Page 309 (1/1)

'And now I el, won't you?' Of course he was ready to see her as far as the Angel 'What a'

'And what am I to say to aunt?'

'Say to her? Just say what you have said all along'

'I've said nothing all along,--just to oblige you, Felix I ot herself to ot to say tohis answer 'If you bother me I shall cut it, you know'

'Cut it!'

'Yes;--cut it Can't you wait till I a will be the ruin o' o, if Mrs Pipkin won't have me no more?'

'I'll find a place for you'

'You find a place! No; that won't do I've told you all that before I'd sooner go into service, or--'

'Go back to John Crumb'

'John Crumb has more respect for me nor you He'd make me his wife to-morrow, and only be too happy'

'I didn't tell you to come away from him,' said Sir Felix

'Yes, you did You told me as I was to come up to London when I saw you at Sheepstone Beeches;--didn't you? And you toldyou'd get it done for ive you a couple of sovereigns, if that's what it is'

'No it isn't;--and I won't have your ers off I want you to say whether you mean to marry ht now have told, that would have been nothing to hi to New York, and would be out of the way of any trouble; and he thought that lies of that kind to young woht, didn't believe them, but liked to be able to believe afterwards that they had been deceived It wasn't the lie that stuck in his throat, but the fact that he was a baronet It was in his estiles to ask to be his wife He did not care for the lie, but he did not like to see such a lie as that at her dictation 'Marry, Ruby! No, I don't ever reatest bore out I know a trick worth two of that'