The Pretty Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Pretty Lady.

The Pretty Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Pretty Lady.

Christine felt that Molder would have danced better two hours earlier; but still he danced beautifully.  Their bodies fitted like two parts of a jigsaw puzzle that have discovered each other.  She realised that G.J. was middle-aged, and regret tinctured the ecstasy of the dance.  Then suddenly she heard a loud, imploring cry in her ear: 

“Christine!”

She looked round, pale, still dancing, but only by inertia.

Nobody was near her.  The four people at the Major’s table gave no sign of agitation or even of interest.  The Major still had Alice more or less in his arms.

“What was that?” she asked wildly.

“What was what?” said Molder, at a loss to understand her extraordinary demeanour.

And she heard the cry again, and then again: 

“Christine!  Christine!”

She recognised the voice.  It was the voice of the officer whom she had taken to Victoria Station one Sunday night months and months ago.

“Excuse me!” she said, slipping from Molder’s hold, and she hurried out of the room to the ladies’ cloak-room, got her wraps, and ran past the watchful guardian, through the dark, dubious portico of the club into the street.  The thing was done in a moment, and why she did it she could not tell.  She knew simply that she must do it, and that she was under the dominion of those unseen powers in whom she had always believed.  She forgot the Guinea-Fowl as completely as though it had been a pre-natal phenomenon with her.

Chapter 24

THE SOLDIER

But outside she lost faith.  Half a dozen motor-cars were slumbering in a row near the door of the Guinea-Fowl, and they all stirred monstrously yet scarcely perceptibly at the sight of the woman’s figure, solitary, fragile and pale in the darkness.  They seemed for an instant to lust for her; and then, recognising that she was not their prey, to sink back into the torpor of their inexhaustible patience.  The sight of them was prejudicial to the dominion of the unseen powers.  Christine admitted to herself that she had drunk a lot, that she was demented, that her only proper course was to return dutifully to the supper-party.  She wondered what, if she did not so return, she could possibly say to justify herself to G.J.

Nevertheless she went on down the street, hurrying, automatic, and reached the main thoroughfare.  It was dark with the new protective darkness.  The central hooded lamps showed like poor candles, making a series of rings of feeble illumination on the vast invisible floor of the road.  Nobody was afoot; not a soul.  The last of the motor-buses that went about killing and maiming people in the new protective darkness had long since reached its yard.  The seductive dim violet bulbs were all extinguished on the entrances of the theatres, and, save for a thread of light at some lofty window here and there, the curving facades of the street were as undecipherable as the heavens above or as the asphalte beneath.

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Project Gutenberg
The Pretty Lady from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.