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Herondale, instead of poor--" Half unconsciously she broke in upon his prayer. "I am still--what I was. I am not poor. My father was a rich man when he died." Stafford regarded her with surprise, then he moved his hand, as if he were waving away the suggestion of an obstacle. "I am glad--for your sake, dearest; though for my own I would almost rather that you were as poor as I thought you; that I might work for you. Why do you stand and look at me so hopelessly. What else is there to divide us, dearest?" Her lips opened, and almost inaudibly she breathed: "Your honour." He winced and set his teeth hard. "My honour!" "Yes. You have pledged your word, you have made your bargain--the price was paid, I suppose; you say so. Then in honour you belong to--_her_." The colour flamed in his face and his eyes grew hot. "You cast me off--you drive me back to her!" he said, scarcely knowing what he said. "Yes!" she responded, faintly. "You belong to her--to her only. Not to me, ah, not to me! No, no, do not come near me, do not touch me! I had forgotten--I was mad!--but I have remembered, I am sane now." Driven almost beyond himself by the sudden revulsion from joy and hope to doubt and despair, racked by the swift stemming of his passion, Stafford's unreasoning anger rose against her: it is always so with the man. "My God! You send me away--to her! You--you do it coolly, easily enough! Perhaps you have some other reason--someone has stepped into my place--" It was a cruel thing to say, even in his madness. For a moment she cowered under it, then she raised her white face and looked straight into his eyes. "And if there has, can you blame me? You cast me aside--you sacrificed me to your father's honour. You had done with me," her voice vibrated with the bitterness which had been her portion for so many dreary months. "Was the world, my life, to cease from that time forth? For you there was--someone else, wealth, rank--for me was there to be nothing, no consolation, no part or lot in life! Yes, there _is_ one--one who is both good and noble, and--" She broke down and covering her face with her hands turned away. Stafford stood as if turned to stone; as if he had lost the sense of sight and hearing. Silence reigned between them; the dogs who had been sitting watching them, rose and shivering, whined complainingly, as if they were asking what was amiss. It was the woman--as always--who first
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