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Pedler, Margaret, -1948

"The Splendid Folly"

You should have referred
Miss Jenkins to me."
Miss Bunting made no reply. She had acted precisely in the way
suggested, but Miss Jenkins, a young art-student of independent opinions,
had flatly declined to be "referred" to Mrs. Lawrence.
"It's not the least use, Bunty dear," she had said. "I'm not going to
have half an hour's acrimonious conversation with Mrs. Lawrence on the
subject of twopennyworth of coal. At the same time I haven't the
remotest intention of paying twopence extra for those two lumps of excess
luggage, so to speak. So you can just trot that sarcophagus away, like
the darling you are, and bring me back my sixpenny scuttle again."
And little Miss Bunting, in her capacity of buffer state between Mrs.
Lawrence and her boarders, had obeyed and said nothing more about the
matter.
"I have to go out now," continued Mrs. Lawrence, after a pause pregnant
with rebuke. "You will receive Miss Quentin on her arrival and attend to
her comfort. And put the large coal-box in her sitting-room as I
directed," she added firmly.
So it came about that when, half an hour later, a taxi-cab buzzed up to
the door of No. 24, with Diana and a large quantity of luggage on board,
the former found herself met in the hall by a cheerful little person with
pretty brown eyes and a friendly smile to whom she took an instant liking.
Miss Bunting escorted Diana up to her rooms on the second floor, while
Henri brought up the rear, staggering manfully beneath the weight of Miss
Quentin's trunk.


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