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rustling palm leaves. Behind the palms stretched the wall, high and blankly impassable. She felt strange, unreal.... Her very fright was unreal. "Tell me," he was saying, his voice low and caressing, "are there many girls like you--in your America?" She tried to speak quite easily, quite simply. "You have been in England and France, Captain Kerissen, and you have seen many Americans traveling there." "I have seen many--yes. But not like you." She looked swiftly at him, then more swiftly away. His eyes were glowing with a look of deep excitement; his teeth flashed white under his small, dark mustache. "Shall I tell you how you appear beside those others?" "No, thank you," the girl answered with a hurried crispness which brought a stare and then a low laugh from him. "You have been told so often?" he suggested. "I never permit myself to be told at all!" Anger made her young voice imperious, but her heart was beating furiously. Involuntarily she quickened her steps and he reached his hand to her bare forearm and held her back. "Pardon--but you are too quick." She stood rigid, some deep instinct warning her not to resist. The situation had gone to the man's head, she felt dumbly; his courtesy was only a scant veneer over that Oriental cast of view which, like the Latin, reads every accident of propinquity as opportunity. His hand fell away and they walked on in slower time. When he spoke his voice betrayed the feeling quickening within him. "Then I have a pleasure before me, for you will listen, please. To me your sister Americans are like big, bright flowers which grow by the wayside where every wind blows hard upon them. And each receives the dust of the footsteps of many men till comes the one who shall possess her. But he does not bear her away. He puts his name upon her, but leaves her out in the same field where every passerby may look and handle----" "You are dreadfully rude," said Arlee clearly. "You don't understand at all. I thought you knew better." "Ah, I know! Was I not in England and did I not hear men talk--yes, of sisters and wives with bold words and laughter? Not so of our ladies--they are sacred names not to be spoken by another.... But I do not wish to speak of these others of your race. I speak of you." "Really, I would rather you would not speak of me." "But I wish to tell you." His voice was no louder; it was even lower, but it took on a note of authority. Arlee was sile
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