[The Arrow of Gold by Joseph Conrad]@TWC D-Link bookThe Arrow of Gold CHAPTER IV 21/64
This I have perceived to be also the greatest of Dominic's concerns.
He, too, wonders.
And when he breathes his doubts the smile lurking under the dark curl of his moustaches is not reassuring. But there is also something exciting in such speculations and the road to the Villa seemed to me shorter than ever before. Let in by the silent, ever-active, dark lady's maid, who is always on the spot and always on the way somewhere else, opening the door with one hand, while she passes on, turning on one for a moment her quick, black eyes, which just miss being lustrous, as if some one had breathed on them lightly. On entering the long room I perceive Mills established in an armchair which he had dragged in front of the divan.
I do the same to another and there we sit side by side facing R., tenderly amiable yet somehow distant among her cushions, with an immemorial seriousness in her long, shaded eyes and her fugitive smile hovering about but never settling on her lips.
Mills, who is just back from over the frontier, must have been asking R.whether she had been worried again by her devoted friend with the white hair.
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