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went away and typed it, and then had her lunch--and I had mine, but Maurice dropped in and mine took longer than hers--it was half past two when I rang my hand bell for her (it is a jolly little silver one I bought once in Cairo) She answered it promptly--the script in her hand. "I have had half an hour with nothing to do," she said--"Can you not give me some other work which I can turn to, if this should happen again?" "You can read a book--there are lots in the book case" I told her--"Or I might leave you some letters to answer." "Thank you, that would be best"--(She is conscientious evidently). We began again. She sits at a table with her notebook, and while I pause she is absolutely still--that is good. I feel she won't count more than a table or chair. I am quite pleased with my work. It is awfully hot to-day and there is some tension in the air--as though something was going to happen. The news is the same--perhaps slightly better.--I am going to have a small dinner to-night. The widow and Maurice and Madame de Clerte--just four and we are going to the play. It is such a business for me to go I seldom turn out.--Maurice is having a little supper in his rooms at the Ritz for us. It is my birthday--I am thirty-one years old. _Friday_--What an evening that 26th of June! The theatre was hot and the cramped position worried me so--and the lights made my eye ache--Madame de Clerte and I left before the end and ambled back to the Ritz in my one horse Victoria and went and sat in Maurice's room. We talked of the situation, and the effect of the Americans coming in, bucking everyone up--we were rather cheerful. Then the sirens began--and the guns followed just as Maurice and Odette got back--They seemed unusually loud--and we could hear the bits of shrapnel falling on the terrace beneath us, Odette was frightened and suggested going into the cellar--but as Maurice's rooms are only on the second floor, we did not want to take the trouble. Fear has a peculiar effect upon some people--Odette's complexion turned grey and she could hardly keep her voice steady. I wondered how soon she would let restraint slip from her and fly out of the room to the cellar. Madame de Clerte was quite unmoved. Then the dramatic happened--Bang!--the whole house shook and the glass of the window crashed in fragments--and Maurice turned out the one light--and lifted a corner of the thick curtain to peep out. "I believe they got
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