FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3009   3010   3011   3012   3013   3014   3015   3016   3017   3018   3019   3020   3021   3022   3023   3024   3025   3026   3027   3028   3029   3030   3031   3032   3033  
3034   3035   3036   3037   3038   3039   3040   3041   3042   3043   3044   3045   3046   3047   3048   3049   3050   3051   3052   3053   3054   3055   3056   3057   3058   >>   >|  
ch of us but one life to live." "And one life to ruin," she answered. "See, you are running on the rocks!" He swung the boat around. "Others have rebuilt upon ruins," he declared. She smiled at him. "But you are taking my ruins for granted," she said. "You would make them first." He relapsed into silence again. The Folly needed watching. Once he turned and spoke her name, and she did not rebuke him. "Women have a clearer vision of the future than men," she began presently, "and I know you better than you know yourself. What--what you desire would not mend your life, but break it utterly. I am speaking plainly. As I have told you, you interest me; so far that is the extent of my feelings. I do not know whether they would go any farther, but on your account as well as my own I will not take the risk. We have come to an impasse. I am sorry. I wish we might have been friends, but what you have said makes it impossible. There is only one thing to do, and that is for you to go away." He eased off his sheet, rounded the fort, and set a course for the moorings. The sun hung red above the silhouetted roofs of Conanicut, and a quaint tower in the shape of a minaret stood forth to cap the illusions of a day. The wind was falling, the harbour quieting for the night, and across the waters, to the tones of a trumpet, the red bars of the battleship's flag fluttered to the deck. The Folly, making a wide circle, shot into the breeze, and ended by gliding gently up to the buoy. CHAPTER V THE SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST It was Saturday morning, but Honora had forgotten the fact. Not until she was on the bottom step did the odour of cigarettes reach her and turn her faint; and she clutched suddenly at the banisters. Thus she stood for a while, motionless, and then went quietly into the drawing-room. The French windows looking out on the porch were, as usual, open. It was an odd sensation thus to be regarding one's husband objectively. For the first time he appeared to her definitely as a stranger; as much a stranger as the man who came once a week to wind Mrs. Forsythe's clocks. Nay, more. There was a sense of intrusion in this visit, of invasion of a life with which he had nothing to do. She examined him ruthlessly, very much as one might examine a burglar taken unawares. There was the inevitable shirt with the wide pink stripes, of the abolishment or even of the effective toning down of which she had long
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3009   3010   3011   3012   3013   3014   3015   3016   3017   3018   3019   3020   3021   3022   3023   3024   3025   3026   3027   3028   3029   3030   3031   3032   3033  
3034   3035   3036   3037   3038   3039   3040   3041   3042   3043   3044   3045   3046   3047   3048   3049   3050   3051   3052   3053   3054   3055   3056   3057   3058   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

stranger

 

bottom

 

clutched

 
motionless
 

trumpet

 

banisters

 

suddenly

 
cigarettes
 

FITTEST

 

breeze


gliding

 
gently
 

battleship

 

fluttered

 
making
 
circle
 

Honora

 

morning

 
forgotten
 

Saturday


CHAPTER

 

SURVIVAL

 

husband

 

invasion

 

examined

 

ruthlessly

 
examine
 
clocks
 

intrusion

 
burglar

effective
 

toning

 

abolishment

 

inevitable

 

unawares

 

stripes

 

Forsythe

 

sensation

 
drawing
 
French

windows

 

appeared

 

objectively

 

quietly

 
vision
 
clearer
 

future

 

rebuke

 

watching

 

turned