“I shall be happy to see you,” Ellen said, repeating the formula of welcome like a child, but she knew when she repeated it that it was very true. After she had parted from young Lloyd, she went into the sitting-room where were her mother and father, her mother sewing on a wrapper, her father reading the paper. Both of them looked up as the girl entered, and both stared at her in a bewildered way without rightly knowing why. Ellen's cheeks were a wonderful color, her eyes fairly blazed with blue light, her mouth was smiling in that ineffable smile of a simple overflow of happiness.
“Did you ride home on the car?” asked Fanny. “I didn't hear it stop.”
“No, mother.”
“Did you come home alone?” asked Andrew, abruptly.
“No,” said Ellen, blinking before the glare of the lamp. Fanny looked at Andrew. “Who did come home with you?” she asked, in a foolish, fond voice.
“Mr. Robert Lloyd. He was sitting on the piazza when I got there. I told Miss Lennox I had just as soon come on the cars alone, but she wouldn't let me, and then he said it would be pleasant to walk, and—”
“Oh, you needn't make so many excuses,” said Fanny, laughing.
Ellen colored until her face was a blaze of roses, she blinked harder, and turned her head away impatiently.
“I am not making excuses,” said she, as if her modesty were offended. “I wish you wouldn't talk so, mother. I couldn't help it.”
“Of course you couldn't,” her mother called out jocularly, as Ellen went into the other room to get her lamp to go to bed.