The Time of Roses
she went slowly in the direction of the sands. She had induced Mrs. Aylmer to p
ing to get the answer which Florence had not given her the day before. She walked slo
omise that she will not betray me to Mrs. Aylmer. Mrs. Aylmer is just the sort of person, if Florence made the worst of things, to tur
in the Post Office Savings Bank. She was intensely fond of money, but she knew that the time had come when it might be necessary to sac
pale, and her eyes were re
s this mean? Have you had any dome
orence. "I wish you would go away, Bertha: I hate to
you will not be long worried by us. I have just been see
answered
y?" continued Bertha, giving
now him," rep
him. How did you becom
r introdu
ce. "Well, Flo, you and I have a good deal to say to each other. L
in an almost sulky tone: "Very well." They turned in that direction and walked slowly. At l
had in his blue eyes. How upright he looked! How different from Bertha! Oh, what a miserable wretche
ey reached
ur little arrangement. You have made up your mind, of course, Florenc
to injure you, much as you injured me in the past; but at the same time why should I make a pro
n the world. Your very name is as a red rag to her. If I want to rouse her worst passions,
rced to listen to me, and if you rouse my evil f
a. "You want money badly. You
s quite
od education and you want
n to e
s on the world, and I was forced to invent all kinds of subterfuges to make my way. I pity girls who are placed as I was placed. I have now managed to get into a comfortable ne
o," said Florence; but she tr
th fifty pounds in your pocket you can go, say to London or to any other large town and advertise what you are worth. You have, I presume, something to
covered her face with her hands; th
ave a qu
. Will you do it? I am quite agreeable. I will furnish you with a short story, say, once a fortnight, or once a month. Will you take one with you and try to sell it as your own? I can do it in the evenings, and you shall have it. Don't you think that I am paying you well, now, to keep silence? I am offering you an honourable livelihood, and in the meantime there is the fifty pounds: you may as well have it
d Florence; "but I never thought of writ
ing as she spoke, "and in the meantime
t take it; p
you are a great writer we can cast up accounts and see on which side the balance lies. You quite understand? I have
do not know what to s
rve, and you will find when you go to London that the posts of teachers and secretaries are ov
rose to
horoughly miserable. I wish there we
of the story part; but, anyhow, you mus
before the other girl could say a word turned and left h
ter all, I am very generous to her; but I see my way, I think, to win Maurice Trevor. I see my way to prevent these two becoming friends, and at the worst, if Maurice does me