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l have some pretty reading.' 'It's awful, awful, awful!' murmured Laura. 'Yes, they oughtn't to be allowed to publish them. I wonder if we couldn't stop that. At any rate he had better be quiet: tell him to come and see me.' 'You won't influence him; he's dreadful against her. Such a house as it is to-day!' 'Well, my dear, naturally.' 'Yes, but it's terrible for me: it's all more sickening than I can bear.' 'My dear child, come and stay with me,' said the old woman, gently. 'Oh, I can't desert her; I can't abandon her!' 'Desert--abandon? What a way to put it! Hasn't she abandoned you?' 'She has no heart--she's too base!' said the girl. Her face was white and the tears now began to rise to her eyes again. Lady Davenant got up and came and sat on the sofa beside her: she put her arms round her and the two women embraced. 'Your room is all ready,' the old lady remarked. And then she said, 'When did she leave you? When did you see her last?' 'Oh, in the strangest, maddest, crudest way, the way most insulting to me. We went to the opera together and she left me there with a gentleman. We know nothing about her since.' 'With a gentleman?' 'With Mr. Wendover--that American, and something too dreadful happened.' 'Dear me, did he kiss you?' asked Lady Davenant. Laura got up quickly, turning away. 'Good-bye, I'm going, I'm going!' And in reply to an irritated, protesting exclamation from her companion she went on, 'Anywhere--anywhere to get away!' 'To get away from your American?' 'I asked him to marry me!' The girl turned round with her tragic face. 'He oughtn't to have left that to you.' 'I knew this horror was coming and it took possession of me, there in the box, from one moment to the other--the idea of making sure of some other life, some protection, some respectability. First I thought he liked me, he had behaved as if he did. And I like him, he is a very good man. So I asked him, I couldn't help it, it was too hideous--I offered myself!' Laura spoke as if she were telling that she had stabbed him, standing there with dilated eyes. Lady Davenant got up again and went to her; drawing off her glove she felt her cheek with the back of her hand. 'You are ill, you are in a fever. I'm sure that whatever you said it was very charming.' 'Yes, I am ill,' said Laura. 'Upon my honour you shan't go home, you shall go straight to bed. And what did he say to you?' 'Oh, it was too mis
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