To-night on
the Pennsylvania. You're quite welcome. Not at all." I hung up the
telephone.
I could hear papa in the nursery:
"She actually told him--after all I said this morning! I never heard
of anything like it."
Two or three voices were raised in my defence. Ted slipped out into
the hall.
"Bully for you," he whispered. "You'll get the flowers all right at
the train. Who do you s'pose they're from? Another box just came for
you. Say, couldn't you leave that smallest box of violets in the
silver box? I want to give them to a girl, and you've got such loads
of others."
"Don't ask her for those," answered my dear sister, "they are the most
precious of all!"
"I can't give you any of mine," I said, "but I'll buy you a box for
her--a small box," I added hastily.
"The carriages have come, dears," quavered grandmamma, coming out of
the nursery, followed by the family, one after the other.
"Get her satchels, Teddy. Her hat is upstairs. Her flowers are in the
hall. She left her ulster on my bed, and her books are on the
window-sill," said mamma. She wouldn't look at me.
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