"And complimentary to your wife," added Irene.

"My wife," said Hartley, in a serious voice, "is, like myself, young

and inexperienced, and should be particularly cautious in regard to

all new acquaintances--men or women--particularly if they be some

years her senior, and particularly if they show any marked desire to

cultivate her acquaintance. People with a large worldly experience,

like most of those we have met at Mrs. Talbot's, take you and I at

disadvantage. They read us through at a single sitting, while it may

take us months, even years, to penetrate the disguises they know so

well how to assume."

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"Nearly all of which, touching the pleasant people we meet at Mrs.

Talbot's, is assumed," replied Irene, not at all moved by her

husband's earnestness.

"You may learn to your sorrow, when the knowledge comes too late,"

he responded, "that even more than I have assumed is true."

"I am not in fear of the sorrow," was answered lightly.

As Irene, against all argument, persuasion and remonstrance on the

part of her husband, persisted in her determination to go to Mrs.

Talbot's, he engaged a carriage to take her there and to call for

her at eleven o'clock.

"Come away alone," he said, with impressive earnestness, as he

parted from her. "Don't let any courteous offer induce you to accept

an attendant when you return home."