A Love Episode by Émile Zola
page 51 of 437 (11%)
page 51 of 437 (11%)
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"My wife," said he, "must return your visit, and she will in person repeat my invitation. It would do your daughter good." "But I don't refuse," she replied, laughing. "I do not require to be fetched with ceremony. Only--only--I am afraid of being indiscreet. At any rate, we will see." Their talk continued, but at last the doctor exclaimed in a tone of surprise: "Where on earth can Mother Fetu have gone? It must be a quarter of an hour since she went to see after her neighbor's soup-pot." Helene then saw that the door was shut, but it did not shock her at the moment. She continued to talk of Madame Deberle, of whom she spoke highly to her husband; but noticing that the doctor constantly glanced towards the door, she at last began to feel uncomfortable. "It's very strange that she does not come back!" she remarked in her turn. Their conversation then dropped. Helene, not knowing what to do, opened the window; and when she turned round they avoided looking at one another. The laughter of children came in through the circular window, which, with its bit of blue sky, seemed like a full round moon. They could not have been more alone--concealed from all inquisitive looks, with merely this bit of heaven gazing in on them. The voices of the children died away in the distance; and a quivering silence fell. No one would dream of finding them in that attic, out of the world. Their confusion grew apace, and in the end Helene, |
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