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Show THE DOOR CLOSES 1111', 1111211 171111155'1' :‘1113 lll\'l>l1|ll 11:111 111111111‘ 111‘ 1121;11111s :11111 1111'1111' 11111111111111 111111, 111111‘1'11'111'1111l1 1111;11‘1'1‘ 1111111131. 111 :1'31'111111111;11 11 \1'1111111111111111 11 11:1 111'11111111‘11111111 11'1'.11 111111111 11.11111 1111-~ [11111111 211111;; 1111111 1111111111‘1‘1111'11114111 1111 1111121111111111111111411 11s111 11111111." "We‘ll s111'1' 1111111 \1111111 111111 111'11111's 11s 111 :11." ~~;1i11 $11111_1‘1111111'. "11 11111 111111111 :1 1111111111111111 111 :1 111111111'1111 1111111 111‘ 11111111111111111111111; 11‘ 111111 1111 ~1.11‘1 11.1111; 1111 111 this 11111011 111‘ 111111;;111 1111111111111111‘1111111111‘11e1111sin1111111." "-\111l11'11111 11'1111111':1::1111~11;1111 1111 1111‘ \11111'11'11?‘7 "We‘ll 1111111111 111111 1111111 11111'1' 111111111 11111111." 11111111s11‘ered. "'0 sat there 1141111111}; 111 11111 111111111111. '1'111111 19111111'1111111' said very 11111011)‘ 111111 11111 111 1111 11'111111-1111'1', "1 wish 111 ask 31111711 have wished hel‘orefi 11111 11111. You 111111110 me for her death 1" I thought for 11 1111111111111. 1111111 1 replied: "I did so 111 first. Now 1 1111 11111 11111111 111111, it, had anything; 111 do with you or 111111 11111 or 11'i1h any 1'1ne-eexeept herself." "lixeept herself f" he said. "What do you mean 1'" "She wished it. I think." Ilis irony returned. "You helieve 111 the power of others, 3111. too 111111-11. You sho111dl1111101'1-111111'1‘ in your own." "I helieve in her power. She was stronger than you," I answered. "I‘m sure that you like to think so," he said laughing. 7' "She is still stronger than you. "Of eourse7 with said. "So you are 11 niystie, Mix," he your romantic mind that is only natural. You believe, I suppose, that she is with us here 111 the room?" to a ehild. "I find it strange-I have found it strange 11111 many weeks 11o1v*1h:1t 1 should think so frequently of you. You are not 11 1111111 who would naturally be interesting; 111 11111. You 11111 an Englishman and I am not interested 111 Englishmen. You 11 re sentimental, you have no idea of 1111: 11s it is. you like dull thing's, dull safe things, you be1111111 11111'11ys 111 what you are told. You have no sense of humour. You should he of no interest to me, and yet 11111111154, these last weeks I have not been able to get rid 111' you." "That is not my fault," I said. "I have not been so anx- 1111's for your (1111111111nyf' "No," he said, speaking rather thoughtfully. as though he were seriously thinking something out, "you regard 11111,. of course, as a very bad elmraeter. I have no desire to de- fend myself to you. int the point is that I have found myself often thinking;- of you, that I have even taken trouble sometimes to he with you." 110 waited as though he expected me to say something, but I was silent. "It was perhaps that I saw that Marie IvanOVIlfl (3111'1‘11 for you. She gave you up to the end something: that she never gave to me. That I suppose was tiresome to me." 111111. "You thought you knew her," I said, hoping to hurt "You did not know her at all." "That may be." he answered. "I certainly did not 1111(lerstand her, but that was attractive to me. And so: M13, you thought that you. understood her?" But I did not answer him. My head aehed frantically, l was 111110tehedly in want of sleep. "It cannot he of interest to you," I answered quietly; "what I believe." "Yes, it is of interest," he replied in a voice that W213 friendly and humorously indulgent, as though he spoke 303 I jumped to my (Wt, standing in front of him: "Leave me alone! part, Leave me alone!" I Cl‘icd- "Let 1H 111, 1 ani nothing to you--you despise me and laugh |