Chapter Two
o as se over my ter. Quite over my t perfectly urns out.
I said, I am sure turn out well.
S staff of servants, to make sure t it does. t ake to it. I dont kno place. I dont kno say. But if you mind my otable-boys, of course, I alking han you can help
S on like t for a quarter of an ime, as I ioned, never quite catcold me take my meals, and my underclotea t eapot, s of t ladys maid to pass on to tcicks: to be given to Mr ay. And Mr ay , since it to C to Cook.
t Miss Maud leaves in and, oo dry to raise a lathose you may keep.
ell, ts servants for you—altle patc candle-ends and soap! If I e felt it before, I kne it o be in expectations of thousand pounds.
t if I o so my room. But so ask me to be very quiet as , for Mr Lilly liked a silent bear upset, and Miss Maud of nerves t like alloful.
So sook up ook up my candle, and s into taircase. ts alake, unless Miss Maud directs you otherwise.
read greer t. At last, o a door, t so my room. Putting urned the handle.
I particularly one, no, since I must er, perer dogs. But tel and, before t it up—runk.
Near t quite tig. lead? I asked Mrs Stiles, t migo anot.
ts to Miss Mauds room, she said.
I said, Miss Maud is there, asleep in her bed?
Per rat Mrs Stiles gave a s just tle.
Miss Maud sleeps very poorly, sly. If s, to go to call out for you, since you are a stranger to Margaret in a cside sake her
tomorro, you ust