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    Chapter 11 - Page 2

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    nature
    salient, but on this occasion they seemed to have started out of her
    head.

    "We're upside down--terribly agitated. A thunderbolt has fallen on the
    house."

    "What's the matter--what's the matter?" Francie asked, pale and with
    parted lips. She had a sudden wild idea that Gaston might have found out
    in America that her father had no money, had lost it all; that it had
    been stolen during their long absence. But would he cast her off for
    that?

    "You must understand the closeness of our union with you from our
    sending for you this way--the first, the only person--in a crisis. Our
    joys are your joys and our indignations are yours."

    "What IS the matter, PLEASE?" the girl repeated. Their "indignations"
    opened up a gulf; it flashed upon her, with a shock of mortification for
    the belated idea, that something would have come out: a piece in the
    paper, from Mr. Flack, about her portrait and even a little about
    herself. But that was only more mystifying, for certainly Mr. Flack
    could only have published something pleasant--something to be proud of.
    Had he by some incredible perversity or treachery stated that the
    picture was bad, or even that SHE was? She grew dizzy, remembering how
    she had refused him, and how little he had liked it, that day at Saint-
    Germain. But they had made that up over and over, especially when they
    sat so long on a bench together (the time they drove) in the Bois de
    Boulogne.

    "Oh the most awful thing; a newspaper sent this morning from America to
    my father--containing two horrible columns of vulgar lies and scandal
    about our family, about all of us, about you, about your picture, about
    poor Marguerite, calling her 'Margot,' about Maxime and Leonie de
    Villepreux, saying he's her lover, about all our affairs, about Gaston,
    about your marriage, about your sister and your dresses and your
    dimples, about our darling father, whose history it professes to relate
    in the most ignoble, the most revolting terms. Papa's in the most awful
    state!" and Mme. de Brecourt panted to take breath. She had spoken with
    the volubility of horror and passion. "You're outraged with us and you
    must suffer with us," she went on. "But who has done it? Who has done
    it? Who has done it?"


    "Why Mr. Flack--Mr. Flack!" Francie quickly replied. She was appalled,
    overwhelmed; but her foremost feeling was the wish not to appear to
    disavow her knowledge.

    "Mr. Flack? do you mean that awful person--? He ought to be shot, he
    ought to be burnt alive. Maxime will kill him, Maxime's in an
    unspeakable rage. Everything's at end, we've been served up to the
    rabble, we shall have to leave Paris. How
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