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ne! I danced; ze air vas no lighter zan I ... ze people shouted, zey called, zey encored. Again I danced, high, high, higher, and zen--crack!" He brought his two hands together with a sharp click. His face was convulsed with emotion, and presently he took a handkerchief from his pocket and wiped the damp from his brow. "Yes," he continued, "it is feefteen year--but to me it is to-day. Zere--in my leg was a break"--he pointed to the place a little above his ankle and below the calf. "You could put a fingere into it--that vone muscle vas my fortune--it vas gone--split in vone moment." His sad eyes stared blankly out from the cracked unclean window as though reviewing a vast panorama of his early years. "How sad; terrible! Is this a common accident?" I inquired of him. "Common? Yes, ze coup de fouet; but zis vas vorse. For long I lay in bed, my brain made mad to know zat all vas overe, zat all vas lost. Zey offered me half vage to teach, but no--not vere I had been ze first--ze very first. I left England and my friends, I hoped for evere." "Was that not foolish?" I asked, viewing the greasy curtains and other surrounding evidences of poverty. "Voolish? Ah, ve are all vools vhen ve love. I had loved: she vas almost mine, but she vas too young, a child dancer of feefteen summers. So sveet, so beautiful. She learnt from me my art, every jeste, every perfection. She vould have been my vife, my queen--but after zis, I ran. Vhen my senses came I knew that I could be no more rich--only a poor dead dog in her vay. For zis I fled ze country. I came back after feefteen year, no longer ze great Salvador, but plain M. Dupres--back to hear of Betty----" "Betty!" I echoed. "Yes, the first dancer in London--my leetle Betty--you have zeen her?" And he lifted a hand to a portrait over his pillow. I recognised with dismay the child face--the merry smile at the corner of the lip. "This is the very woman I am trying to paint." "Sapristi!" he exclaimed, and again wiped his brow. "You vill keep my zecret? Ze years of zacrifice, let them not be known to her." His face was wrinkled and livid with anxiety. "Your confidence is sacred; I am honoured by it," I said, extending a hand, for Laura just then opened the door upon us. She laughed whimsically at my almost emotional leave-taking of a total stranger, and chaffed me about it when we got outside. "I have much to be grateful for to him--to you," I said. "My pictur
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