"No; even you, pardon me, Miss King, don't know Amarilly as I do. She

couldn't get beyond them in her heart, although she may in other

directions. Her heart is in the right place, and it will bridge any

distance that may lie between them."

John looked up attentively and approvingly.

"Amarilly has too much aptitude for learning not to be encouraged, and I

shall do more for her before long. We have pursued a select course of

reading this winter. She has read aloud while I painted. We began

stumblingly with Alice in Wonderland and are now groping through

mythology."

After refreshments had been served, Lily Rose went to her bedroom to don

her travelling gown, and when the happy couple had driven away amid a

shower of rice and shouts from the neighbors, John's carriage drew up.

"John," asked Colette, after a happy little moment in his arms, "did you

read my note and did you see what the date was?"

"Colette, surely it was the dearest love-letter a man ever received. If

I could have had it all these dreary months!"

"Do you wonder that I feared its falling into strange hands?"

"Tell me its history, Colette. How you recovered it, and why you thought

it was in the surplice in the first place?"

"I wrote it the day after you asked me--you know--"

There was another happy disappearance and silence before she resumed: "I was sentimental enough to want to deliver it in an unusual way. I

took it to Mrs. Jenkins's house the day your surplice was to be returned

to you, and I slipped it inside the pocket. I wanted you to find it

there on Sunday morning. I didn't know what to think when you looked at

me so oddly that Sunday--yes, I know now that you were wondering at my

silence. And when we came home in the fall and I learned from Amarilly

that strangers might be reading and laughing at my ardent love-letter,

which must have passed through many and alien hands, I was so horrified

I couldn't act rational or natural. I was--yes, I will 'fess up, John,--

I was unreasonable, as you said and--No, John! wait until I finish

before you--"

"You want to know how and where it was found? It seems at the same time

your surplice was laundered, a lace waist of mine was at their house. I

didn't care for a 'fumigated waist' so, like you, I made Amarilly a

present perforce. She laid it away in its wrappings to keep until her

wedding day. Out of the goodness of her generous little heart she loaned

it to Lily Rose and yesterday, when they were trying it on, Amarilly

found my note in the sleeve. Mrs. Jenkins was appealed to and remembered

that when the things were ready to be sent home, she found the note on

the floor, and supposing it had fallen from the waist slipped it inside

and forgot all about it. I decided that it should be delivered in the

manner originally planned."




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