Page:Joan, the curate.djvu/252

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246
Joan, The Curate.

Thus left alone with the girl he loved, the young lieutenant was not slow in seizing the opportunity he had so long wished for; and although she tried to leave him and to return to the house, he gave her a look so full of entreaty, as he mutely placed himself in her way, and gazed at her with an expression there was no mistaking, that she faltered, paused, and asked, in a low voice—

"What have you, sir, to say to me? I had no notion of meeting you here."

"Surely, Miss Joan, if you could give ten minutes of your conversation to that booby young Waldron, you might bestow the same favor on me!"

"'Twas from no liking for Mr. Waldron I came out," said Joan, hastily. "He lured me hither by saying I should see something very interesting in the Italian garden; and I thought he had some rare flower or bird to show me. I should scarce have come, as you may guess, to see you in such interesting converse with Ann Price!"

In her voice, Tregenna was delighted to notice a tone of pique which seemed to be of good augury.