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followed the operations of the Banker! He watched her when her fifty francs were swept away, and noted the calm manner with which she immediately took five louis from her pile, and pushed them, with her little rake, well on to the table. But before the dealer of the cards had spoken the fateful words: "_Le jeu est fait. Rien ne va plus!_" Mrs. Bailey uttered an exclamation under her breath, and hurriedly rose from her chair. She had suddenly seen Chester--seen his eyes fixed on her with a perplexed, angry look in them, and the look had made her wince. Forgetting that she still had a stake on the green cloth, she turned away from the table and began making her way round the edge of the circle. For a moment Chester lost sight of her--there were so many people round the table. He went on staring, hardly knowing what he was doing, at the four pounds she had left on the green cloth. The cards were quickly dealt, and the fateful, to Chester the incomprehensible, words were quickly uttered. Chester saw that Sylvia, unknowing of the fact, had won--that five louis were added to her original stake. The fair-haired Frenchman in evening dress by whom Mrs. Bailey had been sitting looked round; not seeing her, he himself swept up the stake and slipped the ten louis into his pocket. "Bill! You here? I had quite given you up! I thought you had missed the train--at any rate, I never thought you would come out to Lacville as late as this." The bright colour, which was one of Sylvia's chief physical attributes, had faded from her cheeks. She looked pale, and her heart was beating uncomfortably. She would have given almost anything in the world for Bill Chester not to have come down to the Club and caught her like this--"caught" was the expression poor Sylvia used to herself. "I am so sorry," she went on, breathlessly, "so very sorry! What a wretch you must have thought me! But I have got you such a nice room in a pension where a friend of mine was for a time. I couldn't get you anything at the Villa du Lac. But you can have all your meals with me there. It's such good cooking, and there's a lovely garden, Bill--" Chester said nothing. He was still looking at her, trying to readjust his old ideas and ideals of Sylvia Bailey to her present environment. Sylvia suddenly grew very red. After all, Bill Chester was not her keeper! He had no right to look as angry, as--as disgusted as he was now doing. Then there came to
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