The Pomp of the Lavilettes, Volume 2 by Gilbert Parker
page 17 of 77 (22%)
page 17 of 77 (22%)
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this girl should love him than that she should be upright, or moral, or
truthful. Such is the egotism and vanity of such men. "Well, he owes me several years of life. I put in a bad hour that night." He knew that "several years of life" was a misstatement; but, then, they were both sinners. Her eyes flashed, she stamped her foot, and her fingers clinched. "I wish I'd killed him when I killed his bear!" she said. Then excitedly she described the scene exactly as it occurred. He admired the dramatic force of it. He thrilled at the direct simplicity of the tale. He saw Vanne Castine in the forearms of the huge beast, with his eyes bulging from his head, his face becoming black, and he saw blind justice in that death grip; Christine's pistol at the bear's head, and the shoulder in the teeth of the beast, and then! "By the Lord Harry," he said, as she stood panting, with her hands fixed in the last little dramatic gesture, "what a little spitfire and brick you are!" All at once he caught her away from the open window and drew her to him. Whether what he said that moment, and what he did then, would have been said and done if it were not for the liqueur he had drunk at Sophie's house would be hard to tell; but the sum of it was that she was his and he was hers. She was to be his until the end of all, no matter what the end might be. She looked up at him, her face glowing, her bosom beating |
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