"Why, no; there's nothing. Why?"
"You've not been yourself the last few days."
"I guess that's only your imagination. Well, I'd better be getting along. Sid and the other fellow'll be waiting for me."
Without another look in her direction, he was gone, closing the door after him.
Nora remained quite still for several minutes, biting her lips and frowning in deep thought. It was all very well to say that there was nothing the matter, but there was. Did he think she could live with him day after day all these months and not notice his change of mood, even if she could not translate it? He had still a great deal to learn about women!
On the way over to the shelf to get her work, she paused a moment beside her flowers to cheer herself once more with their brightness. Sitting down by the table, she began to darn one of her husband's thick woolen socks. An instant later she was startled by a loud knock on the door.
With a little cry of pleasure she flung it open, to find Eddie standing outside. She gave a cry of delight. Somehow, the interval since she had seen him last, significant as it was in bringing to her the greatest change her life had known, seemed for the second longer than all the years she had spent in England without seeing him.
"Eddie! Oh, my dear, I'm so glad to see you!" she cried, flinging her arms around his neck.
"Hulloa there," he said awkwardly.
"But how did you come? I didn't hear any wheels."