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iced her particularly, and when she pushed back her hat and looked up at him he started slightly. "Good evening, Miss Huntingdon. What number do you wish?" Perhaps it was from the heat of the day, or from stooping over his desk, or perhaps it was from something else, but his cheek was flushed, and gradually it grew pale again. "Russell, I want to speak to you about Electra. She ought to be at school, you know." "Yes." "But she says your mother can't afford the expense." "Just now she cannot; next year things will be better." "What is the tuition for her?" "Five dollars a month." "Is that all?" He selected a delicate fawn-coloured pair of gloves and laid them before her, while a faint smile passed over his face. "Russell, has anything happened?" "What do you mean?" "What is troubling you so?" "Nothing more than usual. Do those gloves suit you?" "Yes, they will fit me, I believe." She looked at him very intently. He met her gaze steadily, and for an instant his face brightened; then she said abruptly-- "Your mother's eyes are worse." "Yes, much worse." "Have you consulted Dr. Arnold about them?" "He says he can do nothing for her." "How much would it cost to take her to New Orleans and have that celebrated oculist examine them?" "More than we can afford just now; at least two hundred dollars." "Oh, Russell! that is not much. Would not Mr. Watson lend you that little?" "I shall not ask him." "Not even to restore your mother's sight?" "Not to buy my own life. Besides, the experiment is a doubtful one." "Still it is worth making." "Yes, under different circumstances it certainly would be." "Have you talked to Mr. Campbell about it?" "No, because it is useless to discuss the matter." "It would be dangerous to go to New Orleans now, I suppose?" "October or November would be better." Again she looked at him very earnestly, then stretched out her little hand. "Good-bye, Russell. I wish I could do something to help you, to make you less sorrowful." He held the slight waxen fingers, and his mouth trembled as he answered-- "Thank you, Miss Huntingdon. I am not sorrowful, but my path in life is not quite so flowery as yours." "I wish you would not call me 'Miss Huntingdon' in that stiff, far-off way, as if we were not friends. Or maybe it is a hint that you desire me to address you as Mr. Aubrey. It sounds strange, unnatural, to say anything but Ru
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