[The Chink in the Armour by Marie Belloc Lowndes]@TWC D-Link bookThe Chink in the Armour CHAPTER X 1/8
CHAPTER X. And then there began a series of long cloudless days for Sylvia Bailey. For the first time she felt as if she was seeing life, and such seeing was very pleasant to her. Not in her wildest dreams, during the placid days of her girlhood and brief married life, had she conceived of so interesting and so exhilarating an existence as that which she was now leading! And this was perhaps owing in a measure to the fact that there is, if one may so express it, a spice of naughtiness in life as led at Lacville. In a mild, a very mild, way Sylvia Bailey had fallen a victim to the Goddess of Play.
She soon learned to look forward to the hours she and Anna Wolsky spent each day at the baccarat tables.
But, unlike Anna, Sylvia was never tempted to risk a greater sum on that dangerous green cloth than she could comfortably afford to lose, and perhaps just because this was so, on the whole she won money rather than lost it. A certain change had come over the relations of the two women.
They still met daily, if only at the Casino, and they occasionally took a walk or a drive together, but Madame Wolsky--and Sylvia Bailey felt uneasy and growing concern that it was so--now lived for play, and play alone. Absorbed in the simple yet fateful turns of the game, Anna would remain silent for hours, immersed in calculations, and scarcely aware of what went on round her.
She and Monsieur Wachner--"L'Ami Fritz," as even Sylvia had fallen into the way of calling him--seemed scarcely alive unless they were standing or sitting round a baccarat table, putting down or taking up the shining gold pieces which they treated as carelessly as if they were counters. But it was not the easy, idle, purposeless life she was now leading that brought the pretty English widow that strange, unacknowledged feeling of entire content with life. What made existence at Lacville so exciting and so exceptionally interesting to Sylvia Bailey was her friendship with Comte Paul de Virieu. There is in every woman a passion for romance, and in Sylvia this passion had been baulked, not satisfied, by her first marriage. Bill Chester loved her well and deeply, but he was her lawyer and trustee as well as her lover.
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