[The Broken Road by A. E. W. Mason]@TWC D-Link bookThe Broken Road CHAPTER IX 1/27
LUFFE IS REMEMBERED Violet Oliver took a quick step forward when she caught sight of Linforth's tall and well-knit figure coming towards her; and the smile with which she welcomed him was a warm smile of genuine pleasure.
There were people who called Violet Oliver affected--chiefly ladies.
But Phyllis Casson was not one of them. "There is no one more natural in the room," she was in the habit of stoutly declaring when she heard the gossips at work, and we know, on her father's authority, that Phyllis Casson's judgments were in most instances to be respected.
Certainly it was not Violet Oliver's fault that her face in repose took on a wistful and pathetic look, and that her dark quiet eyes, even when her thoughts were absent--and her thoughts were often absent--rested pensively upon you with an unconscious flattery.
It appeared that she was pondering deeply who and what you were; whereas she was probably debating whether she should or should not powder her nose before she went in to supper.
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