[Bad Hugh by Mary Jane Holmes]@TWC D-Link bookBad Hugh CHAPTER XIV 13/21
It would not take her long, she said, and she could work the later to make it up. 'Lina did not refuse, and in a few moments Adah penned a note to A.E.R. "It's an answer to an advertisement for a governess or waiting maid," she said, as 'Lina glanced carelessly at the superscription. "It will do no harm, or good either, I imagine," was 'Lina'a reply, and placing the letter in her pocket, she was about returning to her mother, when she spied Ellen Tiffton dismounting at the gate. Ellen was delighted to see 'Lina, and 'Lina was delighted to see Ellen, leading her at once into the work-room, where Adah sat by the window, busy on the bertha, and looking up quietly when Ellen entered, as if half expecting an introduction.
But 'Lina did not deign to notice her, save in an aside to Ellen, to whom she whispered softly: "That girl, Adah, you know." Reared in a country where the menials all were black, Ellen knew no such marked distinction among the whites, and walked directly up to Adah, whose face seemed to puzzle her.
It was the first time they had met, and Adah turned crimson beneath the close scrutiny to which she was subjected.
Noticing her embarrassment, and wishing to relieve it, Ellen addressed to her some trivial remark concerning her work, complimenting her skill, asking some questions about Willie, whom she had seen, and then leaving her for a girlish conversation with 'Lina, to whom she related many particulars of her visit to New York.
Particularly was she pleased with a certain Dr.Richards, who was described as the most elegant young man at the hotel. "There was something queer about him too," she said, in a lower tone, and drawing nearer to 'Lina.
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