Mr. Leigh was in a very depressed and anxious mood. His late conversations with Mrs. Costello had disturbed him and broken up the current of his thoughts and even to some extent of his usual occupations without producing any result beneficial to either of them. She had told him a strange and almost incredible story of her life; and then just when he was full of sympathy and eagerness to be of use to her everything seemed suddenly to have changed and the events that followed had been wholly as it were out of his reach. He thought over the matter with a little sensation which if he had been less simple and generous a man might have been offence. Even as it was he felt uncomfortably divided between his real interest in his old friends and a temptation to pretend that he was not interested at all. He remembered too with a serio-comical kind of remorse the manner in which he had spoken to Mrs. Costello about Maurice. He was obliged to confess to himself that Maurice had never said a word to him which could be taken as expressing any other than a brotherly feeling of regard for Lucia; he had certainly fancied that there was another kind of affection in his thoughts; but it was no part of the old soldier's code of honour to sanction the betrayal of a secret discovered by chance and he felt guilty in remembering how far the warmth of his friendship had carried him.
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