Page:The Yellow Book - 04.djvu/36

28 had looked up. Of course I knew where she had gone first—but not to cry—to kiss it to place flowers on it. She could not cry not now. She was too happy, happy, happy. Oh, to be back in Paris, her home, where she had lived with him, where every stick and stone was dear to her because of him!

Then, glancing up at the clock, with an abrupt change of key, "Mais allons done, paresseux!—You must take me to see the camarades. You must take me to see Chalks."

And in the street she put her arm through mine, laughing and saying, "On nous croira fiances." She did not walk, she tripped, she all but danced beside me, chattering joyously in alternate French and English. "I could stop and kiss them all—the men, the women, the very pavement. Oh, Paris! Oh, these good, gay, kind Parisians! Look at the sky! look at the view down that impasse—the sunlight and shadows on the houses, the doorwavs, the people. Oh, the air! Oh, the smells! Que c'est bon—que je suis contente! Et dire que j'ai passe cinq mois, mais cinq grands mois, en Angleterre. Ah, veinard, you—you don't know how you're blessed." Presently we found ourselves labouring knee-deep in a wave of black pinafores, and Nina had plucked her bunch of violets from her breast, and was dropping them amongst eager fingers and rosy cherubic smiles. And it was constantly, "Tiens, there s Madame Chose in her kiosque. Bonjour, madame. Vous allez toujours bien?" and "Oh, look! old Perronet standing before his shop in his shirt-sleeves, exactly as he has stood at this hour every day, winter or summer, these ten years. Bonjour, M'sieu Perronet." And you may be sure that the kindly French Choses and Perronets returned her greetings with beaming faces. "Ah, mademoiselle, que c'est bon de vous revoir ainsi. Que vous avez bonne mine!" "It is so strange," she