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niel was overcome. He stammered,-- "How did you know?" Maxime could not look him in the face; but his voice was as steady as ever when he replied, in a tone of bitterest sarcasm,-- "I guess it. Did I not tell you I knew Miss Brandon? She has only one card in her hand; but that is enough; it always makes a trick." To have been deceived, and even to have been rendered ridiculous, is one of those misfortunes which we confess to ourselves, however painful the process may be; but to hear another person laugh at us after such a thing has happened is more than we can readily bear. Daniel, therefore, did not conceal his impatience, and said rather dryly,-- "If I have been the dupe of Miss Brandon, my dear Maxime, you see, at last, that I am so no longer." "Ah, ah!" "No, not in the least. And that, thanks to her; for she herself has destroyed my illusions." "Pshaw!" "Unconsciously, of course, having ran away from her like a fool, I was wandering about in the streets near her house, when I saw her come out in her _coupe_." "Oh, come!" "I saw her as distinctly as I see you. It was four o'clock in the morning, mind!" "Is it possible? And what did you do?" "I followed her." M. de Brevan nearly let the brush fall, with which he was polishing his finger-nails; but he mastered his confusion so promptly, that Daniel did not perceive it. "Ah! you followed her," he said in a voice which all his efforts could not steady entirely. "Then, of course, you know where she went." "Alas, no! She drove so fast, that, quick as I am, I could not follow her, and lost sight of her." Certainly M. de Brevan was breathing more freely, and said in an easy tone,-- "That is provoking, and you have lost a fine opportunity. I am, however, by no means astonished that you are at last enlightened." "Oh! I am so; you may believe me. And yet"-- "Well, yet?" Daniel hesitated, for fear of seeing another sardonic smile appear on Maxime's lips. Still making an effort, he replied,-- "Well, I am asking myself whether all that Miss Brandon states about her childhood, her family, and her fortune, might not, after all, be true." Maxime looked like a sensible man who is forced to listen to the absurd nonsense of an insane person. "You think I am absurd," said Daniel. "Perhaps I am; but, then, do me the favor to explain to me how Miss Brandon, anxious as she must be to conceal her past, could herself point out to me the
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