The Orchard of Tears
Sax Rohmer
“You are so near to my heart day and night that I seem to have you always in my arms.” He spoke softly, his lips very close to Yvonne’s; her golden hair brushed his forehead. “You are the music to which I write the words. The memory of your lightest action since the very hour we met I treasure and revere. Without you I am nothing. All I dream and all I hope I dream and hope for you.”
Yvonne ran her white fingers through his hair and looked up into his face. Paul kissed her, laughing happily. “My darling Yvonne,” he whispered, “Do I sometimes forget to make love to you? It is only because I feel that you are so sure of me. Do you know that since I left you I have heard your voice like a prayer at twilight, seen your eyes watching me as I slept and found your hair gleaming in many a golden sunset.”
“Of course I don’t,” cried Yvonne, with mock severity. “How can I possibly know what you are thinking when you are hundreds of miles away! I only know that when you come back you forget to kiss me.”
“I don’t forget, Yvonne. I think of you a thousand times a day, and every thought is of a kiss.”
“Then you have only thought of me twice today,” said Yvonne, standing up and crossing to a Chesterfield. She seated herself, resting her head upon a black cushion and posing deliberately with the confidence of a pretty woman.
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