[The Claverings by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link bookThe Claverings CHAPTER XIII 1/17
A Visitor Calls At Ongar Park It will be remembered that Harry Clavering, on returning one evening to his lodgings in Bloomsbury Square, had been much astonished at finding there the card of Count Pateroff, a man of whom he had only heard, up to that moment, as the friend of the late Lord Ongar.
At first he had been very angry with Lady Ongar, thinking that she and this count were in some league together, some league of which he would greatly disapprove; but his anger had given place to a new interest when he learned direct from herself that she had not seen the count, and that she was simply anxious that he, as her friend, should have an interview with the man. He had then become very eager in the matter, offering to subject himself to any amount of inconvenience so that he might effect that which Lady Ongar asked of him.
He was not, however, called upon to endure any special trouble or expense, as he heard nothing more from Count Pateroff till he had been back in London for two or three weeks. Lady Ongar's statement to him had been quite true.
It had been even more than true; for when she had written she had not even heard directly from the count.
She had learned by letter from another person that Count Pateroff was in London, and had then communicated the fact to her friend.
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