FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   152   153   154   155   156   157   158   159   160   161   162   163   164   165   166   167   168   169   170   171   >>  
me." (The Princess pressed my hand. I understood.) Mrs. Spencer touched the cigarette to the tiny alcohol name; then offered it to the Duke. "Someone has spoiled you," she said lightly. Lotzen took her hand and, with it, put the cigarette between his lips. "Unfortunately, no," he answered. "But I once saw a pretty woman do that for another man." (Again Dehra pressed my fingers.) "And did he hold her hand afterward?" she asked--freeing her own from the Duke's. "They were not alone," he said--and tried to take it again. But she put both hands behind her. "Come, Your Highness, this is not the Masque," she said. But there was no reproof in her tones. "Tell me," said he; "how did you know me, last night?" "What matters it? Particularly, since it was only because you knew me that you spoke." "You think I was searching for you?" he asked. She blew a cloud of smoke under the lamp shade and watched it float out at the top. "Were you?" she asked. "If I said yes, would it please you?" "Not unless I thought it true, monsieur--and, also, knew the reason." He looked at her steadily a moment. "What better reason could I have than that you are the most beautiful woman in Valeria?" She put her fan before her face. "Your Highness's compliment is very delicate," she laughed. "It wasn't meant for a compliment," he answered. "If you have looked in your mirror, to-night, you know I speak the simple truth." She got up and went over to a great glass, on the opposite wall. Lotzen followed her, and they stood there, a bit, looking in it. "You like me in black?" she asked, smiling at him in the mirror. "I like you in anything," he answered--and made as though to put his arm around her waist. She swung quickly away from him--just out of reach. "Even in a gypsy dress?" she asked. "It was charming--but, I think I prefer this," and he nodded toward her gleaming shoulders. She made a gesture of dissent, and they went back to the table. Lotzen drew a small chair close and sat staring at her. She studied her fan and waited. Then he hooked his hands about his knee and leaned back. "Do you know," he said, "it's a crying shame you are married to my dear cousin." She looked him full in the face--and smiled. "Why didn't you make me a widow, then, last night, when you had the chance?" Lotzen shrugged his shoulders. "The chance was all right, but the end was bad--though
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   152   153   154   155   156   157   158   159   160   161   162   163   164   165   166   167   168   169   170   171   >>  



Top keywords:
Lotzen
 

answered

 

looked

 

shoulders

 

cigarette

 

chance

 

compliment

 

pressed

 

mirror

 

Highness


reason
 

simple

 
smiling
 

opposite

 

gleaming

 

married

 

cousin

 

crying

 

leaned

 

smiled


shrugged

 
hooked
 

charming

 

prefer

 
nodded
 

quickly

 

gesture

 
staring
 

studied

 

waited


dissent

 

fingers

 

afterward

 

freeing

 

pretty

 

alcohol

 

offered

 

touched

 

Spencer

 
Princess

understood

 
Someone
 
Unfortunately
 

spoiled

 

lightly

 

Masque

 

reproof

 

monsieur

 

thought

 

steadily