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"
He
is
at
the
New
Hospital
,
"
said
Rosamond
;
"
I
am
not
sure
how
soon
he
will
come
home
.
But
I
can
send
for
him
,
"
"
Will
you
let
me
go
and
fetch
him
?
"
said
Will
Ladislaw
,
coming
forward
.
He
had
already
taken
up
his
hat
before
Dorothea
entered
.
She
colored
with
surprise
,
but
put
out
her
hand
with
a
smile
of
unmistakable
pleasure
,
saying
"
I
did
not
know
it
was
you
:
I
had
no
thought
of
seeing
you
here
.
"
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"
May
I
go
to
the
Hospital
and
tell
Mr
.
Lydgate
that
you
wish
to
see
him
?
"
said
Will
.
"
It
would
be
quicker
to
send
the
carriage
for
him
,
"
said
Dorothea
,
"
if
you
will
be
kind
enough
to
give
the
message
to
the
coachman
.
"
Will
was
moving
to
the
door
when
Dorothea
,
whose
mind
had
flashed
in
an
instant
over
many
connected
memories
,
turned
quickly
and
said
,
"
I
will
go
myself
,
thank
you
.
I
wish
to
lose
no
time
before
getting
home
again
.
I
will
drive
to
the
Hospital
and
see
Mr
.
Lydgate
there
.
Pray
excuse
me
,
Mrs
.
Lydgate
.
I
am
very
much
obliged
to
you
.
"
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Her
mind
was
evidently
arrested
by
some
sudden
thought
,
and
she
left
the
room
hardly
conscious
of
what
was
immediately
around
her
hardly
conscious
that
Will
opened
the
door
for
her
and
offered
her
his
arm
to
lead
her
to
the
carriage
.
She
took
the
arm
but
said
nothing
.
Will
was
feeling
rather
vexed
and
miserable
,
and
found
nothing
to
say
on
his
side
.
He
handed
her
into
the
carriage
in
silence
,
they
said
good
-
by
,
and
Dorothea
drove
away
.
In
the
five
minutes
drive
to
the
Hospital
she
had
time
for
some
reflections
that
were
quite
new
to
her
.
Her
decision
to
go
,
and
her
preoccupation
in
leaving
the
room
,
had
come
from
the
sudden
sense
that
there
would
be
a
sort
of
deception
in
her
voluntarily
allowing
any
further
intercourse
between
herself
and
Will
which
she
was
unable
to
mention
to
her
husband
,
and
already
her
errand
in
seeking
Lydgate
was
a
matter
of
concealment
.
That
was
all
that
had
been
explicitly
in
her
mind
;
but
she
had
been
urged
also
by
a
vague
discomfort
.
Now
that
she
was
alone
in
her
drive
,
she
heard
the
notes
of
the
man
s
voice
and
the
accompanying
piano
,
which
she
had
not
noted
much
at
the
time
,
returning
on
her
inward
sense
;
and
she
found
herself
thinking
with
some
wonder
that
Will
Ladislaw
was
passing
his
time
with
Mrs
.
Lydgate
in
her
husband
s
absence
.
And
then
she
could
not
help
remembering
that
he
had
passed
some
time
with
her
under
like
circumstances
,
so
why
should
there
be
any
unfitness
in
the
fact
?
But
Will
was
Mr
.
Casaubon
s
relative
,
and
one
towards
whom
she
was
bound
to
show
kindness
.
Still
there
had
been
signs
which
perhaps
she
ought
to
have
understood
as
implying
that
Mr
.
Casaubon
did
not
like
his
cousin
s
visits
during
his
own
absence
.
"
Perhaps
I
have
been
mistaken
in
many
things
,
"
said
poor
Dorothea
to
herself
,
while
the
tears
came
rolling
and
she
had
to
dry
them
quickly
.
She
felt
confusedly
unhappy
,
and
the
image
of
Will
which
had
been
so
clear
to
her
before
was
mysteriously
spoiled
.
But
the
carriage
stopped
at
the
gate
of
the
Hospital
.
She
was
soon
walking
round
the
grass
plots
with
Lydgate
,
and
her
feelings
recovered
the
strong
bent
which
had
made
her
seek
for
this
interview
.