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of the country roads got in his blood, and he bent toward her, she found no encouragement in his words:--"I am mad about you to-night." She took her courage in her hands:--"Then why give me up for some one else?" "That's--different." "Why is it different? I am a woman. I--I love you, Max. No one else will ever care as I do." "You are in love with the Lamb!" "That was a trick. I'm sorry, Max. I don't care for anyone else in the world. If you let me go I'll want to die." Then, as he was silent:-- "If you'll marry me, I'll be true to you all my life. I swear it. There will be nobody else, ever." The sense, if not the words, of what he had sworn to Sidney that Sunday afternoon under the trees, on this very road! Swift shame overtook him, that he should be here, that he had allowed Carlotta to remain in ignorance of how things really stood between them. "I'm sorry, Carlotta. It's impossible. I'm engaged to marry some one else." "Sidney Page?"--almost a whisper. "Yes." He was ashamed at the way she took the news. If she had stormed or wept, he would have known what to do. But she sat still, not speaking. "You must have expected it, sooner or later." Still she made no reply. He thought she might faint, and looked at her anxiously. Her profile, indistinct beside him, looked white and drawn. But Carlotta was not fainting. She was making a desperate plan. If their escapade became known, it would end things between Sidney and him. She was sure of that. She needed time to think it out. It must become known without any apparent move on her part. If, for instance, she became ill, and was away from the hospital all night, that might answer. The thing would be investigated, and who knew-- The car turned in at Schwitter's road and drew up before the house. The narrow porch was filled with small tables, above which hung rows of electric lights enclosed in Japanese paper lanterns. Midweek, which had found the White Springs Hotel almost deserted, saw Schwitter's crowded tables set out under the trees. Seeing the crowd, Wilson drove directly to the yard and parked his machine. "No need of running any risk," he explained to the still figure beside him. "We can walk back and take a table under the trees, away from those infernal lanterns." She reeled a little as he helped her out. "Not sick, are you?" "I'm dizzy. I'm all right." She looked white. He felt a stab of pity for her. She leaned rather
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