The String of Pearls (1850), p. 274

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together to the Temple Gardens, to give Colonel Jeffery the meeting he so much
desired. As nothing of a very particular character occurred that day, we will at
once follow Arabella and Johanna upon the mission, premising that the hours
have slipped away which intervened between the time of Johanna receiving the
note from Colonel Jeffery, and the time when, if she kept the appointment with
him, it would be necessary for her to start from home to do so. Both the young girls made as great alterations in their attire as they could upon this occasion, so that they should not be strikingly recognisable again by Todd; and then Arabella reminding Johanna that the bargain between them was to pass upon the other side of the way, they both set off from the old spectacle-maker's. As they neared Fleet Street, the agitation of Johanna became more and more apparent, and Arabella was compelled to counsel her to calmness, lest the passers-by should notice how much she felt, from some cause to them unknown.
"My dear Johanna," she said. "Your arm trembles in mine. Oh! pray be calm."
"I will—I will. Are we near?"
"Yes. Let us cross."
They reached the other side of the way from that on which Todd's shop was
situated, to the great relief of Arabella, who as yet knew not of the placard
that Todd had exhibited in his window, announcing the want of a pious youth.
The sight of the shop, however, seemed to bring that circumstance to the mind of
Johanna, and she told her young friend of it at once.
"Oh! Johanna," said Arabella, "does it not seem as though—"
She paused, and Johanna looked enquiringly at her. saying—
"What would you say, Arabella? What would you say?"
"Nothing now, Johanna. Nothing now. A thought struck me, and when we return from this meeting with your friend, the colonel, I will communicate it to you. Oh! do not look opposite. Do not."
All such injunctions were thrown away upon Johanna. Look opposite she did, and as she herself had truly said, it would have been quite impossible for her to avoid the doing so, even if the greatest personal risk had been risked in the action. But Todd's shop, to look at from the other side of the way, presented no terrors. It simply presented the idea of a little barber's shop, of no very great pretensions, but of sufficient respectability, as barber's shops were in those
days, not to make any decent person shrink from going into it. No doubt, in the crowd of Fleet Street—for Fleet Street was then crowded, although not to the extent it is now—Johanna and her friend passed quite unnoticed by Todd, even if he had been looking out. At all events, they reached Temple Bar without any obstruction or adventure. Finding, then, that they had passed the main entrance to the Temple, they went down the nearest adjacent street, and pursuing a circuitous route through some curious-looking courts, they reached their destination yet a little before the appointed hour. Colonel Jeffery, however, was not likely to keep Johanna Oakley waiting.
"There," said Arabella. "Is that the colonel?"
Johanna looked up just as the colonel approached, and lifted his hat.
"Yes, yes."
In another moment he was with them. There was a look upon the countenance of Colonel Jeffery of deep concern, and that look, at one glance that was bestowed upon it by Johanna Oakley, was quite sufficient to banish all hidden hopes that she might yet have cherished regarding the character of the news that he had to impart to her. Arabella Wilmot, too, was of the same opinion regarding the physiognomical expression of the colonel, who bowed to her profoundly.
"I have brought my dearest friend with me," said Johanna, " from whom I have no secrets."
"Nor I," said the colonel, "now that I hear she stands in such an enviable relation to you, Miss Oakley."

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transcribed.
Johanna has no secrets from her dearest friend -- but at the end, Ingestrie keeps one from his wife.