[At Love’s Cost by Charles Garvice]@TWC D-Link book
At Love’s Cost

CHAPTER XXII
5/16

You could not understand them if I were to talk to you for a week.

Suffice it, that if I had failed to get this concession, I should have been an utterly ruined man, should have had to go through the bankruptcy court, should have been left without a penny.

And not only that: I should have dragged a great many of the men, of the friends who had trusted to my ability, who have believed in me, into the same pit; not only such men as Griffenberg and Wirsch and the Beltons, but the Plaistows, the Clansdales, and the Fitzharfords.
They would have suffered with me, would have, considered themselves betrayed." Stafford drew a long breath.

There seemed to him still a chance of saving himself, the girl he loved, above all--his honour.
"But even if it were so, father," he said; "other men have failed, other men have been defeated, ruined, and left penniless, and yet have risen and shaken the dust from them and fought their way again to the heights.

You're not an old man, you are strong and clever, and you are not alone." he said, in a lower voice.


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