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sity of looking as savage as she felt. And she felt very savage indeed. If an American Indian--an idealised, poeticised American Indian--could be invested with the beauty that does not belong to the red races and yet which, if perfected on the lines of beauty suggested by some of the nobler specimens of the nobler tribes, she might look like Brigit Mead. The girl had a clean-cutness of feature, a thin compactness of build, a stag-like carriage of her small head that, together with her almost bronze skin and coal-black hair, gave her an air remarkably and arrestingly un-English. The picture in the Luxembourg gallery, a typically French, subtle, secretive face, gives the expression of her face and the strange gleam in the long eyes. But it, the face in the picture, is overcivilised, whereas Brigit looked untamed and resentful. She wore, for the weather had changed with the unpleasant capriciousness of an elderly coquette, a warm, close-fitting black coat and skirt and a small black toque. Round her neck clung to its own tail, as if in a despairing attempt to find out what had happened to its own anatomy, a little sable boa. She had a dressing-case and an umbrella, both of them characteristically uncumbersome and light, and several newspapers and a book. Her journey was not to be a long one. She was going to change trains in London and go half an hour into Surrey to spend a few days with a friend. Lady Kingsmead, when told of the speedy jilting of the desirable Pontefract, and the subsequent acceptance of young Joyselle, had been disagreeable. "It is ridiculous, and everyone will say you are cradle-snatching," she had said. "When you are forty he will be thirty-seven--almost a boy still." "Dearest mamma," returned the girl with a very unfilial lift of her upper lip, "forty is--_youth_!" "And for you to marry a nobody; the son of nobody knows whom!" "But everybody knows who his father is--which is rather distinguished nowadays!" Then Lady Kingsmead, as was natural, quite lost her temper and stormed. Brigit was an idiot, a fool, a beastly little creature to do such a thing. Ponty was a gentleman, at least, whereas---- "Whereas Theo is a delightful, nice, perfectly presentable young man, and the son of the greatest violinist of the century." "Ah, bah! of the last ten years, yes." "Of the century. As to Ponty--why don't you marry him yourself? Anyone could marry Ponty!" Then, suddenly ashamed of her
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