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    Chapter 22 - Page 2

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    as Madame de Chantelle and her grandson had been reconciled, and Darrow was eager to go into the question at once, since it was necessary that the preparations for his marriage should go forward as rapidly as possible. Anna, he knew, would not seek any farther pretext for delay; and he strolled up and down contentedly in the sunshine, certain that she would come out and reassure him as soon as the reunited family had claimed its due share of her attention.

    But when she finally joined him her first word was for the younger lovers.

    "I want to thank you for what you've done for Owen," she began, with her happiest smile.

    "Who--I?" he laughed. "Are you confusing me with Miss Painter?"

    "Perhaps I ought to say for me," she corrected herself. "You've been even more of a help to us than Adelaide."

    "My dear child! What on earth have I done?"

    "You've managed to hide from Madame de Chantelle that you don't really like poor Sophy."

    Darrow felt the pallour in his cheek. "Not like her? What put such an idea into your head?"

    "Oh, it's more than an idea--it's a feeling. But what difference does it make, after all? You saw her in such a different setting that it's natural you should be a little doubtful. But when you know her better I'm sure you'll feel about her as I do."

    "It's going to be hard for me not to feel about everything as you do."

    "Well, then--please begin with my daughter-in-law!"

    He gave her back in the same tone of banter: "Agreed: if you ll agree to feel as I do about the pressing necessity of our getting married."

    "I want to talk to you about that too. You don't know what a weight is off my mind! With Sophy here for good, I shall feel so differently about leaving Effie. I've seen much more accomplished governesses--to my cost!--but I've never seen a young thing more gay and kind and human. You must have noticed, though you've seen them so little together, how Effie expands when she's with her. And that, you know, is what I want. Madame de Chantelle will provide the necessary restraint." She clasped her hands on his arm. "Yes, I'm ready to go with you now. But first of all--this very moment!--you must come with me to Effie. She knows, of course, nothing of what's been happening; and I want her to be told first about you."

    Effie, sought throughout the house, was presently traced to the school-room, and thither Darrow mounted with Anna. He had never seen her so alight with happiness, and he had caught her buoyancy of mood. He kept repeating to himself: "It's over--it's over," as if some monstrous midnight hallucination had been routed by the return of day.


    As they approached the school-room door the terrier's barks came to them through laughing remonstrances.

    "She's giving him his dinner," Anna whispered, her hand in Darrow's.

    "Don't forget the gold-fish!" they heard another
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