The Regatta Mystery and Other Stories (Hercule Poirot 21) - Page 191

came through unscathed. Charles Crawley was

killed in action at the beginning of 1918.

Somehow--that made a difference. I came

home in the autumn of 1918 just before the Armis-tice

and I went straight to Sylvia and told her that

I loved her. I hadn't much hope that she'd care for

me straight away, and you could have knocked me

down with a feather when she asked me why I

hadn't told her sooner. I stammered out some-thing

about Crawley and she said, "But why did

you think I broke it off with him?" And then she

told me that she'd fallen in love with me just as I'd

done with her--from the very first minute.

I said I thought she'd broken off her engage-ment

because of the story I told her and she

laughed scornfully and said that if you loved a

man you wouldn't be as cowardly as that, and we

went over that old vision of mine again and agreed

that it was queer, but nothing more.

Well, there's nothing much to tell for some time

IN A GLASS DARKLY

187

after that. Sylvia and I were married and we were

happy. But I realized, as soon as she was really

mine, that I wasn't cut out for the best kind of

husband. I loved Sylvia devotedly, but I was jeal-ous,

absurdly jealous of anyone she so much as

smiled at. It amused her at first. I think she even

rather liked it. It proved, at least, how devoted I

was.

Tags: Agatha Christie Hercule Poirot Mystery
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