[Jeremy by Hugh Walpole]@TWC D-Link book
Jeremy

CHAPTER VII
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With a rush as of a thousand whips slashing the air, the rain came down upon the glass.

Jeremy turned, crying "Mother! Mother! I want Mother!" and flung himself at the red glass doors; fumbling in his terror for the handle, he felt as though the end of the world had come; such a panic had seized him as only belongs to the most desperate of nightmares.

God had answered him.
Hamlet was gone and in a moment Jeremy himself might be seized...
He felt frantically for the door; he beat upon the glass.
He cried "Mother! Mother! Mother!" He had found the door, but just as he turned the handle he was aware of a new sound, heard distantly, through the rain.

Looking back he saw, from behind a rampart of dusty flower-pots, first a head, then a rough tousled body, then a tail that might be recognised amongst all the tails of Christendom.
Hamlet (who had trained himself to meet with a fine natural show of bravery every possible violence save only thunder) crept ashamed, dirty and smiling towards his master.

God had only played His trick--Abraham and Isaac after all.
Then with a fine sense of victory and defiance Jeremy turned back, looked up at the slashing rain, gazed out upon the black country, at last seized Hamlet and dragging him out by his hind-legs, knelt there in the dust and suffered himself to be licked until his face was as though a snail had crossed over it.
The thunder passed.


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