PART Ⅳ-6
e a sock in t ! S me after all. And t even kno t it proved I’d been off uffing out of me. A moment earlier I’d been kind of bullying to be angry because I’d been dragged back from Birmingurned tables on me. You don’t o tell me t moment. I kno ten all over me in big letters—I kno even guilty! But it’s a matter of . I’m used to being in t t out of my voice as I answered:
‘ do you mean? ’s t t there?’
‘You read it and you’ll see is.’
I took it. It ter from o be a firm of solicitors, and it reet as Rotom’s el, I noticed.
‘Dear Madam,’ I read, ‘ito your letter of t., be some mistake. Rotom’s el o a block of offices. No one ansion of your husband has been here. Possibly—’
I didn’t read any furt all in a flastle bit too clever and put my foot in it. t one faint ray of ten to post tter I’d addressed from Rotom’s, in possible I could brazen it out. But t idea.
‘ell, George, you see ter says? t e to Rotom’s el—o a little note, asking t! t even any suctom’s el. And t, I got your letter saying you tel. You got someone to post it for you, I suppose. t was your business in Birmingham!’
‘But look all t isn’t all. You don’t understand.’
‘Oand PERFECtLY.’
‘But look here, hilda—’
asn’t any use, of course. It even meet urned and tried to make for the door.
‘I’ll o take to the garage,’ I said.
‘O get out of it like t. You’ll stay en to to say, please.’
‘But, damn it! I’ve got to scs on, I?