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only the vilest hypocrisy," replied Sophia, turning very pale, and looking her father full in the face, like a person prepared to do battle.

"I am very sorry to hear this, Sophia," said Mr. Granger; "for if this is really the case, it will be necessary for you to seek some other home. I will have no one in my house who can not value my wife."

"Has she gone there this afternoon, do you think?" he asked.

"I think it is excessively probable. Warman tells me she has been there every afternoon during your absence."

"She must have taken a strange fancy to these people. Austin's wife is some old school-fellow of Clary's, perhaps."

Miss Granger shook her head doubtfully. "I should hardly think that."

"You would turn me out of doors, papa?" "I should certainly endeavor to provide you with a more congenial-congenial, that was the "There must be some reason-something that word you used, I think-a more congenial home." we can not understand. She may have some del"Indeed!" exclaimed Sophia. "Then I sup-icacy about talking to me of these people; there

pose you quite approve of all my stepmother's conduct of her frequent, almost daily visits to such a person as Mr. Austin?"

"Clarissa's visits to Austin! What, in Heaven's name, do you mean?"

"What, papa! is it possible you are ignorant of the fact? I thought that, though my stepmother never talked to me of her visits to the Rue du Chevalier Bayard, you of course knew all about them. Though I hardly supposed you would encourage such an intimacy.'

"Encourage such an intimacy! You must be dreaming, girl. My wife visit a portrait-painter -a single man?"

"He is not a single man, papa. There is a wife, I understand; though he never mentioned her to us. And Clarissa visits them almost every day.

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"I don't believe it. What motive could she have for cultivating such people?"

"I can't imagine-except that she is fond of that kind of society, and of painting. She may have gone to take lessons of Mr. Austin. He teaches, I know."

may be something in their circumstances to-"
"Yes," said Miss Granger, "there is something,
no doubt. I have been assured of that from the
first."

"What did you say the address was?"
"The Rue du Chevalier Bayard, No. 7."
Mr. Granger left the room without another
word. He was not a man to remain long in
doubt upon any question that could be solved by
prompt investigation. He went out into the hall,
where a footman sat reading Galignani in the
lamp-light.

"Has Mrs. Granger's carriage come back, Saunders ?" he asked.

"Yes, Sir; the carriage has been back a quarter of an hour. I were out with my mistress." "Where is Mrs. Granger? In her own rooms?" "No, Sir; Mrs. Granger didn't come home in the carriage. We drove her to the Shangs Elysy first, Sir, and afterward to the Rue du Cavalier Baynard; and Mr. Fairfax, he came down and told me my mistress wouldn't want the carriage to take her home."

"Mr. Fairfax-in the Rue du Chevalier Bay

"Yes, Sir; he's an intimate friend of Mr. Hos. tin's, I believe. Leastways, we've seen him there very often."

Daniel Granger was silent. It was not impos-ard!" sible; and it would have been no crime on his wife's part, of course. But the idea that Clarissa could have done such a thing without his knowledge and approval offended him beyond measure, He could hardly realize the possibility of such an

act.

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"There is some misapprehension on your part, Sophia, I am convinced," he said. If Clarissa had wished to take drawing-lessons from Austin, she would have told me so.'

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"There is no possibility of a mistake on my part, papa. I am not in the habit of making statements which I can not support." "Who told you of these visits? Clarissa herself?"

George Fairfax! George Fairfax, a frequent guest of these people whom she visited! That slumbering demon, which had been sheltered in Daniel Granger's breast so long, arose rampant at the sound of this name. George Fairfax, the man he suspected in the past-the man whom he had done his best to keep out of his wife's pathway in the present, but who, by some fatality, was not to be avoided. Had Clarissa cultivated an intimacy with this Bohemian painter and his wife only for the sake of meeting George Fairfax without her husband's knowledge? To suppose "Oh dear, no; Clarissa is not in the habit of this was to imagine a depth of depravity in the telling me her affairs. I heard it from Warman; heart of the woman he loved. And he had benot in reply to any questioning of mine, I can as- lieved her so pure, so noble a creature. The blow sure you. But the thing has been so frequent was heavy. He stood looking at his servant for that the servants have begun to talk about it. Of a moment or so, paralyzed; but except that one course, I always make a point of discouraging any blank gaze, he gave no sign of his emotion. He speculations upon my stepmother's conduct." only took up his hat, and went quietly out. "His looks was orful!" the man said afterward, in the servants' hall.

