PART Ⅳ-6
It’s past ligime. You don’t us to get fined?’
At t s me go, and I out and scs on, but anding tters, mine and tor’s on table in front of a little of my nerve back, and I ry:
‘Listen, ick about thing.’
‘I’m sure YOU could explain anytion is wher I’d believe you.’
‘But you’re just jumping to conclusions! made you e to tel people, anyway?’
‘It turned out.’
‘O? So you don’t mind letting t blasted o our private affairs?’
‘S need any letting in. It o to tell , you see. S you, George. So like you.’
‘But, hilda—’
I looked at e under t does w rue!
And Gos I could see a it’s like. tly nagging and sulking, and tty remarks after you te, and ting to kno’s all about. But me doal squalor, tal atmospo Lo even be conceivable. t t. If I spent a o o Loo be fading out of my mind. o Lo seemed meaningless. Not gas bills, sche office on Monday.
One more try:
‘But look you t you’re absolutely o you you’re wrong.’
‘Oo tell all those lies?’
No getting a, of course.
I took a pace or tosrong. ? ture and t, seeing t ture and t don’t matter? ever motives I miger-alin, bombs, macrunc , all fading out. Not a vulgar looshes.
One last try:
‘ listen to me a minute. Look know whis week, do you?’
‘I don’t to kno’s quite enough for me.’
‘But das—’
Quite useless, of course. Sy and noell me migake a couple of er t trouble looming up, because presently it o o rip,