[Sentimental Tommy by J. M. Barrie]@TWC D-Link bookSentimental Tommy CHAPTER X 1/20
CHAPTER X. THE FAVORITE OF THE LADIES That night the excited boy was wakened by a tap-tap, as of someone knocking for admittance, and stealing to his mother's side, he cried, "Aaron Latta has come; hearken to him chapping at the door!" It was only the man through the wall, but Mrs.Sandys took Tommy into bed with her, and while Elspeth slept, told him the story of her life. She coughed feebly now, but the panting of the dying is a sound that no walls can cage, and the man continued to remonstrate at intervals.
Tommy never recalled his mother's story without seeming, through the darkness in which it was told, to hear Elspeth's peaceful breathing and the angry tap-tap on the wall. "I'm sweer to tell it to you," she began, "but tell I maun, for though it's just a warning to you and Elspeth no' to be like them that brought you into the world, it's all I have to leave you.
Ay, and there's another reason: you may soon be among folk wha ken but half the story and put a waur face on it than I deserve." She had spoken calmly, but her next words were passionate. "They thought I was fond o'him," she cried; "oh, they were blind, blind! Frae the first I could never thole the sight o' him. "Maybe that's no' true," she had to add.
"I aye kent he was a black, but yet I couldna put him out o' my head; he took sudden grips o' me like an evil thought.
I aye ran frae him, and yet I sair doubt that I went looking for him too." "Was it Aaron Latta ?" Tommy asked. "No, it was your father.
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