The Gilded Chair: A Novel
CONTENTS
When the train crept out of Euston into the wet night the Marchesa Soderrelli sat for a considerable time quite motionless in the corner of her compartment. The lights, straggling northward out of London, presently vanished. The hum and banging of passing engines ceased. The darkness, attended by a rain, descended.
Beside the Marchesa, on the compartment seat, as the one piece of visible luggage, except the two rugs about her feet, was a square green leather bag, with a flat top, on which were three gold letters under a coronet. It was perhaps an hour before the Marchesa Soderrelli moved. Then it was to open this bag, get out a cigarette case, select a cigarette, light it, and resume her place in the corner of the compartment. She was evidently engaged with some matter to be deeply considered; her eyes widened and narrowed, and the muscles of her forehead gathered and relaxed.
The woman was somewhere in that indefinite age past forty. Her figure, straight and supple, was beginning at certain points to take on that premonitory plumpness, realized usually in middle life; her hair, thick and heavy, was her one unchanged heritage of youth; her complexion, once tender and delicate, was depending now somewhat on the arts. The woman was coming lingeringly to autumn. Her face, in repose, showed the freshness of youth gone out; the mouth, straightened and somewhat hardened; the chin firmer; there was a vague irregular line, common to persons of determination, running from the inner angle of the eye downward and outward to the corner of the mouth; the eyes were drawn slightly at the outer corners, making there a drooping angle.
Her dress was evidently continental, a coat and skirt of gray cloth; a hat of gray straw, from which fell a long gray veil; a string of pearls around her neck, and drop pearl earrings.
As she smoked, the Marchesa continued with the matter that perplexed her. For a time she carried the cigarette mechanically to her lips, then the hand holding it dropped on the arm of the compartment seat beside her. There the cigarette burned, sending up a thin wisp of smoke.
Melville Davisson Post
THE GILDED CHAIR
Illustrated By A. B. Wenzell And Arthur E. Becher
MCMX
THE GILDED CHAIR
CHAPTER I—THE TRAVELER
CHAPTER II—THE HOUSE OF THE FIRST MEN
CHAPTER III—THE HERMIT'S CRUST
CHAPTER IV—THE MAIDEN OP THE WATERS
CHAPTER V—THE GATHERING
CHAPTER VI—THE MENACE
CHAPTER VII—THE COUNSEL OP WISDOM
CHAPTER VIII—THE WOMAN ON THE WALL
CHAPTER IX—THE USURPER
CHAPTER X—THE RED BENCH
CHAPTER XI—THE CHART OP THE TREASURE
CHAPTER XII—THE SERVANTS OP YAHVEH
CHAPTER XIII—THE JOURNEYING
CHAPTER XIV—THE PLACE OP PROPHECY
CHAPTER XV—THE VULNERABLE SPOT
CHAPTER XVI—THE LESSON IN MAGIC
CHAPTER XVII—THE STAIR OF VISIONS
CHAPTER XVIII—THE SIGN BY THE WAY
CHAPTER XIX—THE CHAMBER OP LIGHT
CHAPTER XX—THE MOVING SHADOW
CHAPTER XXI—THE IMPOTENT SPELL
CHAPTER XXII—THE IRON POT
|The Duke turned instantly.
CHAPTER XIII—THE GREAT PERIL
CHAPTER XXIV—THE TASTE OF DEATH
CHAPTER XXV—THE WANDERING
CHAPTER XXVI—THE CITY OF DREAMS
THE END