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    Chapter 14 - Page 2

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    to release her tension.

    "I thought you weren't keeping up to the mark. You-- It's jolly of you to confide in me. Still--" Then, with incredible and obviously deliberate stupidity, and a voice as flat as her own, he asked, "Who is the man?"

    Her spirit raged within her at the dumbness, the paralysis that had fallen upon her. Grace, confidence, the power of movement even, seemed gone from her. A fever of shame ran through her being. Horrible doubts assailed her. She sat down awkwardly and helplessly on one of the little stools by her table and covered her face with her hands.

    "Can't you SEE how things are?" she said.

    Part 2

    Before Capes could answer her in any way the door at the end of the laboratory opened noisily and Miss Klegg appeared. She went to her own table and sat down. At the sound of the door Ann Veronica uncovered a tearless face, and with one swift movement assumed a conversational attitude. Things hung for a moment in an awkward silence.

    "You see," said Ann Veronica, staring before her at the window-sash, "that's the form my question takes at the present time."

    Capes had not quite the same power of recovery. He stood with his hands in his pockets looking at Miss Klegg's back. His face was white. "It's--it's a difficult question." He appeared to be paralyzed by abstruse acoustic calculations. Then, very awkwardly, he took a stool and placed it at the end of Ann Veronica's table, and sat down. He glanced at Miss Klegg again, and spoke quickly and furtively, with eager eyes on Ann Veronica's face.

    "I had a faint idea once that things were as you say they are, but the affair of the ring--of the unexpected ring--puzzled me. Wish SHE"--he indicated Miss Klegg's back with a nod--"was at the bottom of the sea. . . . I would like to talk to you about this--soon. If you don't think it would be a social outrage, perhaps I might walk with you to your railway station."

    "I will wait," said Ann Veronica, still not looking at him, "and we will go into Regent's Park. No--you shall come with me to Waterloo."

    "Right!" he said, and hesitated, and then got up and went into the preparation-room.

    Part 3

    For a time they walked in silence through the back streets that lead southward from the College. Capes bore a face of infinite perplexity.

    "The thing I feel most disposed to say, Miss Stanley," he began at last, "is that this is very sudden."

    "It's been coming on since first I came into the laboratory."

    "What do you want?" he asked, bluntly.

    "You!" said Ann Veronica.

    The sense of publicity, of people coming and going about them, kept them both unemotional. And neither had any of that theatricality which demands gestures and facial expression.

    "I suppose you know I like you tremendously?" he pursued.

    "You told me that in the Zoological Gardens."
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