Marion Arleigh's Penance - Everyday Life Library No. 5 by Charlotte M. (Charlotte Monica) Brame
page 32 of 95 (33%)
page 32 of 95 (33%)
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heart to him; for after a few minutes' silence she said to him:
"We are forgetting the very object for which I consented to see you." CHAPTER VI. "It is no wonder," replied Allan Lyster. "I forget everything in speaking to you. You do well, lady, in making me remember myself." "Do not mistake me," she said gently. "I only thought time is flying, and I have not said yet what I promised your sister I would say." They had walked down the orchard, and they stood now under the spreading boughs of a large apple tree--the pink and white blossoms made the loveliest frame for that most fair face. She was lovely as the blossoms themselves. "I feel like a criminal," said Allan Lyster; "and as though you were my judge. I tremble to know what you have to say." "Yet it is not very terrible, Mr. Lyster. Your sister is my dearest friend, and she tells me that you are thinking of going abroad. She is very miserable over it. She fancies she should never see you again. I promised her that I would persuade you to stay." His face flushed--his eyes flashed--he bent over her. |
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