[The Great Impersonation by E. Phillips Oppenheim]@TWC D-Link book
The Great Impersonation

CHAPTER XVII
16/22

Your most distinguished guest has found a task after his own heart.

He has got Henry in a corner of the billiard-room and is trying to convince him of what I am sure the dear man really believes himself--that Germany's intentions towards England are of a particularly dove-like nature.

Your Right Honourable guest has gone to bed, and Eddy Pelham is playing billiards with Mr.Mangan.Every one is happy.

You can devote yourself to soothing my wounded vanity, to say nothing of my broken heart." "Always gibing at me," Dominey grumbled.
"Not always," she answered quietly, raising her eyes for a moment.
"There was a time, Everard, before that terrible tragedy--the last time you stayed at Dunratter--when I didn't gibe." "When, on the contrary, you were sweetness itself," he reflected.
She sighed reminiscently.
"That was a wonderful month," she murmured.

"I think it was then for the first time that I saw traces of something in you which I suppose accounts for your being what you are to-day." "You think that I have changed, then ?" She looked him in the eyes.
"I sometimes find it difficult to believe," she admitted, "that you are the same man." He turned away to reach for his whisky and soda.
"As a matter of curiosity," he asked, "why ?" "To begin with, then," she commented, "you have become almost a precisian in your speech.


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