The servants had begun to talk; his wife's intimacy with people of whom he knew scarcely any thing had been going on so long as to provoke the gossip of the household, and he had heard nothing of it until this moment. The thought stung him to the quick. That domestic slander should have been busy with her name already; that she should have lived her own life so entirely without reference to him! Both thoughts were alike bitYet it was no new thing for him to know that she did not love him.

ter.

He looked at his watch meditatively.

Sophia came out of the drawing-room to look for her father, just a little disturbed by the thought of what she had done. She had gone too far, perhaps. There had been something in her father's look when he asked her for that address that had alarmed her. He was gone-gone there, no doubt, to discover his wife's motives for those strange visits. Miss Granger's heart was not often fluttered as it was this evening. She could not "settle to any thing," as she said herself, but wan

dered up into the nursery, and stood by the dain- | ment, I'll just run and see if-if Austin has come ty little cot, staring absently at her baby brother in again. as he slept.

"If any thing should happen," she thoughtand that event which she vaguely foreshadowed was one that would leave the child motherless"I should make it my duty to superintend his rearing. No one should have power to say that I was jealous of the brother who has robbed me of my heritage."

CHAPTER XLI.

CAUGHT IN A TRAP.

He went quickly out of the room and down stairs, not to look for Austin Lovel, who was on his way to Brussels by this time, but to tell Mrs. Granger's coachman she had no farther use for the carriage, and would not be home to dinner. The man looked a little surprised at this order, but Mr. Fairfax's tone was too peremptory to be unauthorized; so he drove homeward without hesitation.

Clarissa was seated in her favorite easy-chair, looking pensively at the wood-fire, when George Fairfax came back. She heard his returning footsteps, and the sharp click of a key turning in the outer door. This sound set her wondering. What door was that being locked, and by whom?

Ir was dusk when Clarissa's carriage drove into the Rue du Chevalier Bayard-the dull-gray Mr. Fairfax came into the painting-room. It gloaming of February-and the great bell of No- was the crisis of his life, he told himself. If he tre Dame was booming five. She had been pay- failed to obtain some promise from her to-night ing visits of duty, talking banalités in fashion-—some definite pledge of his future happinessable drawing-rooms, and she was weary. She he could never hope to succeed. seemed to breathe a new life as she approached her brother's dwelling. Here there would be the free, reckless utterance of minds that harmonized, of souls that sympathized-instead of stereotyped little scraps of gossip about the great world, or arid discussion of new plays and famous operasingers.

She did not stop to ask any questions of the complacent porter. It was not her habit to do So. She had never yet failed to find Austin, or Austin's wife, at home at this hour. She went swiftly up the darksome staircase, where never a lamp was lighted to illumine the stranger, only an occasional candle thrust out of a door-way by some friendly hand. In the dusk of this particular evening there was not so much as a glim

mer.

The outer door was ajar-not such an uncommon thing as to occasion any surprise to Clarissa. She pushed it open and went in, across a dingy lobby some four feet square, on which abutted the kitchen, and into the salon. This was dark and empty; but one of the folding-doors leading into the painting-room was open, and she saw the warm glow of the fire shining on the old Flemish cabinets and the brazen chandelier. That glow of fire-light had a comfortable look after the desolation and darkness of the salon.

She went into the painting-room. There was a tall figure standing by one of the windows, looming gigantic through the dusk-a figure she knew very well, but not Austin's. She looked quickly round the room, expecting to see her brother lounging by the chimney-piece, or wandering about somewhere in his desultory way; but there was no one else, only that tall figure by the window.

The silence and emptiness of the place, and his presence, startled her a little.

"Good-evening, Mr. Fairfax," she said. "Isn't Austin here ?"

"Not at this moment. How do you do, Mrs. Granger?" and they shook hands. So commonplace a meeting might almost have disappointed the sentimental porter.

"And Bessie ?"

