Page:The Relentless City.djvu/245

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THE RELENTLESS CITY
235

Even her father, too, seemed rather preoccupied, and from time to time she saw that his eyes were fixed on herself with a certain anxious look, which was removed as soon as he saw she observed it.

With regard to the railroad scheme, his explanation after lunch was very short. A big ordnance map showed her where the line would enter the park, where it would enter the tunnel, not to appear again till it had passed outside the precinct. Its whole course would be quite remote from the house—remote also from the wooded side of the park; they would be as unconscious of its presence there as if it was in the next county. The Wyfold route, on the other hand, which perhaps might be adopted if Amelie put serious obstacles in the company's way, would actually be very much closer to the house and the forested piece of the park than the other.

Mr. Palmer made these explanations as if he anticipated some opposition on Amelie's part, and he was pleased to find none.

' It seems to me much the most sensible plan,' she said; ' and, as you say, the railway will really interfere with us less if it is in Molesworth than if it was in Wyfold. I must just tell Bertie about it, and I will send you my formal consent this evening. I will leave everything connected with the sale in your hands.'

She pushed the maps away from her with rather a weary air.

' And how are you, pápa,' she said, falling into her old habit of addressing him. ' I haven't set eyes on you for weeks.'

Mr. Palmer gave a moment's consideration to how he was before he answered.

' Well, I guess I'm a bit out of condition in the brain,' he said. ' From the business point of view, England is the most enervating place I ever came to. These directors and