[The Woman’s Way by Charles Garvice]@TWC D-Link book
The Woman’s Way

CHAPTER XXV
14/18

"I saw them with your other boots in the dressing-room yesterday." "Oh, right!" he said.

"Awfully sorry to have disturbed you." He returned to the dressing-room, arranged the long bath towel over the jewel-case, and went downstairs.

He was too early, as he knew, for any of the servants to be about, and he went through the lower hall and was unbolting the outer door when he chanced to glance at the window nearest it; it was closed by a common hasp, and was without bars.

With a little nod of satisfaction, he opened the window noiselessly; then went out by the door.
He was about to go through the shrubbery, towards the little wood, at the bottom of which lay the lake, but it occurred to him that some of the servants might be getting up and that any movement of his should be open and free from secrecy.

So he went straight across the lawn in the sauntering fashion of a man going for a bath and enjoying the fresh, warm air; but when he entered the wood, which was enchanted ground for Derrick and Celia, he looked round him cautiously; for it was just possible that one of the gamekeepers might be about; but there was no sight or sound of anyone, and when he had gained the centre of the wood, he stopped and looked around him, and presently, after waiting a minute or two listening intently, he hid the box under a bush and covered it with the leaves of last autumn.


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