"Well, father?"
He was standing there, riveted to the spot, and he did not even know of what he was thinking. At the sound of his daughter's voice he picked up a glass, which he remembered belonged to a set he had bought for a dinner-party in honour of Renée's baptism. He lighted a piece of paper, threw it into the glass, and closed his eyes as he turned the glass over. Renée gave a little hiss of pain, a shudder ran through all the bones down her back, and then she said:
"Oh, well; I thought it would hurt me much more than that."
M. Mauperin took his hand from the glass and it fell to the ground; the cupping had not succeeded.
"Give me another," he said to his wife.
Mme. Mauperin handed it to him in a leisurely way.
"Give it me," he said, almost snatching it from her. His forehead was wet with perspiration, but he no longer trembled. This time the vacuum was made: the skin puckered up all round the glass and rose inside as though it were being drawn by the scrap of blackened paper.
"Oh, father! don't bear on so," said Renée, who had been holding her lips tightly together; "take your hand off."
"Why, I'm not touching it—look," said M. Mauperin, showing her his hands.
Renée's delicate white skin rose higher and higher in the glass, turning red, patchy, and violet. When once the cupping was done the glass had to be taken away again, the skin drawn to the edge on one side of the glass, and then the glass swayed backward and forward from the other side. M. Mauperin was obliged to begin again, two or three times over, and to press firmly on the skin, near as it was to the bones.