To prove this she diverged from the path of veracity, as is the way of
some women.
"I did not expect to see you here," she said.
"You told me you were coming," he answered simply. The inference would
have been enough for some women, but not for Etta Sydney Bamborough.
"Well, is that a reason why you should attend a diplomatic soiree, and
force yourself to bow and smirk to a number of white-handed little
dandies whom you despise?"
"The best reason," he answered quietly, with an honesty which somehow
touched her as nothing else had touched this beautiful woman since she
had become aware of her beauty.
"Then you think it worth the bowing and the smirking?" she asked,
looking past him with innocent eyes. She made an imperceptible little
movement toward him as if she expected him to whisper. She was of that
school. But he was not. His was not the sort of mind to conceive any
thought that required whispering. Some persons in fact went so far as to
say that he was hopelessly dull, that he had no subtlety of thought, no
brightness, no conversation. These persons were no doubt ladies upon
whom he had failed to lavish the exceedingly small change of compliment.
"It is worth that and more," he replied, with his ready smile. "After
all, bowing and smirking come very easily. One soon gets accustomed to
it.
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