[The Mother’s Recompense, Volume II. by Grace Aguilar]@TWC D-Link book
The Mother’s Recompense, Volume II.

CHAPTER VI
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He did not fancy that she loved another, and yet why this determined rejection of a young man whom he knew she esteemed.
"I am only grieving you by continuing the subject," he said; "and therefore grant me your forgiveness, dearest Ellen, and your final answer to Cameron, and it shall be resumed no more." "I have nothing to forgive, Herbert," replied Ellen, somewhat mournfully.
She sat a few minutes longer, in saddened thought, gazing on the open letter, and then quitted the room and sought her own.

She softly closed the door, secured it, and then sinking on a low seat beside her couch, buried her pale face in her hands, and for a few minutes remained overwhelmed by that intensity of secret and tearless suffering.

It was called forth afresh by this interview with her cousin: to hear his lips plead thus eloquently the cause of another; to hear him say that perhaps she was one of those who would never love to its full extent.

When her young heart felt bursting beneath the load of deep affection pressing there, one sweet alone mingled in that cup of bitterness, Herbert guessed not, suspected not the truth.

She had succeeded well in concealing the anguish called forth by unrequited love, and she would struggle on.
"Never, never shall it be known that I have given this rebellious heart to one who seeks it not.


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