“Here is your egg and brandy.”

I swallowed it and handed her back the glass.

“I feel all the better for that, too.”

As I sat in the shade of the little stone summer-house within the Greek portico, she lingered in the blazing sunshine, a figure all glorious health and supple curves, and the stray brown hairs above the brown mass gleamed with the gold of a Giotto aureole. She stood, a duskily glowing, radiant emblem of life against the background of spring greenery and rioting convolvulus. I drew a full breath and looked at her as if magnetised. I had the very oddest sensation. She seemed, in Shakespearean phrase, to rain influence upon me. As if she read the stirrings of my blood, she smiled and said:

“After all, confess, isn't it good to be alive?”

A thrill of physical well-being swept through me. I leaped to my feet.

“You witch!” I cried. “What are you doing to me?”

“I?” She retreated a step, with a laugh.

“Yes, you. You are casting a spell on me, so that I may eat my words.”

“I don't know what you are talking about, but you haven't answered my question. It is good to be alive.”