“I didn’t,” said Ethel.
Lewisham gave way to a transport of anger. He caught up a handful of roses and extended them, trembling. “What’s this?” he asked. His finger bled from a thorn, as once it had bled from a blackthorn spray.
“I didn’t take them,” said Ethel. “I couldn’t help it if they were sent.”
“Ugh!” said Lewisham. “But what is the good of argument and denial? You took them in, you had them. You may have been cunning, but you have given yourself away. And our life and all this”—he waved an inclusive hand at Madam Gadow’s furniture—“is at an end.”
He looked at her and repeated with bitter satisfaction, “At an end.”
She glanced at his face, and his expression was remorseless. “I will not go on living with you,” he said, lest there should be any mistake. “Our life is at an end.”
Her eyes went from his face to the scattered roses. She remained staring at these. She was no longer weeping, and her face, save about the eyes, was white.
He presented it in another form. “I shall go away.”
“We never ought to have married,” he reflected. “But ... I never expected this!”
“I didn’t know,” she cried out, lifting up her voice. “I didn’t know. How could I help! Oh!”