Sparrows: the story of an unprotected girl by Horace W. C. (Horace Wykeham Can) Newte
page 227 of 766 (29%)
page 227 of 766 (29%)
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The girl obeyed him: something in the man's voice compelled
obedience. He sat beside her. "Now, tell me your address." Mavis shook her head. "Tell me your address." "Nothing on earth will make me." "The man's waiting." "Let him." "Drive anywhere. I'll tell you where to go later," Windebank called to the cabman. The cab started. The man and the girl sat silent. Mavis was not reproaching herself for having got into the cab with Windebank; her mind was full of the strange trick which fate had played her in throwing herself and her old-time playmate together. There seemed design in the action. Perhaps, after all, their meeting was the reply to her prayer in the tea-shop. The cab drove along the almost deserted thoroughfare. It was now between ten and eleven, a time when the flame of the day seems to die down before bursting out into a last brilliance, when the houses |
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