Excerpt from Constance Trescot: A Novel
"Mr. Hood will see you in the library, sir."
George Trescot followed the servant, and when left alone began to wander about a large room which looked out on the north coast of Massachusetts Bay. Why it was called a library might well have puzzled the young man. There were few books except those of reference, but on chair and table were mill and railway reports, and newspapers in superabundance.
As the clock struck the hour of noon a woman of some twenty-seven years entered the room. Hearing the door open, Trescot turned from a brief and hopeless effort to comprehend the genealogical tree of the Hood family, which hung on the wall in much splendor of heraldic blazonry.
Miss Hood came in smiling, as if she had just been amused and was enjoying the remembrance. Her face had - what is more often found in plain women than in those to whom nature has been more bountiful - great power of expressing both kindliness and mirth.
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