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The
Secret Passage
“What is your
name?”
“Susan Grant, Miss Loach.”
“Call me ma’am. I am Miss Loach only to my
equals. Your age?”
“Twenty-five, ma’am.”
“Do you know your work as parlor-maid thoroughly?”
“Yes, ma’am. I was two years in one place and
six months in another, ma’am. Here are my
characters from both places, ma’am.”
As the girl spoke she laid two papers before the
sharp old lady who questioned her. But Miss
Loach did not look at them immediately. She
examined the applicant with such close attention
that a faint color tinted the girl’s cheeks and
she dropped her eyes. But, in her turn, by
stealthy glances, Susan Grant tactfully managed
to acquaint herself with the looks of her
possible mistress. The thoughts of each woman
ran as follows —
Miss Loach to herself. “Humph! Plain-looking,
sallow skin, rather fine eyes and a slack mouth.
Not badly dressed for a servant, and displays
some taste. She might turn my old dresses at a
pinch. Sad expression, as though she had
something on her mind. Honest-looking, but I
think a trifle inquisitive, seeing how she
examined the room and is stealing glances at me.
Talks sufficiently, but in a low voice. Fairly
intelligent, but not too much so. Might be
secretive. Humph!”...
The
Silent House
Lucian Denzil was a briefless barrister,
who so far departed from the traditions of his
brethren of the long robe as not to dwell within
the purlieus of the Temple. For certain private
reasons, not unconnected with economy, he
occupied rooms in Geneva Square, Pimlico; and,
for the purposes of his profession, repaired
daily, from ten to four, to Serjeant’s Inn,
where he shared an office with a friend equally
briefless and poor.
This state of things sounds hardly enviable, but
Lucian, being young and independent to the
extent of £300 a year, was not dissatisfied with
his position. As his age was only twenty-five,
there was ample time, he thought, to succeed in
his profession; and, pending that desirable
consummation, he cultivated the muses on a
little oatmeal, after the fashion of his kind.
There have been lives less happily circumstanced.
Geneva Square was a kind of backwater of the
great river of town life which swept past its
entrance with speed and clamour without
disturbing the peace within. One long, narrow
street led from a roaring thoroughfare into a
silent quadrangle of tall grey houses, occupied
by lodging-house keepers, city clerks and two or
three artists, who represented the Bohemian
element of the place. In the centre there was an
oasis of green lawn, surrounded by rusty iron
railings the height of a man, dotted with elms
of considerable age, and streaked with narrow
paths of yellow gravel...
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