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“
Yet
you
’
re
backing
him
up
?
”
“
Yet
I
’
m
backing
him
up
.
”
She
paused
.
“
I
wonder
if
you
’
ll
understand
?
What
I
’
ve
most
wanted
for
him
,
and
shall
want
for
Effie
,
is
that
they
shall
always
feel
free
to
make
their
own
mistakes
,
and
never
,
if
possible
,
be
persuaded
to
make
other
people
’
s
.
Even
if
Owen
’
s
marriage
is
a
mistake
,
and
has
to
be
paid
for
,
I
believe
he
’
ll
learn
and
grow
in
the
paying
.
Of
course
I
can
’
t
make
Madame
de
Chantelle
see
this
;
but
I
can
remind
her
that
,
with
his
character
—
his
big
rushes
of
impulse
,
his
odd
intervals
of
ebb
and
apathy
—
she
may
drive
him
into
some
worse
blunder
if
she
thwarts
him
now
.
”
“
And
you
mean
to
break
the
news
to
her
as
soon
as
she
comes
back
from
Ouchy
?
”
“
As
soon
as
I
see
my
way
to
it
.
She
knows
the
girl
and
likes
her
:
that
’
s
our
hope
.
And
yet
it
may
,
in
the
end
,
prove
our
danger
,
make
it
harder
for
us
all
,
when
she
learns
the
truth
,
than
if
Owen
had
chosen
a
stranger
.
I
can
’
t
tell
you
more
till
I
’
ve
told
her
:
I
’
ve
promised
Owen
not
to
tell
any
one
.
All
I
ask
you
is
to
give
me
time
,
to
give
me
a
few
days
at
any
rate
She
’
s
been
wonderfully
‘
nice
,
’
as
she
would
call
it
,
about
you
,
and
about
the
fact
of
my
having
soon
to
leave
Givre
;
but
that
,
again
,
may
make
it
harder
for
Owen
.
At
any
rate
,
you
can
see
,
can
’
t
you
,
how
it
makes
me
want
to
stand
by
him
?
You
see
,
I
couldn
’
t
bear
it
if
the
least
fraction
of
my
happiness
seemed
to
be
stolen
from
his
—
as
if
it
were
a
little
scrap
of
happiness
that
had
to
be
pieced
out
with
other
people
’
s
!
”
She
clasped
her
hands
on
Darrow
’
s
arm
.
“
I
want
our
life
to
be
like
a
house
with
all
the
windows
lit
:
I
’
d
like
to
string
lanterns
from
the
roof
and
chimneys
!
”
She
ended
with
an
inward
tremor
.
All
through
her
exposition
and
her
appeal
she
had
told
herself
that
the
moment
could
hardly
have
been
less
well
chosen
.
In
Darrow
’
s
place
she
would
have
felt
,
as
he
doubtless
did
,
that
her
carefully
developed
argument
was
only
the
disguise
of
an
habitual
indecision
.
It
was
the
hour
of
all
others
when
she
would
have
liked
to
affirm
herself
by
brushing
aside
every
obstacle
to
his
wishes
;
yet
it
was
only
by
opposing
them
that
she
could
show
the
strength
of
character
she
wanted
him
to
feel
in
her
.
But
as
she
talked
she
began
to
see
that
Darrow
’
s
face
gave
back
no
reflection
of
her
words
,
that
he
continued
to
wear
the
abstracted
look
of
a
man
who
is
not
listening
to
what
is
said
to
him
.
It
caused
her
a
slight
pang
to
discover
that
his
thoughts
could
wander
at
such
a
moment
;
then
,
with
a
flush
of
joy
she
perceived
the
reason
.
In
some
undefinable
way
she
had
become
aware
,
without
turning
her
head
,
that
he
was
steeped
in
the
sense
of
her
nearness
,
absorbed
in
contemplating
the
details
of
her
face
and
dress
;
and
the
discovery
made
the
words
throng
to
her
lips
.
She
felt
herself
speak
with
ease
,
authority
,
conviction
.
She
said
to
herself
:
“
He
doesn
’
t
care
what
I
say
—
it
’
s
enough
that
I
say
it
—
even
if
it
’
s
stupid
he
’
ll
like
me
better
for
it
.
.
.
”
She
knew
that
every
inflexion
of
her
voice
,
every
gesture
,
every
characteristic
of
her
person
—
its
very
defects
,
the
fact
that
her
forehead
was
too
high
,
that
her
eyes
were
not
large
enough
,
that
her
hands
,
though
slender
,
were
not
small
,
and
that
the
fingers
did
not
taper
—
she
knew
that
these
deficiencies
were
so
many
channels
through
which
her
influence
streamed
to
him
;
that
she
pleased
him
in
spite
of
them
,
perhaps
because
of
them
;
that
he
wanted
her
as
she
was
,
and
not
as
she
would
have
liked
to
be
;
and
for
the
first
time
she
felt
in
her
veins
the
security
and
lightness
of
happy
love
.
They
reached
the
court
and
walked
under
the
limes
toward
the
house
.
The
hall
door
stood
wide
,
and
through
the
windows
opening
on
the
terrace
the
sun
slanted
across
the
black
and
white
floor
,
the
faded
tapestry
chairs
,
and
Darrow
’
s
travelling
coat
and
cap
,
which
lay
among
the
cloaks
and
rugs
piled
on
a
bench
against
the
wall
.