Monsieur De Camors — Volume 3 by Octave Feuillet
page 57 of 111 (51%)
page 57 of 111 (51%)
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She breathed a sigh. "Come!" she said, and led the way upstairs. She opened the door of the chamber and permitted him to enter it alone. His first glance caught the eyes of his young wife fixed upon him. She was half sitting up in bed, supported by pillows, and whiter than the curtains whose shadow enveloped her. She held clasped to her breast her sleeping infant, which was already covered, like its mother, with lace and pink ribbons. From the depths of this nest she fixed on her husband her large eyes, sparkling with a kind of savage light--an expression in which the sentiment of triumph was blended with one of profound terror. He stopped within a few feet of the bed, and saluted her with his most winning smile. "I have pitied you very much, Marie," he said. "I thank you!" she replied, in a voice as feeble as a sigh. She continued to regard him with the same suppliant and affrighted air. "Are you a little happier now?" he continued. The glittering eye of the young woman was fastened on the calm face of her infant. Then turning toward Camors: "You will not take him from me?" "Never!" he replied. |
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