The Imaginary Marriage by Henry St. John Cooper
page 34 of 327 (10%)
page 34 of 327 (10%)
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man--"Mrs. Alston..." Even the servant!
"My lady begs that you will return with me. She would be very much hurt, ma'am, if you left the house like this, her ladyship begs me to say." "Who was your message for?" "For you, ma'am, of course," said the man. "Ma'am--Mrs. Alston!" So this joke had been passed on even to the servants, and now she was asked to return. "Go back and tell Lady Linden that I do not understand her message in the least. Kindly say that the person you overtook on the road was Miss Joan Meredyth, who is taking the next train to London." She bent her head, turned her back on him, and made her way on to the station. Half an hour later she was leaning back wearily on the dusty seat of a third-class railway carriage, on her way back to the London she hated. Now she was going back again, because she had nowhere else to go. As she sat there with closed eyes, and the tears on her cheeks, she counted up her resources. They were so small, so slender, yet she had been so careful. And now this useless journey had eaten deeply into the little store. She had no more than enough to keep her for another week, one more week, and then.... She shivered at the thought of the destitution that was before her. |
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