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n the hill, I thought I had never seen any girl so beautiful, so lovely--" The colour rose slowly to her face, but died away again: the least vain of women is moved when a man tells her she is beautiful--in his eyes, at any rate. "And when you spoke to me I thought I had never heard so sweet a voice; and if I had, that there had never been one that I so longed to hear again. You were not with me long, only a few minutes, but when I left you and trumped over the hill to the inn I could not get you out of my mind. I wondered who you were, and whether I should see you again." The horses moved, and instinctively she looked over her shoulder towards them. "They will not go: they are quite quiet," he said. "Wait--ah, wait for a few minutes! I have a feeling that if I let you go I shall not see you again; and that would--that would be more than I could bear. That night at the inn the landlord told me about you. Of course he had nothing but praise and admiration for you--who would have any other? But he told me of the lonely life you led, of the care you took of your father, of your devotion and goodness; and the picture of you living at the great, silent house, without friends or companions--well, it haunted me! I could see it all so plainly--I, who am not usually quick at seeing things. As a rule, I'm not impressed by women--Howard says I am cold and bored--perhaps he's right; but I could not get you out of my mind. I felt that I wanted to see you again." He paused again, as if the state of mind he was describing was a puzzle to himself--paused and frowned. "I left the inn and started up the road--I suppose I wanted to get a glimpse of the house in which you lived. Yes; that must have been it. And then, all at once, I saw you. I remember the frock you wore that night--you looked like an angel, a spirit standing there in the moonlight, the most beautiful woman I have ever seen. Are you angry with me for saying so? Don't be; for I've got to tell you everything, and--and--it's difficult!" He was silent a moment. Her head was still down-bent, her small white hand hung at her side; she was quite motionless but for the slow, rhythmic rise and fall of her bosom. "When you came to me, when you spoke to me, my heart leapt as if--well, as if something good had happened to me--something that had never happened before. When I went away the picture of you standing at the door, waving your hand, went with me, and--stayed wi
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