Margot wandered about the Park so lost in her own thoughts that she was

dismayed to find that it was already one o'clock, when warned by the

departing stream of nursemaids that it must be approaching luncheon hour

she at last consulted her watch.

Half an hour's walk, cold cutlets and an irate Agnes, were prospects

which did not smile upon her; it seemed infinitely more agreeable to

turn in an opposite direction, and make as quickly as possible for

Oxford Terrace, where she would be certain of a welcome from poor sad

Edith, who was probably even now lunching on bread and cheese and

anxiety, while her two sturdy infants tucked into nourishing beefsteak.

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Edith was one of those dear things who did not preach if you were late,

but was content to give you what she had, without apologising.

Margot trotted briskly past Dorset Square, took a short cut behind the

Great Central Hotel, and emerged into the dreary stretch of Marylebone

Road.

Even in the spring sunshine it looked dull and depressing, with the

gloomy hospital abutting at the corner, the flights of dull red flats on

the right.

A block of flats--in appearance the most depressing--in reality the most

interesting of buildings!

Inside those walls a hundred different households lived, and moved, and

had their being. Every experience of life and death, of joy and grief,

was acted on that stage, the innumerable curtains of which were so

discreetly drawn. Margot scanned the several rows of windows with a

curious interest. To-day new silk brise-bise appeared on the second

floor, and a glimpse of a branching palm. Possibly some young bride had

found her new home in this dull labyrinth, and it was still beautiful in

her sight! Alas, poor bird, to be condemned to build in such a nest!

Those curtains to the right were shockingly dirty, showing that some

over-tired housewife had retired discomfited from the struggle against

London grime. Up on the sixth floor there was a welcome splash of

colour in the shape of Turkey red curtains, and a bank of scarlet

geranium. Margot had decided long since that this flat must belong to

an art student to whom colour was a necessity of life; who toiled up the

weary length of stairs on her return from the day's work, tasting in

advance the welcome of the cosy room. She herself never forgot to look

up at that window, or to send a mental message of sympathy and cheer to

its unknown occupant.

Oxford Terrace looked quite cheerful in comparison with the surrounding

roads,--and almost countrified into the bargain, now that the beech

trees were bursting into leaf. Margot passed by two or three blocks,

then mounting the steps at the corner of a new terrace, walked along

within the railed-in strip of lawn until she reached a house in the

middle of the row. A peep between draped Nottingham lace curtains

showed a luncheon table placed against the wall, after the cheerful

fashion of furnished apartments, when one room does duty for three, at

which sat two little sailor-suited lads and a pale mother, smiling

bravely at their sallies.




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