[The Treasure of Heaven by Marie Corelli]@TWC D-Link bookThe Treasure of Heaven CHAPTER X 3/24
He sipped it slowly, and, pushing his cap further off his brows, turned his dark eyes, full of smouldering fire, upon Lord Wrotham and his friend, both of whom had succeeded in getting up a little conversation with the hostess's younger daughter, the girl named Grace.
Her sister, Elizabeth, put down her needlework, and watched Tom with sudden solicitude.
An instinctive dislike of Lord Wrotham and his companion caused her to avoid looking their way, though she heard every word they were saying,--and her interest became centred on the handsome gypsy, whose pallid features and terrible expression filled her with a vague alarm. "It would be awfully jolly of you if you'd come for a spin in my motor," said his lordship, twirling his sandy moustache and conveying a would-be amorous twinkle into his small brown-green eyes for the benefit of the girl he was ogling.
"Beastly bore having a break-down, but it's nothing serious--half a day's work will put it all right, and if you and your sister would like a turn before we go on from here, I shall be charmed. We can't do the record business now--not this time,--so it doesn't matter how long we linger in this delightful spot." "Especially in such delightful company!" added his friend, Brookfield. "I'm going to take a photograph of this house to-morrow, and perhaps"-- here he smiled complacently--"perhaps Miss Grace and Miss Elizabeth will consent to come into the picture ?" "Ya-as--ya-as!--oh do!" drawled Wrotham.
"Of course they will! _You_ will, I'm sure, Miss Grace! This gentleman, Mr.Brookfield, has got nearly all the pictorials under his thumb, and he'll put your portrait in them as 'The Beauty of Somerset,' won't you, Brookfield ?" Brookfield laughed, a pleased laugh of conscious power. "Of course I will," he said.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|