Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 728 pages of information about Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3.

Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 728 pages of information about Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3.
thus assailed her.  When well beyond the horizontal rays of light thrown across the pavement, she turned abruptly and saw a human form looming through the fog.  The indistinct glimpse was enough.  She staggered for an instant under the weight of terror, for she no longer doubted that this unknown man had tracked her, step by step, from her home.  The hope of escaping such a spy lent strength to her feeble limbs.  Incapable of reasoning, she quickened her steps to a run, as if it were possible to escape a man necessarily more agile than she.  After running for a few minutes, she reached the shop of a pastry-cook, entered it, and fell, rather than sat, down on a chair which stood before the counter.

As she lifted the creaking latch of the door, a young woman, who was at work on a piece of embroidery, looked up and recognized through the glass panes the antiquated mantle of purple silk which wrapped the old lady, and hastened to pull open a drawer, as if to take from thence something that she had to give her.  The action and the expression of the young woman not only implied a wish to get rid of the stranger, as of some one most unwelcome, but she let fall an exclamation of impatience at finding the drawer empty.  Then, without looking at the lady, she came rapidly from behind the counter, and went towards the back-shop to call her husband, who appeared at once.

“Where have you put ——­ ——?” she asked him, mysteriously, calling his attention to the old lady by a glance, and not concluding her sentence.

Although the pastry-cook could see nothing but the enormous black-silk hood circled with purple ribbons which the stranger wore, he disappeared, with a glance at his wife which seemed to say, “Do you suppose I should leave that on your counter?”

Surprised at the silence and immobility of her customer, the wife came forward, and was seized with a sudden movement of compassion as well as of curiosity when she looked at her.  Though the complexion of the old gentlewoman was naturally livid, like that of a person vowed to secret austerities, it was easy to see that some recent alarm had spread an unusual paleness over her features.  Her head-covering was so arranged as to hide the hair, whitened no doubt by age, for the cleanly collar of her dress proved that she wore no powder.  The concealment of this natural adornment gave to her countenance a sort of conventual severity; but its features were grave and noble.  In former days the habits and manners of people of quality were so different from those of all other classes that it was easy to distinguish persons of noble birth.  The young shop-woman felt certain, therefore, that the stranger was a ci-devant, and one who had probably belonged to the court.

“Madame?” she said, with involuntary respect, forgetting that the title was proscribed.

The old lady made no answer.  Her eyes were fixed on the glass of the shop-window, as if some alarming object were painted upon it.

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Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.