room with books and low lamps—sample rooms, of course, all of them, but with very little of the atmosphere of shop or warehouse.
I met Edith in the living-room.
"Hello, Edith," I said. She looked just the same, very modish, in some brand-new New York clothes, I suppose.
"Toots!" she exclaimed, and put both arms about me and kissed me. Then to cover up a little sign of mistiness in her eyes that would show, she exclaimed, "You're just as good-looking as ever. I declare you are!"
"So are you, too, Edith!" I said, misty-eyed, too, for some reason. I had fought, bled and died with Edith once.
"Oh, no, I'm not. I've got a streak of gray right up the front."
"Really? Well, it doesn't show one bit," I quavered, and then, "It's terribly good to see some one from home."
Edith got out her handkerchief.
"I, for one, just hate squabbles," she announced.
And "So do I," I agreed.
Later we sat down together on the sofa. She looked around curiously.
"What sort of a place is this, anyhow?" she asked in old, characteristic frankness. "I didn't know what I was getting into. It seems sort of—I don't know—not quite—not quite—I feel as if I might be shut up in here and not let out."