[The Powers and Maxine by Charles Norris Williamson]@TWC D-Link book
The Powers and Maxine

CHAPTER XIV
20/37

At last we turned into a particularly dull little street, and stopped.
"Is this the Rue d'Hollande ?" Lisa enquired of the driver, jumping quickly up and putting her head out of the window.
"_Mais oui, Mademoiselle_," I heard the man answer.
"Then stop where you are, please, until I give you new orders." "I should have thought this was the sort of street where nothing could possibly happen," said I.
"Wait a little, and maybe you'll find out you're mistaken.

If nothing does, and we aren't amused, we can go on somewhere else." She had not finished speaking when a handsome electric carriage spun almost noiselessly round the corner.

It slowed down before a gate set in a high wall, almost covered with creepers, and though the street was dimly lighted and we had stopped at a little distance, I could see that the house behind the wall, though not large, was very quaint and pretty, an unusual sort of house for Paris, it seemed to me.
Scarcely had the electric carriage come to a halt when the chauffeur, in neat, dark livery, jumped down to open the door; and quickly a tall, slim woman sprang out, followed by another, elderly and stout, who looked like a lady's maid.
I could not see the face of either, but the light of the lamp on our side of the way shone on the hair of the slim young woman in black, who got down first.

It was gorgeous hair, the colour of burnished copper.

I had heard a man say once that only two women in the world had hair of that exact shade: Jane Hading and Maxine de Renzie.
My heart gave a great bound, and I guessed in an instant why Lisa had brought me here, though how she could have learned where to find the house, I didn't know.
"Oh, Lisa!" I reproached her.


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