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When Knighthood Was in Flower - or, the Love Story of Charles Brandon and Mary Tudor the King's Sister, and Happening in the Reign of His August Majesty King Henry the Eighth by Charles Major
page 79 of 324 (24%)
"I could not bear to go through that dance before so large a company.
I should not object so much if no one else could see--that is, with
you--Edwin." "Edwin!" Oh! so soft and sweet! The little jade! to think
that she could hoodwink me so easily, and talk me into a good humor
with her soft, purring "Edwin." I saw through it all quickly enough,
and left her without another word. In a few minutes she went into an
adjoining room where I knew she was alone. The door was open and the
music could be heard there, so I followed.

"My lady, there is no one to see us here; I can teach you now, if you
wish," said I.

She saw she was cornered, and replied, with a toss of her saucy little
head: "But what if I do not wish?"

Now this was more than I could endure with patience, so I answered:
"My young lady, you shall ask me before I teach you."

"There are others who can dance it much better than you," she
returned, without looking at me.

"If you allow another to teach you that dance," I responded, "you will
have seen the last of me." She had made me angry, and I did not speak
to her for more than a week. When I did--but I will tell you of that
later on. There was one thing about Jane and the new step: so long as
she did not know it, she would not dance it with any other man, and
foolish as my feeling may have been, I could not bear the thought of
her doing it. I resolved that if she permitted another man to teach
her that dance it should be all over between us. It was a terrible
thought to me, that of losing Jane, and it came like a very stroke
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