Page:Nalkowska - Kobiety (Women).djvu/169

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
"Garden of Red Flowers"
157

laugh, and said in an ironical tone of sympathy:

"I would give anything in reason to know what sorrows of the heart have driven you to take so very romantic a walk as this."

I was silent, and knit my brows.

"Souls that pine in loneliness," he went on, as sarcastic as before, "ought to comfort each other, I think: don't you?"

There was a pause, as we walked side by side.

"But why knit those fair eyebrows so? Oh, really, you frighten me. … Such malignant eyes! Come, come, I shall do you no harm; why be so cantankerous?"

In a rage and turning my back on him, I walked swiftly away. He made no attempt to follow. On arriving at the gate, where I was safe at last, I looked round. He was standing where he had stood before, and from afar waving me with bared head a graceful farewell.

The incident mortified and abashed me. I had behaved like a silly goose, narrow-minded and ill-tempered; I had spoiled a situation that might have had pleasant or cu-