SANCTUARY
that he should defer it and give her a few moments' talk.
"Let me make you some fresh tea," she said, as Darrow blushingly shed the garment, "and when Dick comes back we'll all walk home together. I've not had a chance to say two words to you this winter."
Darrow sank into a chair at her side and nervously contemplated his boots. "I've been tremendously hard at work," he said.
"I know: too hard at work, I'm afraid. Dick tells me you have been wearing yourself out over your competition plans."
"Oh, well, I shall have time to rest now," he returned. "I put the last stroke to them this morning."
Mrs. Peyton gave him a quick look. "You're ahead of Dick, then."
"In point of time only," he said smiling.
"That is in itself an advantage," she answered with a tinge of asperity. In spite of an honest effort for impartiality she
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