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Stevenson, Burton Egbert, 1872-1962

"Affairs of State"

A man should try to deserve it"
"And you're going to try?" asked Susie, looking at him with something
very like adoration in her eyes.
"I am going to try--yes," he answered. "But I shall need help--I am
afraid I should not make a success of it by myself."
And then he fell silent, for they had reached the end of the promenade,
where the others joined them.


CHAPTER XVII

The Duchess to the Rescue
It may be that Lord Vernon had been so fortunate as to find a topic of
conversation equally absorbing; at any rate, Nell entered the hotel with
her sister rather subdued and tremulous, and they mounted to their rooms
in silence. A week before, they would probably have thrown themselves
into each other's arms and kissed each other and cuddled each other and
cried over each other, without precisely knowing why, or, at least,
without troubling to put the reason into words. But the events of the
past few days had, imperceptibly, wrought a change in their relations.
An impalpable veil had come between them, a subtle dissonance in point
of view. They were pledged, as it were, to rival interests.
A woman who has no other confidante will, invariably, seek counsel and
sympathy of her own reflected self; and if so it was in this case, for
each of our two heroines went straight to her room, and locked the door,
and sat down before her glass, and, chin in hands, communed long and
earnestly with the image pictured there, gazing deep into its eyes, and
thinking unutterable thoughts, which completely defy transcription.


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