Page:Madame de Treymes.djvu/147

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MADAME DE TREYMES

doir. The remembrance made him shrink slightly from her touch, and she drew back with a smile.

"Have you never asked yourself," she enquired, "why our family consented so readily to a divorce?"

"Yes, often," he replied, all his unformed fears gathering in a dark throng about him. "But Fanny was so reassured, so convinced that we owed it to your good offices———"

She broke into a laugh. "My good offices! Will you never, you Americans, learn that we do not act individually in such cases? That we are all obedient to a common principle of authority?"

"Then it was not you———"

She made an impatient shrugging motion. "Oh, you are too confiding—it is the other side of your beautiful good faith!"

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