The Sowers eBook

Hugh Stowell Scott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 402 pages of information about The Sowers.

The Sowers eBook

Hugh Stowell Scott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 402 pages of information about The Sowers.

No, this man respected women still; and he paid them an honor which, thank Heaven, most of them still deserve.  He treated them as men in the sense that he considered them to be under the same code of right and wrong, of good and evil.

He did not understand what Etta meant when she told him to be careful.  He did not know that the modern social code is like the Spanish grammar—­there are so many exceptions that the rules are hardly worth noting.  And one of our most notorious modern exceptions is the married woman who is pleased to hold herself excused because outsiders tell her that her husband does not understand her.

“I do not think,” said Paul judicially, “that you can have cared very much whether I loved you or not.  When you married me you knew that I was the promoter of the Charity League; I almost told you.  I told you so much that, with your knowledge, you must have been aware of the fact that I was heavily interested in the undertaking which you betrayed.  You married me without certain proof of your husband’s death, such was your indecent haste to call yourself a princess.  And now I find, on your own confession, that you have a clandestine understanding with a man who tried to murder me only a week ago.  Is it not rather absurd to talk of caring?”

He stood looking down at her, cold and terrible in the white heat of his suppressed Northern anger.

The little clock on the mantel-piece, in a terrible hurry, ticked with all its might.  Time was speeding.  Every moment was against her.  And she could think of nothing to say simply because those things that she would have said to others would carry no weight with this man.

Etta was leaning forward in the luxurious chair, staring with haggard eyes into the fire.  The flames leaped up and gleamed on her pale face, in her deep eyes.

“I suppose,” she said, without looking at him, “that you will not believe me when I tell you that I hate the man.  I knew nothing of what you refer to as happening last week; his attempt to murder you, I mean.  You are a prince, and all-powerful in your own province.  Can you not throw him into prison and keep him there?  Such things are done in Russia.  He is more dangerous than you think.  Please do it—­please—­”

Paul looked at her with hard, unresponsive eyes.  Lives depended on his answer.

“I did not come here to discuss Claude de Chauxville,” he said, “but you, and our future.”

Etta drew herself up as one under the lash, and waited with set teeth.

“I propose,” he said, in a final voice which made it no proposition at all, “that you go home to England at once with—­your cousin.  This country is not safe for you.  The house in London will be at your disposal.  I will make a suitable settlement on you, sufficient to live in accordance with your title and position.  I must ask you to remember that the name you bear has hitherto been an unsullied one.  We have been proud of our princesses—­up to now.  In case of any trouble reaching you from outside sources connected with this country, I should like you to remember that you are under my protection and that of Steinmetz.  Either of us will be glad at any time to consider any appeal for assistance that you may think fit to make.  You will always be the Princess Howard Alexis.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Sowers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.