Chapter 8
A SILENCE followed. The countess looked at
her guest, smiling affably, but still not disguising the fact that she would
not take it at all amiss now if the guest were to get up and go. The daughter
was already fingering at the folds of her gown and looking interrogatively at
her mother, when suddenly they heard in the next room several girls and boys
running to the door, and the grating sound of a chair knocked over and a girl
of thirteen ran in, hiding something in her short muslin petticoat, and stopped
short in the middle of the room. She had evidently bounded so far by mistake,
unable to stop in her flight. At the same instant there appeared in the doorway
a student with a crimson band on his collar, a young officer in the Guards, a
girl of fifteen, and a fat, rosy-cheeked boy in a child’s smock.
The prince jumped up, and swaying from side
to side, held his arms out wide round the little girl.
“Ah, here she
is!” he cried, laughing. “Our little darling on her fête day!”
“My dear,
there is a time for everything,” said the countess, affecting severity. “You’re
always spoiling her, Elie,” she added to her husband.
“Bonjour, ma
chère, je vous félicite,” said the visitor. “Quelle délicieuse enfant!” she
added, turning to her mother.
The dark-eyed little girl, plain, but full
of life, with her wide mouth, her childish bare shoulders, which shrugged and
panted in her bodice from her rapid motion, her black hair brushed back, her
slender bare arms and little legs in lace-edged long drawers and open slippers,
was at that charming stage when the girl is no longer a child, while the child
is not yet a young girl. Wriggling away from her father, she ran up to her
mother, and taking no notice whatever of her severe remarks, she hid her
flushed face in her mother’s lace kerchief and broke into laughter. As she
laughed she uttered some incoherent phrases about the doll, which was poking
out from her petticoat.
No comments:
Post a Comment