<SPAN name="6c"></SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
<p>ACROSS THE CHANNEL.</p>
<p>Dawn had given place to day, and day was well advanced toward
noon,<br/>
before the stout little steamer gained her port. It was hours
after<br/>
the usual time for arrival; the train for Paris must long since
have<br/>
started, and Katy felt dejected and forlorn as, making her way
out of<br/>
the terrible ladies'-cabin, she crept on deck for her first
glimpse<br/>
of France.</p>
<p>The sun was struggling through the fog with a watery smile,
and his<br/>
faint beams shone on a confusion of stone piers, higher than
the<br/>
vessel's deck, intersected with canal-like waterways, through
whose<br/>
intricate windings the steamer was slowly threading her course to
the<br/>
landing-place. Looking up, Katy could see crowds of people
assembled to<br/>
watch the boat come in,—workmen, peasants, women, children,
soldiers,<br/>
custom-house officers, moving to and fro,—and all this crowd
were<br/>
talking all at once and all were talking French!</p>
<p>I don't know why this should have startled her as it did. She
knew, of<br/>
course, that people of different countries were liable to be
found<br/>
speaking their own languages; but somehow the spectacle of
the<br/>
chattering multitude, all seeming so perfectly at ease with
their<br/>
preterits and subjunctives and never once having to refer to
Ollendorf<br/>
or a dictionary, filled her with a sense of dismayed
surprise.</p>
<p>"Good gracious!" she said to herself, "even the babies
understand it!"<br/>
She racked her brains to recall what she had once known of
French, but<br/>
very little seemed to have survived the horrors of the night!</p>
<p>"Oh dear! what is the word for trunk-key?" she asked herself.
"They will<br/>
all begin to ask questions, and I shall not have a word to say;
and Mrs.<br/>
Ashe will be even worse off, I know." She saw the
red-trousered<br/>
custom-house officers pounce upon the passengers as they landed
one by<br/>
one, and she felt her heart sink within her.</p>
<p>But after all, when the time came it did not prove so very
bad. Katy's<br/>
pleasant looks and courteous manner stood her in good stead. She
did not<br/>
trust herself to say much; but the officials seemed to
understand<br/>
without saying. They bowed and gestured, whisked the keys in and
out,<br/>
and in a surprisingly short time all was pronounced right, the
baggage<br/>
had "passed," and it and its owners were free to proceed to
the<br/>
railway-station, which fortunately was close at hand.</p>
<p>Inquiry revealed the fact that no train for Paris left till
four in the<br/>
afternoon.</p>
<p>"I am rather glad," declared poor Mrs. Ashe, "for I feel too
used up to<br/>
move. I will lie here on this sofa; and, Katy dear, please see if
there<br/>
is an eating-place, and get some breakfast for yourself and Amy,
and<br/>
send me a cup of tea."</p>
<p>"I don't like to leave you alone," Katy was beginning; but at
that<br/>
moment a nice old woman who seemed to be in charge of the
waiting-room<br/>
appeared, and with a flood of French which none of them could
follow,<br/>
but which was evidently sympathetic in its nature, flew at Mrs.
Ashe and<br/>
began to make her comfortable. From a cupboard in the wall she
produced<br/>
a pillow, from another cupboard a blanket; in a trice she had one
under<br/>
Mrs. Ashe's head and the other wrapped round her feet.</p>
<p>"Pauvre madame," she said, "si pâle! si souffrante! Il
faut avoir<br/>
quelque chose à boire et à manger tout de suite."
She trotted across the<br/>
room and into the restaurant which opened out of it, while Mrs.
Ashe<br/>
smiled at Katy and said, "You see you can leave me quite safely;
I am to<br/>
be taken care of." And Katy and Amy passed through the same door
into<br/>
the <i>buffet</i>, and sat down at a little table.</p>
<p>It was a particularly pleasant-looking place to breakfast in.
