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an I can tell you. But I can't go on because I've lost my model." She had an almost hopeful stare. "Is he beautifully dead?" Her brother laughed out at the candid cheerfulness, hopefulness almost, with which this inquiry broke from her. "He's only dead to me. He has gone away." "Where has he gone?" "I haven't the least idea." "Why, have you quarrelled?"--Biddy shone again. "Quarrelled? For what do you take us? Docs the nightingale quarrel with the moon?" "I needn't ask which of you is the moon," she said. "Of course I'm the nightingale. But, more literally," Nick continued, "Nash has melted back into the elements--he's part of the great air of the world." And then as even with this lucidity he saw the girl still mystified: "I've a notion he has gone to India and at the present moment is reclining on a bank of flowers in the vale of Cashmere." Biddy had a pause, after which she dropped: "Julia will be glad--she dislikes him so." "If she dislikes him why should she be glad he's so enviably placed?" "I mean about his going away. She'll be glad of that." "My poor incorrigible child," Nick cried, "what has Julia to do with it?" "She has more to do with things than you think," Biddy returned with all her bravery. Yet she had no sooner uttered the words than she perceptibly blushed. Hereupon, to attenuate the foolishness of her blush--only it had the opposite effect--she added: "She thinks he has been a bad element in your life." Nick emitted a long strange sound. "She thinks perhaps, but she doesn't think enough; otherwise she'd arrive at this better thought--that she knows nothing whatever about my life." "Ah brother," the girl pleaded with solemn eyes, "you don't imagine what an interest she takes in it. She has told me many times--she has talked lots to me about it." Biddy paused and then went on, an anxious little smile shining through her gravity as if from a cautious wonder as to how much he would take: "She has a conviction it was Mr. Nash who made trouble between you." "Best of little sisters," Nick pronounced, "those are thoroughly second-rate ideas, the result of a perfectly superficial view. Excuse my possibly priggish tone, but they really attribute to my dear detached friend a part he's quite incapable of playing. He can neither make trouble nor take trouble; no trouble could ever either have come out of him or have got into him. Moreover," our young man continued, "if Julia
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