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These and other points of reflection troubled Ethel, and she was glad the long trial was nearing its end, for she knew quite well the disagreeood Dora would certainly repeat their conversation, in her oay of interpreting it, to both Basil Stanhope and Fred Mostyn More than likely both Bryce and Mrs Denning would also hear how her innocent kindness had been ine the conversation that took place, and the subsequent bestowal of pitying, scornful or angry feeling that would insensibly find its way to her consciousness without any bird of the air to carry it

She felt, too, that reprisals of any kind were out of the question They were not only impolitic, they were difficult Her father had an aversion to Dora, and was likely to seize the first opportunity for requesting Ethel to drop the girl's acquaintance Ruth also had urged her to withdraw fro her advice with the assurance that when a friendship began to decline it ought to be abandoned at once There was only her grando to, and at first she did not find her at all interested in the trouble She had just had a dispute with her ive hiry words--"an i creature," she said; and then Ethel had to hear the history of the month's cream and of the milkman's extortion, with the old lady's characteristic declaration: "I told hiht of his ways, but I paid him every cent I owed him Thank God, I am not unreasonable!"

Neither was she unreasonable when Ethel finally got her to listen to her own serious grievance with Dora

"If you will have a woman for a friend, Ethel, you must put up o such ways I hate to see you whis you have been cordially inviting for weeks and months and years"

"Grand thorns for yourself, and then you go unshod over theyman, and Fred Mostyn, and her brother, and mother, and father all on her side; all of the, all of theirl, must be randmother, you are too cruel"

"Why didn't you have a few friends on your own side?"