There were<br/>
many windows with bright polished panes and very clean short
muslin<br/>
curtains, and on the window-sills stood rows of thrifty potted
plants in<br/>
full bloom,—marigolds, balsams, nasturtiums, and many
colored<br/>
geraniums. Two birds in cages were singing loudly; the floor was
waxed<br/>
to a glass-like polish; nothing could have been whiter than the
marble<br/>
of the tables except the napkins laid over them. And such a
good<br/>
breakfast as was presently brought to them,—delicious coffee
in<br/>
bowl-like cups, crisp rolls and rusks, an omelette with a
delicate<br/>
flavor of fine herbs, stewed chicken, little pats of freshly
churned<br/>
butter without salt, shaped like shells and tasting like
solidified<br/>
cream, and a pot of some sort of nice preserve. Amy made great
delighted<br/>
eyes at Katy, and remarking, "I think France is heaps nicer than
that<br/>
old England," began to eat with a will; and Katy herself felt
that if<br/>
this railroad meal was a specimen of what they had to expect in
the<br/>
future, they had indeed come to a land of plenty.</p>
<p>Fortified with the satisfactory breakfast, she felt equal to a
walk; and<br/>
after they had made sure that Mrs. Ashe had all she needed, she
and Amy<br/>
(and Mabel) set off by themselves to see the sights of Dieppe. I
don't<br/>
know that travellers generally have considered Dieppe an
interesting<br/>
place, but Katy found it so. There was a really old church and
some<br/>
quaint buildings of the style of two centuries back, and even the
more<br/>
modern streets had a novel look to her unaccustomed eyes. At
first they<br/>
only ventured a timid turn or two, marking each corner, and going
back<br/>
now and then to reassure themselves by a look at the station; but
after<br/>
a while, growing bolder, Katy ventured to ask a question or two
in<br/>
French, and was surprised and charmed to find herself understood.
After<br/>
that she grew adventurous, and, no longer fearful of being lost,
led Amy<br/>
straight down a long street lined with shops, almost all of which
were<br/>
for the sale of articles in ivory.</p>
<p>Ivory wares are one of the chief industries of Dieppe. There
were cases<br/>
full, windows full, counters full, of the most exquisite combs
and<br/>
brushes, some with elaborate monograms in silver and colors,
others<br/>
plain; there were boxes and caskets of every size and shape,
ornaments,<br/>
fans, parasol handles, looking-glasses, frames for pictures large
and<br/>
small, napkin-rings.</p>
<p>Katy was particularly smitten with a paper-knife in the form
of an angel<br/>
with long slender wings raised over its head and meeting to form
a<br/>
point. Its price was twenty francs, and she was strongly tempted
to buy<br/>
it for Clover or Rose Red. But she said to herself sensibly,
"This is<br/>
the first shop I have been into and the first thing I have really
wanted<br/>
to buy, and very likely as we go on I shall see things I like
better and<br/>
want more, so it would be foolish to do it. No, I won't." And
she<br/>
resolutely turned her back on the ivory angel, and walked
away.</p>
<p>The next turn brought them to a gay-looking little
market-place, where<br/>
old women in white caps were sitting on the ground beside baskets
and<br/>
panniers full of apples, pears, and various queer and curly
vegetables,<br/>
none of which Katy recognized as familiar; fish of all shapes and
colors<br/>
were flapping in shallow tubs of sea-water; there were piles
of<br/>
stockings, muffetees, and comforters in vivid blue and red
worsted, and<br/>
coarse pottery glazed in bright patterns. The faces of the women
were<br/>
brown and wrinkled; there were no pretty ones among them, but
their<br/>
black eyes were full of life and quickness, and their fingers one
and<br/>
all clicked with knitting-needles, as their tongues flew equally
fast in<br/>
the chatter and the chaffer, which went on without stop or stay,
though<br/>
customers did not seem to be many and sales were few.</p>
<p>Returning to the station they found that Mrs. Ashe had been
asleep<br/>
during their absence, and seemed so much better that it was with
greatly<br/>
amended spirits that they took their places in the late afternoon
train<br/>
which was to set them down at Rouen. Katy said they were like the
Wise<br/>
Men of the East, "following a star," in their choice of a hotel;
for,<br/>
having no better advice, they had decided upon one of those
thus<br/>
distinguished in Baedeker's Guide-book.</p>
<p>The star did not betray their confidence; for the Hôtel
de la Cloche, to<br/>
which it led them, proved to be quaint and old, and very pleasant
of<br/>
aspect. The lofty chambers, with their dimly frescoed ceilings,
and beds<br/>
curtained with faded patch, might to all appearances have been
furnished<br/>
about the time when "Columbus crossed the ocean blue;" but
everything<br/>
was clean, and had an air of old-time respectability. The
dining-room,<br/>
which was evidently of more modern build, opened into a square
courtyard<br/>
where oleanders and lemon trees in boxes stood round the basin of
a<br/>
