"Are you ready to go, dear?" she asked, and she turned to Adele

Tace. "This is Celie, Mme. Rossignol," she said, and she spoke

with a marked significance and a note of actual exultation in her

voice.

Celia, however, was not unused to this tone. Mme. Dauvray was

proud of her companion, and had a habit of showing her off, to the

girl's discomfort. The three women spoke a few words, and then

Mme. Dauvray and Celia left the rooms and walked to the entrance-

doors. But as they walked Celia became alarmed.

She was by nature extraordinarily sensitive to impressions. It was

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to that quick receptivity that the success of "The Great

Fortinbras" had been chiefly due. She had a gift of rapid

comprehension. It was not that she argued, or deducted, or

inferred. But she felt. To take a metaphor from the work of the

man she loved, she was a natural receiver. So now, although no

word was spoken, she was aware that Mme. Dauvray was greatly

excited--greatly disturbed; and she dreaded the reason of that

excitement and disturbance.

While they were driving home in the motor-car she said

apprehensively: "You met a friend then, to-night, madame?"

"No," said Mme. Dauvray; "I made a friend. I had not met Mme.

Rossignol before. A bracelet of hers came undone, and I helped her

to fasten it. We talked afterwards. She lives in Geneva."

Mme. Dauvray was silent for a moment or two. Then she turned

impulsively and spoke in a voice of appeal.

"Celie, we talked of things"; and the girl moved impatiently. She

understood very well what were the things of which Mme. Dauvray

and her new friend had talked. "And she laughed. ... I could not

bear it."

Celia was silent, and Mme. Dauvray went on in a voice of awe: "I told her of the wonderful things which happened when I sat with

Helene in the dark--how the room filled with strange sounds, how

ghostly fingers touched my forehead and my eyes. She laughed--

Adele Rossignol laughed, Celie. I told her of the spirits with

whom we held converse. She would not believe. Do you remember the

evening, Celie, when Mme. de Castiglione came back an old, old

woman, and told us how, when she had grown old and had lost her

beauty and was very lonely, she would no longer live in the great

house which was so full of torturing memories, but took a small

appartement near by, where no one knew her; and how she used to

walk out late at night, and watch, with her eyes full of tears,

the dark windows which had been once so bright with light? Adele

Rossignol would not believe. I told her that I had found the story

afterwards in a volume of memoirs. Adele Rossignol laughed and

said no doubt you had read that volume yourself before the

seance."




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