"She too is out of the way for the moment," replied George Fairfax, glancing out of the window. "You came in your carriage, I suppose, Mrs. Granger? If you'll excuse me for a mo

"Time and I against any two," he had said to himself sometimes in relation to this business. He had been content to bide his time; but the golden opportunity had come at last. If he failed tonight, he failed forever.

"Is he coming?" Clarissa asked, rather anxiously. There was something ominous in the stillness of the place, and the absence of any sign of life except George Fairfax's presence.

"Not immediately. Don't alarm yourself," he said, hurriedly, as Clarissa rose with a frightened look. "There is nothing really wrong, only there are circumstances that I felt it better to break to you gently. Yet I fear I am an awkward hand at doing that, at the best. The fact is, your brother has left Paris." "Left Paris!"

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'Yes, only a couple of hours ago." And then Mr. Fairfax went on to tell the story of Austin's departure, making as light of it as he could, and with no word of that letter which had been given him to deliver.

The news was a shock to Clarissa. Very well did she remember what her brother had told her about the probability of his being compelled to "cut Paris." It had come, then, some new disgrace, and banished him from the city he lovedthe city in which his talents had won for him a budding reputation, that might have blossomed into fame, if he had only been a wiser and a better man. She heard George Fairfax in silence, her head bowed with shame. This man was her brother, and she loved him so dearly.

"Do you know where they have gone?" she asked at last.

"To Brussels. He may do very well there, no doubt, if he will only keep himself steady-turn his back upon the rackety society he is so fond of-and work honestly at his art. It is a place where they can live more cheaply, too, than they could here."

"I am so sorry they are gone without a word of parting. It must have been very sudden."

"Yes. I believe the necessity for the journey arose quite suddenly; or it may have been hanging over your brother for a long time, and he may have shut his eyes to the fact until the last moment. He is such a fellow for taking things easily. However, he did not enter into explanations with me.

"Poor Austin! What a wretched life!" Clarissa rose and moved slowly toward the folding-doors. George Fairfax stopped her at the threshold, and quietly closed the door.

"Don't go yet, Clarissa. I want to speak to you."

His tone told her what was coming-the scene in the conservatory was to be acted over again. This was the first time they had been actually alone since that too-well-remembered night. She drew herself up haughtily. A woman's weakness makes her desperate in such a case as this.

"I have no time to talk now, Mr. Fairfax. am going home."

I

"Not yet, Clarissa. I have waited a long time for this chance. I am determined to say my say.' ." "You will not compel me to listen to you?" "Compel is a very hard word. I beseech you to hear me. My future life depends on what I have to say, and on your answer.'

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"I can not hear a word! I will not remain a moment!"

"The door yonder is locked, Clarissa, and the key in my pocket. Brutal, you will say. The circumstances of our lives have left me no option. I have watched and waited for such an opportunity as this; and now, Clarissa, you shall hear me. Do you remember that night in the orchard, when you drove me away by your coldness and obstinacy? And yet you loved me! You have owned it since. Ah, my darling, how I have hated myself for my dullness that night!-hated myself for not having seized you in my arms, if need were, and carried you off to the end of the world to make you my wife. What a fool and craven I must have been to be put off so easily!" 'Nothing can be more foolish than to discuss the past, Mr. Fairfax," replied Clarissa, in a low voice that trembled a little. "You have made me do wrong more than once in my life. There must be an end of this. What would my husband think, if he could hear you? what would he think of me for listening to you? Let me pass, if you please; and God grant that we may never meet again after to-night!"

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"God grant that we may never part, Clarissa! Oh, my love, my love, for pity's sake be reasonable! We are not children, to play fast and loose with our lives. You love me, Clary. No sweetspoken pretenses, no stereotyped denials, will convince me. You love me, my darling, and the world is all before us. I have mapped out our future; no sorrow or discredit shall ever come nigh you trust a lover's foresight for that. Whatever difficulties may lie in our pathway are difficulties that I will face and conquer-alone. You have only to forget that you have ever been Daniel Granger's wife, and leave Paris with me to-night.'

"Mr. Fairfax! are you mad?"