little fountain, whose tinkle and plash blended agreeably with
the<br/>
rattle of the knives and forks. In one corner of the room was a
raised<br/>
and railed platform, where behind a desk sat the mistress of the
house,<br/>
busy with her account-books, but keeping an eye the while on all
that<br/>
went forward.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ashe walked past this personage without taking any notice
of her,<br/>
as Americans are wont to do under such circumstances; but
presently the<br/>
observant Katy noticed that every one else, as they went in or
out of<br/>
the room, addressed a bow or a civil remark to this lady. She
quite<br/>
blushed at the recollection afterward, as she made ready for
bed.</p>
<p>"How rude we must have seemed!" she thought. "I am afraid the
people<br/>
here think that Americans have <i>awful</i> manners, everybody is
so polite.<br/>
They said 'Bon soir' and 'Merci' and 'Voulez-vous avoir la
bonté,' to<br/>
the waiters even! Well, there is one thing,—I am going to
reform.<br/>
To-morrow I will be as polite as anybody. They will think that I
am<br/>
miraculously improved by one night on French soil; but, never
mind! I am<br/>
going to do it."</p>
<p>She kept her resolution, and astonished Mrs. Ashe next
morning, by<br/>
bowing to the dame on the platform in the most winning manner,
and<br/>
saying, "Bon jour, madame," as they went by.</p>
<p>"But, Katy, who is that person? Why do you speak to her?"</p>
<p>"Don't you see that they all do? She is the landlady, I think;
at all<br/>
events, everybody bows to her. And just notice how prettily these
ladies<br/>
at the next table speak to the waiter. They do not order him to
do<br/>
things as we do at home. I noticed it last night, and I liked it
so much<br/>
that I made a resolution to get up and be as polite as the
French<br/>
themselves this morning."</p>
<p>So all the time that they went about the sumptuous old city,
rich in<br/>
carvings and sculptures and traditions, while they were looking
at the<br/>
Cathedral and the wonderful church of St. Ouen, and the Palace
of<br/>
Justice, and the "Place of the Maid," where poor Jeanne d'Arc was
burned<br/>
and her ashes scattered to the winds, Katy remembered her
manners, and<br/>
smiled and bowed, and used courteous prefixes in a soft pleasant
voice;<br/>
and as Mrs. Ashe and Amy fell in with her example more or less, I
think<br/>
the guides and coachmen and the old women who showed them over
the<br/>
buildings felt that the air of France was very civilizing indeed,
and<br/>
that these strangers from savage countries over the sea were in a
fair<br/>
way to be as well bred as if they had been born in a more favored
part<br/>
of the world!</p>
<p>Paris looked very modern after the peculiar quaint richness
and air of<br/>
the Middle Ages which distinguish Rouen. Rooms had been engaged
for<br/>
Mrs. Ashe's party in a <i>pension</i> near the Arc
d'Étoile, and there they<br/>
drove immediately on arriving. The rooms were not in the
<i>pension</i><br/>
itself, but in a house close by,—a sitting-room with six
mirrors,<br/>
three clocks, and a pinched little grate about a foot wide, a<br/>
dining-room just large enough for a table and four chairs, and
two<br/>
bedrooms. A maid called Amandine had been detailed to take charge
of<br/>
these rooms and serve their meals.</p>
<p>Dampness, as Katy afterward wrote to Clover, was the first
impression<br/>
they received of "gay Paris." The tiny fire in the tiny grate had
only<br/>
just been lighted, and the walls and the sheets and even the
blankets<br/>
felt chilly and moist to the touch. They spent their first
evening in<br/>
hanging the bedclothes round the grate and piling on fuel; they
even set<br/>
the mattresses up on edge to warm and dry! It was not very
enlivening,<br/>
it must be confessed. Amy had taken a cold, Mrs. Ashe looked
worried,<br/>
and Katy thought of Burnet and the safety and comfort of home
with a<br/>
throb of longing.</p>
<p>The days that ensued were not brilliant enough to remove
this<br/>
impression. The November fogs seemed to have followed them across
the<br/>
Channel, and Paris remained enveloped in a wet blanket which
dimmed and<br/>
hid its usually brilliant features. Going about in cabs with the
windows<br/>
drawn up, and now and then making a rush through the drip into
shops,<br/>
was not exactly delightful, but it seemed pretty much all that
they<br/>
could do. It was worse for Amy, whose cold kept her indoors and
denied<br/>
her even the relaxation of the cab. Mrs. Ashe had engaged a<br/>
well-recommended elderly English maid to come every morning and
take<br/>
care of Amy while they were out; and with this respectable
functionary,<br/>
whose ideas were of a rigidly British type and who did not speak
a word<br/>
of any language but her own, poor Amy was compelled to spend most
of her<br/>
time. Her only consolation was in persuading this serene
attendant to<br/>
take a part in the French lessons which she made a daily point of
giving<br/>
to Mabel out of her own little phrase-book.</p>
<p>"Wilkins is getting on, I think," she told Katy one night.
