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    Chapter 36

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    CHAPTER XXXVI.

    Grace was not the only one who watched and meditated in Hintock
    that night. Felice Charmond was in no mood to retire to rest at a
    customary hour; and over her drawing-room fire at the Manor House
    she sat as motionless and in as deep a reverie as Grace in her
    little apartment at the homestead.

    Having caught ear of Melbury's intelligence while she stood on the
    landing at his house, and been eased of much of her mental
    distress, her sense of personal decorum returned upon her with a
    rush. She descended the stairs and left the door like a ghost,
    keeping close to the walls of the building till she got round to
    the gate of the quadrangle, through which she noiselessly passed
    almost before Grace and her father had finished their discourse.
    Suke Damson had thought it well to imitate her superior in this
    respect, and, descending the back stairs as Felice descended the
    front, went out at the side door and home to her cottage.

    Once outside Melbury's gates Mrs. Charmond ran with all her speed
    to the Manor House, without stopping or turning her head, and
    splitting her thin boots in her haste. She entered her own
    dwelling, as she had emerged from it, by the drawing-room window.
    In other circumstances she would have felt some timidity at
    undertaking such an unpremeditated excursion alone; but her
    anxiety for another had cast out her fear for herself.

    Everything in her drawing-room was just as she had left it--the
    candles still burning, the casement closed, and the shutters
    gently pulled to, so as to hide the state of the window from the
    cursory glance of a servant entering the apartment. She had been
    gone about three-quarters of an hour by the clock, and nobody
    seemed to have discovered her absence. Tired in body but tense in
    mind, she sat down, palpitating, round-eyed, bewildered at what
    she had done.

    She had been betrayed by affrighted love into a visit which, now
    that the emotion instigating it had calmed down under her belief
    that Fitzpiers was in no danger, was the saddest surprise to her.
    This was how she had set about doing her best to escape her
    passionate bondage to him! Somehow, in declaring to Grace and to
    herself the unseemliness of her infatuation, she had grown a
    convert to its irresistibility. If Heaven would only give her

    strength; but Heaven never did! One thing was indispensable; she
    must go away from Hintock if she meant to withstand further
    temptation. The struggle was too wearying, too hopeless, while
    she remained. It was but a continual capitulation of conscience
    to what she dared not name.

    By degrees, as she sat, Felice's mind--helped perhaps by the
    anticlimax of learning that her lover was unharmed after all her
    fright about
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