Mr. Prohack by Arnold Bennett
page 149 of 489 (30%)
page 149 of 489 (30%)
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place of the wounded Eagle, without uttering a word to her husband of
what she had done. Mr. Prohack could see the dregs of his bank-balance; and in a dream he had had glimpses of a sinister edifice at the bottom of a steep slope, the building being the Bankruptcy Court. "Is it a railway strike you're afraid of?" demanded Dr. Veiga cruelly. And Eve replied with sweetness: "I can't leave London until my son Charlie comes back from Glasgow, and he's written me to say he'll be here next week." A first-rate example, this, of her new secretiveness! She had said absolutely nothing to Mr. Prohack about a letter from Charlie. "When did you hear that?" Mr. Prohack might well have asked; but he was too loyal to her to betray her secretiveness by such a question. He did not wish the Portuguese quack to know that he, the husband, was kept in the dark about anything whatever. He had his ridiculous dignity, had Mr. Prohack, and all his motives were mixed motives. Not a perfectly pure motive in the whole of his volitional existence! However, Sissie put the question in her young blundering way. "Oh, mother dear! You never told us!" "I received the letter the day before yesterday," Eve continued gravely. "And Charlie is certainly not coming home to find me away." For two entire days she had had the important letter and had concealed it. Mr. Prohack was disturbed. |
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