[What Timmy Did by Marie Adelaide Belloc Lowndes]@TWC D-Link bookWhat Timmy Did CHAPTER V 18/19
Every woman, even the least sophisticated, knows what really beautiful and becoming clothes cost nowadays, and Mrs. Crofton's clothes were eminently beautiful and becoming. As Betty went back into the drawing-room, she heard the visitor say:--"I was born with a kind of horror of dogs, and I'm afraid that in some uncanny way they always know it! It's such bad luck, for most nice people and all the people I myself have cared for in my life, have been dog lovers." And at that Dolly, who had a most unfortunate habit of blurting out just those things which, even if people are thinking of, they mostly leave unsaid, exclaimed:--"Your husband bred terriers, didn't he? Flick came from him." Mrs.Crofton made no answer to this, and Janet, who was looking at her, saw her face alter.
A curious expression of--was it pain ?--it looked more like fear,--came over it.
It was clear that Dolly's thoughtless words had hurt her. Suddenly there came the sound of a tap on the pane of one of the windows, and Mrs.Crofton, whose nerves were evidently very much out of order, gave a suppressed cry. "It's only Timmy," said Timmy's mother reassuringly, and then she went and opened the window.
"I hope you've shut Flick up," she said in a low voice. "Of course I have, Mum.
He's quite quiet now." As the boy came forward, into the room, he looked straight up into Mrs. Crofton's face, and as she met the enquiring, alien look, she told herself, for the second time that evening, what a pity it was that these nice people should have such an unpleasant child. Tom came in to say that the pony cart was at the door, and that Jack was waiting there for Mrs.Crofton. They all went out in the hall to see her off.
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