"He's wasted half a crown on his tie, though. I'm going to tell him that you're not to be trusted."
"Then I shall devote myself to Zebedee."
"You won't influence Zebedee's ties," Helen said, "or his collars—the shiniest ones I have ever seen."
"She won't influence him at all, my good Helen. What's she got to do it with?"
"This!" Miriam said, rising superbly and displaying herself.
"Shut her up, somebody!" John begged. "This is beastly. Has she nothing better to do with herself than attracting men? If you met a woman who made that her profession instead of her play, you'd pass by on the other side."
Miriam flushed, frowned, and recovered herself. "I might. I don't think so. I can't see any harm in pleasing people. If I were clever and frightened them, or witty and made them laugh, it would be just the same. I happen to be beautiful." She spread her hands and waved them. "Tell birds not to fly, tell lambs not to skip, tell me to sit and darn the socks!" She stood on the fender and looked at herself in the glass. "Besides," she said, "I don't care. I'm not responsible. If Notya hadn't buried us all here, I might have been living a useful life!" She cast a sly glance at John. "I might be making butter like Lily Brent."
"Not half so good!"
She ignored that, and went on with her thoughts. "I shall ask Uncle Alfred what made Notya bring us here."
She turned and stood, very slim in her dark dress, her eyelids lowered, her lips parted, expectant of reproof and ready with defiance, but no one spoke. She constantly forgot that her family knew her, but, remembering that fact, her tilted eyebrows twitched a little. Her face broke into mischievous curves and dimples.