FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   198   199   200   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215   216   217   218   219   >>  
way, and every vestige of colour had vanished from her cheeks. "Marry you?" she exclaimed. He bent over her, and he laughed softly in the darkness. A mad impulse was upon him to kiss her, but he resisted it. "Why not? Does it sound so dreadful?" She drew her fingers away slowly but with determination. "I had hoped," she said, "that you would have spared me this." "Spared you!" he repeated. "I do not understand. Spared you!" She looked at him with flashing eyes. "Oh, I suppose I ought to thank you," she said, bitterly. "Only I do not. I cannot. You were kinder when you joined with me and helped me to ignore--that hateful moment. That was much kinder." "Upon my honour, Mary," Brooks declared, earnestly, "I do not understand you. I have not the least idea what you mean." She looked at him incredulously. "You have asked me to marry you," she said. "Why?" "Because I care for you." "Care for me? Does that mean that you--love me?" "Yes." She noted very well that moment's hesitation. "That is not true," she declared. "Oh, I know. You ask me out of pity--because you cannot forget. I suppose you think it kindness. I don't! It is hateful!" A light broke in upon him. He tried once more to take her hand, but she withheld it. "I only half understand you, Mary," he said, earnestly, "but I can assure you that you are mistaken. As to asking you out of pity--that is ridiculous. I want you to be my wife. We care for the same things--we can help one another--and I seem to have been very lonely lately." "And you think," Mary said, with a curious side-glance at him, "that I should cure your loneliness. Thank you. I am very happy as I am. Please forget everything you have said, and let us go." Brooks was a little bewildered--and manlike a little more in earnest. "For some reason or other," he said, "you seem disinclined to take me seriously. I cannot understand you, Mary. At any rate you must answer me differently. I want you to be my wife. I am fond of you--you know that--and I will do my best to make you happy." "Thank you," Mary said, hardly. "I am sorry, but I must decline your offer--absolutely. Now, let us go, shall we?" She would have risen, but he laid his hand firmly upon her shoulder. "Not till I have some sort of explanation," he said. "Is it that you do not care for me, Mary?" She turned round upon him with colour enough in her cheeks and a strange angry light burning in her
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   198   199   200   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215   216   217   218   219   >>  



Top keywords:

understand

 

kinder

 

looked

 

suppose

 

hateful

 

earnestly

 
declared
 
Brooks
 

moment

 

Spared


forget

 

cheeks

 

colour

 

lonely

 

glance

 

Please

 

things

 

curious

 

loneliness

 
firmly

shoulder

 

absolutely

 

strange

 

burning

 

explanation

 

turned

 

decline

 

disinclined

 
reason
 

bewildered


manlike

 

earnest

 

answer

 

differently

 

spared

 
determination
 

slowly

 

fingers

 

repeated

 

flashing


bitterly

 
dreadful
 

exclaimed

 

vanished

 

vestige

 

laughed

 
resisted
 

impulse

 

softly

 
darkness