Book-bot.com - read famous books online for free

When Valmond Came to Pontiac, Volume 2. by Gilbert Parker
page 65 of 74 (87%)

He instantly became grave. "I warn you--"

She interrupted him. "Nonsense! You warn me!" She laughed mockingly.
"I warn you, dear Seigneur, that you will be more sorry than satisfied,
if you meddle in this matter."

"You are going to send those things to him?" he asked anxiously.

"Certainly--and food every day." And she kept her word.

De la Riviere, as he went down the hill, thought with irritation of how
ill things were going with him and Madame Chalice--so different from two
years ago, when their friendship had first begun. He had remembered her
with a singular persistency; he had looked forward to her coming back;
and when she came, his heart had fluttered like a schoolboy's. But
things had changed. Clearly she was interested in this impostor. Was
it the man himself or the adventure? He did not know. But the adventure
was the man--and who could tell? Once he thought he had detected some
warmth for himself in her eye, in the clasp of her hand; there was
nothing of that sort now. A black, ungentlemanly spirit seized him.

It possessed him most strongly at the moment he was passing the home of
Elise Malboir. The girl was standing by the gate, looking down towards
the village. Her brow was a little heavy, so that it gave her eyes at
all times a deep look, but now De la Riviere saw that they were brooding
as well. There was sadness in the poise of the head. He did not take
off his hat to her.

"'Oh, grand to the war he goes,
DigitalOcean Referral Badge