[Dross by Henry Seton Merriman]@TWC D-Link book
Dross

CHAPTER VII
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The pleasant habit of afternoon tea had not yet been introduced across the channel, and French ladies had still something to learn.
"Ah, Madame!" said the Baron Giraud in a voice that may be described as metallic, inasmuch as it was tinny, "these young people!" With a wave of his thick white hand he indicated Alphonse and Lucille, who had wandered down an alley entirely composed of orange trees, where, indeed, a yellow glow seemed to hover, so thickly hung the fruit on the branches.

Madame followed the direction of his glance with a non-committing bow of the head.
"I shall have to ask Monsieur le Vicomte what he proposes doing in the way of a 'dot,'" pursued the financier with a cackling laugh, which was not silvery, though it savoured of bullion.

The Vicomtesse smiled gravely, and offered the Baron one of those little square biscuits peculiar to Frejus.
"Madame knows nothing of such matters ?" "Nothing," answered she, meeting the twinkling eyes.
"Ah!" murmured the Baron, addressing, it would seem, the distant mountains.

"Such details are not, of course, for the ladies.

It is the other side of the question"-- he laid his hand upon his waistcoat--"the side of the affections--the heart, my dear Vicomtesse, the heart." "Yes," answered Madame, looking at him with that disquieting straight glance of hers--"the heart." In the mean time--in the orange alley--Alphonse was attempting to get a serious hearing from Lucille, and curiously enough was making use of the same word as that passing between their elders on the terrace above them.
"Have you no heart ?" he cried, stamping his foot on the mossy turf, "that you always laugh when I am serious--have you no heart, Lucille ?" "I do not know what you mean by heart," answered the girl with a little frown, as if the subject did not please her.


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