"She says<br/>
'Biscuit glacé' quite nicely now. But I never will let her
look at the<br/>
book, though she always wants to; for if once she saw how the
words are<br/>
spelled, she would never in the world pronounce them right again.
They<br/>
look so very different, you know."</p>
<p>Katy looked at Amy's pale little face and eager eyes with a
real<br/>
heartache. Her rapture when at the end of the long dull
afternoons her<br/>
mother returned to her was touching. Paris was very <i>triste</i>
to poor<br/>
Amy, with all her happy facility for amusing herself; and Katy
felt that<br/>
the sooner they got away from it the better it would be. So, in
spite of<br/>
the delight which her brief glimpses at the Louvre gave her, and
the fun<br/>
it was to go about with Mrs. Ashe and see her buy pretty things,
and the<br/>
real satisfaction she took in the one perfectly made walking-suit
to<br/>
which she had treated herself, she was glad when the final day
came,<br/>
when the belated dressmakers and artistes in jackets and wraps
had sent<br/>
home their last wares, and the trunks were packed. It had been
rather<br/>
the fault of circumstances than of Paris; but Katy had not
learned to<br/>
love the beautiful capital as most Americans do, and did not feel
at all<br/>
as if she wanted that her "reward of virtue" should be to go
there when<br/>
she died! There must be more interesting places for live people,
and<br/>
ghosts too, to be found on the map of Europe, she was sure.</p>
<p>Next morning as they drove slowly down the Champs
Élysées, and<br/>
looked back for a last glimpse of the famous Arch, a bright
object<br/>
met their eyes, moving vaguely against the mist. It was the gay
red<br/>
wagon of the Bon Marché, carrying bundles home to the
dwellers of<br/>
some up-town street.</p>
<p>Katy burst out laughing. "It is an emblem of Paris," she
said,—"of our<br/>
Paris, I mean. It has been all Bon Marché and fog!"</p>
<p>"Miss Katy," interrupted Amy, "<i>do</i> you like Europe? For
my part, I was<br/>
never so disgusted with any place in my life!"</p>
<p>"Poor little bird, her views of 'Europe' are rather dark just
now, and<br/>
no wonder," said her mother. "Never mind, darling, you shall
have<br/>
something pleasanter by and by if I can find it for you."</p>
<p>"Burnet is a great deal pleasanter than Paris," pronounced
Amy,<br/>
decidedly. "It doesn't keep always raining there, and I can take
walks,<br/>
and I understand everything that people say."</p>
<p>All that day they sped southward, and with every hour came a
change in<br/>
the aspect of their surroundings. Now they made brief stops in
large<br/>
busy towns which seemed humming with industry. Now they whirled
through<br/>
grape countries with miles of vineyards, where the brown leaves
still<br/>
hung on the vines. Then again came glimpses of old Roman
ruins,<br/>
amphitheatres, viaducts, fragments of wall or arch; or a sudden
chill<br/>
betokened their approach to mountains, where snowy peaks could be
seen<br/>
on the far horizon. And when the long night ended and day roused
them<br/>
from broken slumbers, behold, the world was made over! Autumn
had<br/>
vanished, and the summer, which they thought fled for good, had
taken<br/>
his place. Green woods waved about them, fresh leaves were
blowing in<br/>
the wind, roses and hollyhocks beckoned from white-walled
gardens; and<br/>
before they had done with exclaiming and rejoicing, the
Mediterranean<br/>
shot into view, intensely blue, with white fringes of foam, white
sails<br/>
blowing across, white gulls flying above it, and over all a sky
of the<br/>
same exquisite blue, whose clouds were white as the drifting
sails on<br/>
the water below, and they were at Marseilles.</p>
<p>It was like a glimpse of Paradise to eyes fresh from autumnal
grays and<br/>
glooms, as they sped along the lovely coast, every curve and
turn<br/>
showing new combinations of sea and shore, olive-crowned cliff
and<br/>
shining mountain-peak. With every mile the blue became bluer, the
wind<br/>
softer, the feathery verdure more dense and summer-like.
