The Awakening of Helena Richie by Margaret Wade Campbell Deland
page 206 of 388 (53%)
page 206 of 388 (53%)
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would have happened if I had not come home just as he arrived!" He
paused, his voice hardening: "My daughter saw him." Helena stepped back, wincing and silent. "You will be so good as to consider the result of such tomfoolery--to me." "And what about me?" she said. "Your 'daughter'--I suppose you mean Alice--is not the only person in the world!" But Lloyd Pryor, having dealt his blow, was gracious again. "My dear, you needn't begin recriminations. Of course, I speak on your account as much as on my own. It would have been--well, awkward, all round. You must see that it does not occur again. You will not get on terms with these people that will encourage them to look me up. You understand?" She looked at him, terror-stricken. In all their squabbles and differences--and there had been many in the last few years--he had never spoken in this extraordinary tone. It was not anger, it was not the courteous brutality with which she was more or less familiar; it was superiority. The color swept into her face; even her throat reddened. She said stammering, "I don't know why you speak--in--in this tone--" "I am not going to speak any more in any tone," he said lightly; "there's the stage! Good-by, my dear. I trust your boy may recover rapidly. Tell him I was prepared for his sling and the 'smooth stone out of the brook'! Sorry I couldn't have seen more of you." As he |
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