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m." With a glance at Boris Strumolowski, at Hannah Hobdey, at Jimmy Portugal, June said nothing, and went out, devoid of equanimity. Entering the "little meal-room," she perceived the young lady to be Fleur--looking very pretty, if pale. At this disenchanted moment a little lame duck of her own breed was welcome to June, so homoeopathic by instinct. The girl must have come, of course, because of Jon; or, if not, at least to get something out of her. And June felt just then that to assist somebody was the only bearable thing. "So you've remembered to come," she said. "Yes. What a jolly little duck of a house! But please don't let me bother you, if you've got people." "Not at all," said June. "I want to let them stew in their own juice for a bit. Have you come about Jon?" "You said you thought we ought to be told. Well, I've found out." "Oh!" said June blankly. "Not nice, is it?" They were standing one on each side of the little bare table at which June took her meals. A vase on it was full of Iceland poppies; the girl raised her hand and touched them with a gloved finger. To her new-fangled dress, frilly about the hips and tight below the knees, June took a sudden liking--a charming colour, flax-blue. 'She makes a picture,' thought June. Her little room, with its whitewashed walls, its floor and hearth of old pink brick, its black paint, and latticed window athwart which the last of the sunlight was shining, had never looked so charming, set off by this young figure, with the creamy, slightly frowning face. She remembered with sudden vividness how nice she herself had looked in those old days when her heart was set on Philip Bosinney, that dead lover, who had broken from her to destroy for ever Irene's allegiance to this girl's father. Did Fleur know of that, too? "Well," she said, "what are you going to do?" It was some seconds before Fleur answered. "I don't want Jon to suffer. I must see him once more to put an end to it." "You're going to put an end to it!" "What else is there to do?" The girl seemed to June, suddenly, intolerably spiritless. "I suppose you're right," she muttered. "I know my father thinks so; but--I should never have done it myself. I can't take things lying down." How poised and watchful that girl looked; how unemotional her voice sounded! "People will assume that I'm in love." "Well, aren't you?" Fleur shrugged her shoulders. 'I might have known it,'
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