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d of the Figaro, which he couldn't read, and the New York Herald, which he had already read. A single person was just now in possession of these conveniences--a young lady who sat with her back to the window, looking straight before her into the conventional room. She was dressed as for the street; her empty hands rested upon the arms of her chair--she had withdrawn her long gloves, which were lying in her lap--and she seemed to be doing nothing as hard as she could. Her face was so much in shadow as to be barely distinguishable; nevertheless the young man had a disappointed cry as soon as he saw her. "Why, it ain't Miss Francie--it's Miss Delia!" "Well, I guess we can fix that," said Mr. Dosson, wandering further into the room and drawing his feet over the floor without lifting them. Whatever he did he ever seemed to wander: he had an impermanent transitory air, an aspect of weary yet patient non-arrival, even when he sat, as he was capable of sitting for hours, in the court of the inn. As he glanced down at the two newspapers in their desert of green velvet he raised a hopeless uninterested glass to his eye. "Delia dear, where's your little sister?" Delia made no movement whatever, nor did any expression, so far as could be perceived, pass over her large young face. She only ejaculated: "Why, Mr. Flack, where did you drop from?" "Well, this is a good place to meet," her father remarked, as if mildly, and as a mere passing suggestion, to deprecate explanations. "Any place is good where one meets old friends," said George Flack, looking also at the newspapers. He examined the date of the American sheet and then put it down. "Well, how do you like Paris?" he subsequently went on to the young lady. "We quite enjoy it; but of course we're familiar now." "Well, I was in hopes I could show you something," Mr. Flack said. "I guess they've seen most everything," Mr. Dosson observed. "Well, we've seen more than you!" exclaimed his daughter. "Well, I've seen a good deal--just sitting there." A person with delicate ear might have suspected Mr. Dosson of a tendency to "setting"; but he would pronounce the same word in a different manner at different times. "Well, in Paris you can see everything," said the young man. "I'm quite enthusiastic about Paris." "Haven't you been here before?" Miss Delia asked. "Oh yes, but it's ever fresh. And how is Miss Francie?" "She's all right. She has gone upstairs to g
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