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e you less. You seem less like the friend I knew on the boat." "Ah, that boat!... You were my friend, then!" he added suddenly, with a note of question sounding through the affirmation, and she answered quickly, looking away with an air of petulant reproach. "Why, you know I was, Captain Kerissen. And here in Cairo----" "Yes, here in Cairo," he interrupted triumphantly, "in the face of those eyes and tongues--I saw that red-headed dog of an Englishman looking his anger at you! But you smiled on me before them all--those fools, those tyrannic fools----" "But you mustn't abuse my other friends! They were only--stupid!" "Stupid as their blood brother, the ox!... But they are not in the picture now--those other friends!" Disagreeably he laughed. "And you do not grieve for them--no? The world has not touched you? There is no one out there,"--he made a gesture over the guarding walls--"no one who holds a fragment of your thought, of your heart in his hands?" She looked at him as if puzzled, then burst into a bubbling laugh. "Why, of course not! I've just had a nice time with people. There has never been a bit of sentiment about it!" "Not on your side," he said meaningly, and because this was hitting the truth smartly on the head she looked past him in some confusion. "Oh--boys!" she said with a deprecating little laugh. "I've never listened to them." He leaned back in his chair, feeling for his cigarette case, and the contentment of his look deepened. "You have been a child, asleep to life," he murmured complacently. "I told you you were a princess--let us say a sleeping princess waiting for the prince, like that old fairy tale of the English." He was looking at his cigarette as he tapped it on the arm of his chair, and slowly struck a light, then, after the first breath, "But do you not hear his footsteps in your sleep?" he added, and gave her a glance from the corner of his eyes. She looked up and then down; she stared out into the sun-flooded garden and laughed softly. "Even princesses dream," she demurely acknowledged, and thought the line and her fleet, meaning glance went very well with this mad opera-bouffe which fate was forcing her to play. Kerissen seemed to think that went very well, too, for his flashing teeth acknowledged his pleasure in her aptness; then his smile faded and she felt him studying her over his cigarette, studying her averted gaze, the bright color in her cheeks, the curves
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