[A Lady of Quality by Frances Hodgson Burnett]@TWC D-Link book
A Lady of Quality

CHAPTER XVII--Wherein his Grace of Osmonde's courier arrives from France
12/15

A lacquey entered, bearing a salver on which lay two letters.

One was a large one, sealed with a ducal coronet, and this she saw first, and took in her hand even before the man had time to speak.
"His Grace's courier has arrived from France," he said; "the package was ordered to be delivered at once." "It must be that his Grace returns earlier than we had hoped," she said, and then the other missive caught her eye.
"'Tis your ladyship's own," the lacquey explained somewhat anxiously.
"'Twas brought back, Sir John not having yet come home, and Jenfry having waited three hours." "'Twas long enough," quoth her ladyship.

"'Twill do to-morrow." She did not lay Osmonde's letter aside, but kept it in her hand, and seeing that she waited for their retirement to read it, her guests began to make their farewells.

One by one or in groups of twos and threes they left her, the men bowing low, and going away fretted by the memory of the picture she made--a tall and regal figure in her flowered crimson, her stateliness seeming relaxed and softened by the mere holding of the sealed missive in her hand.

But the women were vaguely envious, not of Osmonde, but of her before whom there lay outspread as far as life's horizon reached, a future of such perfect love and joy; for Gerald Mertoun had been marked by feminine eyes since his earliest youth, and had seemed to embody all that woman's dreams or woman's ambitions or her love could desire.
When the last was gone, Clorinda turned, tore her letter open, and held it hard to her lips.


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