perior servants of the
old-fashioned type. With her hands full of newly-purchased bookstand
magazines and her eyes full of trouble, she stood gazing at the sole
occupant of the carriage.
"Oh, Miss Diana your Ladyship . . ." he began once more.
"Shut it, Marney," said Miss Diana her Ladyship, elegantly. "I've had
enough. You're not coming with me, and that's that. I'm not a child any
longer never to stir about the world alone."
"Shure, and your aunt, Lady Grizel, will turn in her grave at it," keened
poor Marney. An expression of scampish glee crossed the girl's face.
"Yes, old Grizzly will do some turning," she murmured. "Thank goodness
that's all she can do now."
The maid crossed herself with a shocked air, though it was far from being
the first time she had heard those profanities of the dead upon her
mistress's lips. The latter gave her no time for further argument.
"What's the use of standing there stuffing up my view?" she demanded
crossly. "If you want something to do, go and get me some flowers.
Everyone has flowers but me. It's outrageous. Get heaps."
Marney flurried down the platform, bent on her errand, and Diana
Vernilands immediately issued from the doorstep of the carriage and gazed
eagerly and invitingly at the crowd.
Ordinarily the beauty alone of the sables which muffled her ears and fell
to her heels would have focused attention, not to mention the eager
liveliness of her face. But on this occasion no one returned her vivid
glances. Everyone was busy with their own affairs and friends. The only
person seeming as isolated and lonely as herself was another girl, who,
having made a tour from one end of the train to the other in vain quest
of a seat, was now wearily and furiously doing the return trip. No
porter followed her; she carried her own dressing-case and rugs, and she,
too, was without flowers. This last fact clenched Lady Diana's decision.
A bond of loneliness and flowerlessness existed between them. She hailed
the other girl deliriously.
"Hi! Are you looking for a place?" she cried. "Come in here. I've got
a carriage to myself."
The other was as astonished as relieved.
"Oh, may I? How awfully good of you!" she said warmly, and stepping into
the carriage, bestowed her possessions in such small space as was not
already encumbered. Then she looked at Lady Diana in the doorway with a
pair of lovely but rather sad violet eyes that had smoky shadows beneath
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