[White Lies by Charles Reade]@TWC D-Link book
White Lies

CHAPTER IV
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She led the way to the Pleasaunce, and, when she got to the ancestral oak, she said hurriedly, "Now, mesdemoiselles, hide in there, and as still as mice.

You'll soon know who leaves the purses." With this she scudded to the lane, and gave Edouard the key.

"Look sharp," said she, "before they get up; it's almost their dressing time." "YOU'LL SOON KNOW WHO LEAVES THE PURSES!" Curiosity, delicious curiosity, thrilled our two daughters of Eve.
This soon began to alternate with chill misgivings at the novelty of the situation.
"She is not coming back," said Josephine ruefully.
"No," said Rose, "and suppose when we pounce out on him, it should be a stranger." "Pounce on him?
surely we are not to do that ?" "Oh, y-yes; that is the p-p-programme," quavered Rose.
A key grated, and the iron gate creaked on its hinges.

They ran together and pinched one another for mutual support, but did not dare to speak.
Presently a man's shadow came slap into the tree.

They crouched and quivered, and expected to be caught instead of catching, and wished themselves safe back in bed, and all this a nightmare, and no worse.
At last they recovered themselves enough to observe that this shadow, one half of which lay on the ground, while the head and shoulders went a little way up the wall of the tree, represented a man's profile, not his front face.


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