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The Belton Estate by Anthony Trollope
page 107 of 556 (19%)

Captain Aylmer found it difficult to make any answer to this, feeling
the subject to be one which could hardly be discussed between him and
Miss Amedroz. He not unnaturally looked to be the heir of his aunt's
property, and any provision made out of that property for Clara would
so far lessen that which would come to him. For anything that he knew,
Mrs Winterfield might leave everything she possessed to her niece. The
old lady had not been open and candid to him whom she meant to favour
in her will, as she had been to her to whom no such favour was to be
shown. But Captain Aylmer did know, with tolerable accuracy, what was
the state of affairs at Belton, and was aware that Miss Amedroz had no
prospect of maintenance on which to depend, unless she could depend on
her aunt. She was now pleading that she was not dependent on that lady,
and Captain Aylmer felt that she was wrong. He was a man of the world,
and was by no means inclined to abandon any right that was his own; but
it seemed to him that he was almost bound to say some word to show that
in his opinion Clara should hold herself bound to comply with her
aunt's requirements.

'Dependence is a disagreeable word,' he said; and one never quite knows
what it means.'

'If you were a woman you'd know. It means that I must stay at Perivale
on Sundays, while you can go up to London or down to Yorkshire. That's
what it means.'

'What you do mean, I think, is this that you owe a duty to your aunt,
the performance of which is not altogether agreeable. Nevertheless it
would be foolish in you to omit it.'

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