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Dell, Ethel M. (Ethel May), 1881-1939

"The Swindler and Other Stories"

"
But Priscilla was quite unimpressed.
"You won't have time to miss me," she said. "I don't think any one will,
except, perhaps, Dad; and he always knows where to find me."
"Your father will certainly not leave town before the end of the
season," said Lady Raffold, raising her voice slightly.
"Poor dear Dad!" murmured Priscilla.


II
THE ROMANCE OF HER LIFE

"And so I escaped. Her ladyship didn't like it, but it was worth a
tussle."
Priscilla leaned back luxuriously in the housekeeper's room at Raffold
Abbey, and laughed upon a deep note of satisfaction. She had discarded
all things fashionable with her departure from London in the height of
the season. The crumpled linen hat she wore was designed for comfort and
not for elegance. Her gown of brown holland was simplicity itself. She
sat carelessly with her arm round the neck of an immense mastiff who had
followed her in.
"I've cut everything, Froggy," she declared, "including the terrible
American cousin. In fact, it was almost more on his account than any
other that I did it. For I can't and won't marry him, not even for the
sake of the dear old Abbey! Are you very shocked, I wonder?"
Froggy the housekeeper--so named by young Lord Mortimer in his schoolboy
days--looked up from her work and across at Priscilla, her brown,
prominent eyes, to which she owed her _sobriquet_, shining lovingly
behind her spectacles.


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