nkment, the hotel that Philip had chosen was a small one, where a truly English headwaiter, who was not trying to conceal a Ger
" said the young woma
do just as I please," Phil replied; and she unb
rde of tourists, rising at dawn to make sightseeing a diligent business, who are assiduously cultivated by shopkeepers if somewhat neglected by the nobility. When he moved on the Tower, Westminster Abbey, or Oxford, he made no
hould have the compartment to himself, when two young women appeared, both a trifle short of breath. So impressionable a tourist as himself could not fail to notice tha
y rate!" she gasped,
"But your run has given you a lovely colour!" she added admiringly. If the one wished to be shown up
though," said the beautiful one, as Ph
particular way she holds her fingers when she shepherds strands of hair were more awkward, possibly fewer strands would need attention in public. There is something confidential in these quick fondling movements which have drawn a reader's eyelashes above the margin of a newspaper ma
rands of hair, but they did not concern her. It
is going when I like the other way!" she
s so thoughtful!" said the ot
read his paper diligently. When they had left the chimney pots behind, he found that the plain one's objection to riding the way that the train was going apparently no longer applied;
bi-lingual facility which does not mean an interlarding of words but bursts of sentences. They criticised and compa
ght nose and expressive mouth, with its full lips and the oval chin-a classic type of its kind; the other with chestnut hair also in masses, but brushed unbecomingly back from the high, broad forehead, the large, black-brown eyes wide apart, a squarish chin a
hich one of the two was speaking. Both voices were pleasant, though the beautiful girl's voice
read. Besides, that sort of thing is not done in England, or, for that, matter, in America, as a rule, on short train journeys. Except for that one glance fr
Truckleford again, shan't
see Uncle Arthur waiting o
enriette, my dear,
m declaring that he must be about their seventeenth de
hey exclaim
he English use really. There are many kinds of reallys: forbidding, surprised, sceptical, inqu
my sixteenth cousin and you are Henriette and Helen Ribot, and my father, the R
plain one, thoughtfully, looking toward Henri
d her eyes were sparkling into his in a way that made it dif
chievous, her eyes said. But she did it delightfully, and Helen, who held out her ha
on that it was y
hy
closer scrutiny of his features, and she ad
to say. Helen looked from one to the other, listening. It seemed her natural role. Phil almost forgot her existence unti
iette, now I have you I'll not let you go all summer. You can do your painting here."