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ling. But I haven't. It is only this. If Poole could break the heart of one woman, he can break the heart of another--and he sha'n't break yours." "Who told you that he broke her heart?" "You've seen the picture. Could a woman with a face like that do anything bad enough to wreck a man's life? I can't believe it, Mary. There are always two sides of a question." She did not answer at once. Then she said, "How did you know about--Roger?" "Delilah told me--he couldn't expect to keep it secret." "He did not expect it; and he had much to bear." "Then he has told you, and has pleaded with eloquence? But that child's face in the picture pleads with me." It did plead. Remembering it, Mary was assailed by her first doubts. It was such a child's face, with saint's eyes. Porter's voice was proceeding. "A man can always make out a case for himself. And you have only his word for what he did. Oh, I suppose you'll think I'm all sorts of a cad to talk this way. But I can't see you drifting, drifting toward a danger which may wreck your life." "Why should it wreck my life?" "Because Poole, whatever the merits of the case--doesn't seem to me strong enough to shape his destiny and yours. Was it strong for him to let go as he did, just because that woman failed him? Was it strong for him to hide himself here--like--like a criminal? A strong man would have faced the world. He would have tried to rise out of his wreck. His actions all through spell weakness. I could bear your not marrying me, Mary. But I can't bear to see you marry a man who isn't worthy of you. To see you unhappy would be torture for me." In his earnestness he had struck a genuine note, and she recognized it. "I know," she said, unsteadily. "I believe that you think you are fighting my battle, instead of your own. But I don't think Roger Poole would--lie." "Not consciously. But he'd create the wrong impression--we can never see our own faults--and he would blame her, of course. But the man who has made one woman unhappy would make another unhappy, Mary." Mary was shaken. "Please don't put it so--inevitably. Roger hasn't any claim on me whatever." "Hasn't he? Oh, Mary, hasn't he?" There was hope in his voice, and she shrank from it. "No," she said, gently, "he is just--my friend. As yet I can't believe evil of him. But I don't love him. I don't love anybody--I don't want any man in my life." She though
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