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CHAPTER 9
 Of course it was all different. Our first encounter in this new phase had a quality of extreme disillusionment. The warm living creature, who would whisper, who would kiss with wonderful lips, who would say strange daring things, who had soft hair one might touch with a thrilling and worshipful hand, who changed one at a word or a look into a God of pride, became as if she had been no more than a dream. A self-possessed young in white and brown glanced at me from amidst a group of brilliant people on the terrace, nodded as it seemed quite carelessly in acknowledgment of my salutation, and resumed her confident conversation with a tall stooping man, no less a person than Evesham, the Prime Minister. He was lunching at Burnmore on his way across country to the Rileys. I heard that dear laugh of hers, as ready and easy as when she laughed with me. I had not heard it for nearly three years—nor any sound that had its sweetness. "But Mr. Evesham," she was saying, "nowadays we don't believe that sort of thing——"  
"There are a lot of things still for you to believe," says Mr. Evesham beaming. "A lot of things! One's capacity increases. It grows with exercise. Justin will bear me out."
 
Beyond her stood an undersized, brown-clad man with a big head, a dark face and brown eyes now in unrestrained on Mary's laughing face. This then was Justin, the incredibly rich and powerful, whose comprehensive operations could make and break a thousand fortunes in a day. He answered Evesham carelessly, with his gaze still on Mary, and in a voice too low for my straining ears. There was some woman in the group also, but she has left nothing upon my mind whatever except an effect of black and a very green sunshade. She greeted Justin's remark, I remember, with the little of laughter that characterized that set. I think too there was someone else in the group; but I cannot clearly recall who....
 
Presently as I and Philip made unreal conversation together I saw Mary disengage herself and come towards us. It was as if a princess came towards a beggar. Absurd are the changes of phase between women andmen. A year or so ago and all of us had been but "the children" together; now here were I and Philip youths still, nobodies, echoes and , crude promises at the best, and here was Mary in full flower, as glorious and central as the Hampton Court azaleas in spring.
 
"And this is Stephen," she said, with happy confidence.
 
I made no reply, and there was a little pause thick with mute questionings.
............
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