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ure sausage, isn't it? And it will all come undone when I let go of it," she added apprehensively. "If you'll be so good as just to wet the edge with your lips," he said, in a matter-of-fact way. She looked at him, and a faint dash of color came into her face. "You won't like to smoke it afterward," she said coolly. He stared at her, then smiled. "Try me!" he said succinctly. She gave a little shrug of the shoulders, moistened the cigarette in the usual way, and handed it to him gravely. "I'll try to make the next better," she said. "I suppose you will want another?" "I'm afraid I shall want more than you will be inclined to make," he said, "and I shouldn't like to trespass on your good nature." "Oh, it's not very hard work making cigarettes," she said. "I'd better set about the next at once. How is that?" and she held up the production for inspection. "Simply perfect," he said. "You would amass a fortune out in the East as a cigarette maker." She looked up at him, beyond him, wistfully. "I wish I could amass a fortune; indeed, I'd be content if I could earn my living any way," she said, as if she were communing with herself rather than addressing him. "If I could earn some money, and help Dick!" Her voice died away, and she sighed softly. He regarded her dreamily. "Don't think of anything so--unnatural," he said. She raised her eyes, and looked at him with surprise. "Is it unnatural for a woman--a girl--to earn her own living?" she said. "Yes," he said emphatically. "Women were made for men to work for, not to toil themselves." Nell laughed, in simple mockery of the sentiment. "What nonsense! As if we were dolls or something to be wrapped up in lavender! Why, half the women in Shorne Mills work! You see them driving their donkeys down to the beach for sand--haven't you seen them with bags on each side?--and doing washing, and making butter and going to market. Why, I should have to work if anything happened to mamma. At least, she has often said so. She has--what is it?--oh, an annuity or something of the kind; and if she died, Dick and I would have to 'face the world,' as she puts it." He said nothing, but looked at her through the thin blue cloud of his cigarette. She looked so sweet, so girlish, so--yes, so helpless--lying there in the sunlight, one brown paw supporting her shapely head, the other--after the manner of girls--dabbling in the water. A pang of compassion
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