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The Gadfly by E. L. (Ethel Lillian) Voynich
page 26 of 534 (04%)
got some goat's milk up there on the pasture; oh, it
was nasty! But I'm hungry again, now; and I
want something for this little person, too.
Annette, won't you have some honey?"

He had sat down with the child on his knee, and
was helping her to put the flowers in order.

"No, no!" Montanelli interposed. "I can't
have you catching cold. Run and change your wet
things. Come to me, Annette. Where did you
pick her up?"

"At the top of the village. She belongs to the
man we saw yesterday--the man that cobbles the
commune's boots. Hasn't she lovely eyes? She's
got a tortoise in her pocket, and she calls it
'Caroline.'"

When Arthur had changed his wet socks and
came down to breakfast he found the child seated
on the Padre's knee, chattering volubly to him
about her tortoise, which she was holding upside
down in a chubby hand, that "monsieur" might
admire the wriggling legs.

"Look, monsieur!" she was saying gravely in
her half-intelligible patois: "Look at Caroline's
boots!"

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