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Cumner's Son and Other South Sea Folk — Volume 04 by Gilbert Parker
page 68 of 69 (98%)
crime, who was a great artist, and who believed himself a patriot, should
suffer so here. When he asked me I helped him. Yet I suppose I was
selfish, wasn't I? It was because he loved me."

Hugh spoke breathlessly: "And because--you loved him, Marie?"

Her head was lifted quickly, as though she saw, and was looking him in
the eyes. "Oh no, oh no," she cried, "I never loved him. I was sorry
for him--that was all."

"Marie, Marie," he said gently, while she shook her head a little
pitifully, "did you, then, love any one else?"

She was silent for a space and then she said: "Yes--Oh, Hugh, I am so
sorry for your sake that I am blind, and cannot marry you."

"But, my darling, you shall not always be blind, you shall see again.
And you shall marry me also. As though--life of my life! as though one's
love could live but by the sight of the eyes!"

"My poor Hugh! But, blind, I could not marry you. It would not be just
to you."

He smiled with a happy hopeful determination; "But if you should see
again?"

"Oh, then. . . ."

She married him, and in time her sight returned, though not completely.
Tryon never told her, as the Governor had told him, that Rive Laflamme,
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