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s is all very well, but I'm restless." "Restless!" she said with a faint surprise in her voice. "Yes. I think I want exercise. I've got a sort of feeling--I've never had it before--as though I was getting fat." "My dear!" she cried. "I want to do things;--ride horses, climb mountains, take the devil out of myself." She watched me thoughtfully. "Couldn't we DO something?" she said. Do what? "I don't know. Couldn't we perhaps go away from here soon--and walk in the mountains--on our way home." I thought. "There seems to be no exercise at all in this place." "Isn't there some walk?" "I wonder," I answered. "We might walk to Chioggia perhaps, along the Lido." And we tried that, but the long stretch of beach fatigued Margaret's back, and gave her blisters, and we never got beyond Malamocco.... A day or so after we went out to those pleasant black-robed, bearded Armenians in their monastery at Saint Lazzaro, and returned towards sundown. We fell into silence. "PIU LENTO," said Margaret to the gondolier, and released my accumulated resolution. "Let us go back to London," I said abruptly. Margaret looked at me with surprised blue eyes. "This is beautiful beyond measure, you know," I said, sticking to my point, "but I have work to do." She was silent for some seconds. "I had forgotten," she said. "So had I," I sympathised, and took her hand. "Suddenly I have remembered." She remained quite still. "There is so much to be done," I said, almost apologetically. She looked long away from me across the lagoon and at last sighed, like one who has drunk deeply, and turned to me. "I suppose one ought not to be so happy," she said. "Everything has been so beautiful and so simple and splendid. And clean. It has been just With You--the time of my life. It's a pity such things must end. But the world is calling you, dear.... I ought not to have forgotten it. I thought you were resting--and thinking. But if you are rested.--Would you like us to start to-morrow?" She looked at once so fragile and so devoted that on the spur of the moment I relented, and we stayed in Venice four more days. CHAPTER THE FOURTH ~~ THE HOUSE IN WESTMINSTER 1 Margaret had already taken a little house in Radnor Square, Westminster, before our marriage, a house that seemed particularly adaptable to our needs as public-spirited efficients; it had been very pleasantly painted and papered under Margaret'
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