She cut the first rose and held it to her lips, smelling it. "Lovely. Who was your letter from, Mark?"
He thought, "How on earth did she know?" He had forgotten it himself. "How ever did you know? From Lady Tybar. They're back."
"I saw you from the window with the postman. Lady Tybar! Whatever was she writing to you about?"
He somehow did not like this. Why "whatever"? And being watched was rather beastly; he remembered he had fiddled about with the letter,—half put it in his pocket and then taken it out again. And why not? What did it matter? But he had a prevision that it was going to matter. Mabel did not particularly like Nona. He said, "Just to say they're back. She wants us to go up there."
"An invitation? Whyever didn't she write to me?"
"Whyever" again!—"May I see it?"
He took the letter from his pocket and handed it to her. "It's not exactly an invitation—not formal."
She did what he called "flicked" the letter out of its envelope. He watched her reading it and in his mind he could see as perfectly as she with her eyes, the odd, neat script; in his mind he read it with her, word by word.
Dear Marko—We're back. We've been from China to Peru almost. Come up one day and be bored about it. How are you?
Nona.