"Yes, Mrs. Capron-Smith was just saying——" Mrs. Cotterill put in.
(So that was her name.)
"It would be something too lovely!" said Nellie in ecstasy.
Switzerland! Astonishing how with a single word she had marked the gulf between Bursley people and herself. The Cotterills had never been out of England. Not merely that, but the Cotterills had never dreamt of going out of England. Denry had once been to Dieppe, and had come back as though from Timbuctoo with a traveller's renown. And she talked of Switzerland easily.
"I suppose it is very jolly," he said.
"Yes," she said, "it's splendid in summer. But, of course, the time is winter, for the sports. Naturally when you are n't free to take a bit of a holiday in winter you must be content with summer, and very splendid it is. I 'm sure you 'd enjoy it frightfully, Nell."
"I'm sure I should—frightfully!" Nellie agreed. "I shall speak to father. I shall make him——"
"Now, Nellie—" her mother warned her.
"Yes I shall mother," Nellie insisted.
"There is your father!" observed Mrs. Cotterill, after listening.