Snow-Blind by Katharine Newlin Burt
page 24 of 108 (22%)
page 24 of 108 (22%)
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The kitchen door creaked. Hugh started and shot a look over his
shoulder. Bella stood on the kitchen threshold with an expressionless face and lowered eyelids. "Why did you jump?" asked Sylvie nervously. Hugh wet his lips with his tongue. "Nothing. The door creaked. Go on. Tell me more, child," he urged. "No. I want to hear about you now. Tell me your story." Hugh clenched his hands and flushed darkly. He glanced over his shoulder with a furtive look, but Bella had gone. "No one else rightly knows my story, Sylvie. Will you promise me never to speak of it, to Bella, to Pete, to any one?" "Of course, I promise." Her face beamed with the pride of a child entrusted with a secret. Then, lowering his voice and moving closer to her chair, he began a fictitious history, a history of persecuted and heroic innocence, of reckless adventure, of daring self-sacrifice. The girl listened with parted lips. Her cheeks glowed. And behind the door, Bella too listened, straining her ears. The murmur of Hugh's recital, rising now and then to some melodramatic climax, then dropping cautiously, rippled on, broken now and again by Sylvie's ejaculations. Behind the door Bella stood like a wooden block, colorless and stolid as though she understood not a syllable |
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