So she thought, as she gazed before her into space from the
chintz-covered lounge on the night of the day Barode Barouche was buried.
There was a smell of roses in the room. She had gathered many of them
that afternoon. She caught a bud from a bunch on a table, and fastened it
in the bosom of her dress. Somehow, as she did it, she had a feeling she
would like to clasp a man's head to her breast where the rose was--one of
those wild thoughts that come to the sanest woman at times. She was
captured by the excitement in which she had moved during the past
month--far more now than she had been in all the fight itself.
There came a knock at the outer door, and before that of her own room
opened, she recognized the step of the visitor. So it was Tarboe had
come. He remembered that day in the street when he met Junia, and was
shown there were times when a woman could not be approached with emotion.
He had waited till the day he knew she was alone, for he had made a
friend of her servant by judicious gifts of money.
"I hope you're glad to see me," he said with an uncertain smile, as he
saw her surprise.
"I hope I am," she replied, and motioned him to a seat. He chose a
high-backed chair with a wide seat near the lounge.
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