D-Link bookThe Red Acorn CHAPTER IV 12/15
"Some rascal has supplanted me," he said bitterly, but under his breath. She took a chair near by, put away the arm he would have placed about her waist, drew from her pocket a dainty handkerchief bordered with black, and opened it deliberately.
It shed a delicate odor of violets. Harry waited anxiously for her to speak. "This mourning which I wear," she began gently, "I put on when I received the news of your downfall." "My downfall ?" broke in Harry hotly.
"Great heavens, you don't say that you, too, have been carried away by this wretched village slander ?" "I put it on," she continued, unmindful of the interruption, "because I suffered a loss which was greater than any merely physical death could have occasioned." "I don't understand you." "My faith in you as a man superior to your fellows died then.
This was a much more cruel blow than your bodily death would have been." "'Fore gad, you take a pleasant view of my decease--a much cooler one, I must confess, than I am able to take of that interesting event in my history." Her great eyes blazed, and she seemed about to reply hotly, but she restrained herself and went on with measured calmness: "The reason I selected you from among all other men, and loved you, and joyfully accepted as my lot in life to be your devoted wife and helpmate, was that I believed you superior in all manly things to other men.
Without such a belief I could love no man." She paused for an instant, and Harry managed to stammer: "But what have I done to deserve being thrown over in this unexpected way ?" "You have not done anything.
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