[Wife in Name Only by Charlotte M. Braeme (Bertha M. Clay)]@TWC D-Link book
Wife in Name Only

CHAPTER VIII
4/9

Yet, in the midst of all, Lord Arleigh saw that she turned to him as the sunflower to the sun.

No matter with whom she was conversing, she never for one moment forgot him, never seemed inattentive, listened to him, smiled her brightest on him, while the May sun shone, and the white hawthorn flowers fell on the grass--while the birds chirped merrily, and crowds of bright, happy people passed to and fro.
"How true she is to her old friends!" thought Lord Arleigh, when he saw that even a prince could not take her attention from him.
So they rode on through the sunlit air--he fancy free, she loving him every moment with deeper, truer, warmer love.
"I should be so glad, Norman," she said to him, "if you would give me a few riding-lessons.

I am sure I need them." He looked at the graceful figure, at the little hands that held the reins so deftly.
"I do not see what there is to teach you," he observed; "I have never seen any one ride better." "Still I should be glad of some little instruction from you," she said.
"I always liked riding with you, Norman." "I shall be only too pleased to ride with you every day when I am in town," he told her; and, though he spoke kindly, with smiling lips, there was no warmth of love in his tone.
The day was very warm--the sun had in it all the heat of June.

When they reached Verdun House, Philippa said: "You will come in for a short time, Norman?
You look warm and tired.
Williams--the butler--is famous for his claret-cup." He murmured something about being not fatigued, but disinclined for conversation.
"You will not see any one," she said; "you shall come to my own particular little room, where no one dares enter, and we will have a quiet conversation there." It seemed quite useless to resist her.

She had a true siren power of fascination.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books