[The Common Law by Robert W. Chambers]@TWC D-Link bookThe Common Law CHAPTER III 3/24
Can't you come up and look at my picture ?" Neville got up, frowning, and followed Ogilvy upstairs. Rita Tevis, swathed in a blanket from which protruded a dripping tinselled fish's tail, sat disconsolately on a chair, knitting a red-silk necktie for some party of the second part, as yet unidentified. "Mr.Neville," she said, "Sam has been quarrelling with me every minute while I'm doing my best in that horrid tub of water.
If anybody thinks it's a comfortable pose, let them try it! I wish--I _wish_ I could have the happiness of seeing Sam afloat in this old fish-scale suit with every spangle sticking into him and his legs cramped into this unspeakable tail!" She extended a bare arm, shook hands, pulled up her blanket wrap, and resumed her knitting with a fierce glance at Ogilvy, who had attempted an appealing smile. Neville stood stock-still before the canvas.
The picture promised well; it was really beautiful--the combined result of several outdoor studies now being cleverly worked up.
But Ogilvy's pictures never kept their promise. [Illustration: "Neville stood stock-still before the canvas."] "Also," observed Rita, reproachfully, "_I_ posed _en plein air_ for those rainbow sketches of his--and though it was a lonely cove with a cunningly secluded little crescent beach, I was horribly afraid of somebody coming--and besides I got most cruelly sun-burned--" "Rita! You _said_ you enjoyed that excursion!" exclaimed Ogilvy, with pathos. "I said it to flatter that enormous vanity of yours, Sam.
I had a perfectly wretched time." "What sort of a time did you have last evening ?" inquired Neville, turning from the picture. "Horrid.
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