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    Chapter 15 - Page 2

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    meet it.

    "Before I cross the sea," was his thought, "I would see her once again
    if chance so favors me. I would see if there seems any new thing in her
    face, and if there is--if this is no wild jest and comedy, but means
    that she has wakened to knowing herself a woman--I shall know when I
    see her eyes and can carry my thought away with me. Then when I come
    back--'twill be but a few months at the most--I will ride into
    Gloucestershire the first week I am on English soil, and I will go to
    her and ask that I may be her servant until she learns what manner of
    man I am and can tell me to go--or stay."

    If Sir Jeoffry and his crew had dreamed that such a thought worked in
    the mind of one of the richest young noblemen in England--he a Duke and
    handsome enough to set any woman's heart beating--as he rode through
    the Gloucestershire lanes; if they had dreamed that such a thing was
    within the bounds of human possibility, what a tumult would have been
    roused among them; how they would have stared at each other, with
    mouths open, uttering exclamatory oaths of wild amazement and ecstatic
    triumph; how they would have exulted and drunk each other's healths
    and their wild playmate's and her splendid fortunes. But, in truth,
    that such a thing could be, would have seemed to them as likely as that
    Queen Anne herself should cast a gracious eye upon a poor, fox-hunting,
    country baronet who was one of her rustic subjects. The riot of
    Wildairs and its company was a far cry indeed from Camylott and St.
    James.

    If my Lord Twemlow had guessed at the possibility of the strange thing,
    and had found himself confronting a solution of his carking problem
    which would flood its past with brilliance and illuminate all its
    future with refulgent light, casting a glow of splendour even over his
    own plain country gentleman's existence, how he would have started and
    flushed with bewildered pride and rubbed his periwig awry in his
    delighted excitement. If my Lord Dunstanwolde, sitting at that hour in
    his silent library, a great book open before him, his forehead on his
    slender veined hand, his thoughts wandering far away, if he had been
    given by Fate an inkling of the truth which none knew or suspected, or
    had reason for suspecting, perhaps he would have been the most startled

    and struck dumb of all--the most troubled and amazed and shocked.

    But of such a thing no one dreamed, as, indeed, why should they, and my
    lord Duke of Osmonde rode over the border into Gloucestershire on his
    fine beast, and, trotting-up the roads and down the lanes, wore a look
    upon his face which showed him deep in thought.

    'Twas a grey day, unbrightened by any sun. For almost a week there had
    been rain, and the roads were
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