"You have--eh? Well and good. But before I go home let me ask you, my

girl, to think if by any chance you throwing us over like this won't be

rather bad for your father later on? Just think it over."

He looked at his victim with an air of cunning mystery. She jumped up so

suddenly that he started back. Mrs. Fyne rose too, and even the spell

was removed from her husband. But the girl dropped again into the chair

and turned her head to look at Mrs. Fyne. This time it was no accidental

meeting of fugitive glances. It was a deliberate communication. To my

question as to its nature Mrs. Fyne said she did not know. "Was it

appealing?" I suggested. "No," she said. "Was it frightened, angry,

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crushed, resigned?" "No! No! Nothing of these." But it had frightened

her. She remembered it to this day. She had been ever since fancying

she could detect the lingering reflection of that look in all the girl's

glances. In the attentive, in the casual--even in the grateful

glances--in the expression of the softest moods.

"Has she her soft moods, then?" I asked with interest.

Mrs Fyne, much moved by her recollections, heeded not my inquiry. All

her mental energy was concentrated on the nature of that memorable

glance. The general tradition of mankind teaches us that glances occupy

a considerable place in the self-expression of women. Mrs. Fyne was

trying honestly to give me some idea, as much perhaps to satisfy her own

uneasiness as my curiosity. She was frowning in the effort as you see

sometimes a child do (what is delightful in women is that they so often

resemble intelligent children--I mean the crustiest, the sourest, the

most battered of them do--at times). She was frowning, I say, and I was

beginning to smile faintly at her when all at once she came out with

something totally unexpected.

"It was horribly merry," she said.

I suppose she must have been satisfied by my sudden gravity because she

looked at me in a friendly manner.

"Yes, Mrs. Fyne," I said, smiling no longer. "I see. It would have been

horrible even on the stage."

"Ah!" she interrupted me--and I really believe her change of attitude

back to folded arms was meant to check a shudder. "But it wasn't on the

stage, and it was not with her lips that she laughed."

"Yes. It must have been horrible," I assented. "And then she had to go

away ultimately--I suppose. You didn't say anything?"




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