[The Vale of Cedars by Grace Aguilar]@TWC D-Link book
The Vale of Cedars

CHAPTER VI
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It was not his death which thus appalled her; alas--alas!--and she hated herself for the fearful thought--she had almost lost sight of that, in the words which followed.

Breaking from his embrace, she sunk down on her knees before him, and buying her face upon his hand, in broken accents and with choking sobs, revealed the whole.

How could she do her noble kinsman such fearful wrong as to wed him, when her whole heart, thoughts, nay, life itself, seemed wrapt in the memory of another?
And that other! Oh! who, what was he?
Once she looked up in her father's face, but so fearful were the emotions written there--wrath struggling with love, grief, pity, almost terror--that hastily she withdrew her glance, and remained kneeling, bent even to the dust, long after the confession had been poured forth, waiting in fear and anguish for his words.
"Marie, Marie! is it my Marie, my sainted Miriam's, child, who thus speaks?
who hath thus sinned sole representative of a race of ages, in whose pure thoughts such fearful sin hath never mingled.

My child so to love the stranger as to reject, to scorn her own! Oh God, my God, why hast thou so forsaken me?
Would I had died before!" And the heavy groan which followed, confirmed the anguish breathed in those broken words.
"Father!" implored the unhappy girl, clasping his knees in an agony of supplication, though she raised not her head--"Oh my father! in mercy do not speak thus! Words of wrath, of reproach, fearful as they are from thee, yet I can bear them, but not such woe! Oh, think what I have borne, what I must still bear.

If I have sinned, my sin will bring, nay, it has already brought its own chastisement.


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