[St. Martin’s Summer by Rafael Sabatini]@TWC D-Link book
St. Martin’s Summer

CHAPTER I
11/24

But in no light at all would you have guessed the truth, that her next would be her forty-second birthday.

Her face was pale, of an ivory pallor that gleamed in sharp contrast with the ebony of her lustrous hair.

Under the long lashes of low lids a pair of eyes black and insolent set off the haughty lines of her scarlet lips.
Her nose was thin and straight, her neck an ivory pillar splendidly upright upon her handsome shoulders.
She was dressed for riding, in a gown of sapphire velvet, handsomely laced in gold across the stomacher, and surmounted at the neck, where it was cut low and square, by the starched band of fine linen which in France was already replacing the more elaborate ruff.

On her head, over a linen coif, she wore a tall-crowned grey beaver, swathed with a scarf of blue and gold.
Standing by the hearth, one foot on the stone kerb, one elbow leaning lightly on the overmantel, she proceeded leisurely to remove her gloves.
The Seneschal observed her with eyes that held an odd mixture of furtiveness and admiration, his fingers--plump, indolent-looking stumps--plucking at his beard.
"Did you but know, Marquise, with what joy, with what a--" "I will imagine it, whatever it may be," she broke in, with that brusque arrogance that marked her bearing.

"The time for flowers of rhetoric is not now.


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