[The Wings of the Morning by Louis Tracy]@TWC D-Link bookThe Wings of the Morning CHAPTER X 25/37
I have seen her since, and she wears badly.
She is married now, and after thirty grew very fat." Artful Jenks! Iris settled herself comfortably to listen. "I have jumped that fence with a lot in hand," he thought. "We became engaged," he said aloud. "She threw herself at him," communed Iris. "Her name was Elizabeth--Elizabeth Morris." The young lieutenant of those days called her "Bessie," but no matter. "Well, you didn't marry her, anyhow," commented Iris, a trifle sharply. And now the sailor was on level ground again. "Thank Heaven, no," he said, earnestly.
"We had barely become engaged when she went with her uncle to Simla for the hot weather.
There she met Lord Ventnor, who was on the Viceroy's staff, and--if you don't mind, we will skip a portion of the narrative--I discovered then why men in India usually go to England for their wives.
Whilst in Simla on ten days' leave I had a foolish row with Lord Ventnor in the United Service Club--hammered him, in fact, in defence of a worthless woman, and was only saved from a severe reprimand because I had been badly treated.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|