MADAME DE TREYMES
him, parried him, at every turn: he had to take his baffled purpose back to another point of attack.
"Quite conceivably," he said: "so much so that I am aware I must make the most of this opportunity, because I am not likely to get another."
"But what remains of your opportunity, if it is n't one to me?"
"It still remains, for me, an occasion to abase myself———" He broke off, conscious of a grossness of allusion that seemed, on a closer approach, the real obstacle to full expression. But the moments were flying, and for his self-esteem's sake he must find some way of making her share the burden of his repentance.
"There is only one thinkable pretext for detaining you: it is that I may still show my sense of what you have done for me."
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