[In the Days of My Youth by Amelia Ann Blandford Edwards]@TWC D-Link bookIn the Days of My Youth CHAPTER XVI 10/21
a cold damp broke out upon my forehead at the mere thought! All at once, just as these questions flashed across my mind, the lady drew the mantle aside, and said:-- "How imprudent of you to hide in my carriage ?" I could not believe my ears. "Suppose any of those people had caught sight of you ...
why, it would have been all over Paris to-morrow! Happily, I had the presence of mind to cover you with my cloak; otherwise ...
but there, Monsieur, I have a great mind to be very angry with you!" It was now clear that I was mistaken for some one else.
Fortunately the carriage-lamps were unlit, the windows still blurred with rain, and the night intensely dark; so, feeling like a wretch reprieved on the scaffold, I shrank farther and farther into the corner, glad to favor a mistake which promised some hope of escape. "_Eh bien_!" said the lady, half tenderly, half reproachfully; "have you nothing to say to me ?" Say to her, indeed! What could I say to her? Would not my voice betray me directly? "Ah," she continued, without waiting for a reply; "you are ashamed of the cruel scene of this morning! Well, since you have not allowed the night to pass without seeking a reconciliation, I suppose I must forgive you!" I thought, at this point, that I could not do better than press her hand, which was exquisitely soft and small--softer and smaller than even Madame de Marignan's. "Naughty Hippolyte!" murmured my companion.
"Confess, now, that you were unreasonable." I sighed heavily, and caressed the little hand with both of mine. "And are you very penitent ?" I expressed my penitence by another prodigious sigh, and ventured, this time, to kiss the tips of the dainty fingers. "_Ciel_!" exclaimed the lady.
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