Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: II. For a number of mornings previous to the one herein commemorated, Miss Hamilton, whose habit it was to sit, with some slight resource in the way of fancy-work, near one of the windows which opened upon the quiet suburban avenue, had observed a tall, sedate stranger advance along the opposite sidewalk, cross the street, and disappear from view. Perhaps her attention was attracted because of the regularity of this episode ; perhaps because his appearance approximated her somewhat exacting ideal; perhaps because the first time she saw him he was looking at the window with a certain expectancy. Among the accomplishments she had acquired under Madame Sevier's tutelage was not the grace of humility. The idea was instantly suggested that he had before seen her here, and was on the lookout for her. This flattered her and piqued her curiosity, all the more because of the regular recurrence of the phenomenon about the same hour. He was a grave man, twenty-five or thirty years of age ; handsome in a certain sense, but not in the style that usually attracts the favorable regards of young girls. He had deeply set gray eyes, an aquiline nose, a large, firm chin, a finely chiseledmouth and flexible lips, about which were lines that showed a capacity for varying expression. The strong lower jaw, and broad, high forehead gave the face a certain squareness. He was cleanshaven, and his light brown hair was clipped close to a shapely head. He wore a well-fitting suit of light cloth, and a straw hat. He was tall, well proportioned, and as an experienced observer could easily have seen in good training from the standpoint of athletics. He walked slowly, but at an even pace, looking neither to the right nor the left; and there was nothing, apparently, which broke the monotony of his methodi... --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.