Opal Verrons was small and slight with large childlike eyes that could

look like a baby's, but that could hold the very devil on occasions.

The eyes were dark and lustrous with long curling black lashes framing

them in a face that might have been modeled for an angel, so round the

curves, so enchanting the lips, so lofty the white brow. Angelé Potocka

had no lovelier set to her head, no more limpal fire in her eye, than

had Opal Verrons. Indeed her lovers often called her the Fire Opal. The

only difference was that Angelé Potocka developed her brains, of which

she had plenty, while Opal Verrons had placed her entire care upon

developing her lovely little body, though she too had plenty of brains

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on occasion.

And she knew how to dress! So simply, so slightly sometimes, so

perfectly to give a setting--the right setting--to her little self. She

wore her heavy dark hair bobbed, and it curled about her small head

exquisitely, giving her the look of a Raphael Cherub or a boy page in

the court of King Arthur. With a flat band of silver olive leaves about

her brow, and the soft hair waving out below, nothing more was

necessary for a costume save a brief drapery of silver spangled cloth

with a strap of jewels and a wisp of black malines for a scarf. She was

always startling and lovely even in her simplest costume. Many people

turned to watch her in a simple dark blue serge made like a child's

girded with a delicate arrangement of medallions and chains of white

metal, her dark rough woollen stockings rolled girlishly below white

dimpled knees, and her feet shod in flat soled white buckskin shoes.

She was young enough to "get away with it," the older women said

cattishly as they watched her stroll away to the beach with a new man

each day, and noted her artless grace and indifferent pose. That she

had a burly millionaire husband who still was under her spell and

watched her jealously only made her more interesting, and they pitied

her for being tied to a man twice her age and bulky as a bale of

cotton. She who could dance like a sylph and was light on her little

feet as a thistle down. Though wise ones sometimes said that Opal had

her young eyes wide open when she married Ed Verrons, and she had him

right under her little pink well manicured thumb. And some said she was

not nearly so young as she looked.

Her hands were the weakest point in Opal Verron's whole outfit. Not

that they were unlovely in form or ungraceful. They were so small they

hardly seemed like hands, so undeveloped, so useless, with the dimpling

of a baby's, yet the sharp nails of a little beast. They were so plump

and well cared for they were fairly sleek, and had an old wise air

about them as she patted her puffy curls daintily with a motion all her

own that showed her lovely rounded arm, and every needle-pointed

shell-tinted finger nail, sleek and puffy, and never used, not even

for a bit of embroidery or knitting. She couldn't, you know, with those

sharp transparent little nails, they might break. They were like her

little sharp teeth that always reminded one of a mouse's teeth, and

made one shudder at how sharp they would be should she ever

decide to bite.