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Byline: Rebecca Johnson
It's the morning after the second set of Democratic debates. Huma Abedin has had three hours of sleep and four cups of coffee, but her black Prada suit is wrinkle-free, her skin is flawless, and her long, luxurious hair is blow-dried into the kind of bouncy waves you see mostly in shampoo commercials. Her mind, however, is on her boss. As Hillary Clinton basks in the adoration of 500 of New York's most powerful women, all of whom paid $250 a head for breakfast, Abedin watches proudly from the back of the room. "We're on such a high from last night," she says. "I was so nervous I got teary. It was like watching your kid go off to ...