The Irrational Knot eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about The Irrational Knot.

The Irrational Knot eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about The Irrational Knot.

Elinor looked wistfully at him, her impetuosity failing her as she felt how little effect it was producing.  Yet her temper rather rose than fell at him.  There was a much more serious hostility than before in her tone as she said: 

“You seem to have been thoroughly prepared for what has happened.  I do not want any instructions from you as to what I shall write to Marian about her money affairs:  I want to know, in case she takes it into her head to come back when she has found what a fool she has made of herself, whether I may tell her that you are glad to be rid of her, and that there is no use in her humiliating herself by coming to your door and being turned away.”

“Shall I explain the situation to you from my point of view?” said he.  At the sound of his voice she looked up in alarm.  The indulgent, half-playful manner which she had almost lost the sense of because it was so invariable with him in speaking to ladies was suddenly gone.  She felt that the real man was coming out now without ceremony.  He was quick to perceive the effect he had produced.  To soften it, he placed a comfortable chair on the hearthrug, and said, in his ordinary friendly way:  “Sit nearer the fire:  we can talk more comfortably.  Now,” he continued, standing with his back to the mantelpiece, “let me tell you, Miss McQuinch, that when you talk of my turning people away from my door you are not talking fair and square sense to me.  I dont turn my acquaintances off in that way, much less my friends; and a woman who has lived with me as my wife for eighteen months must always be a rather particular friend.  I liked her before I was her husband, and I shall continue to like her when I am no longer her husband.  So you need have no fear on that score.  But I wont remain her husband.  You said just now that I knew what was going to happen; that I intended it to happen, wanted it to happen, and am glad it happened.  There is more truth in that than you thought when you said it.  For some time past Marian has been staying with me as a matter of custom and convenience only, using me as a cover for her philandering with Douglas, and paying me by keeping the house very nicely for me.  I had asked myself once or twice how long this was to last.  I was in no hurry for the answer; for although I was wifeless and had no one to live with who really cared for me, I was quite prepared to wait a couple of years if necessary, on the chance of our making it up somehow.  But sooner or later I should have insisted on closing our accounts and parting; and I am not sorry now that the end has come, since it was inevitable; though I am right sorry for the way it has come.  Instead of eloping in the conventional way, she should have come to an understanding with me.  I could easily have taken her for a trip in the States, where we could have stopped a few months in South Dakota and got divorced without any scandal.  I have never made any claims on her since she found out that she

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The Irrational Knot from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.