[The Man by Bram Stoker]@TWC D-Link book
The Man

CHAPTER IX--IN THE SPRING
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To wait, and wait, and wait, with your heart all aflame!' Stephen recognised her aunt's concern for her health in time to protect herself from the curiosity of her loving-kindness.

Her youth and readiness and adaptability, and that power of play-acting which we all have within us and of which she had her share, stood to her.

With but little effort, based on a seeming acquiescence in her aunt's views, she succeeded in convincing the old lady that her incipient feverish cold had already reached its crisis and was passing away.

But she had gained certain knowledge in the playing of her little part.

All this self-protective instinct was new; for good or ill she had advanced one more step in not only the knowledge but the power of duplicity which is so necessary in the conventional life of a woman.
Oh! did we but see! Could we but see! Here was a woman, dowered in her youth with all the goods and graces in the power of the gods to bestow, who fought against convention; and who yet found in convention the strongest as well as the readiest weapon of defence.
For nearly two weeks Stephen's resolution was held motionless, neither advancing nor receding; it was veritably the slack water of her resolution.


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