Dacres paused, and the dark frown that was on his brow grew still darker.
"After all what?" asked Hawbury, who now began to perceive that another feeling besides jealousy was the cause of his friend's gloomy melancholy.
"Well, after all, you know, old fellow, I fear I'll have to give her up."
"Give her up?"
"Yes."
"That's what you said before, and you mentioned Australia, and that rot."
"The more I think of it," said Dacres, dismally, and regarding the opposite wall with a steady yet mournful stare—"the more I think of it, the more I see that there's no such happiness in store for me."
"Pooh, man! what is it all about? This is the secret that you spoke about, I suppose?"
"Yes; and it's enough to put a barrier between me and her. Was I jealous? Did I seem huffy? What an idiot I must have been! Why, old man, I can't do any thing or say any thing."
"The man's mad," said Hawbury, addressing himself to a carved tobacco-box on the table.