High Noon

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High Noon, by Anonymous

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Title: High Noon A New Sequel to 'Three Weeks' by Elinor Glyn
Author: Anonymous
Release Date: May 20, 2007 [EBook #21540]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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NOON ***

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[Illustration: NATALIE VSESLAVITCH
From a miniature in the Verdayne collection.]

HIGH NOON
A NEW SEQUEL TO
"THREE WEEKS"
ANONYMOUS

NEW YORK
THE MACAULAY COMPANY
1911

COPYRIGHT, 1911, BY
THE MACAULAY COMPANY
* * * * *

FOREWORD
I must make a confession.
It will not be needed by the many thousands who have lived with me
the wonderful sunrise of Paul's love, and the sad gray morning of his
bereavement. To these friends who, with Paul, loved and mourned his
beautiful Queen and their dear son, the calm peace and serenity of the
high noon of Paul's life will seem but well-deserved happiness.
It is to the others I speak.
In life it is rarely given us to learn the end as well as the beginning. To
tell the whole story is only an author's privilege.

Of the events which made Paul's love-idyl possible, but a mere hint has
been given. If at some future time it seems best, I may tell you more of
them. As far as Paul himself is concerned, you have had but the first
two chapters of his story. Here is the third of the trilogy, his high noon.
And with the sun once more breaking through the clouds in Paul's heart,
we will leave him.
You need not read any more of this book than you wish, since I claim
the privilege of not writing any more than I choose. But if you do read
it through, you will feel with me that the great law of compensation is
once more justified. As sorrow is the fruit of our mistakes, so
everlasting peace should be the reward of our heart's best endeavor.
Sadness is past; joy comes with High Noon.
"The Queen is dead. Long live the Queen!"
THE AUTHOR.

HIGH NOON
CHAPTER I
It was Springtime in Switzerland! Once more the snow-capped
mountains mirrored their proud heads in sapphire lakes; and on the
beeches by the banks of Lake Lucerne green buds were bursting into
leaves. Everywhere were bright signs of the earth's awakening.
Springtime in Switzerland! And that, you know--you young hearts to
whom the gods are kind--is only another way of saying Paradise!
Towards Paradise, then, thundered the afternoon express from Paris,
bearing the advance guard of the summer seekers after happiness. But
if the cumbrous coaches carried swiftly onward some gay hearts, some
young lovers to never-to-be-forgotten scenes, one there was among the
throng to whom the world was gray--an English gentleman this, who
gazed indifferently upon the bright vistas flitting past his window. The

London Times reposed unopened by his side; Punch, Le Figaro, Jugend
had pleased him not and tumbled to the floor unnoticed.
There seemed scant reason for such deep abstraction in one who bore
the outward signs of so vigorous a manhood. Tall, well-formed,
muscular as his faultless clothes half revealed, half hid, his bronzed
face bearing the clear eyes and steady lips of a man much out of doors,
this thoughtful Englishman was indeed a man to catch and hold
attention. No callow youth, was he, but in the prime of life--strong,
clean, distinguished in appearance, with hair slightly silvered at the
temples; a man who had lived fully, women would have said, but who
was now a bit weary of the world.
Small wonder that the smart American girl sitting opposite in the
compartment stared at him with frank interest, or an elegantly gowned
Parisienne demi-mondaine (travelling incognito as the Comtesse de
Boistelle) eyed him tentatively through her lorgnette.
So Sir Paul Verdayne sat that afternoon in a compartment of the
through express, all unconscious of the scrutiny of his fellow travellers;
his heart filled with the dogged determination to face the future and
make the best of it like a true Englishman; somewhat
saddened--yes--but still unbroken in spirit by the sorrows that had been
his.
Many years ago it was, since he had vowed to revisit the Springplace of
his youth, Lucerne, a spot so replete with tender memories, and each
succeeding year had found him making anew his pilgrimage, though a
sombre warp of sorrow was now interwoven in the
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