The girl drew a long breath, which might very well have been one of relief. They turned silently toward the exit.
“Are you going back home?” Laverick asked.
“Yes,” she answered listlessly. “There is nothing else to do.”
“Isn’t it rather sad for you there by yourself?”
She nodded.
“It is the first time,” she said. “Another girl and her mother have lived with me always. They started off last week, touring. They are paying a little toward the house or I should have to go into rooms. As it is, I think that it would be more comfortable.”
Laverick looked at her wonderingly.
“You seem such a child,” he said, “to be left all alone in the world like this.”
“But I am not a child actually, you see,” she answered, with an effort at lightness. “Somehow, though, I do miss Arthur’s going. His father was always very good to me, and made him promise that he would do what he could. I didn’t see much of him, but one felt always that there was somebody. It’s different now. It makes one feel very lonely.”
“I, too,” Laverick said, with commendable mendacity, “am rather a lonely person. You must let me see something of you now and then.”