"Never more reasonable. -never so much in earnest. Come with me, Clarissa. It is not a sacrifice that I ask from you: I offer you a release. Do you think there is any virtue or beauty in your present life, or any merit in continuing it? From first to last, your existence is a lie. Do you think a wedding-ring redeems the honor of a woman who sells herself for money? There is no slavery more degrading than the bondage of such an alliance,"

"Open the door, Mr. Fairfax, and let me go!"

His reproaches stung her to the quick; they were so bitterly true.

"Not till you have heard me, my darling-not till you have heard me out."

His tone changed all at once, softening into ineffable tenderness. He told her of his love with words of deeper passion than he had ever spoken yet-words that went home to the heart that loved him. For a moment, listening to that impassioned pleading, it seemed to Clarissa that this verily was life indeed-that to be so loved was in itself alone the perfect joy and fullness of existence, leaving nothing more to be desired, making shame as nothing in the balance. that one moment the guilty heart was well-nigh yielding; the bewildered brain could scarcely maintain the conflict of thought and feeling. Then suddenly this mental agony changed to a strange dullness, a mist rose between Clarissa and the eager face of her lover. She was nearer fainting than she had ever been in her life before.

In

George Fairfax saw her face whiten, and the slender figure totter ever so slightly. In a moment a strong arm was round her. The weary head sank on his shoulder.

"My darling," he whispered, "why not leave Paris to-night? It can not be too soon. Your husband is away. We shall have a start of two or three days, and avoid all risk of pursuit."

"Not quite," said a voice close behind him; and looking round, George Fairfax saw one of the folding - doors open, and Daniel Granger standing on the threshold. The locked outer door had availed the traitor nothing. Mr. Granger had come up stairs with the porter, who carried a bunch of duplicate keys in his pocket.

Clarissa gave a sudden cry, which rose in the next instant to a shrill scream. Two men were struggling in the door-way, grappling each other savagely for one dreadful minute of confusion and agony. Then one fell heavily, his head crashing against the angle of the door-way, and lay at full length, with his white face looking up to the ceiling.

This was George Fairfax.

Clarissa threw herself upon her knees beside the prostrate figure.

"George! George!" she cried, piteously. It was the first time she had ever uttered his Christian name, except in her dreams; and yet it came to her lips as naturally in that moment of supreme agony as if it had been their every-day utterance.

"George! George!" she cried again, bending down to gaze at the white blank face dimly visible in the fire-light; and then, with a still sharper anguish, "He is dead!"

The sight of that kneeling figure, the sound of that piteous imploring voice, was well-nigh maddening to Daniel Granger. He caught his wife by the arm, and dragged her up from her knees with no tender hand.

"You have killed him," she said. "I hope I have."

Whatever latent passion there was in this man's nature was at white-heat now. An awful fury possessed him. He seemed transformed by the intensity of his anger. His bulky figure rose taller; his full gray eyes shone with a pitiless light under the straight, stern brows.

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"Yes," cried Clarissa, with a wild hysterical laugh, my lover! You are right. I am the most miserable woman upon earth, for I love him."

"I am glad you do not deny it. Stand out of the way, if you please, and let me see if I have killed him."

There were a pair of half-burned wax-candles on the mantel-piece. Mr. Granger lighted one of them, and then knelt down beside the prostrate figure with the candle in his hand. George Fairfax had given no sign of life as yet. There had not been so much as a groan.

He opened his enemy's waistcoat, and laid his hand above the region of the heart. Yes, there was life still-a dull beating. The wretch was not dead.

While he knelt thus, with his hand upon George Fairfax's heart, a massive chain, loosened from its moorings, fell across his wrist. Attached to the chain there was a locket—a large gold locket with a diamond cross-one of the ornaments that Daniel Granger had given to his wife.

He remembered it well. It was a very trifle among the gifts he had showered upon her; but he remembered it well. If this had been the one solitary gem he had given to his wife, he could not have been quicker to recognize it, or more certain of its identity.

He took it in the palm of his hand and touched the spring, holding the candle still in the other hand. The locket flew open, and he saw the ring of silky brown hair and the inscription, "From Clarissa."

He looked up at his wife with a smile-such a smile!

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You might have afforded your lover something better than a second-hand souvenir," he said. Clarissa's eyes wandered from the still white face, with its awful closed eyes, only to rest for a moment on the unlucky locket.

