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him."

      "How delicious you are!"

      "Delicious! Is that saying enough? Could you not find something rather more eulogistic? Let us see—try now!"

      She was still glancing down the list; and Paul de Rueille pointed with the handle of his whip to a line written in pencil:

      "What's that?—'Tell grandmamma about La Norinière!'"

      "Why, I met the Juzencourts, and they said I was to be sure to tell grandmamma that 'The Norinière' is to be inhabited."

      "Ah, Clagny has sold it?"

      "No; he is coming back to it. It appears that he is coming every summer."

      "Ah, so much the better. Grandmamma will be very glad of that."

      "Yes, she likes him very much. I do not know him, this M. de Clagny, but I have often heard about him."

      "Don't you remember seeing him a long time ago?"

      "Why, no!"

      "Well, he was your godfather, anyhow!"

      "You are dreaming! Uncle Alexis is my godfather."

      "Your Uncle Jonzac is the godfather of Denyse, but it was M. de Clagny who was the godfather of Bijou. Yes, he said once, speaking of you when you were very little, the Bijou—and the name suited you so well that you have had it ever since."

      "Don't you think it is rather ridiculous to call me Bijou now that I am old?"

      "You look as though you were fourteen, and you always will look like that, I promise you."

      "Isn't it rather risky to promise me that?"

      She laughed as she glanced at him, and he, too, looked at her as though he could not take his eyes away from the pretty, fresh young face turned towards him. He was paying no attention to the road, which was in a very bad state, until suddenly the right wheel went into a rut, and the gig gave a jerk, which sent Denyse on to him. She clung to his arm with all her might, and they remained an instant like this until they were able to regain their balance. The wheel, then, in some way or another, got clear of the deep rut in which it had been caught, and the horse went on again at a quick pace as before.

      "That's right!" said Bijou, laughing heartily. "I certainly thought we should be upset."

      "It was as near a shave as possible," he answered gravely.

      She loosened the grasp of her small fingers, which had been pressed tightly on her cousin's shoulder.

      "Is it really over?" she asked. "You are not going to begin again, I hope?"

      M. de Rueille did not answer. He was looking at her with an absent-minded, troubled expression in his eyes.

      "Yes; but, instead of looking at me, do look before you," she went on. "We shall get into another rut directly, you'll see."

      "Oh, no! oh, no!" he murmured, as though he were in some dream.

      "I'm sure we shall be late for dinner," said Bijou; "and you know grandmamma does not altogether like that."

      Rueille touched the pony's back with the whip, and the animal, springing forward, jerked the little carriage violently, and then started off at a mad pace.

      This time Bijou looked stupefied.

      "What's that for?" she asked. "Whatever is the matter with you to-day? Just now you almost upset us, and now you touch Colonel with the whip, and you ought not to let him even guess that you have one; you have made him take fright," and then, seeing that the horse was calming down, she added, "or nearly so; you are not yourself at all."

      "No," he answered mechanically, "I am not myself."

      At the pony's first plunge Denyse had taken M. de Rueille's arm again. It was not that she was in the least afraid, but she was perched on a seat which was too high for her, so that she could not keep her balance, and, consequently, she tried to hold on to something firm. Without loosing the arm on to which she was hanging, she leant towards her cousin, and asked, with evident interest:

      "Not yourself? What is the matter? Are you ill?"

      "Ill? No! at least, not exactly."

      "What do you mean by not exactly? Oh, but you must not be ill. We have to work at our play this evening, and if you do not set about it, all of you, and in earnest, why, it will never be finished for the race-ball."

      "I don't care a hang about the play, and—I—if I were you—"

      He stopped abruptly, evidently embarrassed.

      "Well?" asked Bijou, "what is it? You were going to say something."

      "Yes," he stammered out, scarcely knowing how to put what he wanted to say. "I was going to remark that the design Jean has made for your—for Hebe's dress—"

      "Well?"

      "Well, it isn't the thing at all; there is too little of it."

      "Too little of it? Nonsense!"

      "It isn't nonsense. I say it is not the thing for a woman, and especially a young girl like you, to appear like that."

      Bijou looked at Paul de Rueille with a bewildered expression on her face, and then burst out laughing.

      "Oh, you are queer; you look exactly like a jealous husband."

      "Jealous!" he stammered out, vexed and ill at ease. "It isn't for me to be jealous, but I—"

      "No, certainly, but all the same, without being jealous, you men do not like a woman to look pretty, or to be nice, or amusing, for anyone else's benefit than just your own."

      "Well, admitting that that is so, it is quite natural."

      "Ah! you think so? Oh, well, a woman, on the contrary, is always glad when the men she likes are admired; she is delighted when other people like them too."

      "Nonsense! You do not know anything about it, my dear Bijou. You are most deliciously inexperienced in such things fortunately."

      "Why fortunately?" she asked, opening her soft, innocent eyes wide in astonishment.

      "Because—"

      He stopped short, and Bijou insisted, pinching his arm.

      "Well, go on—do go on."

      "No, it would be too complicated," he answered, evidently ill at ease, and trying to shake off the grasp of the strong little hand.

      "Too complicated!" repeated Bijou, turning red. "I detest being put off like that. Why will you not explain what you were thinking?"

      "Explain what I was thinking," he said, in a sort of fright. "Oh, no!"

      "No? Well, it is not nice of you."

      They went on for a minute or two without speaking, Bijou calm and smiling, and her companion with a serious, uneasy look on his face.

      Just as the gig was entering the avenue, Bijou turned towards M. de Rueille, and touching him, this time very gently, with her little hand, she said in a penetrating voice, which, in his agitated state of mind, was the last straw:

      "As it vexes you so much I won't wear that costume. We will get Jean to design another for me."

      He seized the hand that was resting on his arm and pressed it to his lips with an almost brutal tenderness.

      Bijou did not appear to like this passionate display of feeling. She drew her hand away quietly, but there was a strange gleam in her eyes as she said:

      "Take care of the gate, it is a sharp turn remember, and you are not in luck to-day."

      She then began to collect her parcels calmly, and until they arrived at the door of the château she was silent and thoughtful. The first dinner-bell was just ringing, and Bijou ran upstairs

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