The Breaking Point eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 439 pages of information about The Breaking Point.

The Breaking Point eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 439 pages of information about The Breaking Point.

“Sometimes I think he positively avoids me,” Clare wailed.  “There’s the house, Elizabeth.  Do you mind stopping a moment?  He must be in his office now.  The light’s burning.”

“I wish you wouldn’t, Clare.  He’d hate it if he knew.”

She moved on and Clare slowly followed her.  The Rossiter girl’s flow of talk had suddenly stopped.  She was thoughtful and impulsively suspicious.

“Look here, Elizabeth, I believe you care for him yourself.”

“I?  What is the matter with you to-night, Clare?”

“I’m just thinking.  Your voice was so queer.”

They walked on in silence.  The flow of Clare’s confidences had ceased, and her eyes were calculating and a trifle hard.

“There’s a good bit of talk about him,” she jerked out finally.  “I suppose you’ve heard it.”

“What sort of talk?”

“Oh, gossip.  You’ll hear it.  Everybody’s talking about it.  It’s doing him a lot of harm.”

“I don’t believe it,” Elizabeth flared.  “This town hasn’t anything else to do, and so it talks.  It makes me sick.”

She did not attempt to analyze the twisted motives that made Clare belittle what she professed to love.  And she did not ask what the gossip was.  Half way up Palmer Lane she turned in at the cement path between borders of early perennials which led to the white Wheeler house.  She was flushed and angry, hating Clare for her unsolicited confidence and her malice, hating even Haverly, that smiling, tree-shaded suburb which “talked.”

She opened the door quietly and went in.  Micky, the Irish terrier, lay asleep at the foot of the stairs, and her father’s voice, reading aloud, came pleasantly from the living room.  Suddenly her sense of resentment died.  With the closing of the front door the peace of the house enveloped her.  What did it matter if, beyond that door, there were unrequited love and petty gossip, and even tragedy?  Not that she put all that into conscious thought; she had merely a sensation of sanctuary and peace.  Here, within these four walls, were all that one should need, love and security and quiet happiness.  Walter Wheeler, pausing to turn a page, heard her singing as she went up the stairs.  In the moment of the turning he too had a flash of content.  Twenty-five years of married life and all well; Nina married, Jim out of college, Elizabeth singing her way up the stairs, and here by the lamp his wife quietly knitting while he read to her.  He was reading Paradise Lost:  “The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven.”

He did a certain amount of serious reading every year.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Breaking Point from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.