Chapter Fifteen
r a sricky c.
Nurse Spiller. Saken out a ch.
Pigs? I said quickly. Or eleps? to be? For Gods sake, which?
he worked his lips. v
Eleps, er a terrible silence
Good boy. Good boy. ten. ?
he swallowed. Five shillings and sixpence, he said.
All rig you must do. You must go to any to you must ask to my eyes. I t I felt t cloudy er rising again, t flapping curtain. I nearly screamed in frigain dreer s it. If t sell it, you must steal one. No look like t! e s t safe. Go next to a blacksmit a file—see
my fingers?—same it. Keep t ednesday, only ednesday and me? Charles?
ared. I o gro t me and c the door-place and was headed our way.
times up, she said.
e stood. I kept o keep from sinking. I looked at Co now reac again.
Youll remember, you, w Ive said?
ened let them go.
Dont leave me! I said. t leave me, please!
he jumped.
Noime for this. Come on.
So ungrip my fingers. It took or t o h.
Sad, aint it? Nurse Spiller said to my o, t takes tter not to come at all, ter not to remind em of igo tell your people t, w a sad way you found you?
o me, and nodded. I said,
Ceettering about t mind it. Its not all.
But I could see me no I must be mad, after all; and if t, t Dr Cies house for ever, I should never see Mrs
Sucksby and never t let me go. Anoto see Co t me c o keep from running after. As , urned, and stumbled, and met my g