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imself by the sofa, and taking Eva's hand. Eva soon found herself much better. Her father and uncle resumed their game, and the children were left together. "Do you know, Eva, I'm sorry papa is only going to stay two days here, and then I shan't see you again for ever so long! If I stay with you, I'd try to be good, and not be cross to Dodo, and so on. I don't mean to treat Dodo ill; but, you know, I've got such a quick temper. I'm not really bad to him, though. I give him a picayune, now and then; and you see he dresses well. I think, on the whole, Dodo 's pretty well off." "Would you think you were well off, if there were not one creature in the world near you to love you?" "I?--Well, of course not." "And you have taken Dodo away from all the friends he ever had, and now he has not a creature to love him;--nobody can be good that way." "Well, I can't help it, as I know of. I can't get his mother and I can't love him myself, nor anybody else, as I know of." "Why can't you?" said Eva. "_Love_ Dodo! Why, Eva, you wouldn't have me! I may _like_ him well enough; but you don't _love_ your servants." "I do, indeed." "How odd!" "Don't the Bible say we must love everybody?" "O, the Bible! To be sure, it says a great many such things; but, then, nobody ever thinks of doing them,--you know, Eva, nobody does." Eva did not speak; her eyes were fixed and thoughtful for a few moments. "At any rate," she said, "dear Cousin, do love poor Dodo, and be kind to him, for my sake!" "I could love anything, for your sake, dear Cousin; for I really think you are the loveliest creature that I ever saw!" And Henrique spoke with an earnestness that flushed his handsome face. Eva received it with perfect simplicity, without even a change of feature; merely saying, "I'm glad you feel so, dear Henrique! I hope you will remember." The dinner-bell put an end to the interview. CHAPTER XXIV Foreshadowings Two days after this, Alfred St. Clare and Augustine parted; and Eva, who had been stimulated, by the society of her young cousin, to exertions beyond her strength, began to fail rapidly. St. Clare was at last willing to call in medical advice,--a thing from which he had always shrunk, because it was the admission of an unwelcome truth. But, for a day or two, Eva was so unwell as to be confined to the house; and the doctor was called. Marie St. Clare had taken no notice of the child's gradually deca
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