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?‰mile, 1840-1902

"Four Short Stories By Emile Zola"


"A theater's a curious sight, eh?" said the Marquis de Chouard with the
enchanted expression of a man who once more finds himself amid familiar
surroundings.
But Bordenave had at length reached Nana's dressing room at the end of
the passage. He quietly turned the door handle; then, cringing again:
"If His Highness will have the goodness to enter--"
They heard the cry of a startled woman and caught sight of Nana as,
stripped to the waist, she slipped behind a curtain while her dresser,
who had been in the act of drying her, stood, towel in air, before them.
"Oh, it IS silly to come in that way!" cried Nana from her hiding place.
"Don't come in; you see you mustn't come in!"
Bordenave did not seem to relish this sudden flight.
"Do stay where you were, my dear. Why, it doesn't matter," he said.
"It's His Highness. Come, come, don't be childish."
And when she still refused to make her appearance--for she was startled
as yet, though she had begun to laugh--he added in peevish, paternal
tones:
"Good heavens, these gentlemen know perfectly well what a woman looks
like. They won't eat you."
"I'm not so sure of that," said the prince wittily.
With that the whole company began laughing in an exaggerated manner in
order to pay him proper court.


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