The “Gamin” frowned. She was too young as yet to enjoy being called a little girl, and the riposte came at once.
“Where old gentlemen are safe, younger people may surely go!” she said, mischievously.
“Old gentleman ... hummm ... m! That’s rather hard on me, isn’t it, dear cousin mine?”
“Hard, why?” she retorted. “How old are you, anyhow?” And, standing on the very points of her tiny slippers, she pointed at his temples with two accusing fingers.
“One, two, three, four, five, six ... silver threads among the bronze,” she misquoted.
“And seven!” he coolly admitted, looking smilingly down at her. “Seven or more, what matters? I am thirty-four, you know, my little cousin.”
“What matters indeed! You have enough privileges already, without expecting to remain always young.”
“Privileges! You surprise me!”
“Certainly,” she insisted. “Aren’t you a great Prince, a Serene-Highness—just as in the fairy-tales? Haven’t you huge, big estates in Russia and the Crimea, villas in the south of France, fortins in the Caucasus, mines in Siberia, besides loads and loads of money, jewels, picture-galleries, a private band of musicians, acres of hothouses, horses, stud-farms? A regular Marquis de Carabas, that’s what you are!”
She paused for lack of breath, and once more he laughed.