[The Hermit of Far End by Margaret Pedler]@TWC D-Link book
The Hermit of Far End

CHAPTER XXII
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CHAPTER XXII.
LOVE'S SACRAMENT A full week had elapsed since the night of that eventful journey in pursuit of Molly, and from the moment when Garth had given Sara into the safe keeping of Jane Crab till the moment when he came upon her by the pergola at Rose Cottage, perched on the top of a ladder, engaged in tying back the exuberance of a Crimson Rambler, they had not met.
And now, as he halted at the foot of the ladder, Sara was conscious that her spirits had suddenly bounded up to impossible heights at the sight of the lean, dark face upturned to her.
"The Lavender Lady and Miles are pottering about in the greenhouse," she announced explanatorily, waving her hand in the direction of a distant glimmer of glass beyond the high box hedge which flanked the rose-garden.
"Are they ?" Trent, thus arrested in the progress of his search for his host and hostess, seemed entirely indifferent as to whether it were ever completed or not.

He leaned against one of the rose-wreathed pillars of the pergola and gazed negligently in the direction Sara indicated.
"How is Miss Molly ?" he asked.
Sara twinkled.
"She is just beginning to discard sackcloth and ashes for something more becoming," she informed him gravely.
"That's good.

Are you--are you all right after your tumble?
I'm making these kind inquiries because, since it was my car out of which you elected to fall, I feel a sense of responsibility." Sara descended from the ladder before she replied.

Then she remarked composedly-- "It has taken precisely seven days, apparently, for that sense of responsibility to develop." "On the contrary, for seven days my thirst for knowledge has been only restrained by the pointings of conscience." "Then"-- she spoke rather low--"was it conscience pointing you--away from Sunnyside ?" His hazel eyes flashed over her face.
"Perhaps it was--discretion," he suggested.

"Looking in at shop windows when one has an empty purse is a poor occupation--and one to be avoided." "Did you want to come ?" she persisted gently.
Half absently he had cut off a piece of dead wood from the rose-bush next him and was twisting it idly to and fro between his fingers.


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