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the china shall be hand-painted." "You won't mind my leaving you for five seconds," said Mr. Dod, suddenly exploring his breast-pocket; "the train doesn't leave for a quarter of an hour yet, and I find I haven't a smoke about me," and he opened the door. "Not more that five seconds then," I said, for nothing is more trying to the nerves than to wait for a train which is due in a few minutes and a man who is buying cigars at the same time. Dicky left the door open, and that was how I heard a strangely familiar voice, with an inflexion of enforced calm and repression, suddenly address him from behind it. "_Good evening, Dod!_" I did not shriek, or even grasp Isabel's hand. I simply got up and stood a little nearer the door. But I have known few moments so electrical. "My dear chap, how _are_ you?" exclaimed Dicky. "How are you? Staying in Cologne? I'm just off to Paris." I thought I heard a heavy sigh, but it was somewhat lost in the trundling of the porters' trucks. "Then," said Arthur Page, for I had not been deceived, "it is as I supposed." "What did you suppose, old chap?" asked Dicky in a joyous and expansive tone. "You do not go alone?" The bitterness of this was not a thing that could be communicated to paper and ink. "Why, no," said Dicky, "the fact is----" I saw the wave--it was characteristic--with which Mr. Page stopped him. "I have been made acquainted with the facts," he said. "Do not dwell upon them. I do not, cannot, blame you, if you have really won her heart." "So far as I know," said Dicky, with some hauteur, "there's nothing in it to give _you_ the hump." "Why waste time in idle words?" replied Arthur. "You will lose your train. I could never forgive myself if I were the cause of that." "You won't be," said Dicky sententiously, looking at his watch. "But I must ask--must demand--the privilege of one parting word," said Arthur firmly. "Do not be apprehensive of any painful scene. I desire only to wish her every happiness, and to bid her farewell." Mr. Dod, though on the eve of his wedding day, was not wholly oblivious of the love affairs of other people. I could see a new-born and overwhelming comprehension of the situation in his face as he put his head in at the door and beckoned to Isabel. Evidently he could not trust himself to speak. "Miss Portheris," he said, with magnificent self-control, "Mr. Page. Mr. Page would like to wish you every happiness and t
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