FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   >>  
ost efforts Mr. Silk could not entirely banish the smile which trembled on his lips. "Me and Teddy," said Mr. Kybird, turning to her with a little bob, which served him for a bow, "'ave just been having a little talk about old times." "He was just passing," said Mr. Silk. "Just passing, and thought I'd look in," said Mr. Kybird, with a careless little laugh; "the door was open a bit." "Wide open," corroborated Mr. Silk. "So I just came in to say ''Ow d'ye do?'" said Mr. Kybird. Mrs. Silk's sharp, white face turned from one to the other. "Ave you said it?" she inquired, blandly. "I 'ave," said Mr. Kybird, restraining Mr. Silk's evident intention of hot speech by a warning glance; "and now I'll just toddle off 'ome." "I'll go a bit o' the way with you," said Edward Silk. "I feel as if a bit of a walk would do me good." Left alone, the astonished Mrs. Silk took the visitor's vacated chair and, with wrinkled brow, sat putting two and two together until the sum got beyond her powers of calculation. Mr. Kybird's affability and Teddy's cheerfulness were alike incomprehensible. She mended a hole in her pocket and darned a pair of socks, and at last, anxious for advice, or at least a confidant, resolved to see Mr. Wilks. She opened the door and looked across the alley, and saw with some satisfaction that his blind was illuminated. She closed the door behind her sharply, and then stood gasping on the doorstep. So simultaneous were the two happenings that it actually appeared as though the closing of the door had blown Mr. Wilks's lamp out. It was a night of surprises, but after a moment's hesitation she stepped over and tried his door. It was fast, and there was no answer to her knuckling. She knocked louder and listened. A door slammed violently at the back of the house, a distant clatter of what sounded like saucepans came from beyond, and above it all a tremulous but harsh voice bellowed industriously through an interminable chant. By the time the third verse was reached Mr. Wilks's neighbours on both sides were beating madly upon their walls and blood-curdling threats strained through the plaster. She stayed no longer, but regaining her own door sat down again to await the return of her son. Mr. Silk was long in coming, and she tried in vain to occupy herself with various small jobs as she speculated in vain on the meaning of the events of the night. She got up and stood by the open door,
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   >>  



Top keywords:
Kybird
 
passing
 
speculated
 

meaning

 

moment

 
hesitation
 
stepped
 

answer

 

slammed

 

violently


listened

 
knuckling
 

knocked

 

louder

 
surprises
 

illuminated

 

simultaneous

 

happenings

 

doorstep

 

gasping


sharply

 

appeared

 

distant

 

events

 

closed

 
closing
 
coming
 

curdling

 
beating
 

threats


longer

 

regaining

 

return

 

strained

 

plaster

 
stayed
 

neighbours

 

reached

 

tremulous

 

bellowed


sounded

 

saucepans

 
industriously
 

satisfaction

 

occupy

 
interminable
 
clatter
 

blandly

 

inquired

 
restraining