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    Chapter 11

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    Before noon of the next day I was ascending the stairs of the new house
    in which the Duc had his hermitage. There was an air of secrecy in the
    broad publicity of the carpeted stairs that led to his flat; a hush in
    the atmosphere; in the street itself, a glorified _cul de sac_ that ran
    into the bustling life of the Italiens. It had the sudden sluggishness
    of a back-water. One seemed to have grown suddenly deaf in the midst of
    the rattle.

    There was an incredible suggestion of silence--the silence of a private
    detective--in the mien of the servant who ushered me into a room. He was
    the English servant of the theatre--the English servant that foreigners
    affect. The room had a splendour of its own, not a cheaply vulgar
    splendour, but the vulgarity of the most lavish plush and purple kind.
    The air was heavy, killed by the scent of exotic flowers, darkened by
    curtains that suggested the voluminous velvet backgrounds of certain old
    portraits. The Duc de Mersch had carried with him into this place of
    retirement the taste of the New Palace, that show-place of his that was
    the stupefaction of swarms of honest tourists.

    I remembered soon enough that the man was a philanthropist, that he
    might be an excellent man of heart and indifferent of taste. He must be.
    But I was prone to be influenced by things of this sort, and felt
    depressed at the thought that so much of royal excellence should weigh
    so heavily in the wrong scale of the balance of the applied arts. I
    turned my back on the room and gazed at the blazing white decorations of
    the opposite house-fronts.

    A door behind me must have opened, for I heard the sounds of a
    concluding tirade in a high-pitched voice.

    "_Et quant à un duc de farce, je ne m'en fiche pas mal, moi_," it said
    in an accent curiously compounded of the foreign and the _coulisse_. A
    muttered male remonstrance ensued, and then, with disconcerting
    clearness:

    "_Gr-r-rangeur--Eschingan--eh bien--il entend. Et moi, j'entends, moi
    aussi. Tu veux me jouer centre elle. La Grangeur--pah! Consoles-toi
    avec elle, mon vieux. Je ne veux plus de toi. Tu m'as donné de tes sales
    rentes Groenlandoises, et je n'ai pas pu les vendre. Ah, vieux farceur,
    tu vas voir ce que fen vais faire._"

    A glorious creature--a really glorious creature--came out of an

    adjoining room. She was as frail, as swaying as a garden lily. Her great
    blue eyes turned irefully upon me, her bowed lips parted, her nostrils
    quivered.

    "_Et quant à vous, M. Grangeur Eschingan,_" she began, "_je vais vous
    donner mon idée à moi ..._"

    I did not understand the situation in the least, but I appreciated the
    awkwardness of it. The world
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