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Hichens, Robert Smythe, 1864-1950

"A Spirit in Prison"


And of this boy's, Ruffo's, he was not sure.
Hermione recalled the boy; his brown healthiness, his laughing eyes
and lips, his strong young body, his careless happy voice. And she
found herself instinctively listening by the window to hear that voice
again.
Now, as she looked out, the loveliness of the night appealed to her
strongly, and she felt sure that Vere must be still outside, somewhere
under the moon.
Just beneath the window was the narrow terrace, on to which she had
stepped out, obedient to Vere's call, three days ago. Perhaps Vere was
there, or in the garden beyond. She extinguished the lamp. She went to
her bedroom to get a lace shawl, which she put over her head and drew
round her shoulders like a mantilla. Then she looked into Vere's room,
and found it empty.
A moment later she was on the terrace bathed in the radiance of the
moon.

CHAPTER VIII
Vere was outside under the stars. When she had said good-night and had
slipped away, it was with the desire to be alone, to see no one, to
speak with no one till next morning.


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