Rose of the World
o his satisfaction completed his psychological analysis of a ruler in chief, he told himself that half a page or so consecrated to one of the pawns in the great chess game of emp
purposeful yet respectful stride, Bethune had approached the Governor and addressed him in an undertone. Sir Arthur had listened and responded with urbanity and condescension. Whereupon the officer
nk of no better topic for opening the conversation with his dissimilar companion th
sonality, our h
do
es d'Anglo-Saxons (as M. Chatelard knew) wanted
ians, hein? The square man in
on to reply; and M. Chatelard, amazed at a silence which he
ble you do n
competent to judge,"
At least, my young friend," he went on aloud, "you have, I trust, yourself no cause to be dissatisfied with his
re quite independent of Sir A
more than British reserve in the almost resentful tone-so
can deceive one's self! Just now I would have sworn, from your attitude, despite y
yes. Nothing connect
nal favo
on it a favour-a mere act
ear sir, an a
ne that could not inte
terests me. It is my trade
oths that were plastered against the walls, Bethune halted a second to survey the sh
hould he not gratify this note-taking traveller with his tale? There was no mystery about it; and a plain statement of the situ
ff abruptly. "You are, I understand, a sedulous observer: did yo
an in silence for a perceptible moment. "Did I notice her Excellency?" he repeated then, in elaborately natural tones. "Why, my dear fellow, it would mean having no eyes not to notice her-one of the most bea
which he had been lighting his c
It is my desire, it is my intention, to write the life of that comrade. I requir
ed the Frenchman, in tones of on
cer, gravely. "To make h
d h
ed to see that she
him before so extraordinary a situation. As he went he regarded the Eng
ife of his comrade! He comes to her with a plan ... a plan of an astuteness to deceive an angel. But the woman who loves is never deceived. Because she loves him, she reads his heart. Virtuous, she refuses.... They are both young, she knows her weakness. She bores herself, yes, she bores herself, but she refuses. And he, what does he do, the young, silent, determined adorer? My faith, it is the simplicity of genius: he goes to the old husband, that the old husband
e aloud, "but you
ura
r lover's task easy to him, nor amusing, hey! With her it will be all or nothing: the grand passion. Ah, my gallant friend, belie
ne's turn to
alling in love with Lady Gerardine?" Then, overcome with the humour
pleased to discover a concentrated bitterness; in
that your programme was a little dangerous. And for one like myself, who has made a study of women, Lady Gerardine is a type-a type
ime the physician was not far wrong in noting bitterness in his ton
nt you. But cold?" s
is white in face," said
will burn to the bone. Ah, it is not the old husband that will feel that fire! But the fire is there, all the fiercer for being concentrated. A
ted Bethune, drily, "and yonder are
tter, interrupted in full eloquence, had had time to lay
figure swing away from light to darkness, down the narrow street dotted with gaudy booth
two seemed to circle in his mind round the baffling image of his friend's widow like a flight of birds round the h
ype="