Love, the Fiddler by Lloyd Osbourne
page 103 of 162 (63%)
page 103 of 162 (63%)
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"How cheerless your room is," she said, looking about. "Oh, how cheerless!" "Did you come here to tell me that?" I said. "No," she said. "I don't know why I came. Because I was a fool, I suppose--a fool to think you'd want to see me. Take me home, Hugo." She rose as she said this and looked towards the door. I pressed her to take a little whiskey, for she was still as cold as death and as white as the snow queen in Hans Andersen's tale, but she refused to let me give her any. "Take me home, please," she repeated. Her carriage was waiting a block away. Hendricks, the footman, received my order with impassivity and shut us in together with the unconcern of a good servant. It was dark in the carriage, and neither of us spoke as we whirled through the snowy streets. Once the lights of a passing hansom illumined my companion's face and I saw that she was crying. It pleased me to see her suffer; she had cost me eleven weeks of misery; why should she escape scot-free! "Hugo," she said, "are you coming back to us, Hugo?" "I don't know," I said. "Why don't you know?" she asked. "Oh, because!" I said. |
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