Page:Idalia, by 'Ouida'.djvu/158

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150
IDALIA THE BADGE OF THE SILVER IVY.
150

He flung himself back among his furs, with a fierce bitterness in his soul:

"Good God, again!—and there!"

The carriage whirled on, leaving the masked throngs to flock to the wild Rigolboche of the Opera.

That night under the glitter of a chandelier in the Hotel Mirabeau, before a fire which shed its warmth over the green velvet and walnut wood, the ormolu and silver, the mirrors and consoles of the chamber, two men sat smoking over claret and olives, having dined alone, by a miracle, in the midst of the laughing, dazzling, contagious gaieties of peopled Paris. In these days confederates meet over liqueurs and cigarettes, instead of in subterranean caverns; and conspirators plan their checkmates in a coffee-room, an opera-box, or a drive to an imperial stag-hunt, instead of by midnight, under masks, and with rapiers drawn.

One of the men was Victor Vane, the other that dashing Free Lance, that Monodist of the Sugared Violet, that political brigand of the Carpathian Pass, to whom the telegram had been addressed as to the Count Conrad Constantine Phaulcon: a man in physical beauty, physical prowess, talent, wit, and bearing, far the superior of the Englishman, yet