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64 “Do people always stare at you?” he inquired.

She swept the car with an indifferent glance.

“I don’t know. I never noticed.”

“It’s queer for us to be going off like this,” he said, in a startled tone.

“It seems perfectly natural to me. Are you embarrassed?” she asked, suddenly aware of a new quality in him.

“No, certainly not,” he defended himself.

It was five o’clock when they drew into Grand Central Station, a time when the whole duty of man seems to be to get out of New York and into the suburbs. An army of ants ran through the great blue-vaulted rotunda, streaming into the narrow tunnels, where the steel horses were puffing and steaming. The sense of rushing waters was upon Jarvis. He halted, stunned and helpless.

“Isn’t it great? All the tribes of Shem, Ham, and Japhet,” cried Bambi, at his elbow. She piloted him through—big, powerful, bewildered Jarvis. Many a hurrying suburbanite slowed up enough to look after them, the tall, blond giant, and a little girl with shining eyes.

“Where are we going?” Jarvis asked, with child-like confidence that she would know.