CONTENTS:
| CHAPTER. | PAGE. | |
| I.— | A Girl with a Character | [9] |
| II.— | "Darrell Court is a Prison to me!" | [16] |
| III.— | "Your Good Society is all Deceit" | [28] |
| IV.— | "You are Going to Spoil my Life" | [35] |
| V.— | Pauline's Good Points | [42] |
| VI.— | The Progress Made by the Pupil | [47] |
| VII.— | Captain Langton | [54] |
| VIII.— | The Introduction | [61] |
| IX.— | The Broken Lily | [67] |
| X.— | Pauline Still Incorrigible | [74] |
| XI.— | How Will it End? | [81] |
| XII.— | Elinor Rocheford | [87] |
| XIII.— | Sir Oswald Thinks of Marriage | [94] |
| XIV.— | Pauline's Love for Darrell Court | [103] |
| XV.— | Breach Between Uncle and Niece | [108] |
| XVI.— | The Queen of the Ball | [115] |
| XVII.— | Pauline's Bright Fancies | [122] |
| XVIII.— | Rejected | [128] |
| XIX.— | Pauline Threatens Vengeance | [142] |
| XX.— | Captain Langton Desperate | [148] |
| XXI.— | Mysterious Robbery | [156] |
| XXII.— | Fulfilling the Contract | [163] |
| XXIII.— | No Compromise With Pauline | [169] |
| XXIV.— | A Rich Gift Declined | [176] |
| XXV.— | A True Darrell | [183] |
| XXVI.— | A Puzzling Question | [189] |
| XXVII.— | Sir Oswald's Doubts | [196] |
| XXVIII.— | Reading of the Will | [203] |
| XXIX.— | Waiting for Revenge | [209] |
| XXX.— | Will Fate Aid Pauline? | [217] |
| XXXI.— | Fate Favors Pauline | [225] |
| XXXII.— | Captain Langton Accepted | [231] |
| XXXIII.— | "I Have Had My Revenge!" | [239] |
| XXXIV.— | The Stranger on the Sands | [247] |
| XXXV.— | The Story of Elaine | [253] |
| XXXVI.— | Redeemed by Love | [260] |
| XXXVII.— | Pride Brought Low | [267] |
| XXXVIII.— | Pauline and Lady Darrell | [287] |
| XXXIX.— | Face To Face | [294] |
| XL.— | Dying in Sin | [303] |
| XLI.— | The Work of Atonement | [308] |
| XLII.— | Love and Sorrow | [314] |
| XLIII.— | Lady Darrell's Will | [321] |
| XLIV.— | Shadow of Absent Love | [328] |
LOVE WORKS WONDERS.
CHAPTER I.
A GIRL WITH A CHARACTER.
It was a strange place for an intelligence office, yet Madame Selini evidently knew what she was doing when she established her office in an aristocratic neighborhood, and actually next door to the family mansion of the Countess Dowager of Barewood. The worthy countess was shocked, and, taking counsel of her hopes, predicted that Madame Selini's institution would soon prove a failure. Notwithstanding this prediction, the agency prospered, and among its patrons were many of the nobility.
One fine morning in May a carriage stopped before Madame Selini's door, and from it descended a handsome, aristocratic gentleman, evidently of the old school. There was some little commotion in the interior of the building, and then a foot-page appeared to whom Sir Oswald Darrell—for that was the gentleman's name—gave his card.