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.

Simultaneously a taxi swerved round the corner of Burlington Street.  Marthe stood on the step next to the driver.  As the taxi halted she jumped down.  Her drenched white apron was over her head and she was wet to the skin.

In the taxi, while the officer struck matches, Christine knelt and fastened his leggings; he could not have performed the nice operation for himself.  And all the time she was doing something else—­she was pushing forward the whole taxi, till her muscles ached with the effort.  Then she sat back on the seat, smoothed her hair under the hat, unclasped the bag, and patted her features delicately with the powder-puff.  Neither knew the exact time, and in vain they tried to discern the faces of clocks that flew past them in the heavy rain.  Christine sighed and said: 

“These tempests.  This rain.  They say it is because of the big cannons—­which break the clouds.”

The officer, who had the air of being in a dream, suddenly bent towards her and replied with a most strange solemnity: 

“It is to wash away the blood!”

She had not thought of that.  Of course it was!  She sighed again.

As they neared Victoria the officer said: 

“My kit-bag!  It’s at the hotel.  Shall I have time to pay my bill and get it?  The Grosvenor’s next to the station, you know.”

She answered unhesitatingly:  “You will go direct to the train.  I will try the hotel.”

“Drive round to the Grosvenor entrance like hell,” he instructed the driver when the taxi stopped in the station yard.

In the hotel she would never have got the bag, owing to her difficulties in explaining the situation in English to a haughty reception-clerk, had not a French-Swiss waiter been standing by.  She flung imploring French sentences at the waiter like a stream from a hydrant.  The bill was produced in less than half a minute.  She put down money of her own to pay for it, for she had refused to wait at the station while the officer fished in the obscurities of his purse.  The bag, into which a menial had crammed a kit probably scattered about the bedroom, arrived unfastened.  Once more at the station, she gave the cabman all the change which she had received at the hotel counter.  By a miracle she made a porter understand what was needed and how urgently it was needed.  He said the train was just going, and ran.  She ran after him.  The ticket-collector at the platform gate allowed the porter to pass, but raised an implacable arm to prevent her from following.  She had no platform ticket, and she could not possibly be travelling by the train.  Then she descried her officer standing at an open carriage door in conversation with another officer and tapping his leggings with his cane.  How aristocratic and disdainful and self-absorbed the pair looked!  They existed in a world utterly different from hers.  They were the triumphant and negligent males.  She endeavoured to direct the porter with her pointing hand, and then, hysterical again, she screamed out the one identifying word she knew:  “Edgar!”

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