Page 309 - for-the-term-of-his-natural-life
P. 309

Maurice laughed. ‘What have I to do with it?’
              ‘You are the principal witness against him. If you say that
           he behaved well— and he did behave well, you know: many
           men would have left you to starve— they won’t hang him.’
              ‘Oh, won’t they! That won’t make much difference.’
              ‘Ah, Maurice, be merciful!’ She bent towards him, and
           tried to retain his hand, but he withdrew it.
              ‘You’re a nice sort of woman to ask me to help your lov-
            er—a man who left me on that cursed coast to die, for all he
            cared,’ he said, with a galling recollection of his humiliation
            of five years back. ‘Save him! Confound him, not I!’
              ‘Ah, Maurice, you will.’ She spoke with a suppressed sob
           in her voice. ‘What is it to you? You don’t care for me now.
           You beat me, and turned me out of doors, though I never
            did you wrong. This man was a husband to me— long, long
            before I met you. He never did you any harm; he never will.
           He will bless you if you save him, Maurice.’
              Frere jerked his head impatiently. ‘Bless me!’ he said. ‘I
            don’t want his blessings. Let him swing. Who cares?’
              Still she persisted, with tears streaming from her eyes,
           with white arms upraised, on her knees even, catching at
           his coat, and beseeching him in broken accents. In her wild,
           fierce beauty and passionate abandonment she might have
            been  a  deserted  Ariadne—a  suppliant  Medea.  Anything
           rather  than  what  she  was—a  dissolute,  half-maddened
           woman, praying for the pardon of her convict husband.
              Maurice Frere flung her off with an oath. ‘Get up!’ he
            cried brutally, ‘and stop that nonsense. I tell you the man’s
            as good as dead for all I shall do to save him.’

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