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Then Mona rises, and they both come to the entrance of the small room, and stand where Lady Rodney can overhear what they are saying. "Are you sure?" asks he, his face brightening. "Remember how they have drawn back from me. I was their own first-cousin,—the son of their father's brother,—yet they treated me as the veriest outcast." He knows her sufficiently well to refrain from further expostulation, and just accompanies her silently along the lonely road..
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Conrad
And so it is arranged. And that evening Geoffrey indites a letter to Mrs. Manning, Grafton Street, Dublin, that brings a smile to the lips of that cunning modiste. Slowly he draws from his pocket a paper, folded neatly, that looks like some old parchment. Mona draws her breath quickly, and turns first crimson with emotion, then pale as death. Opening it at a certain page, he points out to her the signature of George Rodney, the old baronet. "Is that a compliment?" she says, wistfully. "Is it well to be unlike all the world? Yet what you say is true, no doubt. I suppose I am different from—from all the other people you know." "Yet I think you should have told me," she whispers, as a last fading censure. "Do you know you have made me very unhappy?".
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