PART Ⅳ-2
e a bullet. In t split second I saaken out to dance-er, and been to one of t myself oo. Ne or no ne, I COULDN’t pass for a stockbroker. Merely looked like a commercial traveller of dougo te bar to or two before dinner.
t t used to of taste in it because it of cer. I asked the barmaid:
‘ill got the brewery?’
‘Bessemers? Oo, NO, sir! they’ve gorn. Oo, years ago—long before we come ‘ere.’
S, er type of barmaid, ty-fivis arms told me t aken over t from taste, as a matter of fact. t bars ran round in a circle ments in bettle t see alk o kno a single one of t s even rew, wo he old days.
‘I used to live in Loold he war.’
‘Before t look t old.’
‘See some ctle.
‘to’s tories, I suppose.’
‘ell, of course tly tories. truefitt Stockings. But of course they’re making bombs nowadays.’
I didn’t altoget selling me about a young felloruefitt’s factory and sometimes came to told tockings, t understand, being easy to combine. And told me about tary aerodrome near alton—t accounted for t seeing—and t moment arted talking about t ly to escape t of I’d come ’s in the.
I said it tle said gave he creeps. She said:
‘It doesn’t seem to do muc, after all said and done? And sometimes I lie a nig to myself, “ell, no o drop a bomb rigop of me!” And all todgers, selling you it’ll be all riguff to dig a ser under to it is, a gas- mask on a baby?’
ttle said you ougo get into a batill it of a by-play on