icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

The Sea Lady

Chapter 7 No.7

Word Count: 643    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

a state of strange exultation. "I've been through with it and I've seen her," he panted. "I waited about outside and saw her taken into the carriage. I've talked to one of the maids-I got into

played

rst from his littered desk, eyeing th

really is a merma

d pawed at his pen tray. "Whad if

ed. That note

anything of that sort going, young man." Ban

ow

eal in merm

not going to

a

here s

ue? They know perfectly well what they are going to believe and what they aren't going to believe, and they aren't going to believe anything about mermaids-you bet your hat. I don't care if the whole damned beach was litter

s tr

gh

a Fellow of the

ublic won't belie

nd headline I thought you was up to a lark. I thought you was on to a mixed bathing scandal or something of that sort-with juice in it. The sort of thing that all understand. You know when you went down to Folkestone y

ury-he doesn't g

s case. "What the deuce," he said, addressing h

e. "I might go over this and do it up as a lark perhaps. Make it a comic dialogue sketch with a man w

They'd think it clever. They'd think you was making g

t Banghurst's back expressed quite cl

st just when it seemed he

it to the Gu

uggested an

e young man, heated,

ckoning without the e

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
The Sea Lady
The Sea Lady
“This charming, little-known fantasy by the author of „The Time Machine" and „The War of the Worlds" is also a sharply satirical look at the mores and moral of Edwardian England. During a family outing at the beach a family sees a young woman struggling further out in the water. It's only when they „rescue" her that they see that she's a mermaid. They quickly take her into the beach house, still unaware that the mermaid has planned the whole incident in order to meet a young man. Her motives are not quite clear; nor are her intentions of what she plans to do with the young man after she gets him, since she lives beneath the sea. On occasion she drops her guard and lets it be known she is death underwater. Will she be stopped in time from committing this dastardly deed? „The Sea Lady" takes a pretty good subject – mermaid turned siren in proper British society – and totally drops the ball.”