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he answered, "that it isn't a habit of mine. But seriously----" "Well seriously?" "Isn't it your own fault a little? Why do you not tell me your address, and allow me to call upon you." "Why should I? I have told you that I do not wish for acquaintances in London." "Perhaps not in a general way," he answered calmly. "You are quite right, I think. Only I am not an acquaintance at all. I am an old friend, and I declined to be shelved." "Would you mind telling me," Anna asked, "how long I knew you in Paris?" He looked at her sideways. There was nothing to be learned from her face. "Well," he said slowly, "I had met you three times--before Drummond's dinner." "Oh, Drummond's dinner!" she repeated. "You were there, were you?" He laughed a little impatiently. "Isn't that rather a strange question--under the circumstances?" he asked quietly. Her cheeks flushed a dull red. She felt that there was a hidden meaning under his words. Yet her embarrassment was only a passing thing. She dismissed the whole subject with a little shrug of the shoulders. "We are both of us trenching upon forbidden ground," she said. "It was perhaps my fault. You have not forgotten----" "I have forgotten nothing?" he answered, enigmatically. Anna hailed a bus. He looked at her reproachfully. The bus however was full. They fell into step again. More than ever a sense of confusion was upon Ennison. "Last time I saw you," he reminded her, "you spoke, did you not, of obtaining some employment in London." "Quite true," she answered briskly, "and thanks to you I have succeeded." "Thanks to me," he repeated, puzzled. "I don't understand." "No? But it is very simple. It was you who were so much amazed that I did not try--the music hall stage here." "You must admit," he declared, "that to us--who had seen you--the thought of your trying anything else was amazing." "At any rate," she declared, "your remarks decided me. I have an engagement with a theatrical agent--I believe for the 'Unusual'." "You are going to sing in London?" he said quietly. "Yes." For a moment or two he did not speak. Glancing towards him she saw that a shadow had fallen upon his face. "Tell me," she insisted, "why you look like that. You are afraid--that here in London--I shall not be a success. It is that, is it not?" "No," he answered readily. "It is not that. The idea of your being a failure would never have occurred to me."
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