[The Zeit-Geist by Lily Dougall]@TWC D-Link book
The Zeit-Geist

CHAPTER V
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He had enough insight into her character, enough knowledge of her manner and the modulations in her voice, to have a pretty true instinct as to when she was lying and when she was not; but he did not know that the allusion to the time when he used to court her was thrown out to produce just what it did in him, a tender recollection of his old hopes.
"Until Markham is arrested, you know, and every one else at Fentown knows, that it is my duty to see that you don't communicate with him.
You've fooled me to-night, and I'll have to keep closer watch; but if you don't want me to do the watching, I can pay another man." She had hoped faintly that he would have shown himself less resolute; now there was only one thing to be done.

After all, she had known for days that she might be obliged to do it.
"I wouldn't take it so hard, Bart, if it was any one but you," she said softly.

She went on to say other things of this sort which would make it appear that there was in her heart an inward softness toward him which she had never yet revealed.

With womanly instinct she played her little part well and did not exaggerate; but she was not speaking now to the man of drug-weakened mind and over-stimulated sense whom she had known in former years.
He spoke with pain and shame in his voice and attitude.

"There isn't anything that I could do for you, Ann, that I wouldn't do as it is, without you pretending that way." She did not quite take it in at first that she could not deceive him.
"I thought you used to care about me," she said; "I thought perhaps you did yet; I thought perhaps"-- she put well-feigned shyness into her tone--"that you weren't the sort that would turn away from us just because of what father has done.


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