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h she did not know. He had no time to think of it, for she offered him her lips again. The moment when he might have told her thus went by. It was but an impulse; for he still loved what he was doing, and took delight in the risks of it. And he could not bear so to impair her joy. Soon she must know, but she should not yet be robbed of her joy that it was she who could bring him back to Blent. For him in his knowledge, for her in her ignorance, there was an added richness of pleasure that he would not throw away, even although now he believed that were the truth known she would come to him still. Must not that be, since now he, even he, would come to her, though the truth had been otherwise? "There's a train from Fillingford at eight in the morning. I'm going back there to-night. I've got a fly waiting by the Pool--if the man hasn't gone to sleep and the horse run away. Will you meet me there? We'll go up to town and be married as soon as we can--the day after to-morrow, I suppose." "And then----?" "Oh, then just come back here. We can go nowhere but here, Cecily." "Just come back and----?" "And let them find it out, and talk, and talk, and talk!" he laughed. "It would be delightful!" she cried. "Nobody to know till it's done!" "Yes, yes, I like it like that. Not father even, though?" "You'll be gone before he's up. Leave a line for him." "But I--I can't go alone with you." "Why not?" asked Harry, seeming a trifle vexed. "I'll tell you!" she cried. "Let's take Mina with us, Harry!" He laughed; the Imp was the one person whose presence he was ready to endure. Indeed there would perhaps be a piquancy in that. "All right. An elopement made respectable by Mina!" He had a touch of scorn even for mitigated respectability. "Shall we call her and tell her now?" "Well, are you tired of this interview?" "I don't know whether I want it to go on, or whether I must go and tell somebody about it." "I shouldn't hesitate," smiled Harry. "You? No. But I--Oh, Harry dear, I want to whisper my triumph." "But we must be calm and business-like about it now." "Yes!" She entered eagerly into the fun. "That'll puzzle Mina even more." "We're not doing anything unusual," he insisted with affected gravity. "No--not for our family at least." "It's just the obvious thing to do." "Oh, it's just the delicious thing too!" She almost danced in gayety. "Let me call Mina. Do!" "Not for a moment, a
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