Beth Woodburn by Maud Petitt
page 36 of 116 (31%)
page 36 of 116 (31%)
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share. Are you ready, Beth?"
Her pale face was hidden in her hands. He touched her hair reverently. Tick! tick! tick! from the old clock in the silence. Then a crimson flush, and she rose with sudden violence. "Oh, Arthur, what _can_ you mean? I thought--you seemed my brother almost--I thought you would always be that. Oh, Arthur! Arthur! how can you--how dare you talk so? I am Clarence Mayfair's promised wife." "Clarence Mayfair's--" The words died away on his white lips. He leaned upon the mantel-piece, and Beth stood with her grey eyes fixed. His face was so deathly white. His eyes were shaded by his hand, and his brow bore the marks of strong agony. Oh, he was wounded! Those moments were awful in their silence. The darkness deepened in the old parlor. There was a sound of voices passing in the street. The church bell broke the stillness. Softly the old calm crept over his brow, and he raised his face and looked at her with those great dark eyes--eyes of unfathomable tenderness and impenetrable fire, and she felt that her very soul stood naked before him. She trembled and sank on the couch at her side. His look was infinitely tender as he came toward her. "I have hurt you--forgive me," he said gently, and he laid his hand on her head so reverently for a moment. His white lips murmured something, but she only caught the last words, "God bless you--forever. Good-bye, Beth--little Beth." He smiled back upon her as he left the room, but she would rather he had looked sad. That smile--she could never forget it, with its wonderful sweetness and sorrow. |
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