The Pretty Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Pretty Lady.

The Pretty Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Pretty Lady.
having children; she enjoyed having children; she demanded children; she had a child every year and there was never any trouble.  And he never admired her more poignantly than at the periods just before his children were born, when she had the vast, exquisitely swelling figure of the French Renaissance Virgin in marble that stood on a console in his drawing-room at the Albany....  Such was G.J.’s dream as he assisted in the control of the Lechford Hospitals.  Emerging from it he looked along the table.  Quite half the members were dreaming too, and he wondered what thoughts were moving secretly within them.  But the chairman was not dreaming.  He never loosed his grasp of the matter in hand.  Nor did the earnest young blonde by the chairman’s side who took down in stenography the decisions of the committee.

Chapter 14

QUEEN

Then Lady Queenie Paulle entered rather hurriedly, filling the room with a distinguished scent.  All the men rose in haste, and there was a frightful scraping of chair-legs on the floor.  Lady Queenie cheerfully apologised for being late, and, begging no one to disturb himself, took a modest place between the chairman and the secretary and a little behind them.

Lady Queenie obviously had what is called “race”.  The renown of her family went back far, far beyond its special Victorian vogue, which had transformed an earldom into a marquisate and which, incidentally, was responsible for the new family Christian name that Queenie herself bore.  She was young, tall, slim and pale, and dressed with the utmost smartness in black—­her half-brother having gloriously lost his life in September.  She nodded to the secretary, who blushed with pleasure, and she nodded to several members, including G.J.  Being accustomed to publicity and to seeing herself nearly every week in either The Tatler or The Sketch, she was perfectly at ease in the room, and the fact that nearly the whole company turned to her as plants to the sun did not in the least disturb her.

The attention which she received was her due, for she had few rivals as a war-worker.  She was connected with the Queen’s Work for Women Fund, Queen Mary’s Needlework Guild, the Three Arts Fund, the Women’s Emergency Corps, and many minor organisations.  She had joined a Women’s Suffrage Society because such societies were being utilised by the Government.  She had had ten lessons in First Aid in ten days, had donned the Red Cross, and gone to France with two motor-cars and a staff and a French maid in order to help in the great national work of nursing wounded heroes; and she might still have been in France had not an unsympathetic and audacious colonel of the R.A.M.C. insisted on her being shipped back to England.  She had done practically everything that a patriotic girl could do for the war, except, perhaps, join a Voluntary Aid Detachment and wash dishes and scrub floors for fifteen hours a day and

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Pretty Lady from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.