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gitating. "It's good of you to ask me; but we'd better not begin what we can't keep up." "Stay here," said Hilary again, kneeling down beside her chair. And suddenly he began to kiss her face and neck. He felt her answering kisses; for a moment they were clasped together in a fierce embrace. Then, as though by mutual consent, their arms relaxed; their eyes grew furtive, like the eyes of children who have egged each other on to steal; and on their lips appeared the faintest of faint smiles. It was as though those lips were saying: "Yes, but we are not quite animals!" Hilary got up and sat down on his bed. Blanca stayed in the chair, looking straight before her, utterly inert, her head thrown back, her white throat gleaming, on her lips and in her eyes that flickering smile. Not a word more, nor a look, passed between them. Then rising, without noise, she passed behind him and went out. Hilary had a feeling in his mouth as though he had been chewing ashes. And a phrase--as phrases sometimes fill the spirit of a man without rhyme or reason--kept forming on his lips: "The house of harmony!" Presently he went to her door, and stood there listening. He could hear no sound whatever. If she had been crying if she had been laughing--it would have been better than this silence. He put his hands up to his ears and ran down-stairs. CHAPTER XIII SOUND IN THE NIGHT He passed his study door, and halted at Mr. Stone's; the thought of the old man, so steady and absorbed in the face of all external things, refreshed him. Still in his brown woollen gown, Mr. Stone was sitting with his eyes fixed on something in the corner, whence a little perfumed steam was rising. "Shut the door," he said; "I am making cocoa; will you have a cup?" "Am I disturbing you?" asked Hilary. Mr. Stone looked at him steadily before answering: "If I work after cocoa, I find it clogs the liver." "Then, if you'll let me, sir, I'll stay a little." "It is boiling," said Mr. Stone. He took the saucepan off the flame, and, distending his frail cheeks, blew. Then, while the steam mingled with his frosty beard, he brought two cups from a cupboard, filled one of them, and looked at Hilary. "I should like you," he said, "to hear three or four pages I have just completed; you may perhaps be able to suggest a word or two." He placed the saucepan back on the stove, and grasped the cup he had filled. "I will drink my cocoa, an
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