Sally Bishop eBook

E. Temple Thurston
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 456 pages of information about Sally Bishop.

Sally Bishop eBook

E. Temple Thurston
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 456 pages of information about Sally Bishop.

She took the bangle out of its velvet case and clasped it—­with pride even then—­upon her wrist.

“You see it fits—­perfectly,” she said, looking up pathetically.

“Then—­Good Lord! why do you bring it back?”

She unclasped it, letting it lie in the palm of her hand, half-stretched out towards him.

“Because I mustn’t accept it—­I can’t.  If, after the last time I was here, when you said good-bye, you’d said to me you were going to buy it, I should have told you that I would not take it.”

He paid no attention to her outstretched hand.  At her eyes he looked.

“Why not?  Why particularly after I’d said good-bye?”

“Because you have no right to give it me, and I have less right to accept it.”

He half-laughed.  “Isn’t that rather childish?”

“I don’t think so.”

“But do you like it?  Isn’t it a sort of thing you’d like?”

“A sort of thing?  I think it’s beautiful.  I’ve never had a present like it in my life—­never had anything that was so valuable.”

“And you’re going to refuse it?”

“I must.”

He still made no offer to take it from her, but looked persistently at her eyes.

“If I asked you quite straight,” he said, “would you tell me quite straight—­why?”

Now it must be the truth or the lie.  No silence, no half-measures could answer here.  She knew that he was at the very door of her heart, when it must either be slammed, bolted, locked in his face with a lie or flung, with the truth, wide open for him to enter if he chose.

She hesitated, it is true; but it was not the hesitation of indecision.  When, only a few moments before, her senses have been giddily balancing upon a precipice, saved from the hopeless downfall, only because the man put out no hand to pull her over, a woman is not likely to delay in doubt when at last he offers his hands, his eyes and his voice to drag her into the ultimate abyss of ecstasy.

Sally delayed, only with the natural instinct of reserve.  Eventually, she knew she must tell him; if not in words, then by actions, looks—­even by silence itself.

“I never thought you meant that bet,” she began in timid procrastination.

“No—­probably you didn’t—­but I did.  And that’s not the reason why you’re returning it now.  Supposing we sponge out the debt and I tell you to look upon it as a gift—­would you keep it then?”

“No.”

“Well—­it’s the wherefore of that I want to know.  Why wouldn’t you?”

“Because you have no right, no cause, to make me presents.  You practically told me so yourself—­you said good-bye.”

“But don’t you take all you can get?” he asked, almost with brutality.  So the passion was stirring in him.  All that came to his lips found utterance.

At any time, she would have resented that.  Now she knew instinctively what the brutality in it expressed.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Sally Bishop from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.