The American Claimant


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Sally went to bed happy, too; and remained happy, deliriously happy, for  
nearly two hours; but at last, just as she was sinking into a contented  
and luxurious unconsciousness, the shady devil who lives and lurks and  
hides and watches inside of human beings and is always waiting for a  
chance to do the proprietor a malicious damage, whispered to her soul and  
said, "That question had a harmless look, but what was back of it?--what  
was the secret motive of it?--what suggested it?"  
The shady devil had knifed her, and could retire, now, and take a rest;  
the wound would attend to business for him. And it did.  
Why should Howard Tracy ask that question? If he was not trying to marry  
her for the sake of her rank, what should suggest that question to him?  
Didn't he plainly look gratified when she said her objections to  
aristocracy had their limitations? Ah, he is after that earldom, that  
gilded sham--it isn't poor me he wants.  
So she argued, in anguish and tears. Then she argued the opposite  
theory, but made a weak, poor business of it, and lost the case. She  
kept the arguing up, one side and then the other, the rest of the night,  
and at last fell asleep at dawn; fell in the fire at dawn, one may say;  
for that kind of sleep resembles fire, and one comes out of it with his  
brain baked and his physical forces fried out of him.  
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