“Oh, but I didn’t know-”

“Oh, yes, you did, because I wrote and told you-I told you Mummy and Daddy were going to Madeira and marooning me with Aunt Agatha. And did you rally round? Not a rally! Did you take the trouble to lift the receiver from that mother-of-pearl telephone thing you had for one of your wedding presents and coo into it, ‘Darling, do come round and see me’? You know you didn’t. Sylvia, if you look at me like that, I’ll throw something at you-I really will!”

Sylvia’s lovely eyes had widened piteously. A clear, round tear brimmed gently over and rolled quite slowly and with immense effect down a faintly tinted cheek. Gay’s little angry flame burned higher. If Sylvia would only get cross-but Sylvia never got cross. You might call her the most awful names, and she didn’t resent them, or hate you. She just cried, and made you feel what a brute you were. She was making Gay feel like that now. A tear rolled down the other cheek too. She didn’t wipe either of them away, she just let them fall on to the pale grey gloves, and said in a lost-child sort of voice.

“I know-I’ve been horrid. There isn’t any reason why you should help me, only-I’m so frightened, and I don’t know what to do-I don’t indeed.” The tears were falling faster now. They welled up, ran over, and fell. They kept on falling. They put out Gay’s little angry flame. She would have to take a hand. She had known that all the time of course. You can’t just let an idiotic creature down because it doesn’t know enough to come in out of the rain. She tossed back her hair and said,

“Oh, I’ll help you. You always knew I would. Stop crying, Silly Billy baby, and tell me what it’s all about. Whatever have you been and gone and done?”



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