The Story of Louie
reet the waitresses of which seemed to crowd upon her as if the width of Holborn did not exist. As she sat down at her little ma
ter a long, long walk down Chancery Lane and along the Embankment almost a
l the week, and then, Louie had thought (dropping the mask for another moment) he had better have stopped away. In a word, she had not been sure that he had been entirely sober. But perhaps in that she had been wrong. It didn't matter. She set a wide differenc
e. Very remarkably, both times the big leonine student, Mr. Jeffries, had been the twitcher. In both cases the actual incident had been the same-a glance
ly Ross were pretty much a pair; but they had surprised her coming from the other. Louie had been sure that on the first occasion Mr. Jeffries had fancied himself to be unobserved, for he had looked stealthily round about him, had waited for a moment, and then, moving
erdo his sudden affectation of indifference. Louie admitted that it would be at her own risk that she put any interpretation that was not amusing on these trifles; but about the glances, their surreptitiousness and the man's deliberate attempt at concealment, there had been no doubt whate
be her living they might just as well be taken seriously; but she preferred to work where gossip was going on. So she began the evening in one of the days in the E of reference books, where Miss Windus and t
r. Indeed, she had given Louie a far too intelligent look when Louie had gratified this hunger for humour of hers at the unconscious Kitty's expense; and
y was saying-her W's did sometimes beco
my dear-not if he wo
ie actually s
either engaged o
Vy, you might as well say that Archie
hey aren
there y
're no age! I don't believe in getting yourself engaged and done
't engaged in three mon
he returned to the original su
to say you'll find o
suddenly said: "Ssss-I'll show
o the cords of the window Louie
hands and closed the window for her. It was the more cleverly done that she detained Mr. Jeffries and managed to get closed
nd I'm going to a dance and don't vant to make it any vors
"No," and turned away at once. M
ind out! I shall offer him some tickets now, for self a
xpect the gentleman I was engaged
Just after somebody, I should sa
hool," mused Kitty Windus. "Arch
specting me!" said Miss Levey merrily. "I vo
thing, my dear," r
" (This reply, Louie ha
or something at hi
an A.B.C. shop-
maid," Ki
vasher
he washes hi
h her blouses, too
oth la
re a little out of plac
ere some example or other had been left chalked up on the big blackboard from the last lesson. Thence she went into the typewriting-room, and back to the lecture-room again. Finally she got from the "library"-the little back room where t
was engaged, or hoped to be engaged, to somebody outside the school altogether. That sounded-odd. Of course if Mr. Jeffries said so, Mr. Jeffries ought to know; but it is a difficult matter to disbelieve your own
o glances. Her reason for certitude was quite unassailable. She had known what they
Louie now sat by the folding door-relaxed, thinking of nothing, or, if of anything, certainly neither of her late resolute pose nor y
t into the library for a book and walked past with it again. He still wore that concealing ulster; the Soames girl had on a brown tailor-made and a cap of
which, lasting perhaps only a minute, have all the effect of a refreshing sleep. She could reassume her mask now. Evie Soames was talking to Weston by the blackboard; opposite her, a pale student called Richardson was c
, passed into the library. A few seconds later still
uie, "for a littl
f the stairs. Mr. Jeffries and Miss Soames would have to come out by the same way they had entered, and Louie rather wanted to see them come out. It was no business of hers, but she had remembered those two glances and the conversa
s; but Louie was not interested in Evie. She w
ment later
kind of glance for which you yourself have hungered when you see it given to another; but not only had Louie never seen-she had never, not even in her own rapt dreamings as a half-grown girl in her teens, thought it possible that a man's l
door, Louie knew that in his former passings a
m. No doubt he was going to see her home. Probably she would have preferr
his hat on, and
st? Mr. Jeffries was nothing to her. If his face shone,
elf now as she had just been to things o
oming up a moment ago to put his exercise-book back into its place, had left one of the doors open. The door moved on its hinges back in
d swept out of Mrs. Lovenant-Smith's French window wit
en on tha
could have shut out a mental picture. Her
the nam
erself with Kitty Windus and welcomed the buffooneries of Mr. Mackie. But it presented itself to her startlingly now. Her own complete ignorance had just revealed a shi
she, after all, not sounded any mystery, and
gracious! What an escapade! Without mercy for herself she examined i
other man at another w
d herself for the first time, had she wanted to triumph? Why had she not seen sooner that what she had really wanted had been to be triumphed over? Triumph?-It came to he
rdinary resilience, her mi
to kiss Roy at their parting she had not known exactly why she had done so: she had obeyed an instinct; a chapter had been closed, and had had to be marked as definitely closed; her heart had known no rancour against him. But now!-she might just as well have kissed him. Now, in this strange place, two strange people-or rather one, for
this shabby giant, whose face she had just seen enheavened out of all knowledge-had told young Merridew, who had told
ie drew a long br
told th
thing and one thing only to be said. If Mr. Je
er again-she fou
ad said that
aid slowly to herself: "Ah-this is going to be more than a
tty and the Jewess, that Evie Soames and the red-waistcoated boy, off to Guildford together to-morrow, would before long be engaged to be married; but Mr. Jeffries, the third person in the commonest of dramas, and Mr. Jeffries, the introducer into that drama of a preposterous, impossible fourth actor, whose name Miriam Levey was resolved to know, were not one and the same man. Louie sat astounded again at his lie. It struck her as really in its way stupendous. Others thought he was below his fellows in this shabby little hutch of a Business School; not so Louie now! She saw those clear yellow eyes again. Ruses and mac
ate with his studies-cadged on his pro
asked to
orn Louie had found something eve
Billionaires
Billionaires
Romance
Romance
Romance
Werewolf