Editing A Trip North

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She’d paid for two more cups and had made her way through most of her notes of her fortnight in London before she had to change trains for a line that would take her east.  The crush of the northern line was replaced by the lighter traffic of the northeastern and the car was less crowded.  Furthermore, the folk aboard must have been of hardier northern stock, for someone cracked a few windows fore and aft and the fresh air banished the stifling morning from her memory. <br><br>
 
She’d paid for two more cups and had made her way through most of her notes of her fortnight in London before she had to change trains for a line that would take her east.  The crush of the northern line was replaced by the lighter traffic of the northeastern and the car was less crowded.  Furthermore, the folk aboard must have been of hardier northern stock, for someone cracked a few windows fore and aft and the fresh air banished the stifling morning from her memory. <br><br>
  
It was nearly 6 o’clock in the evening when Josephine finally stepped down onto the platform and found her trunk waiting for her. She checked the knots on the ropes and the locks and found all were secure. Over the crash and boom of the nearby surf, the bells of Scarborough’s churches and clock towers rang the hour and Josephine hired a porter to carry her trunk to the station telegraph office.  She would give Katherine another fifteen minutes and then wire ahead to the estate of her arrival.  There might still be a wagon at the station she could hire to take her there. Josephine entertained herself with reading the notices tacked on the bulletin boards while she waited. She checked her father’s watch and saw it was a quarter past.<br><br>
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It was nearly 6 o’clock in the evening when Josephine finally stepped down onto the platform and found her trunk waiting for her. She checked the knots on the ropes and the locks and found all were secure. Over the crash and boom of the nearby surf, the bells of Scarborough’s churches and clock towers rang the hour and Josephine hired a porter to carry her trunk to the station telegraph office.  She would give Katherine another fifteen minutes and then wire ahead to the estate of her arrival.  There might still be a wagon at the station she could hire to take her there. Josephine entertained herself with reading the notices tacked on the bulletin boards while she waited. She checked her father’s watch and saw it was a quarter past.
  
 
''Right.  Look lively then.''<br><br>   
 
''Right.  Look lively then.''<br><br>   

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