I hope we shall hear you sing again
to-night, unless you are too tired."
"I shall do whatever _miladi_ wishes," said Madame Cyprienne, in a
deep but musical voice, with a slight foreign accent. "It is for her
to command, me to obey. She has been very kind, you know," she went on
to Colonel Wilders, who had taken Lydstone's seat by her side. "But
for her I should have starved."
"Dear me! how sad," said the colonel. "Was it so bad as that? How did
it happen. Was M. Cyprienne unlucky?"
She did not answer; and the colonel, wondering, looked up, to find her
fine eyes filled with tears.
"How stupid of me! What an idiot I am! Of course, your husband is--"
She pointed to her black dress, edged with crape, but said nothing.
"Yes, yes! I quite understand. Pray forgive me," stammered the
colonel, and there followed an awkward pause.
"Mine is a sad story," she said at length, in a sorrowful tone. "I was
left suddenly alone, unprotected, without resources, in this strange
country--to fight my own battle, to earn a crust of bread by my own
exertions, or starve."
"Dear, dear!" said the colonel, his sympathies fully aroused.
"I should have starved, but for Lady Essendine. She heard of me. I was
trying to dispose of some lace--some very old Spanish point. You are a
judge of lace, monsieur?"
"Of course, of course!" said the colonel, although, as a matter of
fact, he did not know Spanish point from common _ecru_.
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