Tim answered her out of the fullness of the queer new wisdom with which love had endowed him.
“A man would rather be hurt by the woman he loves than humoured by the woman he doesn't love,” he said quietly.
And Elisabeth, understanding, held her peace.
She had been very controlled, very wise and circumspect in her dealing with Tim, conscious of raw-edged nerves that would bear but the lightest of handling. But it was another woman altogether who, half-an-hour later, faced Geoffrey Durward in the seclusion of his study.
The two moving factors in Elisabeth's life had been, primarily, her love for her husband, and, later on, her love for Tim, and into this later love was woven all the passionately protective instinct of the maternal element. She was the type of woman who would have plucked the feathers from an archangel's wing if she thought they would contribute to her son's happiness; and now, realizing that the latter was threatened by the fact that his love for Sara had failed to elicit a responsive fire, she felt bitterly resentful and indignant.
“I tell you, Geoffrey,” she declared in low, forceful tones, “she shall marry Tim—she shall! I will not have his beautiful young life marred and spoilt by the caprices of any woman.”
Major Durward looked disturbed.
“My dear, I shouldn't call Sara in the least a capricious woman. She knows her own heart—”
“So does Tim!” broke in Elisabeth. “And, if I can compass it, he shall have his heart's desire.”
Her husband shook his head.