Katharine Frensham
Alan, my boy?" ask
uss about nothing. Why can't you and mother have it out like any other fel
fifteen years and more-all
was as bad as t
t you are old enough to know, we are obliged to tell you that we are not, never have be
ther's personality and bearing, he had never been particularly attached to her; but with that conservative conventionalism characterist
n to him. Bitterly the man reproached himself for his selfishness. And yet he had waited for this moment for fifteen long years-more than that; for he and his wife had discovered at the onset that they
s or unconscious, of one individuality with another individuality. And she gives no balm for it. On the contrary, she gives a sort of mo
over him and put his ha
We will talk about it another time. Come, pull yourself to
on as though he
ifford Tho
up, and stifl
ding," he said. "I wan
did not seem ashamed of his tears; he offered
father," he said w
ive myself. I have taken away from you something which I can never give ba
and watched the door close, and then stood still a moment, waiting, longing, and listening. But when he realised that the boy had indeed gone, he slipped into his study chair and leaned back, his arms folded tightly together, and his thin face drawn into an expre
"It's all right now. Let
s face relaxed. Father