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tation. Gwenda's eyes were ominously somber and she had the white face of a ghost, a face that to Rowcliffe, as he looked at it, recalled the white face of Alice. He disliked Alice's face, he always had disliked it, he disliked it more than ever at that moment; yet the sight of this face that was so like it carried him away in an ecstasy of tenderness. He adored it because of that likeness, because of all that the likeness revealed to him and signified. And it increased, quite unendurably, his agitation. Gwenda was supernaturally calm. In another instant the illusion that her presence had given him passed. He saw what she had come for. "Has anything gone wrong?" he asked. She drew in her breath sharply. "It's Alice." "Yes, I know it's Alice. _Is_ anything wrong?" he said. "What is it?" "I don't know. I want you to tell me. That's what I've come for. I'm frightened." "D'you mean, is she worse?" She did not answer him. She looked at him as if she were trying to read in his eyes something that he was trying not to tell her. "Yes," he said, "she _is_ worse." "I know that," she said impatiently. "I can see it. You've got to tell me more." "But I _have_ told you. You _know_ I have," he pleaded. "I know you tried to tell me." "Didn't I succeed?" "You told me why she was ill--I know all that----" "Do sit down." He turned from her and dragged the armchair forward. "There." He put a cushion at her back. "That's better." As she obeyed him she kept her eyes on him. The book he had been reading lay where he had put it down, on the hearthrug at her feet. Its title, "_Etat mental des hysteriques_;" Janet, stared at him. He picked it up and flung it out of sight as if it had offended him. With all his movements her head lifted and turned so that her eyes followed him. He sat down and gazed at her quietly. "Well," he said, "and what didn't I tell you?" "You didn't tell me how it would end." He was silent. "Is that what you told father?" "Hasn't he said anything?" "He hasn't said a word. And you went away without saying anything." "There isn't much to say that you don't know----" "I know why she was ill. You told me. But I don't know why she's worse. She _was_ better. She was quite well. She was running about doing things and looking so pretty--only the other day. And look at her now." "It's like that," said Rowcliffe. "It comes and goes." He said it quietly. But the b
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