[Running Water by A. E. W. Mason]@TWC D-Link book
Running Water

CHAPTER XVIII
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But in the morning she was only aware of a great lightness of spirit.

She could now devote herself to the work of her life; and for two long tiring days she kept Walter Hine at her side.

But now he sought to avoid her.

The little energy he had ever had was gone, he alternated between exhilaration and depression; he preferred, it seemed, to be alone.

For two days, however, Sylvia persevered, and on the third her lightness of spirit unaccountably deserted her.
She drove with Walter Hine that morning, and something of his own irritability seemed to have passed into her; so that he turned to her and asked: "What have I done?
Aren't you pleased with me?
Why are you angry ?" "I am not angry," she replied, turning her great gray eyes upon him.


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