pass that way, through the sweetness of it, and this
made a coign of vantage for the men with trays, who
were very persecuting there. Lindsay and Alicia
stood together beside the roses, her hands were deep
in them; he perceived with pleasure that their glow
was reflected in her face. “No,”
she exclaimed with dainty aplomb to the man who sat
cross-legged in muslin draperies on the table.
“These are certainly of yesterday. There
is no scent left in them—and look!”
she held up the bunch and shook it. A shower
of pink petals and drops of water fell upon the round
of her arm above the wrist, where the laces of her
sleeve slipped back. Lindsay had something like
a poetic appreciation of her, observing her put the
bunch down tenderly, as if she would not, if she could
help it, find fault with any rose. The dealer
drew put another and handed it to her; a long-stemmed,
wide-open, perfect thing, and it was then that her
glance of delight, wandering, fell upon Laura Filbert.
Lindsay looked instantly, curiously, in the same direction,
and Alicia was aware that he also saw. There ensued
a terse moment with a burden of silence and the strangest
misgivings, in which he may have imagined that he
had his part alone, but which was the heavier for
her because of him. These two had seen the girl
before only under circumstances that suggested projection,
that made excuse, on a platform receiving the respect
of attention, marching with her fellows under common
conventions, common orders. Here, alone, slipping
in and out among the crowd, she looked abandoned;
the sight of her in her bare white feet and the travesty
of her dress was a wound. Her humility screamed
its violation, its debasement of her race; she woke
the impulse to screen her and hurry her away as if
she were a woman walking in her sleep. She had
on her arm a sheaf of the War Cry. This
was another indignity; she offered them right and
left, and no one had a pice for her except one man,
a sailor who refused the paper. When he rejoined
his companions there was a hoarse laugh, and the others
turned their heads to look after her.
The flower-dealer eyed his customers with contemptuous speculation, seeing what had claimed their eyes. There was nothing new, the “mem” passed every day at this hour. She did no harm and no good. He, too, looked at her as she came closer, offering her paper to Alladiah Khan, a man impatient in his religion, who refused it, mumbling in his beard. With a gesture of appeal she pressed it on him, saying something. Then Alladiah’s green turban shook, his beard, dyed red in Mecca, waggled; he raised his arm, and Laura, in white astonishment, darted from under it. They seldom did that.