[Jaffery by William J. Locke]@TWC D-Link bookJaffery CHAPTER IV 21/28
"You're wonderful." "Let us stretch our legs, Hilary," said Adrian, who had not displayed enthusiastic interest in the housing of Liosha. So we went off, leaving the two together, and we discoursed on the mystic ways of women, omitting all reference, as men do, to the exceptional paragon of femininity who reigned in our respective hearts. Perhaps we did a foolish thing in thus abandoning saint and hungry convert to their sympathetic intercourse.
The saint could hold her own; she had vowed herself to Adrian, and she belonged to the type for whom vows are irrefragable; but poor old Jaffery had made no vows, save of loyalty to his friends; which vows, provided they are kept, are perfectly consistent with a man's falling hopelessly, despairingly in love with his friend's affianced bride.
And, as far as Barbara and myself have been able to make out, it was during this intimate talk that Jaffery fell in love with Doria.
Of course, what the French call _le coup de foudre_, the thunderbolt of love had smitten him when he had first beheld Doria alighting from the motor-car.
But he did not realise the stupefying effect of this bang on the heart till he had thus sat at her little feet and drunk in her godlike wisdom. The fairy tales are very true.
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