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    Chapter 27 - Page 2

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    disappointment she had caused him; and yet conscious
    also that that very ache was not the overwhelming penetrating
    emotion he perhaps wished it to be, but a pang on a par with a
    dozen others; and that even while he felt it he foresaw the day
    when he should cease to feel it. And she thought to herself
    that this certainty of oblivion must be bitterer than any
    certainty of pain.

    A silence had fallen between them. He broke it by rising from
    his seat, and saying with a shrug: "You'll end by driving me to
    marry Joan Senechal."

    Susy smiled. "Well, why not? She's lovely."

    "Yes; but she'll bore me."

    "Poor Streff! So should I--"

    "Perhaps. But nothing like as soon--" He grinned sardonically.
    "There'd be more margin." He appeared to wait for her to speak.
    "And what else on earth are you going to do?" he concluded, as
    she still remained silent.

    "Oh, Streff, I couldn't marry you for a reason like that!" she
    murmured at length.

    "Then marry me, and find your reason afterward."

    Her lips made a movement of denial, and still in silence she
    held out her hand for good-bye. He clasped it, and then turned
    away; but on the threshold he paused, his screwed-up eyes fixed
    on her wistfully.

    The look moved her, and she added hurriedly: "The only reason I
    can find is one for not marrying you. It's because I can't yet
    feel unmarried enough."

    "Unmarried enough? But I thought Nick was doing his best to
    make you feel that."

    "Yes. But even when he has--sometimes I think even that won't
    make any difference."

    He still scrutinized her hesitatingly, with the gravest eyes she
    had ever seen in his careless face.

    "My dear, that's rather the way I feel about you," he said
    simply as he turned to go.

    That evening after the children had gone to bed Susy sat up late
    in the cheerless sitting-room. She was not thinking of
    Strefford but of Nick. He was coming to Paris--perhaps he had
    already arrived. The idea that he might be in the same place

    with her at that very moment, and without her knowing it, was so
    strange and painful that she felt a violent revolt of all her
    strong and joy-loving youth. Why should she go on suffering so
    unbearably, so abjectly, so miserably? If only she could see
    him, hear his voice, even hear him say again such cruel and
    humiliating words as he had spoken on that dreadful day in
    Venice when that would be better than this blankness, this utter
    and final exclusion from his life! He had been cruel to her,
    unimaginably cruel: hard, arrogant, unjust; and had been so,
    perhaps, deliberately, because he already wanted to be free.
    But she was ready to face even that possibility, to humble
    herself still farther than he
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