[A Laodicean by Thomas Hardy]@TWC D-Link book
A Laodicean

BOOK THE FIFTH
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A fly had been brought round, and one of the hotel servants was in the act of putting up a portmanteau with De Stancy's initials upon it.

A minute afterwards the captain came to her door.
'I thought you had not gone to bed, after all.' 'I was anxious to see you off,' said she, 'since neither of the others is awake; and you wished me not to rouse them.' 'Quite right, you are very good;' and lowering his voice: 'Paula, it is a sad and solemn time with me.

Will you grant me one word--not on our last sad subject, but on the previous one--before I part with you to go and bury my father ?' 'Certainly,' she said, in gentle accents.
'Then have you thought over my position?
Will you at last have pity upon my loneliness by becoming my wife ?' Paula sighed deeply; and said, 'Yes.' 'Your hand upon it.' She gave him her hand: he held it a few moments, then raised it to his lips, and was gone.
When Mrs.Goodman rose she was informed of Sir William's death, and of his son's departure.
'Then the captain is now Sir William De Stancy!' she exclaimed.

'Really, Paula, since you would be Lady De Stancy by marrying him, I almost think--' 'Hush, aunt!' 'Well; what are you writing there ?' 'Only entering in my diary that I accepted him this morning for pity's sake, in spite of Uncle Abner.

They'll say it was for the title, but knowing it was not I don't care.' XI.
On the evening of the fourth day after the parting between Paula and De Stancy at Amiens, when it was quite dark in the Markton highway, except in so far as the shades were broken by the faint lights from the adjacent town, a young man knocked softly at the door of Myrtle Villa, and asked if Captain De Stancy had arrived from abroad.


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