[The Queen of Hearts by Wilkie Collins]@TWC D-Link bookThe Queen of Hearts CHAPTER II 12/15
This looked so like madness--or hypochondria at the least--that I felt afraid to ask him about it, and always pretended not to observe him. The second peculiarity in his conduct was that he never referred, while in my company, to the reports about his errand at Naples, and never once spoke of Miss Elmslie, or of his life at Wincot Abbey.
This not only astonished me, but amazed those who had noticed our intimacy, and who had made sure that I must be the depositary of all his secrets.
But the time was near at hand when this mystery, and some other mysteries of which I had no suspicion at that period, were all to be revealed. I met him one night at a large ball, given by a Russian nobleman, whose name I could not pronounce then, and cannot remember now.
I had wandered away from reception-room, ballroom, and cardroom, to a small apartment at one extremity of the palace, which was half conservatory, half boudoir, and which had been prettily illuminated for the occasion with Chinese lanterns.
Nobody was in the room when I got there.
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