"You have not yet asked after your sweetheart, Darrell," his mother said

one evening soon after his arrival, as they sat awaiting his father's

return from a short stroll.

"You are my sweetheart now, little mother," he replied, kissing the hand

that lay within his own.

"Does that mean that you care less for Marion than before you went

away?" she queried.

"No," Darrell answered, slowly; "I cannot say that my regard for her has

decreased. I may have changed in some respects, but not in my feelings

towards Marion. I will ask you a question, mother: Do you think she

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still cares for me as before I left home?"

"I hardly know how to answer you, because, as you know, Marion is so

silent and secretive. I never could understand the girl. To be candid,

Darrell dear, I never could understand why you should care for her, and

I never thought she cared for you as she ought."

"You know, mother, how I came to be attracted to her in the first place;

we were schoolmates, and you know she was an exceptionally brilliant

girl, and different from most of the others. We were interested in the

same subjects, and naturally there sprang up quite an intimacy between

us. Then we corresponded while I was at college, and her letters were so

bright and entertaining that my admiration for her increased. I thought

her the most brilliant and the best girl, every way, in all my

acquaintance, and I think so still."

"But, my dear boy," his mother exclaimed, "admiration is not love; I

don't believe you ever really loved her, and she always seemed to me to

be all brains and no heart--one of those cold, silent natures incapable

of loving."

"I think you are wrong there, mother. Marion is silent, but I don't

believe she is cold or incapable of loving. She may, or may not, be

incapable of expressing it, but I believe she could love very deeply and

sincerely were her love once awakened."

"You know she has taken up the study of medicine?"

"Ned Elliott told me she had been studying with Dr. Parker for about a

year."

"Dr. Parker tells me she is making remarkable progress."

"I don't doubt it, mother; she will probably make a success of it; she

is just the woman to do so."

"There never was any mention of love between you two, was there, or any

engagement?" Darrell's mother asked, with some hesitation, after a brief

silence.

"None whatever," he replied, then added, with a smile: "We considered

ourselves in love at the time,--at least, I did; but as I look back now

it seems a very Platonic affair; but I thought I loved her, and I think

she loved me."

"You say, Darrell, that your regard for her is unchanged?"