“Oh, it’s nothing,” she replied with a smile; “really nothing. A mere headache. I shall be better to-morrow.”
“Can I do anything for you?”
“No, thanks,” she answered, motioning him to a seat beside her.
“No, no, at your feet; Valérie—always at your feet,” the young man replied gayly, throwing himself down before her, and flinging his head back in order to gaze more intently into the dark, brilliant eyes above him.
Keeping time with a heavy finger, he sang, in a not unmusical baritone, two lines of an old French love song:
“Non, ma jeunesse n’est pas morte,
Il n’est pas mort ton souvenir.”
But his fair companion was almost oblivious to the importance of the burden of his melody. With her little pointed chin against the rose of her palm, she sat lost in a world of reverie.
“Do you ever see Jack Egerton now?” she asked suddenly.
He smiled, accustomed to her wilful wanderings.
“Yes, frequently,” he said in turn. “We have known one another so long, that I look upon him as my best friend.”