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Cumner's Son and Other South Sea Folk — Volume 04 by Gilbert Parker
page 65 of 69 (94%)
"I do not wish to distress you, but--"

"Now, Carbourd, what is the matter? Faugh! this place smells musty.
What's that--a tomb? Speak out, Citizen Carbourd."

"It is this: Mademoiselle Wyndham is blind." Carbourd told the story
with a great anxiety in his words.

"The poor mademoiselle--is it so? A thousand pities! So kind, so young,
so beautiful. Ah, I am distressed, and I finished her portrait
yesterday! Yes, I remember her eyes looked too bright, and then again
too dull: but I thought that it was excitement, and so--that!"

Laflamme's regret was real enough up to a certain point, but, in
sincerity and value, it was chasms below that of Hugh Tryon, who, even
now, was getting two horses ready to give the Frenchmen their chance.

After a pause Laflamme said: "She will not come here again, Carbourd?
No? Ah, well, perhaps it is better so; but I should have liked to speak
my thanks to her."

That night Marie sat by the window of the sitting-room, with the light
burning, and Angers asleep in a chair beside her--sat till long after
midnight, in the thought that Laflamme, if he had reached the Cave,
would, perhaps, dare something to see her and bid her good-bye. She
would of course have told him not to come, but he was chivalrous, and
then her blindness would touch him. Yet as the hours went by the thought
came: was he, was he so chivalrous? was he altogether true? . . .
He did not come. The next morning Angers took her to where the boat had
been, but it was gone, and no oars were left behind. So, both had sought
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