The Bloody Chamber-2
oo late to keep silent; and if oo, least o me. So I told erdiction, my disobedience, the blood.
quot;I can scarcely believe it,quot; ;t man. . . so ric;
quot;; I said and tumbled tal key out of my o the silken rug.
quot;O; ;I can smell t;
ook my me. Alt a great strengto me from ouch.
quot;e ales up and do,quot; ;to young girls on ted t from of to tte, e ;
But, in tic times, my travel as far as Paris to do ing in t I shuddered.
quot;O all tales, ctering of fools, spooks to scare bad co good be ranger, t tle of Murder?quot;
t, in my , Id als lord h of me.
quot;; said my friend suddenly. quot;t must be near morning. tide is going do;
oones gleamed ly in t of t and, unimaginable ensity of ransmit to you, I saance, still far a dra by moment inexorably nearer, tunnels ting mist.
My urned; time, it was no fancy.
quot;t; said Jean-Yves. quot;It must go back on t;
But till caked blood and I ran to my bat under t tap. Crimson er s, as if tself oken stuck. turquoise eyes of taps me derisively; too clever for me! I scrubbed tain still it budge. I t ly toyard gate; tain.
teers dro over into s. . . sloer as slowly as you can. . .
And still tain mocked ter t spilled from the leering dolphin.
quot;You ime,quot; said Jean-Yves. quot;. I must stay ;
quot;You s!quot; I said. quot;Go back to your room, no;
ated. I put teel in my voice, for I kne meet my lord