Page:The strange experiences of Tina Malone.djvu/28

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28
THE STRANGE EXPERIENCES

CHAPTER V.

DESPAIR AND SOLITUDE.

"And back to my own again."

It slipped out involuntarily—I could see that she was glad to leave me.

And so it had ended. As I watched her going down the stairs to her own rooms I knew somehow that all the old feeling had gone.

She did not say so openly, she wanted me to feel that things were just the same, but I knew they were not.

That was on Saturday evening.

On Sunday I thought I would stay in bed late. I had had morning tea and was cuddling up cosily among the blankets with a book when my bell rang.

"Who's there?" I called from the passage.

"Aren't you up yet?" said a voice.

"Who is it?" I asked.

"It's I, Michael Grant. Isn't Mrs. Parker there?"

"No, her rooms are downstairs," I said.

"Oh, I thought she was there," came the answer in the sleepy drawl of a cultured Irish voice.

Naomi came rushing up two minutes later.

"Put on your things, dear, and come down. It's Mick Grant. I want him to meet you. Come and entertain him while I dress. I had to huddle on my things anyway."

I ran down and spent a little time there but I knew they were old friends and I soon made an excuse to get away.

I went down later in the day but I could see that Naomi had quite changed towards me. She seemed to be hiding something from me—there was a wall between us.

I took my conge already in spirit.

It was on St. Patrick's Day, I think, that, looking down at her from my window, I said,

"Come up and have some tea, Naomi."

"I can't," she returned. "I'm going out to lunch. Beatrice Lamb has written to me; such a foolish letter. I've torn it in half."

"I feel inclined to have a good cry," I said, "I believe I'll go to a picture show."

"Go and sit in a church instead," she said.

Friends no longer, and now the Priestess seemed to take my place.

I hesitated now before I ran down as usual to say good-night and sit a few minutes to talk with her.

"I would like to get Alice Griffiths here to talk to Dr.