[The Sowers by Henry Seton Merriman]@TWC D-Link book
The Sowers

CHAPTER VII
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De Chauxville was there, and Maggie with her quiet, honest eyes.

But the widow of Sydney Bamborough made Paul ask her to be his wife, and she promised to give him his answer later.

She did it despite a thousand difficulties and more than one danger--accomplished it with, as the sporting people say, plenty to spare--before the door behind them was opened by the attendant, and Karl Steinmetz, burly, humorously imperturbable and impenetrable, stood smiling gravely on the situation.
He saw Claude de Chauxville, and before the Frenchman had turned round the expression on Steinmetz's large and placid countenance had changed from the self-consciousness usually preceding an introduction to one of a dim recognition.
"I have had the pleasure of meeting madame somewhere before, I think.

In St.Petersburg, was it not ?" Etta, composed and smiling, said that it was so, and introduced him to Maggie.

De Chauxville took the opportunity of leaving that young lady's side, and placing himself near enough to Paul and Etta to completely frustrate any further attempts at confidential conversation.
For a moment Steinmetz and Paul were left standing together.
"I have had a telegram," said Steinmetz in Russian.


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