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The Grey Room by Eden Phillpotts
page 68 of 260 (26%)
"How beautiful and happy he looks," she said. "But what I loved
is gone; and, going, it has changed all the rest. This is not Tom--
only the least part of him."

Her father bowed his head.

"I felt so when your mother died, my dearest child."

Then she knelt down and put her hand on the hand of the dead man
and prayed. Her father knelt beside her, and it was he, not the
young widow, who wept.

She rose presently.

"I can think of him better away from him now," she said. "I will
not see him again."

They returned to her old nursery, and he told her that he was going
to face life and take the head of his table at luncheon.

"How brave of you, dear father," she said. Sir Walter waited for
the gong to sound, but it did not, and he rebuked himself for
thinking that it would sound. Masters had a more correct sense of
the fitness of things than he. He thought curiously upon this
incident, and suspected that he must be unhinged a little. Then
he remembered a thing that he had desired to say to Mary and
returned to her.

"I do not wish you to sleep in this room to-night, my darling," he
said.
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