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Regiment of Women

Chapter 5 No.5

Word Count: 1156    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

achieved by foundlings" should have included friendship in his dictum. For relations ... well, everybody knew what everybody meant when relations were ment

her sweet silent fashion, to Clare Hartill at their occasional meetings; but she remained subtly uninterested. But w

at she must not expect too much of poor, dear Elsbeth.... (It was characteristic of their relationship that she never called her guardi

ved to reveal to herself her ingrained incapacity for government. She had never forgotten the humiliation of those months when Clare Hartill, a pitiless fourteen-year-old girl, had headed one successful revolt after another against her. It had been an episode; with the advent of Alwynne she had returned to domesticity; but the experience had intensified her innate lack of s

d been the pole-star of her world. All the more disconcerting of Elsbeth, receiver of confidences, there

r relations were distant ones, whom she rarely mentioned and apparently more rarely missed. Alwynne was the more sur

coming back!" Elsbeth rustl

rinkled h

Oh-those cous

emember? They've lived abroad for years on account of her heal

he velveteen boy

th la

a for a time. But still he's well enough off. He came home when his mother died last year, and now, it seems, he's taken a house close to their old home, and settled down as a market-gardener. The Lumsde

dreamy. Her unconscious hand was rapping out its tune upon the tablecloth-the only symptom of excite

d to gad about the Riviera. And there wa

des w

id not se

the Great House was let. Years ago. And Roger-I hope you'll get on with Roger. I ha

dull. As Clare said-- Indeed, she wasn't always quoting Clare! She didn't always set up Clare's judgment against Elsb

and the formal invitation

planned out every day of the holidays. Everything fixed. She really couldn't ask Clare to upset all her arrangements. It wouldn't be fair. Awfully sorry, of course, but why couldn't Alwynne's dear Elsbeth

uldn't enjoy the visit without Alwynne at her elbow; refused utterly to be convinced of unreasonableness. Alwynne would enjoy the change, the country-didn't Alwynne love the co

ne sn

y. But Elsbeth did not go to Dene by herself. There she was mulish. Go visiting and leave the housekeeping to Alwynne's tender mercie

pocket and Elsbeth stayed at home. But Elsbeth had learned her less

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