"I gave that to my sister-in-law," she said, indifferently. "Heaven only knows how he came by it." And then, in a different tone, she asked, "Why don't you do something for him? Why don't you fetch some one? Do you want him to die ?"

"Yes. Do you think any thing less than his death would satisfy me? Don't alarm yourself; I am not going to kill him. I was quite ready to do it just now in hot blood; but he is safe enough now. What good would there be in making an end of him? There are two of you in it." You can kill me, if you like," said Clarissa. 'Except for my child's sake, I have little wish to live."

"For your child's sake!" echoed her husband, scornfully. "Do you think there is any thing in common between my son and you, after tonight ?"

He dropped the locket on George Fairfax's breast with a contemptuous gesture, as if he had been throwing away a handful of dirt. That folly had cost dearly enough.

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"I'll go and fetch some one," he said. "Don't let your distraction make you forget that the man wants all the air he can get. You had better stand away from him.'

Clarissa obeyed mechanically. She stood a little way off, staring at that lifeless figure, while Daniel Granger went to fetch the porter. The house was large, and at this time in the evening for the most part untenanted, and Austin's painting-room was over the arched carriage-way. Thus it happened that no one had heard that fall of George Fairfax's.

Mr. Granger explained briefly that the gentleman had had a fall, and was stunned-would the porter fetch the nearest doctor? The man looked at him rather suspiciously. The lovely lady's arrival in the gloaming; a locked door; this middle-aged Englishman's eagerness to get into the rooms; and now a fall; and the young Englishman is disabled. The leaf out of a romance began to assume a darker aspect. There had been murder done, perhaps, up yonder. The porter's comprehensive vision surveyed the things that might be-the house fallen into evil repute by reason of this crime, and bereft of lodgers. porter was an elderly man, and did not care to shift his household gods.

The

"What have they come to do up there ?" he asked. “I think I had better fetch the sergent de ville."

"You are quite at liberty to do that, provided you bring a doctor along with him," replied Daniel Granger, coolly, and then turned on his heel and walked up stairs again.

He roamed through the empty rooms with a candle in his hand until he found a bottle of water, some portion of which he dashed into his enemy's face, kneeling by his side to do it, but with a cool off-hand air, as if he were reviving a dog, and that a dog upon which he set no value. George Fairfax opened his eyes, very slowly, and groaned aloud. "What a

"O God, my head!" he said. blow!"

He had a sensation of lying at the bottom of a steep hill-on a sharp inclined plane, as it were, with his feet uppermost-a sense of suffocation, too, as if his throat had been full of blood. There seemed to him to be blood in his eyes also; and he could only see things in a dim, cloudy way— a room-what room he could not remember-one candle flaring on the mantel-piece, and the light of an expiring fire.

Of the things that had happened to him immediately before that struggle and that fall, he had, for the time being, no memory. But by slow degrees it dawned upon him that this was Austin Lovel's painting-room.

"Where the devil are you, Austin ?" he asked, impatiently. "Can't you pick a fellow up?"

A grasp stronger than ever Austin Lovel's had been dragged him to his feet, and half led, half pushed him into the nearest chair. He sat there, staring blankly before him. Clarissa had moved away from him, and stood amidst the deep shadows at the other end of the studio, waiting for her doom. It seemed to her to matter very little what that doom should be. Perfect ruin had come upon her.

The porter came in presently with a doctor-a little old gray-headed man, who wore spectacles, and had an ancient doddering manner not calcu

lated to inspire beholders with any great belief in his capacity.

He bowed to Mr. Granger in an old-fashioned ceremonious way, and went over to the patient. "A fall, I believe you say, monsieur ?" he said.

"Yes, a fall. He struck his head against the angle of that door-way."

Mr. Granger omitted to state that it was a blow between the eyes from his clenched fist which had felled George Fairfax-a blow sent straight out from the powerful shoulder.

"There was no seizure-no fit of any kind, I hope ?"

"No."

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The Frenchman was manipulating Mr. Fairfax's cranium with cautious fingers.

