urged. "If I were a man in such a situation I'd throw myself upon the woman's mercy. I'd say, 'Beautiful, sweet lady! I know I know you. Your name, your entirely charming and appropriate name, is trembling on the tip of my tongue. But, for some unaccountable reason, my brute of a memory chooses to play the fool. If you've a spark of Christian kindness in your soul, you'll come to my rescue with a little clue." "If the woman had a Christian sense of the ridiculous in her soul, I fear you'd throw yourself on her mercy in vain," she warned. "What is the good of tantalizing people?" "Besides," she continued, "the woman might reasonably feel slightly humiliated to find herself forgotten in that bare-faced manner." "The humiliation would be surely all the man's. Have you heard from the Wohenhoffens lately?" "The—what? The—who?" She raised her eyebrows. "The Wohenhoffens," he repeated. "What are the Wohenhoffens? Are they persons? Are they things?" "Oh, nothing. My inquiry was merely dictated by a thirst for knowledge. It occurred to me that you might have won a black domino at the masked ball they gave, the Wohenhoffens. Are you sure you didn't?" "I've a great mind to punish your forgetfulness by pretending that I did," she teased. "She was rather tall, like you, and she had gray eyes, and a nice voice, and a laugh that was sweeter than the singing of nightingales. She was monstrously clever, too, with a flow of language that would have made her a leader in any sphere. She was also a perfect fiend. I have always been anxious to meet her again, in order that I might ask her to marry me. I'm strongly disposed to believe that she was you. Was she?" he pleaded. "If I say yes, will you at once proceed to ask me to marry you?" she asked. "Try it and see." " Ce n'est pas la peine.