[Franklin Kane by Anne Douglas Sedgwick]@TWC D-Link book
Franklin Kane

CHAPTER XVII
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There was nothing to be done and nothing to be said.

She could not tell him that, since he did not love her sufficiently to give up a pleasure for her sake, she must give him up; nor could she tell him that he must not use her money for pleasures that she considered wrong.

But it was this second impossible retort--the first, evidently, did not cross his mind--that was occupying Gerald.

He was not slow in seeing delicacies, though he was slow indeed in seeing what might have been solemnities.

The position couldn't strike him as solemn; he couldn't conceive that a woman might break off her engagement for such a cause; but he did see his own position of beneficiary as delicate.
His next words showed it: 'Of course I won't hunt here, if you really say not.


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