The Pretty Lady by Arnold Bennett
page 16 of 323 (04%)
page 16 of 323 (04%)
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"That is what I wear. In the way of chiffons it is the only fantasy I have bought up to the present in London. Of course, clothes--I have been forced to buy clothes. It matches exquisitely the stockings, eh?" She slid her arms into the sleeves of the transparency. She was a pretty and highly developed girl of twenty-six, short, still lissom, but with the fear of corpulence in her heart. She had beautiful hair and beautiful eyes, and she had that pucker of the forehead denoting, according to circumstances, either some kindly, grave preoccupation or a benevolent perplexity about something or other. She went near him and clasped hands round his neck, and whispered: "Your waltz was adorable. You are an artist." And with her shoulders she seemed to sketch the movements of dancing. Chapter 4 CONFIDENCE After putting on his thick overcoat and one glove he had suddenly darted to the dressing-table for his watch, which he was forgetting. Christine's face showed sympathetic satisfaction that he had remembered in time, simultaneously implying that even if he had not |
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