[Fraternity by John Galsworthy]@TWC D-Link book
Fraternity

CHAPTER V
12/12

"But Mr.Stone, you know, thinks that we are funny." The little model smiled faintly, too; the streak of sunlight had slanted past her, and, standing there behind its glamour and million floating specks of gold-dust, she looked for the moment like the young Shade of Spring, watching with expectancy for what the year would bring her.
With the words "I am ready," spoken from the doorway, Mr.Stone interrupted further colloquy....
But though the girl's position in the household had, to all seeming, become established, now and then some little incident--straws blowing down the wind--showed feelings at work beneath the family's apparent friendliness, beneath that tentative and almost apologetic manner towards the poor or helpless, which marks out those who own what Hilary had called the "social conscience." Only three days, indeed, before he sat in his brown study, meditating beneath the bust of Socrates, Cecilia, coming to lunch, had let fall this remark: "Of course, I know nobody can read his handwriting; but I can't think why father doesn't dictate to a typist, instead of to that little girl.
She could go twice the pace!" Blanca's answer, deferred for a few seconds, was: "Hilary perhaps knows." "Do you dislike her coming here ?" asked Hilary.
"Not particularly.

Why ?" "I thought from your tone you did." "I don't dislike her coming here for that purpose." "Does she come for any other ?" Cecilia, dropping her quick glance to her fork, said just a little hastily: "Father is extraordinary, of course." But the next three days Hilary was out in the afternoon when the little model came.
This, then, was the other reason, on the morning of the first of May, which made him not averse to go and visit Mrs.Hughs in Hound Street, Kensington..


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