"Paul," Hilary asked suddenly, "what are you thinking about?"
Pauline slapped the reins lightly across old Fanny's plump sides. "Oh,
different things--traveling for one." Suppose Uncle Paul's letter
should come in this afternoon's mail! That she would find it waiting
for her when she got home!
"So was I," Hilary said. "I was wishing that you and I were going off
on that train, Paul."
"Where to?" Paul asked. After all, it couldn't do any harm--Hilary
would think it one of their "pretend" talks, and it would he nice to
have some definite basis to build on later.
"Anywhere," Hilary answered. "I would like to go to the seashore
somewhere; but most anywhere, where there were people and interesting
things to do and see, would do."
"Yes," Pauline agreed.
"There's Josie," Hilary said, and her sister drew rein, as a girl came
to the edge of the walk to speak to them.
"Going away?" she asked, catching sight of the valise.
"Only out to the Boyds'," Pauline told her, "to leave Hilary."
Josie shifted the strap of school-books under her arm impatiently.
"'Only!'" she repeated. "Well, I just wish I was going, too; it's a
deal pleasanter out there, than in a stuffy school room these days.
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