Hyères and<br/>
Cannes and Antibes were passed, and then, as they rounded a long
point,<br/>
came the view of a sunshiny city lying on a sunlit shore; the
train<br/>
slackened its speed, and they knew that their journey's end was
come and<br/>
they were in Nice.</p>
<p>The place seemed to laugh with gayety as they drove down the
Promenade<br/>
des Anglais and past the English garden, where the band was
playing<br/>
beneath the acacias and palm-trees. On one side was a line of<br/>
bright-windowed hotels and <i>pensions</i>, with balconies and
striped<br/>
awnings; on the other, the long reach of yellow sand-beach, where
ladies<br/>
were grouped on shawls and rugs, and children ran up and down in
the<br/>
sun, while beyond stretched the waveless sea. The December sun
felt as<br/>
warm as on a late June day at home, and had the same soft
caressing<br/>
touch. The pavements were thronged with groups of
leisurely-looking<br/>
people, all wearing an unmistakable holiday aspect; pretty girls
in<br/>
correct Parisian costumes walked demurely beside their mothers,
with<br/>
cavaliers in attendance; and among these young men appeared now
and<br/>
again the well-known uniform of the United States Navy.</p>
<p>"I wonder," said Mrs. Ashe, struck by a sudden thought, "if by
any<br/>
chance our squadron is here." She asked the question the moment
they<br/>
entered the hotel; and the porter, who prided himself on
understanding<br/>
"zose Eenglesh," replied,—</p>
<p>"Mais oui, Madame, ze Americaine fleet it is here; zat is, not
here,<br/>
but at Villefranche, just a leetle four mile away,—it is ze
same<br/>
zing exactly."</p>
<p>"Katy, do you hear that?" cried Mrs. Ashe. "The frigates
<i>are</i> here, and<br/>
the 'Natchitoches' among them of course; and we shall have Ned to
go<br/>
about with us everywhere. It is a real piece of good luck for us.
Ladies<br/>
are at such a loss in a place like this with nobody to escort
them. I am<br/>
perfectly delighted."</p>
<p>"So am I," said Katy. "I never saw a frigate, and I always
wanted to see<br/>
one. Do you suppose they will let us go on board of them?"</p>
<p>"Why, of course they will." Then to the porter, "Give me a
sheet<br/>
of paper and an envelope, please.—I must let Ned know that I
am<br/>
here at once."</p>
<p>Mrs. Ashe wrote her note and despatched it before they went
upstairs to<br/>
take off their bonnets. She seemed to have a half-hope that some
bird of<br/>
the air might carry the news of her arrival to her brother, for
she kept<br/>
running to the window as if in expectation of seeing him. She was
too<br/>
restless to lie down or sleep, and after she and Katy had
lunched,<br/>
proposed that they should go out on the beach for a while.</p>
<p>"Perhaps we may come across Ned," she remarked.</p>
<p>They did not come across Ned, but there was no lack of
other<br/>
delightful objects to engage their attention. The sands were
smooth<br/>
and hard as a floor. Soft pink lights were beginning to tinge
the<br/>
western sky. To the north shone the peaks of the maritime Alps,
and<br/>
the same rosy glow caught them here and there, and warmed their
grays<br/>
and whites into color.</p>
<p>"I wonder what that can be?" said Katy, indicating the rocky
point which<br/>
bounded the beach to the east, where stood a picturesque building
of<br/>
stone, with massive towers and steep pitches of roof. "It looks
half<br/>
like a house and half like a castle, but it is quite fascinating,
I<br/>
think. Do you suppose that people live there?"</p>
<p>"We might ask," suggested Mrs. Ashe.</p>
<p>Just then they came to a shallow river spanned by a bridge,
beside whose<br/>
pebbly bed stood a number of women who seemed to be washing
clothes by<br/>
the simple and primitive process of laying them in the water on
top of<br/>
the stones, and pounding them with a flat wooden paddle till they
were<br/>
white. Katy privately thought that the clothes stood a poor
chance of<br/>
lasting through these cleansing operations; but she did not say
so, and<br/>
made the inquiry which Mrs. Ashe had suggested, in her best
French.</p>
<p>"Celle-là?" answered the old woman whom she had
addressed. "Mais c'est<br/>
la Pension Suisse."</p>
<p>"A <i>pension</i>; why, that means a boarding-house," cried
Katy. "What fun<br/>
