through the dark gallery across the corridor toward a 
tearoom. But at the door of the gallery she turned back. There through 
the lattice which shuts in the Ladies' Gallery, right across the House, 
she saw the Strangers' Gallery at the other end. The man whose head 
had been propped on his hands when she first discovered his presence 
was now sitting upright, and seemed to be looking straight at herself, 
though she knew well that no one in the Ladies' Gallery was really 
visible from any other part of the House. His face was a mere 
black-and-white patch in the distance. But she imagined the clear, 
critical eyes, their sudden frown or smile. 
"I wonder what _he_'ll think of Arthur's speech--and whether he's seen 
Coryston. I wonder whether he knows there's going to be an awful row 
to-night. Coryston's mad!" 
Coryston was her eldest brother, and she was very fond of him. But the 
way he had been behaving!--the way he had been defying mamma!--it 
was really ridiculous. What could he expect? 
She seemed to be talking to the distant face, defending her mother and 
herself with a kind of unwilling deference. 
"After all, do I really care what he thinks?" 
She turned and went her way to the tearoom. As she entered it she saw
some acquaintances at the farther end, who waved their hands to her, 
beckoning her to join them. She hastened across the room, much 
observed by the way, and conscious of the eyes upon her. It was a relief 
to find herself among a group of chattering people. 
Meanwhile at the other end of the room three ladies were finishing their 
tea. Two of them were the wives of Liberal Ministers--by name, Mrs. 
Verity and Mrs. Frant. The third was already a well-known figure in 
London society and in the precincts of the House of Commons--the 
Ladies' Gallery, the Terrace, the dining-rooms--though she was but an 
unmarried girl of two-and- twenty. Quite apart, however, from her own 
qualities and claims, Enid Glenwilliam was conspicuous as the only 
daughter of the most vigorously hated and ardently followed man of the 
moment--the North Country miner's agent, who was now England's 
Finance Minister. 
"You saw who that young lady was?" said Mrs. Frant to Miss 
Glenwilliam. "I thought you knew her." 
"Marcia Coryston? I have just been introduced to her. But she isn't 
allowed to know me!" The laugh that accompanied the words had a 
pleasant childish chuckle in it. 
Mrs. Frant laughed also. 
"Girls, I suppose, have to do what they're told," she said, dryly. "But it 
was Arthur Coryston, wasn't it, who sent you that extra order for to-day, 
Enid?" 
"Yes," laughed the girl again; "but I am quite certain he didn't tell his 
mother! We must really be civil and go back to hear him speak. His 
mother will think it magnificent, anyway. She probably wrote it for him. 
He's quite a nice boy--but--" 
She shook her head over him, softly smiling to herself. The face which 
smiled had no very clear title to beauty, but it was arresting and 
expressive, and it had beautiful points. Like the girl's figure and dress, 
it suggested a self-conscious, fastidious personality: egotism, with
charm for its weapon. 
"I wonder what Lady Coryston thinks of her eldest son's performances 
in the papers this morning!" said lively little Mrs. Frant, throwing up 
hands and eyes. 
Mrs. Verity, a soft, faded woman, smiled responsively. 
"They can't be exactly dull in that family," she said. "I'm told they all 
talk at once; and none of them listens to a word the others say." 
"I think I'll bet that Lady Coryston will make Lord Coryston listen to a 
few remarks on that speech!" laughed Enid Glenwilliam. "Is there such 
a thing as _matria potestas_? I've forgotten all the Latin I learned at 
Cambridge, so I don't know. But if there is, that's what Lady Coryston 
stands for. How splendid--to stand for anything--nowadays!" 
The three fell into an animated discussion of the Coryston family and 
their characteristics. Enid Glenwilliam canvassed them all at least as 
freely as her neighbors. But every now and then little Mrs. Frant threw 
her an odd look, as much as to say, "Am I really taken in?" 
* * * * * 
Meanwhile a very substantial old lady, scarcely less deliberate and 
finely finished, in spite of her size, than Lady Coryston herself, had 
taken a chair beside her in the gallery, which was still very empty. 
"My dear," she said, panting a little and grasping Lady Coryston's wrist, 
with a plump hand on which the rings sparkled--"My dear! I came to 
bring you a word of sympathy." 
Lady Coryston looked at her coldly. 
"Are you speaking of Coryston?" 
"Naturally. The only logical result of those proceedings last night 
would    
    
		
	
	
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