April Hopes
forgotten her hunger, as a woman will in the presence of any social interest; but she suddenly thought his going would give her a chance for two words with her daughter, and so she sent him. As he creaked heavily across the smooth floor of the nave; “Alice,” she whispered, “I don't know exactly what I've done: Who introduced this young Mr. Mavering to you?”      

       “Mr. Munt.”      

       “Mr. Munt!”      

       “Yes; he came for me; he said you sent him. He introduced Mr. Mavering, and he was very polite. Mr. Mavering said we ought to go up into the gallery and see how it looked; and Mr. Munt said he'd been up, and Mr. Mavering promised to bring me back to him, but he was not there when we got back. Mr. Mavering got me some ice cream first, and then he found you for me.”      

       “Really,” said Mrs. Pasmer to herself, “the combat thickens!” To her daughter she said, “He's very handsome.”      

       “He laughs too much,” said the daughter. Her mother recognised her uncandour with a glance. “But he waltzes well,” added the girl.     

       “Waltzes?” echoed the mother. “Did you waltz with him, Alice?”      

       “Everybody else was dancing. He asked me for a turn or two, and of course I did it. What difference?”      

       “Oh, none—none. Only—I didn't see you.”      

       “Perhaps you weren't looking.”      

       “Yes, I was looking all the time.”      

       “What do you mean, mamma?”      

       “Well,” said Mrs. Pasmer, in a final despair, “we don't know anything about them.”      

       “We're the only people here who don't, then,” said her daughter. “The ladies were bowing right left to him all the time, and he kept asking if I knew this one and that one, and all I could say was that some of them were distant cousins, but I wasn't acquainted with them. I would think he'd wonder who we were.”      

       “Yes,” said the mother thoughtfully.     


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