"Only a moment on the doorstep."
"Come, sit next to me. You have slept well, I can see. Notice the advantage of coming straight in to breakfast, and not running about the forest—you get here first, and so get the best cup of coffee."
"But it isn't proper for me to have the best," said Anna, smiling as she took the cup, "when I have guests here."
"Yes, it is—very proper indeed. Besides, you told me they were sisters."
"So they are. Has the baroness not been here?"
"No, she is still in bed."
"No, I saw her a moment ago. I thought you were with her."
"Oh, my dear—so early in the morning!" protested the princess. "When did I see her last? Less than nine hours ago. She followed me into my bedroom and talked much. I could not begin again with her the first thing in the morning, even to please you." And she looked at Anna very affectionately. "You were tired last night, were you not?" she continued. "Axel Lohm stayed so late, I think he wanted to speak to you. But you went straight up to bed."
"I had seen him before he went in to you. He didn't want to speak to me. He was consumed by curiosity about our new friends."
"Was he? He did not show much interest in them. He talked to me nearly all the time. He thought for a moment that he knew the baroness—at least, he stared at her at first and seemed surprised. But it turned out that she was only like someone he knew. She had evidently never seen him before. It is a great pleasure to me to talk to that young man," the princess went on, while Anna ate her toast.