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t I have uttered no thoughtless piece of rudeness. If I have, I beg you to forgive me.' She glanced at him. He appeared to speak seriously, and it was the kind of speech he would never have dreamed of making to her in former days, at all events in this tone. 'You know perfectly well,' she answered, with slow voice, bending to look more closely at a page, 'that you never said anything to me which could call for apology.' 'I am not so sure of that,' Wilfrid replied, smiling. 'Then take my assurance now,' said Beatrice, closing her book, and rising to move towards her aunt. As she went, she cast a look back, a look of curious blankness, as if into vacancy. She sang shortly after, and the souls of the politicians were stirred within them. For Wilfrid, he lay back with his eyes closed, his heart borne on the flood of music to that pale-windowed room of sickness, whose occupant must needs be so sadly pale. The security he felt in the knowledge that Emily grew better daily made him able to talk cheerfully and behave like one without preoccupation, but Emily in truth was never out of his mind. He lived towards the day when he should kneel at her feet, and feel once more upon his forehead those cold, pure lips. And that day, as he believed, was now very near. To her aunt's secret surprise, Beatrice allowed the end of the week to come and go without any allusion to the subject of departure. It was all the more strange, seeing that the girl's show of easy friendliness with Wilfrid had not lasted beyond the day; she had become as distant and self-centred as before. But on the morning of the following Tuesday, as Mrs. Baxendale sat reading not long after breakfast, Beatrice entered the room in her light travelling garb, and came forward, buttoning her glove. 'You are going out?' Mrs. Baxendale asked, with some misgiving. 'Yes--to London. They are calling a cab. You know how I dislike preparatory miseries.' Her aunt kept astonished silence. She looked at the girl, then down at her book. 'Well,' she said at length, 'it only remains to me to remember the old proverb. But when is the train? Are you off this moment?' 'The train leaves in five-and-twenty minutes. May I disturb uncle, do you think?' 'Ah, now I understand why you asked if he would be at home through the morning. I'll go and fetch him.' She went quickly to the library. Mr. Baxendale sat there alone. 'Beatrice is going,' she said, coming behind
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