help, “nothing is easier; let him say ‘No,’ then.”
“Very true; and I have proved to him he was wrong not to say ‘Yes.’“
“You told him candidly, I suppose, that La Valliere was deceiving him?”
“Yes, without the slightest reserve; and, as soon as I had done so, he gave a start, as if he were going to clear the Channel at a bound.”
“At all events,” said Miss Stewart, “he has done something; and a very good thing too, upon my word.”
“But,” said Buckingham, “I stopped him; I have left him and Miss Mary in conversation together, and I sincerely trust that now he will not leave, as he seemed to have an idea of doing.”