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e indirectly returned to the charge on the following Sunday, when Norah was about to start for her afternoon out. "Norah, I want a word with you." The girl came back along the flagged path to the kitchen door. "It's just this, Norah. You'll please to remember what I've told you, and act accordingly." Norah turned her head and answered over her shoulder, rather sullenly, as Mavis thought. "All right. I remember." "Don't answer me like that," said Mavis sharply. "And please to remember your manners, and look at people when you speak to them." "All right," said Norah again, and, as Mavis judged, very sullenly this time. "Look you here, young lady," she said, with increasing warmth. "I'm not going to stand any of your nonsense--and of that I give you fair warning. Now you just answer me in a seemly manner and tell me exactly where you are going this afternoon, or I'll send you straight back into the house to take off your finery and not go out at all." Dale, close by in the little sitting-room, heard his wife's voice raised thus angrily, closed the book that was lying open on his knees, and came to the window. "What's wrong, Mav?" "It's Norah offering me her sauce, and I won't put up with it." Dale, with the book in his hand, came out through the kitchen, and stood by Mavis on the stone flags. "Norah," he said seriously, "you must always be good, and do whatever Mrs. Dale tells you." "Yes, but that's just what she doesn't do;" and Mavis explained that, in spite of repeated orders, Norah had several times gone mooning off into the woods all by herself. "So now I'm reminding her, and asking where she means to go this afternoon." Norah, with her eyes on the flags, said that she would go to Rodchurch. "Very good," said Mavis. "Then now you've answered, you may go." When Norah had disappeared round the corner of the house, Mavis talked to her husband apologetically and confidentially. "Will, dear, I'm sorry I disturbed you when you were reading;" and glancing at the book in his hand, she felt ashamed of her recent warmth. "I couldn't help blowing her up, and I'll tell you why." Then she spoke of the necessity of keeping a sharp eye and a firm hand on a girl of Norah's age and attractions; and she further mentioned her suspicion, now almost entirely allayed, of some secret carryings-on. "Oh, I don't think there's anything of that sort," said Dale. "No, I may say I'm morally sure Norah i
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