What Timmy Did by Marie Adelaide Belloc Lowndes
page 282 of 339 (83%)
page 282 of 339 (83%)
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Deep in her heart she had felt quite convinced that Mrs. Crofton had come
to Beechfield for Godfrey Radmore, and for no other reason. Now she wondered if she had been unjust. "How I wish she'd stay away _now_, even for a few days longer!" exclaimed Janet. At that moment Timmy rushed into the hall, Radmore drove up in his motor, and in a couple of minutes the three were off--Janet looking after them, a touch of wistful longing and anxiety in her kind heart. She had hoped somehow, that Godfrey would persuade Betty to go alone with him to-day, and she was wondering now whether she could have said a word to Timmy. Her child was so unlike other little boys. If selfish, he was very understanding where the few people he cared for were concerned, and his mother had never known him to give her away. But the harm, if harm there was, was done now, and for some things she was not sorry to get rid of Timmy for some hours. There had arisen between the boy and his eldest half-brother a disagreeable state of tension. Timmy seemed to take pleasure in teasing Jack, and Jack was not in the humour to bear even the smallest practical joke just now. * * * * * On and on sped the party in the motor, Timmy sitting by his godfather in front, Betty, in lonely state, behind. They hadn't gone very far before the countryside began to have all the charm of strangeness to Betty Tosswill, and she found herself enjoying |
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