nt Miss Mauds maid. I am.
So te it all up. . S down splashed.
Its only er, I said, seeing
you. S anote ealing glances at less. Finally she said:
I ter tle fat in it...quot;
t o go into her a fresh pair of
aloves myself, to sit and c. Let me do it, I said, undoing tton at ; and t first s let me toucime—since I said I le— so let me. t ly clean, and gre of oo smooto be rig t . I of my lap and tand and curn black. Surned to asimes Id stand and look h
her.
For t to notice, at Briar, t t cead, t: to to see ed or dropped. In tumn, it floods, Maud said, and all t care for t. And some nige mist comes creeping from ter, almost to t gave beneats stle t is freezing already. Do you see struggles? It s to flo till it. Do you see, Sue? he rushes?
Sc of ts only er, miss.
Only er?
Broer.
She blinked.
You are cold, I said to t too long. I put mine. I did it, not tayed stiff. But t day—or perhe day
after t—sook my arm again, and so stiff; and after t, I suppose urally ... I dont kno er t I it and tried to look back. But by t time ime her.
S a girl, after all; for all t t a girl t idying one of . S t s, but t Boroug. e played for matc first; ttle counters, made of mot moons; and after t, and cool on till doly, making tcer a , too.
alked. So alk of London. Is it truly so large? sres? And hey call, fashion-houses?
And eating-houses. And every kind of shop. And parks, miss.
Parks, like my uncles?
A little like, Id say. But filled h people, of course.—Are you low, miss, or high?
I am doe filled, would you say?
I am o your two.
e filled, you say, h people?
Of course. But dark. ill you cut?
Dark? Are you sure? I t London o be brig lamps fired—I believe—h gas?
Great lamps, like diamonds! I said. In tres and t—
Dance, Sue?
Dance, miss. to dance, of course?
I— Saug. Do you t be a lady