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aithful to their dream, and that she too--" "Let me go, Mr. Belsky, let me go, I say!" Clementina wrenched her hands from him, and ran out of the room. Belsky hesitated, then he found his hat, and after a glance at his face in the mirror, left the house. XXIV. The tide of travel began to set northward in April. Many English, many Americans appeared in Florence from Naples and Rome; many who had wintered in Florence went on to Venice and the towns of northern Italy, on their way to Switzerland and France and Germany. The spring was cold and rainy, and the irresolute Italian railroads were interrupted by the floods. A tawny deluge rolled down from the mountains through the bed of the Arno, and kept the Florentine fire-department on the alert night and day. "It is a curious thing about this country," said Mr. Hinkle, encountering Baron Belsky on the Ponte Trinita, "that the only thing they ever have here for a fire company to put out is a freshet. If they had a real conflagration once, I reckon they would want to bring their life-preservers." The Russian was looking down over the parapet at the boiling river. He lifted his head as if he had not heard the American, and stared at him a moment before he spoke. "It is said that the railway to Rome is broken at Grossetto." "Well, I'm not going to Rome," said Hinkle, easily. "Are you?" "I was to meet a friend there; but he wrote to me that he was starting to Florence, and now--" "He's resting on the way? Well, he'll get here about as quick as he would in the ordinary course of travel. One good thing about Italy is, you don't want to hurry; if you did, you'd get left." Belsky stared at him in the stupefaction to which the American humor commonly reduced him. "If he gets left on the Grossetto line, he can go back and come up by Orvieto, no?" "He can, if he isn't in a hurry," Hinkle assented. "It's a good way, if you've got time to burn." Belsky did not attempt to explore the American's meaning. "Do you know," he asked, "whether Mrs. Lander and her young friend are still in Florence? "I guess they are." "It was said they were going to Venice for the summer." "That's what the doctor advised for the old lady. But they don't start for a week or two yet." "Oh!" "Are you going to Miss Milray's, Sunday night? Last of the season, I believe." Belsky seemed to recall himself from a distance. "No--no," he said, and he moved away, forgetful of
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