For instance, I cannot understand the
extraordinary fascination it seems to exercise over such an intelligent
man as is that Comte de Virieu."
Madame Wachner looked at the speaker significantly.
"Ah!" she said. "The poor Count! 'E is what you call 'confirmed'--a
confirmed gambler. And 'e will now be able to play more than ever, for
I 'ear a fortune 'as been left to 'im!"
Sylvia was startled. She wondered how the Wachners could have come to
know of the Count's legacy. She got up, with a nervous, impatient
gesture.
How dull, how long, how intolerable had been the last two days spent by
her in the company of Bill Chester, varied by that of talkative Madame
Wachner and the silent, dour Ami Fritz!
Her heart felt very sore. During that last hour she and Count Paul had
spent together in the garden, she had begged him to stay away--to spend
the rest of the summer with his sister. Supposing he took her at her
word--supposing he never came back to Lacville at all? Sylvia tried to
tell herself that in that case she would be glad, and that she only
wanted her friend to do the best, the wisest thing for himself.
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