O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1919 by Various
page 62 of 410 (15%)
page 62 of 410 (15%)
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and symbol of purity been more precious. No whisper had ever breathed
against her. If there had been secrets behind her, they had been dead; if a skeleton, the closet had been closed. And now, looking down on her, he was not only appalled, he was a little sickened, as one might be to find squalor and decay creeping into a familiar and once immaculate room. "Who is this man?" he repeated. "He grew up with me." She half raised herself on her knees in the eagerness of her appeal. "We were boy and girl together at home in Maryland. We were meant for each other, Chris. We were always to marry--always, Chris. And when I went away, and when I married your--when I married Daniel Kain, _he_ hunted and he searched and he found me here. He was with me, he stood by me through that awful year--and--that was how it happened. I tell you, Christopher, darling, we were meant for each other, John Sanderson and I. He loved me more than poor Daniel ever did or could, loved me enough to throw away a life of promise, just to hang on here after every one else was gone, alone with his 'cello and is one little memory. And I loved him enough to--to--_Christopher, don't look at me so!"_ His eyes did not waver. You must remember his age, the immaculate, ruthless, mid-Victorian 'teens; and you must remember his bringing-up. "And so this was my father," he said. And then he went on without waiting, his voice breaking into falsetto with the fierceness of his charge. "And you would have kept on lying to me! If I hadn't happened, just happened, to find you here, now, you would have gone on keeping me in the dark! You would have stood by and seen me--well--_go crazy!_ Yes, |
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