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iable to be turned out at the college will?' 'It may be so,' said the attorney. 'Then, if you please, what is the meaning of her absence when requested by one of the Fellows of the college to attend?' 'I am here to represent her,' said Mr. Fishwick. 'Represent her! Represent a college laundress! Pooh! I never heard of such a thing.' 'But, sir, I am her legal adviser, and--' 'Legal adviser!' Mr. Thomasson retorted, turning purple--he was really puzzled. 'A bedmaker with a legal adviser! It's the height of impudence! Begone, sir, and take it from me, that the best advice you can give her is to attend me within the hour.' Mr. Fishwick looked rather blue. 'If it has nothing to do with her property,' he said reluctantly, and as if he had gone too far. 'Property!' said Mr. Thomasson, gasping. 'Or her affairs.' 'Affairs!' the tutor cried. 'I never heard of a bedmaker having affairs.' 'Well,' said the lawyer doggedly, and with the air of a man goaded into telling what he wished to conceal, 'she is leaving Oxford. That is the fact.' 'Oh!' said Mr. Thomasson, falling on a sudden into the minor key. 'And her daughter?' 'And her daughter.' 'That is unfortunate,' the tutor answered, thoughtfully rubbing his hands. 'The truth is--the girl proved so good a nurse in the case of my noble friend who was injured the other day--my lord Viscount Dunborough's son, a most valuable life--that since she absented herself, he has not made the same progress. And as I am responsible for him--' 'She should never have attended him!' the attorney answered with unexpected sharpness. 'Indeed! And why not, may I ask?' the tutor inquired. Mr. Fishwick did not answer the question. Instead, 'She would not have gone to him in the first instance,' he said, 'but that she was under a misapprehension.' 'A misapprehension?' 'She thought that the duel lay at her door,' the attorney answered; 'and in that belief was impelled to do what she could to undo the consequences. Romantic, but a most improper step!' 'Improper!' said the tutor, much ruffled. 'And why, sir?' 'Most improper,' the attorney repeated in a dry, business-like tone. 'I am instructed that the gentleman had for weeks past paid her attentions which, his station considered, could scarcely be honourable, and of which she had more than once expressed her dislike. Under those circumstances, to expose her to his suit--but no more need be said,' the attorney
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