The Way of an Eagle eBook

Ethel May Dell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 406 pages of information about The Way of an Eagle.

The Way of an Eagle eBook

Ethel May Dell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 406 pages of information about The Way of an Eagle.

He spoke with a certain dignity, albeit he refused to meet Nick’s eyes.  He looked unutterably tired.

Nick lay quite motionless in his chair, inscrutably still, save for the restless glitter behind his colourless eyelashes.  At length, “Do you remember a conversation we had in this room a few months ago?” he asked.

Grange shook his head slightly, too engrossed with his miserable thoughts to pay much attention.

“Well, think!” Nick said insistently.  “It had to do with your engagement to Muriel Roscoe.  Perhaps you have forgotten that too?”

Grange looked up then, shaking off his lethargy with a visible effort.  He got slowly to his feet, and drew himself up to his full giant height.

“No,” he said, “I have not forgotten it.”

“Then,” said Nick, “once more—­what are you going to do?”

Grange’s face darkened.  He seemed to hesitate upon the verge of vehement speech.  But he restrained himself though the hot blood mounted to his temples.

“I have never yet broken my word to a woman,” he said.  “I am not going to begin now.”

“Why not?” said Nick, with a grin that was somehow fiendish.

Grange ignored the gibe.  “There is no reason why I should not marry her,” he said.

“No reason!” Nick’s eyes flashed upwards for an instant, and a curious sense of insecurity stabbed Grange.

Nevertheless he made unfaltering reply.  “No reason whatever.”

Nick sat up slowly and regarded him with minute attention.  “Are you serious?” he asked finally.

“I am absolutely serious,” Grange told him sternly.  “And I warn you, Ratcliffe, this is not a subject upon which I will bear interference.”

“Man alive!” jeered Nick.  “You must think I’m damned easily scared.”

He got up with the words, jerking his meagre body upright with a slight, fierce movement, and stood in front of Grange, arrogantly daring.

“Now just listen to this,” he said.  “I don’t care a damn how you take it, so you may as well take it quietly.  It’s no concern of mine to know how you have whitewashed this thing over and made it look clean and decent—­and honourable—­to your fastidious eye.  What I am concerned in is to prevent Muriel Roscoe making an unworthy marriage.  And that I mean to do.  I told you in the summer that she should be no man’s second best, and, by Heaven, she never shall.  I had my doubts of you then.  I know you now.  And—­I swear by all things sacred that I will see you dead sooner than married to her.”

He broke off for a moment as though to get a firmer grip upon himself.  His face was terrible, his body tense as though controlled by tight-strung wires.

Before Grange could speak, he went on rapidly, with a resolution more deadly if less passionate than before.

“If either of you had ever cared, it might have been a different matter.  But you never did.  I knew that you never did.  I never troubled to find out your reason for proposing to her.  No doubt it was strictly honourable.  But I always knew why she accepted you.  Did you know that, I wonder?”

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Project Gutenberg
The Way of an Eagle from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.