“No, thank you,” said Sonia. “I’m not going to put it on.”
“No ... but it’s possible ... some one may have ... have you felt in the pockets of it? That one, now? It seems as if that one—”
He pointed to the pocket which had held the packet.
Sonia started back with an air of utter dismay; her eyes glanced wildly round the room as if seeking an avenue of escape; her fingers closed convulsively on the pocket.
“But this is abominable!” she cried. “You look as if—”
“I beg you, mademoiselle,” interrupted Guerchard. “We are sometimes obliged—”
“Really, Mademoiselle Sonia,” broke in the Duke, in a singularly clear and piercing tone, “I cannot see why you should object to this mere formality.”
“Oh, but—but—” gasped Sonia, raising her terror-stricken eyes to his.
The Duke seemed to hold them with his own; and he said in the same clear, piercing voice, “There isn’t the slightest reason for you to be frightened.”
Sonia let go of the cloak, and Guerchard, his face all alight with triumph, plunged his hand into the pocket. He drew it out empty, and stared at it, while his face fell to an utter, amazed blankness.