 so good.
    But the tension of his nerves was unendurable. Five minutes more of anguish,
and he sprang up like an automaton.
    »Must you really go, Mr. Moxey?« said Constance, with a manner which of
course was intended to veil her emotion. »Please don't be another year before
you let us see you again.«
    Blessings on her tender heart! What more could she have said, in the
presence of all those people? He walked all the way to Notting Hill through a
pelting rain, his passion aglow.
    Impossible to be silent longer concerning the brilliant future. Arrived at
home, he flung off hat and coat, and went straight to the drawing-room, hoping
to find Marcella alone. To his annoyance, a stranger was sitting there in
conversation, a very simply dressed lady, who, as he entered, looked at him with
a grave smile and stood up. He thought he had never seen her before.
    Marcella wore a singular expression; there was a moment of silence, for
Christian decidedly embarrassing, since it seemed to be expected that he should
greet the stranger.
    »Don't you remember Janet?« said his sister.
    »Janet?« He felt his face flush. »You don't mean to say -? But how you have
altered! And yet, no; really, you haven't. It's only my stupidity.« He grasped
her hand, and with a feeling of genuine pleasure, despite awkward reminiscences.
    »One does alter in eleven years,« said Janet Moxey, in a very pleasant,
natural voice - a voice of habitual self-command, conveying the idea of a highly
cultivated mind, and many other agreeable things.
    »Eleven years? Yes, yes! How very glad I am to see you! And I'm sure
Marcella was. How very kind of you to call on us!«
    Janet was as far as ever from looking handsome or pretty, but it must have
been a dullard who proclaimed her face unpleasing. She had eyes of remarkable
intelligence, something like Marcella's, but milder, more benevolent. Her lips
were softly firm; they would not readily part in laughter; their frequent smile
meant more than that of the woman who sets herself to be engaging.
    »I am on my way home,« she said, »from a holiday in the South, - an enforced
holiday, I'm sorry to say.«
    »You have been ill?«
    »Overworked a little. I am practising medicine in
