A Woodland Queen — Volume 3 by André Theuriet
page 39 of 77 (50%)
page 39 of 77 (50%)
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"Whom do you suspect?" he stammered.
"Oh!" replied Claudet, employing a simple artifice to sound the obscure depth of his cousin's heart, "it is useless to name the person; you do not know him." "A stranger?" Julien's countenance had again changed. His hands were twitching nervously, his lips compressed, and his dilated pupils were blazing with anger, instead of triumph, as before. "Yes; a stranger, a clerk in the iron-works at Grancey, I think." "You think!--you think!" cried Julien, fiercely, "why don't you have more definite information before you accuse Mademoiselle Vincart of such treachery?" He resumed pacing the hall, while his interlocutor, motionless, remained silent, and kept his eyes steadily upon him. "It is not possible," resumed Julien, "Reine can not have played us such a trick! When I spoke to her for you, it was so easy to say she was already betrothed!" "Perhaps," objected Claudet, shaking his head, "she had reasons for not letting you know all that was in her mind." "What reasons?" |
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