She was quite a clever little Londoner now, and knew which were the right omnibuses to take, and, in short, how to find her way about town. She hailed the City omnibus, and hastily and humbly took her place amongst its crowded passengers. She was the unlucky twelfth, and her advent was certainly not hailed with delight. The bright morning had turned to rain, and the passengers, most of them women, were wrapped up in waterproof cloaks. Jasmine, when she entered the omnibus, looked so small, so timid, and unimportant, that no one thought it worth while even to move for her, and at last she was thankful to get a little pin-point of room between two very buxom ladies, who both almost in the same breath desired her not to crowd them, and both also fiercely requested her to keep her wet dress from touching their waterproofs.
At another time Jasmine would have been quite spirited enough to resent the unfriendly behavior of the inmates of the City ’bus; but her interview with Poppy had depressed her greatly, and she had a kind of terrified little fear that she knew the reason of Mrs. Flint’s sharp tones, that she could guess why Poppy’s bright face should look so dismal, and why she was obliged so earnestly to beg of her to return her one and sixpence.
“She wants her own money—her wages, that she earned with a swimming head and all,” thought poor Jasmine. “How selfish of me not to remember before that of course, poor Poppy would want her wages; it is perfectly dreadful to think of her doing without them. Why, of course, Mrs. Flint would be likely to scold her if she went about with her ragged boots when she earns such good wages. Poor, dear, brave Poppy! she would never tell what she did with her money. Well, she must have it all back to-day. Yes, I am determined about that, she shall have it back, to-day.”
Jasmine was thinking so hard, and so absorbing was her theme, that she leaned unconsciously against the fat neighbor on her right. This good person immediately pushed her with some vigor into the arms of the portly neighbor on her left, who exclaimed, in a cross voice—
“Lor’ sakes! my dear, sit upright, do.”
“I hope the young person will soon get out,” exclaimed the other neighbor. “I call it downright unconscionable to crowd up Christian women like this. Might I make bold to inquire, miss, when you are thinking of alighting?”
“I am going to Paternoster Row,” said Jasmine, in a meek voice. “I do not think I am very far from there now.”
“Oh, no, miss! we have only to go down Newgate Street, and there you are. It’s a queer place, is Paternoster Row, not that I knows much about it.”
“A mighty bookish place,” took up the other neighbor “they say they are all bookworms that live there, and that they are as dry as bits of parchment. I shouldn’t say that a bright little miss like you had any call to go near such a place.”
Jasmine drew herself up, and her face became sunshiny once more.