True Tilda by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
page 42 of 375 (11%)
page 42 of 375 (11%)
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quick, half-guttural cry, like that of a startled animal, a small figure
started up, close by her feet, and stood and edged away from her with an arm lifted as if to ward off a blow. It was a small boy--a boy abominably ragged and with smears of blacking thick on his face, but for all that a good-looking child. Tilda gazed at him, and he gazed back, still without lowering his arm. He was trembling, too. "Doctor Livingstone, I presume?" said Tilda, lifting the brim of her chip hat and quoting from one of Mr. Maggs's most effective dramatic sketches. But as the boy stared, not taking the allusion, she went on, almost in the same breath, "Is your name Arthur--Arthur Miles?" It seemed that he did not hear. At any rate he still backed and edged away from her, with eyes distended--she had seen their like in the ring, in beautiful terrified horses, but never in human creatures. --"Because, if you 're Arthur Miles, I got a message for you." A tattered book lay on the turf at her feet. She picked it up and held it out to him. For a while he looked at her eyes, and from them to the book, unable to believe. Then, with a noise like a sob, he sprang and snatched it, and hid it with a hug in the breast of his coat. "I got a message for you," repeated Tilda. "There's someone wants to see you, very bad." "You go away!" said the boy sullenly. "You don't know. If _he_ catches you, there's no chance." |
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