"There is a considerable swelling at the back of the skull," he said. "But there appears to have been another blow on the forehead. There is a puffiness, and a slight abrasion of the skin." Mr. Fairfax extricated his head from this investigation by standing up suddenly, out of reach of the small doctor. He staggered a little as he rose to his feet, but recovered himself after a moment or so, and stood firmly enough, with his hand resting on the back of the chair.

"If you will be good enough to accept this by way of fee," he said, slipping a napoleon into the doctor's hand, "I need give you no farther trouble."

The old man looked rather suspiciously from Mr. Fairfax to Mr. Granger, and then back again. There was something queer in the business evidently, but a napoleon was a napoleon, and his fees were neither large nor numerous. He coughed feebly behind his hand, hesitated a little, and then with a sliding bow slipped from the room. The porter lingered, determined to see the end of the romance, at any rate.

It was not long. "Are you ready to come away?" Daniel Granger asked his wife, in a cold, stern voice. And then, turning to George Fairfax, he said, "You know where to find me, Sir, when you wish to settle the score between us."

"I shall call upon you to-morrow morning, Mr. Granger."

Clarissa looked at George Fairfax piteously for a moment, wondering if he had been much hurt -if there were any danger to be feared from the effects of that crushing fall. Never for an instant of her life had she meant to be false to her husband; but she loved this man; and her secret being discovered now, she deemed that the bond between her and Daniel Granger was broken. She looked at George Fairfax with that brief, yearning look, just long enough to see that he was deadly pale, and then left the room with her husband, obeying him mechanically. They went down the darksome staircase, which had grown so familiar to Clarissa, out into the empty street. There was a hackney carriage waiting near the archway-the carriage that had brought Mr.

Granger. He put his wife into it without a word, and took his seat opposite to her; and so they drove home, in profound silence.

Clarissa went straight to her room-the dressing-room in which Daniel Granger had talked to her the night before he went to England. How well she remembered his words, and her own inclination to tell him every thing! If she had only obeyed that impulse-if she had only confessed the truth-the shame and ignominy of tonight would have been avoided. There would have been no chance of that fatal meeting with George Fairfax; her husband would have sheltered her from danger and temptation-would have saved her from herself.

Vain regrets. The horror of that scene was still present with her-must remain so present with her till the end of her life, she thought. Those two men grappling each other, and then the fall-the tall figure crashing down with the force of a descending giant, as it had seemed to that terror-stricken spectator. For a long time she sat thinking of that awful moment-thinking of it with a concentration which left no capacity for any other thought in her mind. Her maid had come to her, and removed her out-of-door garments, and stirred the fire, and had set out a dainty little tea-tray on a table close at hand, hovering about her mistress with a sympathetic air, conscious that there was something amiss. But Clarissa had been hardly aware of the girl's presence. She was living over again the agony of that moment in which she thought George Fairfax was dead.

This could not last forever. She awoke byand-by to the thought of her child, with her husband's bitter words ringing in her ears:

"Do you think there is any thing in common between my son and you, after to-night ?" "Perhaps they will shut me out of my nursery," she thought.

The rooms sacred to Lovel Granger were on the same floor as her own-she had stipulated that it should be so. She went out into the corridor from which all the rooms opened. All was silent. The boy had gone to bed, of course, by this time: very seldom had she been absent at the hour of his retirement. It had been her habit to spend a stolen half-hour in the nursery just before dressing for dinner, or to have her boy brought to her dressing-room-one of the happiest halfhours in her day. No one barred her entrance to the nursery. Mrs. Brobson was sitting by the fire, making believe to be busy at needle-work, with the under-nurse in attendance-a buxom damsel, whose elbows rested on the table as she conversed with her superior. Both looked up in some slight confusion at Clarissa's entrance. They had been talking about her, she thought, but with a supreme indifference. No petty household slander could trouble her in her great sorrow. She went on toward the inner room, where her darling slept, the head-nurse following obsequiously with a candle. In the night-nursery there was only the subdued light of a shaded lamp.

"Thank you, Mrs. Brobson, but I don't want any more light," Clarissa said, quietly. "I am going to sit with baby for a little while. Take the candle away, please; it may wake him."

It was the first time she had spoken since she had left the Rue du Chevalier Bayard. Her own

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