The Title Market by Emily Post
page 25 of 292 (08%)
page 25 of 292 (08%)
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"Don't, dear." She would have moved away, but he held her. "Your face is thinner, but that only shows better its beautiful bones. Ah, now your smile is just as delicious--but don't wrinkle your forehead like that; it is full of lines. So--that is better. You make the eyes sad sometimes; eyes should be the windows that let light into the soul; they should be glad and admit only sunshine." Then with one of his lightning transitions of mood, he added, not without a ring of emotion, "_Mia povera bella_." But Eleanor reached up and took his face between her hands. "As for you," she said, "you are always just a boy. Sometimes it is impossible to believe you are older than I--I think I should have been your mother." CHAPTER III NINA A ponderous, glossy, red Limousine turned in under the wrought bronze portico of one of the palatial houses of upper Fifth Avenue. As the car stopped, the face of a woman of about forty appeared at its window. Her expression was one of fretful annoyance, as though the footman who had sprung off the box and hurried up the steps to ring the front doorbell had, in his haste, stumbled purposely. The look she gave him, as he held |
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