"No, sweetheart," he said hoarsely, "you would never respect me any more if I took advantage of your tenderness now. As soon—as soon as I really may, I will teach you every shade of love and its meanings. I will kiss those lips and unloosen that hair; I will suffocate you with caresses and make you thrill as I shall thrill until we both forget everything in the intoxication of bliss," and he half-closed his eyes, and his face grew pale again with suppressed emotion.
"Oh, I do not understand at all," Stella said, in a disappointed and perplexed voice. "Since we are going to be married, why would it be so very wrong for you to kiss me? I—I—" her small rueful face, with its sweet childlike irregular curves, looked almost pathetically comic, and Sasha leaned forward and covered his eyes with his hands. And then he mastered himself and laughed softly.
"Oh, you adorable one!" he said. "It is not wrong—not the least wrong.
Only presently, when you do understand, you will realize how very much
I loved you to-day."
But Stella was still pouting—and got up restlessly and went to the window.
"What can they do when they get to the Embassy?" she asked. "Could they really take me back if they found me by telephoning round?"
"I do not think so—if you are past twenty-one."
"I was twenty-one in April. I am not a bit afraid of them, but I do not want to have any row."
"When my sister has arrived you must write to your aunt, and tell where you are and what are your intentions, then all will be finished."
"Oh, I wish she would come, don't you?" Stella said.
"More than I can say, darling," he answered, fervently. "You will not,
I hope, find me so incomprehensible then."