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A BUSH HOUSE PARTY.
87

"Oh, yes, it does—to me. I have been watching you, Miss Valliant, wondering——"

"Wondering what?"

"Wondering what lies underneath the butterfly existence you seem to lead."

"Ah! you think I am a butterfly."

"I think that you know how to papillonner la vie—as one says, but that is a different thing from being a butterfly."

"I don't understand much French, but I understand enough to know what that means."

"It's a great art—to papillonner la vie."

"Do you practice it?" she asked.

"I try to. But I have moods in which life seems deadly serious."

"Were you in one of those moods that night?"

"Ah! No, I was in a reckless mood that night. I have quite got over it now."

"And you are in the butterfly phase," she said, a little bitterly.

"Why do you say that in such a contemptuous way?"

"I was thinking of something Mr. Trant told me about you."

"What was that?"

"I don't think I ought to tell you."

"I can guess what it was. Trant reproaches me with liking ladies' society too much. I am sure he told you that I was a flirt."

"Yes, he said something of that kind, only he put it more strongly."

"How? You needn't mind telling me what Trant said about me. I am sure that he has often said the same things to my face."

"So he told me."

"He warned you against me, didn't he?"

"Yes——"

"And he described me as a conceited cad who tried to be a lady-killer?"