[Kennedy Square by F. Hopkinson Smith]@TWC D-Link bookKennedy Square CHAPTER XVIII 9/22
You may never see me again, and if it is not what I ought to say, you can forget it all when I am gone. Kate!"-- he paused, and for a moment it was all he could do to control himself.
"What I want to tell you first is this--that I haven't had a happy day or hour since that night on the stairs in my father's house. Whether I was right or wrong I don't know; what followed is what I couldn't help, but that part I don't regret, and if any one should behave to you as Willits did I would do it over again.
What I do regret is the pain it has caused you.
And now here comes this awful sorrow to Uncle George, and I am the cause of that too." She turned her face quickly, the color leaving her cheeks as if alarmed. Had he been behaving badly again? But he swept it away with his next sentence. "You see, my father refused to pay any of the bills I owed and Uncle George paid them for me--and I can't have that go on a day longer--certainly not now." Kate's shoulders relaxed.
A sigh of relief spent itself; Harry was still an honest gentleman, whatever else he might have done! "And now comes the worst of it, Kate." His voice sank almost to a whisper, as if even the birds should not hear this part of his confession: "Yes--the worst of it--that I have had all this to suffer--all this misery to endure--all these insults of my father to bear without you! Always, before, we have talked things out together; then you were shut away and I could only look up at your windows and rack my brain wondering where you were and what you were doing.
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