laid hold of a little locket which had slipped into sight as Paul bent forward in his salute. He thrust it back, coloring so deeply that the child observed it, and exclaimed, with a mischievous laugh, "It is your sweetheart, Paul. I heard Bessy, my maid, tell Hester she was sure you had one because you took no notice of them. Let me see it. Is she pretty?" "Very pretty," answered the boy, without showing the picture. "Do you like her very much?" questioned Lillian, getting interested in the little romance. "Very much," and Paul's black eyelashes fell. "Would you die for her, as they say in the old songs?" asked the girl, melodramatically. "Yes, Miss Lillian, or live for her, which is harder." "Dear me, how very nice it must be to have anyone care for one so much," said the child innocently. "I wonder if anybody ever will for me?" "Love comes to all soon or late, And maketh gay or sad; For every bird will find its mate, And every lass a lad," sang Paul, quoting one of Hester's songs, and looking relieved that Lillian's thoughts had strayed from him. But he was mistaken. "Shall you marry this sweetheart of yours someday?" asked Lillian, turning to him with a curious yet wistful look. "Perhaps." "You look as if there was no 'perhaps' about it," said the child, quick to read the kindling of the eye and the change in the voice that accompanied the boy's reply. "She is very young and I must wait, and while I wait many things may happen to part us." "Is she a lady?" "Yes, a wellborn, lovely little lady, and I'll marry her if I live." Paul spoke with a look of decision, and a proud lift of the head that contrasted curiously with the badge of servitude he wore. Lillian felt this, and asked, with a sudden shyness coming over her, "But you are a gentleman, and so no one will mind even if you are not rich." "How do you know what I am?" he asked quickly.