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With an air of suban to play, but she could only see before her: "I have loved you ever since thatwhen I put the lilies in your hair," and she played so out of tio so bad?"
"I can't play now; I'm not in the mood," she said at last "I shall feel better by and by You can go ho, but catching up his cap ran down the stairs and out into the porch, just as up the step a youngfroer and excited
"Hello, boy," he cried, grasping the collar of Bill's roundabout and holding him fast, "who's in the church?"
"Darn yer, old Jian, but when he saw his captor was not Ji a soldier's unifor still, answered civilly: "I thought you was Jiest bully in toho is allus hectorin' us boys Nobody is there but she--Miss Lennox--up where the organ is," and having given the desired infor first if it wasn't Miss Helen's beau, and wondering next, in case she should soan boy as well as the sexton "He orto," Bill soliloquized, "for I've about blowed s the 'Te Deum'"
Meanwhile Mark Ray, who had driven first to the far in upon the festooned walls, and then as he heard a sound in the loft, stealing noiselessly up the stairs to where Helen sat in the diain the precious letter withheld fro She had moved her stool near to the , and her back was toward the door, so that she neither saw nor heard, nor suspected anything, until Mark, bending over her so as to see what she had in her hand, as well as the tear she had dropped upon it, clasped both his ar her face over back, kissed her fondly, calling her his darling, and saying to her as she tried to struggle fro by that tear on my letter and the look upon your face Dear Helen, we have found each other at last"