Standing alone now on the pave in a foreign city (стоя в одиночестве теперь на мостовой в чужом: «иностранном» городе), assailed by the foreign roar of foreign traffic (настигнутая чужим/чуждым шумом чужого/иностранного транспорта) and the foreign bustle of foreign passers-by (и чужой суетой иностранных прохожих), outside the great gray mansion (снаружи =
foreign ['fOrIN], bustle [bAsl], forlorn [fq'lLn]
Standing alone now on the pave in a foreign city, assailed by the foreign roar of foreign traffic and the foreign bustle of foreign passers-by, outside the great gray mansion that was like a private house and not a store at all, Mrs. Harris suddenly felt lonely, frightened and forlorn, and in spite of the great roll of silver-green American dollars in her handbag she wished for a moment that she had not come, or that she had asked the young man from the Airways to accompany her, or that the taxi driver had not driven away, leaving her standing there.
And then, as luck would have it (а потом, случайно: «как захотел случай/захотела удача»), a car from the British Embassy drove by (машина из Британского посольства проехала рядом) and the sight of the tiny Union Jack fluttering from the mudguard (и вид крошечного национального флага, трепетавшего у крыла автомобиля) stiffened her spine and brought determination to her mouth and eyes (укрепил ее дух и принес решительность =
mudguard ['mAdgRd], brought [brLt], balmy ['bRmI]
And then, as luck would have it, a car from the British Embassy drove by and the sight of the tiny Union Jack fluttering from the mudguard stiffened her spine and brought determination to her mouth and eyes. She reminded herself who and what she was, drew in a deep breath of the balmy Paris air laced with petrol fumes and resolutely pushed open the door and entered.