SANCTUARY
his chance with other men.
But Dick, glancing at his watch, uttered an exclamation of annoyance. "Oh, by Jove, I shan't have time after all. Gill is waiting for me now; we must have dawdled over dinner." He bent to give his mother a caressing tap on the cheek. "Now don't worry," he adjured her; and as she smiled back at him he added with a sudden happy blush: "She does n't, you know: she's so sure of me."
Mrs. Peyton's smile faded, and laying a detaining hand on his, she said with sudden directness: "Sure of you, or of your success?"
He hesitated. "Oh, she regards them as synonymous. She thinks I'm bound to get on."
"But if you don't?"
He shrugged laughingly, but with a slight contraction of his confident brows. "Why, I shall have to make way for some one
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