“I’m not at all sorry—” she cried. “It was all his fault. He was such a strange, rough, violent young fellow!”
The words trembled on the old doctor’s lips—“Perhaps it will all come right now!” But he checked himself, for in his heart of hearts he did not in the least believe that it would all come right. He knew well enough that Godfrey Radmore, after that dramatic exit to Australia, had cut himself clean off from all his friends. He was coming back now as that wonderful thing to most people—a millionaire. Was it likely, so the worldly-wise old doctor asked himself, that a man whose whole circumstances had so changed, ever gave a thought to that old boyish love affair with Betty Tosswill?—violent, piteous and painful as the affair had been. But had Betty forgotten? About that the doctor had his doubts, but he kept them strictly to himself.
He changed the subject abruptly. “It isn’t scarlet fever at the Mortons—only a bit of a red rash. I thought you’d like to know.
“It’s good of you to have come and told me,” she exclaimed. “I confess I did feel anxious, for Timmy was there the whole of the day before yesterday.”
“Ah! and how’s me little friend?”
Janet Tosswill looked around—but no, there was no one in the corridor of which the door, giving into the hall, was wide open.
“He’s gone to do an errand for me in the village.”
“The boy is much more normal, eh?” He looked at her questioningly.
“He still says that he sees things,” she admitted reluctantly, “though he’s rather given’ up confiding in me. He tells old Nanna extraordinary tales, but then, as you know, Timmy was always given to romancing, and of course Nanna believes every word he says and in a way encourages him.”
The doctor looked at Timmy’s mother with a twinkle in his eye. “Nanna isn’t the only one,” he observed. “I was told in the village just now that Master Timmy had scared away the milk from Tencher’s cow.”
A look of annoyance came over Mrs. Tosswill’s face. “I shall have to speak to Timmy,” she exclaimed. “He’s much too given to threatening the village people with ill fortune if they have done anything he thinks wrong or unkind. The child was awfully upset the other day because he discovered that the Tenchers had drowned a half-grown kitten.”
“He’s a queer little chap,” observed the old doctor, “a broth of a boy, if ye’ll allow me to say so—I’d be proud of Timmy if I were his mother, Mrs. Toss!”
“Perhaps I am proud of him,” she said smiling, “but still I always tell John he’s a changeling child—so absurdly unlike all the others.”
“Ah, but that’s where you come in, me good friend. ’Twas a witch you must have had among ye’re ancestresses in the long ago.”
He gripped her hand, and went out to his two-seater, his mind still full of his friend’s strange little son.
Then all at once—he could not have told you why—Dr. O’Farrell’s mind switched off to something very different, and he went back into the hall again.