The Honor of the Name by Émile Gaboriau
page 144 of 734 (19%)
page 144 of 734 (19%)
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possession of the brain and lead to the worst of follies.
Let the woman whose pulse has never quickened its beating under the influence of this counterfeit of love, cast the first stone. That she could be vanquished in this struggle for supremacy; that there could be any doubt of the result, were thoughts which never once entered the mind of Mlle. Blanche. She had been told so often, it had been repeated again and again, that the man whom she would choose must esteem himself fortunate above all others. She had seen her father besieged by so many suitors for her hand. "Besides," she thought, smiling proudly, as she surveyed her reflection in the large mirrors; "am I not as pretty as Marie-Anne?" "Far prettier!" murmured the voice of vanity; "and you possess what your rival does not: birth, wit, the genius of coquetry!" She did, indeed, possess sufficient cleverness and patience to assume and to sustain the character which seemed most likely to dazzle and to fascinate Martial. As to maintaining this character _after_ marriage, if it did not please her to do so, that was another matter! The result of all this was that during dinner Mlle. Blanche exercised all her powers of fascination upon the young marquis. |
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