The Queen of Hearts
War and Peace
Astounding Stories of Super-Science January 1930
A Sharper's Downfall
The Two Destinies
Weapons of Mystery
Let Us Kiss and Part; A Shattered Tieis a late-19th-century American romance novel that tells the emotionally charged story ofLeon and Verna Dalrymple, a young couple whose marriage collapses amid pride, poverty, and escalating conflict. After their bitter separation, the narrative shifts forward sixteen years to focus on their daughterJessie, who must navigate life’s hardships and family complications on her own, carrying the emotional legacy of her parents’ fractured relationship as she seeks love, identity, and purpose in a world filled with both promise and disappointment.
WHEN POVERTY ENTERS THE DOOR.
To love and hate in the same breath, it is as cruel as a tragedy.
Leon and Verna Dalrymple knew all that subtle pain as they faced each other in the cold, gray light of that autumn day whereon they were parting forever.
It was not simply a lovers’ quarrel, either.
The pity of it was that they were husband and wife, both very young, both very fond, but driven apart by unreasoning pride and passion.
The husband was twenty-one years old, the bride but seventeen—a case of “marry in haste, repent at leisure.”
Six months ago the bride, sole daughter of a wealthy family, had eloped from boarding school with a poor young man, a teacher of music.
For her fault the daughter had been cast off by her parents, and the young man dismissed from the school where he taught. Unable to secure another position, misfortune had steadily tracked his footsteps until he could scarcely afford bread for himself and the fair, dainty bride.
Having rushed into marriage without thought for the future, misfortune soured their naturally hasty tempers, and when the fierce wolf of poverty came in at the door love flew out of the window.
[6]
They could scarcely have told how it all began, but at last they were quarreling most bitterly. There were mutual recriminations and fault-findings, that increased in virulence until one day, goaded by Verna’s reproaches, Leon cried out in hot resentment:
“I regret that I ever saw you!”
“I hate you!” she replied, with a scornful flash of her great, somber, dark eyes, and whether the words were true or not, she never took them back—neither one ever professed sorrow for angry words or begged forgiveness. The husband, hurt by her sneers, pained by her reproaches, and inwardly wounded by his inability to provide for her better, took refuge in sullen silence that she resented by downright sulking. She was furious at his unkindness, disgusted with her poverty, and unconsciously ill of a trouble she did not suspect, so the breach widened between their hearts until one day she said with rigid white lips and somber, angry eyes:
“I am tired of starving and freezing here where I am not wanted! I shall go home and beg papa to forgive my folly and get me a divorce from you.”
The awful words were spoken and they fell on his heart like hailstones, but though he grew pale as death and his whole frame trembled, he feigned the cruelest indifference, saying bitterly:
“You could not please me better!”
So the die was cast.
Perhaps she had wished to test his love, perhaps she hoped that the fear of losing her might beat down the armor of his stubborn pride and make him sue for a reconciliation.
[7]
Whatever she might have secretly desired, his answer was a deathblow to her hopes.
At his words a strange look flashed into her large, dark eyes, and for a moment her red mouth quivered like a child’s at an unexpected blow. But she swallowed a choking sob, and the next moment her young face grew rigid as a mask.
Rising slowly from her seat, she put on her hat, caught up a small hand satchel from the floor, and passed silently from the poor apartment.
If only she had turned her fair, haughty head for one backward glance—if only——
For his passionate heart had almost leaped from his breast in the terror of his loss.
Anger, pride, and pique were forgotten alike in the supreme anguish of that moment’s despair.
As she turned away he stretched his arms out yearningly, whispering with stiff, white lips that could scarcely frame the words:
“Darling, come back!”
Had she only looked back, her heart would have melted with tenderness at sight of his grief. She would have fallen, sobbing, on his breast.
But she never turned her proud, dark head; she did not catch the yearning whisper, and his arms dropped heavily to his sides again, while the echo of her retreating footsteps fell like a death knell on his heart.
Angry and estranged, they had parted to go their separate ways forever, and the stream of destiny rolled in widely between their sundered lives, thus wrenched violently heart from heart.
To be born to the heritage of such beauty, pride,
[8]
and passion, is not altogether goodly—yet, it is the daughter of this strangely parted pair whom I have chosen for my heroine, for in four months after Verna Dalrymple left her husband she became the mother of a lovely daughter—a girl that in its dainty beauty possessed the blond fairness of the father, the dark, dreamy eyes and proud, beautiful mouth of the brunet mother.
[9]
A BREAKING HEART. Madame Barto did not expect any customers the next morning; it was so still, so dark and lowering after the night’s storm, but at ten o’clock the bell clanged loudly and she admitted…
AN EVIL OMEN. Thursday morning dawned fair and sunny with all traces of Tuesday night’s storm swept away—the streets clean, the skies blue, the air crisply cold—the day set for Jessie Lyndon’s funeral…
FORSAKEN AT THE ALTAR. Mrs. Dalrymple, throwing back her heavy veil for air, gasped with surprise and wonder. She could not have dreamed of seeing Frank Laurier at the funeral services at the Van Dorn…
WAVES OF MEMORY. When Laurier and Noel had both been taken away, the man whose bicycle had been the cause of their calamity stood alone among the curious onlookers gazing somewhat ruefully at the ruin…
FORGETFULNESS, THE GREAT PANACEA. A lonely life and much brooding inclines the mind to strange aspects. Leon Dalrymple’s thoughts dwelt persistently on the dead girl—his divorced wife’s adopted daught…
WHEN A MAN HATES. Rapid thoughts were revolving in his mind: “I will take her far away from New York, my precious daughter, and her mother shall never know that she is not lying in the old vault among…
DALRYMPLE’S SECRET. Jessie’s large, soft, dark eyes turned on her father’s face with a look that shook his soul, they were so like other eyes he had once loved. She cried pleadingly: “No, no, for I ha…
LAURIER’S ATONEMENT. When two people are of the same mind that certain subjects are painful, they are not apt to recall them to each other’s memory. Leon Lyndon, as he chose to call himself, left New …
THE NEW WINE OF LOVE. Cora Ellyson had, indeed, refused her lover’s request. Ernest Noel had gauged her quite correctly in asserting that she would be unwilling to be married simply, without the pomp …
WOULD THE OLD LOVE RETURN? December snows lay deep upon the ground when Laurier left the hospital two weeks after the fateful accident that had postponed his wedding. His first visit was to Cora. Havi…

Robert W. Krepps
The story begins on January 9, 1955, when Earth suddenly enters a crisis after …
Read more

Henry James
Levity is not a word often applied to Henry James, but this story has about it …
Read more

Henry Fletcher
The North Shore Mysterydraws readers into a quiet coastal community where uneas…
Read more