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Von Hutten, Bettina, 1874-1957

"The Halo"

Breathing deep, she waited
for the climax, and when it came, quietly opened the door.
She had chosen her moment well, and as the door faced a long mirror
between the windows she saw, as she stood on the threshold, not only
Joyselle, who, alone in the room, stood staring in amazement, but also
that at which he stared--herself. Clad in a dress made apparently
entirely of flexible dull gold scales, the long lines of her figure
unbroken by any belt or trimming, the woman in the glass stood smiling
like a witch of old, a deep colour in her cheeks, the palms of her hands
held down by her side, the fingers outspread and slightly lifted as if
in water. Quite silently she stood and smiled until the man before her
dropped his violin--for the first time, she knew instinctively, in his
life.
Then she spoke, saying his name, the name by which the world knew him:
"_Joyselle._"
"_Mon Dieu!_" he returned softly. Coming slowly forward he caught her
hand with clumsy haste and kissed it. Her heart stopped its mad beating,
for she had won. Here was no Beau-papa. Here was the man, Victor
Joyselle.


CHAPTER FOUR

"I did not know you," he said. "I thought--_juste ciel_, how do I know
what I thought? You are so beautiful, I----"
She laughed gently.


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