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 mustn't think of anything else." And she asked to talk to Lan over the phone.

David kept his promise to go but he did not leave with Lan on the afternoon train, although Fidelia offered to pack his suitcase for him and bring it downtown. David did not deceive himself. His visit to Rock Island was to be not only a return to the companionship of Lan, also it was to be a return to the company of Alice. It must be; there could be no avoiding it. And he knew that Fidelia fully understood this.

As there was a train in the morning which would take him to Rock Island in ample time for the wedding, he saw Lan off in the afternoon and he returned to the hotel at his usual hour.

"Lan's wedding is the only thing which could happen that I've got to be in without you," he said to Fidelia. "Leaving to-morrow morning, I'll get into Rock Island about noon. "I'llI'll [sic] be at the Taines' to-morrow night, of course, but back here by noon again. Will you come in for lunch with me?"

"Of course I will," Fidelia said. "You know that I wish you'd gone with Lan, if you'd liked to."

"I didn't want to," David said.

"I wish you'd stay longer in Rock Island, if you find you'd like to," Fidelia urged.

"Why would I stay?" David asked. "Lan and Myra of course will be gone."

Neither he nor she mentioned Alice, except when he said in confirmation of what he had told her over the telephone: "Alice is going to be maid-of-honor, of course," and when he told Fidelia in order that she