Shadows of Flames - BestLightNovel.com
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"I don't see...." stammered Loring.
"Yes, you do see," smiled Sophy. "And I want to take this opportunity of a.s.suring you that I'm not jealous of Belinda. Only--please don't try to make your love for her a proof of your still greater love for me."
"Sophy...!"
"I'm not one of those people who cut up love into sections--vivisect it ... for it dies, I can tell you, when it's hacked to bits like that!...
This part ign.o.ble--that part n.o.ble. Love is a whole--a whole--or it is nothing. What you gave to Belinda you could not have given her if you'd loved me really. I don't say _would_ not ... I say _could_ not...."
"But I swear to you...."
".... _Could_ not!" repeated Sophy inflexibly.
He had got to his feet again, and was looking at her with a disturbed, baffled look.
"I _do_ love you, Sophy," he said at last. "Don't you believe I love you?"
"In a way ... yes," said Sophy.
"What do you mean by 'in a way'?".
"Well--in a way that doesn't allow me to interfere with greater pleasures."
He went crimson.
"Oh, I say!" he said. "How unkind ... how awfully hard and unkind of you!"
"There mustn't be anything but truth in this talk between us, Morris.
I'm sorry to seem unkind. I only said what I feel and believe."
"G.o.d! I didn't know you could be so cruel...." he muttered, staring at the fire.
"It isn't I that am cruel; it's the truth that's cruel," she said.
"You call that 'the truth'? ... G.o.d!" he said again.
"Then tell me...." she said. "What pleasure have you ever put second to me?"
"What ... pleasure?" he stammered.
She looked at him steadily.
"Yes ... what pleasure?" she repeated.
"I.... I...."
He was frankly at a loss. She had such a queer, upsetting way of putting things. He stood ruffled, resentful, aggrieved, helpless. Not a pleasure could he think of that he had not put before her. His head buzzed with the effort to recall some small sacrifice that he had made in her behalf. She was speaking in a different voice now--softer, more feeling.
"Ah, Morris," she said, "it is all so sad ... so horribly sad! Though I may seem unkind--my heart aches with it. But this has not come suddenly.
A long, long time it's been coming. It began ... yes ... that night ...
do you remember?--that night over two years ago ... when you came to my room...."--she hesitated, caught her lip hard for a second, went on in a lower voice--"when you came to me--not yourself ... for drink...."
He had put up one hand over his eyes as he leaned with his elbow on the mantelpiece. He said in a choked voice:
"I've been a beast ... sometimes ... I admit."
She hesitated again; then said, whispering:
"_That_ was a pleasure you always put before me."
"Don't!" he said.
"I won't, then," she answered pityingly.
Her eyes scalded with tears. Her hands, locked hard together, were trembling.
There was a long pause.
"Sophy," he said presently, very low, his hand still over his eyes, "how if I take an oath to you never to drink again?"
She looked with a tender, wise look at his hidden face.
"You would come to hate me for it in the end, dear."
"Oh ... Sophy...."
"Yes, dear. You would."
"I know.... You think I couldn't keep it," he said miserably.
"No. But if you kept it, you would be hating me all the time."
A gush of bitterness rose in him.
"So _that's_ what you think of me?" he said.
"It's what I think your nature would make you feel--bound by such an oath."
There came another pause.
He broke out rather vehemently again:
"At least do me the justice to admit that I was dead set against having Linda visit us...."
"Yes. I remember. But it would have come sooner or later. You would have been thrown with her in other ways."
"You really think I ... a ... care for her?"
Sophy didn't answer for a second or two; then she said: