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    Chapter 28

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    "What do you say to Nice to-morrow, dearest?" the Princess suggested
    a few evenings later as she followed Undine upstairs after a languid
    evening at bridge with the Duchess and Madame de Trezac.

    Half-way down the passage she stopped to open a door and, putting her
    finger to her lip, signed to Undine to enter. In the taper-lit dimness
    stood two small white beds, each surmounted by a crucifix and a palm
    branch, and each containing a small brown sleeping child with a mop of
    hair and a curiously finished little face. As the Princess stood gazing
    on their innocent slumbers she seemed for a moment like a third little
    girl scarcely bigger and browner than the others; and the smile with
    which she watched them was as clear as theirs. "Ah, si seulement je
    pouvais choisir leurs amants!" she sighed as she turned away.

    "--Nice to-morrow," she repeated, as she and Undine walked on to their
    rooms with linked arms. "We may as well make hay while the Trezac
    shines. She bores Mamma frightfully, but Mamma won't admit it because
    they belong to the same oeuvres. Shall it be the eleven train, dear?
    We can lunch at the Royal and look in the shops--we may meet somebody
    amusing. Anyhow, it's better than staying here!"

    Undine was sure the trip to Nice would be delightful. Their previous
    expeditions had shown her the Princess's faculty for organizing such
    adventures. At Monte-Carlo, a few days before, they had run across two
    or three amusing but unassorted people, and the Princess, having fused
    them in a jolly lunch, had followed it up by a bout at baccarat, and,
    finally hunting down an eminent composer who had just arrived to
    rehearse a new production, had insisted on his asking the party to tea,
    and treating them to fragments of his opera.

    A few days earlier, Undine's hope of renewing such pleasures would have
    been clouded by the dread of leaving Madame de Trezac alone with the
    Duchess. But she had no longer any fear of Madame de Trezac. She had
    discovered that her old rival of Potash Springs was in actual dread
    of her disfavour, and nervously anxious to conciliate her, and the
    discovery gave her such a sense of the heights she had scaled, and the
    security of her footing, that all her troubled past began to seem like
    the result of some providential "design," and vague impulses of piety

    stirred in her as she and the Princess whirled toward Nice through the
    blue and gold glitter of the morning.

    They wandered about the lively streets, they gazed into the beguiling
    shops, the Princess tried on hats and Undine bought them, and they
    lunched at the Royal on all sorts of succulent dishes prepared under
    the head-waiter's special supervision. But as they were savouring
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