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"I thought you might be going down to Honedale, as I knew you returned

last night, so I brought these flowers for your patient with my

compliments, or if you prefer I give them to you, and you can thus

present them as if coming from yourself."

"As if I would do that," the doctor answered, taking the bouquet in

his hand the better to examine and admire it. "Did you arrange it, or

your gardener?" he asked, and when Guy replied that the merit of

arrangement, if merit there were, belonged to himself, he began to

deprecate his own awkwardness and want of tact. "Here I have been

cudgeling my head this half hour trying to think what I could take her

as a peace offering, and could think of nothing, while you--Well, you

and I are different entirely. You know just what is proper--just what

to say, and when to say it--while I am a perfect bore, and without

doubt shall make some ludicrous blunder in delivering the flowers.

To-day will be the first time really that we meet, as she was sleeping

when I was there last, while on all other occasions she has paid no

attention whatever to me."

For a moment Guy regarded his friend attentively, noticing now that

extra care had been bestowed upon his toilet, that the collar was

fresh from the laundry, and the new cravat tied in a most

unexceptionable manner, instead of being twisted into a hard knot,

with the ends looking as if they had been chewed.

"Doc," he said, when his survey was completed, "how old are you--

twenty-five or twenty-six?"

"Twenty-five--just your age--why?" and the doctor looked with an

expression so wholly innocent of Guy's real meaning that the latter,

instead of telling why, replied: "Oh! nothing; only I was wondering if you would do to be my father.

Agnes, I verily believe, is more than half in love with you; but, on

the whole, I would not like to be your son; so I guess you'd better

take some one younger--say Jessie. You are only eighteen years her

senior."

The doctor stared at him amazed, and when he had finished said with

the utmost candor: "What has that to do with Madeline? I thought we

were talking of her." "Innocent as the newly-born babe," was Guy's

mental comment, as he congratulated himself on his larger and more

varied experience.

And truly Dr, Holbrook was as simple-hearted as a child, never

dreaming of Guy's meaning, or that any emotion save a perfectly proper

one had a lodgment in his breast as he drove down to Honedale,

guarding carefully Guy's bouquet, and wishing he knew just what he

ought to say when he presented it.