it must be to board there!"</p>
<p>"Well, why shouldn't we board there!" said her friend. "You
know we<br/>
meant to look for rooms as soon as we were rested and had found
out a<br/>
little about the place. Let us walk on and see what the Pension
Suisse<br/>
is like. If the inside is as pleasant as the outside, we could
not do<br/>
better, I should think."</p>
<p>"Oh, I do hope all the rooms are not already taken," said
Katy, who had<br/>
fallen in love at first sight with the Pension Suisse. She felt
quite<br/>
oppressed with anxiety as they rang the bell.</p>
<p>The Pension Suisse proved to be quite as charming inside as
out. The<br/>
thick stone walls made deep sills and embrasures for the
casement<br/>
windows, which were furnished with red cushions to serve as seats
and<br/>
lounging-places. Every window seemed to command a view, for those
which<br/>
did not look toward the sea looked toward the mountains. The
house was<br/>
by no means full, either. Several sets of rooms were to be had;
and Katy<br/>
felt as if she had walked straight into the pages of a romance
When Mrs.<br/>
Ashe engaged for a month a delightful suite of three, a
sitting-room and<br/>
two sleeping-chambers, in a round tower, with a balcony
overhanging the<br/>
water, and a side window, from which a flight of steps led down
into a<br/>
little walled garden, nestled in among the masonry, where
tall<br/>
laurestinus and lemon trees grew, and orange and brown
wallflowers made<br/>
the air sweet. Her contentment knew no bounds.</p>
<p>"I am so glad that I came," she told Mrs. Ashe. "I never
confessed it to<br/>
you before; but sometimes.—when we were sick at sea, you know,
and when<br/>
it would rain all the time, and after Amy caught that cold in
Paris—I<br/>
have almost wished, just for a minute or two at a time, that we
hadn't.<br/>
But now I wouldn't not have come for the world! This is
perfectly<br/>
delicious. I am glad, glad, glad we are here, and we are going to
have a<br/>
lovely time, I know."</p>
<p>They were passing out of the rooms into the hall as she said
these<br/>
words, and two ladies who were walking up a cross passage turned
their<br/>
heads at the sound of her voice. To her great surprise Katy
recognized<br/>
Mrs. Page and Lilly.</p>
<p>"Why, Cousin Olivia, is it you?" she cried, springing forward
with<br/>
the cordiality one naturally feels in seeing a familiar face in
a<br/>
foreign land.</p>
<p>Mrs. Page seemed rather puzzled than cordial. She put up her
eyeglass<br/>
and did not seem to quite make out who Katy was.</p>
<p>"It is Katy Carr, mamma," explained Lilly. "Well, Katy, this
<i>is</i> a<br/>
surprise! Who would have thought of meeting you in Nice!"</p>
<p>There was a decided absence of rapture in Lilly's manner. She
was<br/>
prettier than ever, as Katy saw in a moment, and beautifully
dressed in<br/>
soft brown velvet, which exactly suited her complexion and
her<br/>
pale-colored wavy hair.</p>
<p>"Katy Carr! why, so it is," admitted Mrs. Page. "It is a
surprise<br/>
indeed. We had no idea that you were abroad. What has brought you
so far<br/>
from Tunket,—Burnet, I mean? Who are you with?"</p>
<p>"With my friend Mrs. Ashe," explained Katy, rather chilled by
this cool<br/>
reception.</p>
<p>"Let me introduce you. Mrs. Ashe, these are my cousins Mrs.
Page and<br/>
Miss Page. Amy,—why where is Amy?"</p>
<p>Amy had walked back to the door of the garden staircase, and
was<br/>
standing there looking down upon the flowers.</p>
<p>Cousin Olivia bowed rather distantly. Her quick eye took in
the details<br/>
of Mrs. Ashe's travelling-dress and Katy's dark blue ulster.</p>
<p>"Some countrified friend from that dreadful Western town where
they<br/>
live," she said to herself. "How foolish of Philip Carr to try to
send<br/>
his girls to Europe! He can't afford it, I know." Her voice was
rather<br/>
rigid as she inquired,—</p>
<p>"And what brings you here?—to this house, I mean?"</p>
<p>"Oh, we are coming to-morrow to stay; we have taken rooms for
a month,"<br/>
explained Katy. "What a delicious-looking old place it is."</p>
<p>"Have you?" said Lilly, in a voice which did not express any
particular<br/>
pleasure. "Why, we are staying here too."</p>
<br/><br/>
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