On a dreary afternoon of November, when London was closely wrapped in a

yellow fog, Hermione Lester was sitting by the fire in her house in Eaton

Place reading a bundle of letters, which she had just taken out of her

writing-table drawer. She was expecting a visit from the writer of the

letters, Emile Artois, who had wired to her on the previous day that he

was coming over from Paris by the night train and boat.

Miss Lester was a woman of thirty-four, five feet ten in height, flat,

thin, but strongly built, with a large waist and limbs which, though

vigorous, were rather unwieldy. Her face was plain: rather square and

harsh in outline, with blunt, almost coarse features, but a good

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complexion, clear and healthy, and large, interesting, and slightly

prominent brown eyes, full of kindness, sympathy, and brightness, full,

too, of eager intelligence and of energy, eyes of a woman who was

intensely alive both in body and in mind. The look of swiftness, a look

most attractive in either human being or in animal, was absent from her

body but was present in her eyes, which showed forth the spirit in her

with a glorious frankness and a keen intensity. Nevertheless, despite

these eyes and her thickly growing, warm-colored, and wavy brown hair,

she was a plain, almost an ugly woman, whose attractive force issued from

within, inviting inquiry and advance, as the flame of a fire does,

playing on the blurred glass of a window with many flaws in it.

Hermione was, in fact, found very attractive by a great many people of

varying temperaments and abilities, who were captured by her spirit and

by her intellect, the soul of the woman and the brains, and who, while

seeing clearly and acknowledging frankly the plainness of her face and

the almost masculine ruggedness of her form, said, with a good deal of

truth, that "somehow they didn't seem to matter in Hermione." Whether

Hermione herself was of this opinion not many knew. Her general

popularity, perhaps, made the world incurious about the subject.

The room in which Hermione was reading the letters of Artois was small

and crammed with books. There were books in cases uncovered by glass from

floor to ceiling, some in beautiful bindings, but many in tattered paper

covers, books that looked as if they had been very much read. On several

tables, among photographs and vases of flowers, were more books and many

magazines, both English and foreign. A large writing-table was littered

with notes and letters. An upright grand-piano stood open, with a

quantity of music upon it. On the thick Persian carpet before the fire

was stretched a very large St. Bernard dog, with his muzzle resting on

his paws and his eyes blinking drowsily in serene contentment.




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