It's to show an exception (which is often the purpose of "yet") because in the first clause it identifies an action, then then it's like "but wait, maybe the action didn't really get going" in the second half of the sentence
Answer:
feeling or showing sudden shock or alarm.
(btw ily your profile)
Explanation:
I had the same question and got all the points on my response here: The story, “Another Evening at the Club” is about Samia and a wealthy man that she’s married to. The significance in the title of the story is that when you add “just” to the title it makes the two times that they were in the club, seem unimportant. The two times that Samia and her husband went to the club were important parts of the story. The first time Samia had went she lost her emerald ring, and then blamed her servant. The husband was angry with the servant, smacked her, and had her taken to the police station for questioning. The next day the husband had gone to the club while Samia was at home, and that’s when she found the ring again. Both of these shows that it was another evening at the club, almost like saying this happened, then another day happened. The difference in language and how you word things is important because it can change the whole meaning.
I hope this helps because I literally just retyped all of it lol