[The Palace Beautiful by L. T. Meade]@TWC D-Link book
The Palace Beautiful

CHAPTER IV
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CHAPTER IV.
TO THE RESCUE.
Miss Martineau told her news with considerable agitation.

She considered it a terrible revelation.

It seemed to her a very fearful and disastrous thing that three girls brought up like the Mainwarings, three girls still almost children, should be thrown on the world without any means for their support.
Simple and primitive as their lives had been at Rosebury, they still had been tenderly nurtured and warmly sheltered--no cold blast of unkindness or neglect had visited them--they had been surrounded ever by both love and respect.

The love came principally from their mother and from one another, but the respect came from all who knew them.

The Mainwaring girls, in their plain dresses and with their unsophisticated manners, looked like ladies, and invariably acted as such.
Soon after making her communication Miss Martineau took her leave; she hurried home, and sitting down in her dingy little parlor, began to think.
"No, thank you, Susan," she said to her little maid-of-all-work, "I shan't want any supper to-night.


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