[When Wilderness Was King by Randall Parrish]@TWC D-Link bookWhen Wilderness Was King CHAPTER XIII 2/9
I have enjoyed most excellent company." "The mysterious spirits of the starry night ?" he questioned, looking out into the darkness, "or the dim figures of your own imagination ?" "Very far from either," she retorted, with a laugh; "a most substantial reality, as you are bound to confess.
Master Wayland, is it not time for you fitly to greet Captain de Croix? He may deem you lax in cordiality." I can perceive now how dearly the laughing witch loved to play us one against the other, hiding whatever depth of feeling she may have had beneath the surface of careless innocence, and keeping us both in an uncertainty as aggravating as it was sweet.
I could not read the expression upon De Croix's face in the gloom, yet I saw him start visibly at her almost mocking words, and there was a trace of ill-suppressed irritation in his voice. "Saint Guise! 'T was for that, then, he left us so mysteriously," he exclaimed, unconsciously uttering his first thought aloud.
"But how knew he you were to be here ?" Before she could answer, I spoke, anxious to relieve her of embarrassment; for 't was ever my nature to yield much without complaint. "As it chances, Captain de Croix, she did not know," I said, standing back from the palisades where he could see me more clearly.
"I left the table below with no thought of meeting Mademoiselle, and came out on this platform for a different purpose.
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