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t of a curious weird Roumanian thing, and Norris made straight for the piano. Lena, ethereal in pale blue, was sympathetically listening to perfection. She had lost her look of incongruity with her surroundings. The dreamy eyes and the transparent skin found their setting in her filmy gown and the rich soft light. Dick drew in his breath. He seemed never to get used to her. Naturally he found a seat near her. She was his protegee. "Don't you sing, Miss Quincy?" was his inevitable query. And she replied with inward anguish, "Not at all." "But I'm sure you do. You look like incarnate song," he persisted. "You're playing modest." Lena cast down her eyes and said, "I am a very truthful little girl." "Have you had a good time here?" Then she looked up with kindling face. "Oh, so good! You can't know how I thank you, Mr. Percival. I know I owe it to you. I feel as though I were breathing the air I belong in, at last. It's so different from--but you know all about my life," said Lena brokenly. "And Mrs. Lenox is so sweet and kind, I just love her!" "And Miss Elton?" Lena stiffened and made no reply for an instant. "Miss Elton is quite as clever as you men, isn't she?" Lena asked, in quite another tone of voice. "Infinitely more so," said Dick cordially. "Do you like it?" she asked in a breathless way. "Why, yes, in Madeline," he answered. "She isn't a bit priggish, you know, but just naturally interested in everything good. Why? Don't you and she get on?" Lena gave an uneasy little twist as though she did not enjoy the question, and she sighed. "Why, frankly, I don't wholly. It's my own stupid little fault, of course. I'm not clever. She's very charming; but she gets a little tiresome to me." "Does she?" said Dick ponderingly. "It's very hateful of me to say such things about your particular friend," said Lena contritely. "Besides, I don't mean--what do I mean? I never thought it out. But it's so easy to tell you everything, Mr. Percival. And I think it's rather nice for a girl to be more silly and inconsequential part of the time." She laughed in a gurgling little fashion. "I believe it is," said Dick speculatively, as he looked at her. "But Madeline's awfully jolly, you know. I've had more good times with her than with any other girl I know. No nonsense about her." "That's it,--no nonsense," said Lena, and this time her laugh was not so pleasant; and Dick glanced across at Madeline w
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