“Oh! but you think of me sometimes, I suppose,” said Jacqueline, softly, “for I share your time with him.”

“I think of you to blame you for taking me away from the fifteenth century,” replied Hubert Marien, half seriously. “Ouf!—There! it is done at last. That dimple I never could manage I have got in for better or for worse. Now you may fly off. I set you at liberty—you poor little thing!”

She seemed in no hurry to profit by his permission. She stood perfectly still in the middle of the studio.

“Do you think I have posed well, faithfully, and with docility all these weeks?” she asked at last.

“I will give you a certificate to that effect, if you like. No one could have done better.”

“And if the certificate is not all I want, will you give me some other present?”

“A beautiful portrait—what can you want more?”

“The picture is for mamma. I ask a favor on my own account.”

“I refuse it beforehand. But you can tell me what it is, all the same.”

“Well, then—the only part of your house that I have ever been in is this atelier. You can imagine I have a curiosity to see the rest.”