The Golden Bowl Henry James (spicy books to read txt) đ
- Author: Henry James
Book online «The Golden Bowl Henry James (spicy books to read txt) đ». Author Henry James
âI believe in you more than anyone.â
âThan anyone at all?â
She hesitated, for all it might mean; but there wasâ âoh a thousand times!â âno doubt of it. âThan anyone at all.â She kept nothing of it back now, met his eyes over it, let him have the whole of it; after which she went on: âAnd thatâs the way, I think, you believe in me.â
He looked at her a minute longer, but his tone at last was right. âAbout the wayâ âyes.â
âWell thenâ â?â She spoke as for the end and for other mattersâ âfor anything, everything, else there might be. They would never return to it.
âWell thenâ â!â His hands came out, and while her own took them he drew her to his breast and held her. He held her hard and kept her long, and she let herself go; but it was an embrace that, august and almost stern, produced, for all its intimacy, no revulsion and broke into no inconsequence of tears.
XXXVIIIMaggie was to feel, after this passage, how they had both been helped through it by the influence of that accident of her having been caught, a few nights before, in the familiar embrace of her fatherâs wife. His return to the saloon had chanced to coincide exactly with this demonstration, missed moreover neither by her husband nor by the Assinghams, who, their card-party suspended, had quitted the billiard-room with him. She had been conscious enough at the time of what such an impression, received by the others, might, in that extended state, do for her case; and none the less that, as no one had appeared to wish to be the first to make a remark about it, it had taken on perceptibly the special shade of consecration conferred by unanimities of silence. The effect, she might have considered, had been almost awkwardâ âthe promptitude of her separation from Charlotte, as if they had been discovered in some absurdity, on her becoming aware of spectators. The spectators, on the other handâ âthat was the appearanceâ âmightnât have supposed them, in the existing relation, addicted to mutual endearments; and yet, hesitating with a fine scruple between sympathy and hilarity, must have felt that almost any spoken or laughed comment could be kept from sounding vulgar only by sounding, beyond any permitted measure, intelligent. They had evidently looked, the two young wives, like a pair of women âmaking upâ effusively, as women were supposed to do, especially when approved fools, after a broil; but taking note of the reconciliation would imply, on her fatherâs part, on Amerigoâs, and on Fanny Assinghamâs, some proportionate vision of the grounds of their difference. There had been something, there had been but too much, in the incident, for each observer; yet there was nothing anyone could have said without seeming essentially to say: âSee, see, the dear thingsâ âtheir quarrelâs blissfully over!â âOur quarrel? What quarrel?â the dear things themselves would necessarily, in that case, have demanded;
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