The Reef
companion’s hat, besides provoking this reflection, gave him his first full sight of her face; and this was so favourable that the name she now pronounced fell on him with a quite disproportionate shock of dismay.     

       “Oh, Mrs. Murrett’s—was it there?”      

       He remembered her now, of course: remembered her as one of the shadowy sidling presences in the background of that awful house in Chelsea, one of the dumb appendages of the shrieking unescapable Mrs. Murrett, into whose talons he had fallen in the course of his head-long pursuit of Lady Ulrica       Crispin. Oh, the taste of stale follies! How insipid it was, yet how it clung!     

       “I used to pass you on the stairs,” she reminded him.     

       Yes: he had seen her slip by—he recalled it now—as he dashed up to the drawing-room in quest of Lady Ulrica. The thought made him steal a longer look. How could such a face have been merged in the Murrett mob? Its fugitive slanting lines, that lent themselves to all manner of tender tilts and foreshortenings, had the freakish grace of some young head of the Italian comedy. The hair stood up from her forehead in a boyish elf-lock, and its colour matched her auburn eyes flecked with black, and the little brown spot on her cheek, between the ear that was meant to have a rose behind it and the chin that should have rested on a ruff. When she smiled, the left corner of her mouth went up a little higher than the right; and her smile began in her eyes and ran down to her lips in two lines of light. He had dashed past that to reach Lady Ulrica Crispin!     

       “But of course you wouldn’t remember me,” she was saying. “My name is Viner—Sophy Viner.”      

       Not remember her? But of course he did! He was genuinely sure of it now.       “You’re Mrs. Murrett’s niece,” he declared.     

       She shook her head. “No; not even that. Only her reader.”      

       “Her reader? Do you mean to say she ever reads?”      

       Miss Viner enjoyed his wonder. “Dear, no! But I wrote notes, and made up the visiting-book, and walked the dogs, and saw bores for her.”      

       Darrow groaned. “That must have been rather bad!”      


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