The Second Class Passenger - Fifteen Stories by Perceval Gibbon
page 43 of 350 (12%)
page 43 of 350 (12%)
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"Madame," he said grandly, "I can do anything you desire. He shall have the note to-night." Poor Monsieur Vaucher, the charred remains of a man of sentiment, preserving yet a spark or two of the soft fire! Could he have known the contents of that note and their significance, with what fervor of refusal he would have cast it back at her! But he knew nothing, save that Truda's acting restored to him sometimes for an hour or two the emotions of his youth, and he was very much her servant. It was in the spirit of devotion and service that he called a droshky, and fared out to the crooked streets of the Jewish quarter to do his errand. It was a fine soft night, with a clear sky of stars, and Monsieur Vaucher enjoyed the drive. And as he went, jolting over the cobbles of the lesser streets, he suffered himself to recall the great scene of that night's play--a long slow situation of a woman at bay, opposing increasing odds with increasing spirit--and experienced again his thrill. "Ah," he murmured over his cigar; "the Schottelius, she has the sense of climax!" And so he duly delivered the note and returned to the hotel and bed, a man content with the conduct of his own world. Things went well with Truda and Vaucher and all the company for the next two days. Never had she been so amenable to those who charged themselves with her interests, never so generally and mildly amiable to those who had to live at her orders. But none of those who came in contact with her failed to observe a new note in her manner. It was |
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