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"
I
'm
all
right
,
really
,
"
said
Bobbie
,
and
she
telegraphed
to
her
Mother
from
her
swollen
eyes
this
brief
,
imploring
message
--
"
NOT
before
the
others
!
"
Tea
was
not
a
cheerful
meal
.
Peter
was
so
distressed
by
the
obvious
fact
that
something
horrid
had
happened
to
Bobbie
that
he
limited
his
speech
to
repeating
,
"
More
bread
and
butter
,
please
,
"
at
startlingly
short
intervals
.
Phyllis
stroked
her
sister
's
hand
under
the
table
to
express
sympathy
,
and
knocked
her
cup
over
as
she
did
it
.
Fetching
a
cloth
and
wiping
up
the
spilt
milk
helped
Bobbie
a
little
.
But
she
thought
that
tea
would
never
end
.
Yet
at
last
it
did
end
,
as
all
things
do
at
last
,
and
when
Mother
took
out
the
tray
,
Bobbie
followed
her
.
"
She
's
gone
to
own
up
,
"
said
Phyllis
to
Peter
;
"
I
wonder
what
she
's
done
.
"
"
Broken
something
,
I
suppose
,
"
said
Peter
,
"
but
she
need
n't
be
so
silly
over
it
.
Mother
never
rows
for
accidents
.
Listen
!
Yes
,
they
're
going
upstairs
.
She
's
taking
Mother
up
to
show
her
--
the
water-jug
with
storks
on
it
,
I
expect
it
is
.
"
Bobbie
,
in
the
kitchen
,
had
caught
hold
of
Mother
's
hand
as
she
set
down
the
tea-things
.
"
What
is
it
?
"
Mother
asked
.
But
Bobbie
only
said
,
"
Come
upstairs
,
come
up
where
nobody
can
hear
us
.
"
When
she
had
got
Mother
alone
in
her
room
she
locked
the
door
and
then
stood
quite
still
,
and
quite
without
words
.
All
through
tea
she
had
been
thinking
of
what
to
say
;
she
had
decided
that
"
I
know
all
,
"
or
"
All
is
known
to
me
,
"
or
"
The
terrible
secret
is
a
secret
no
longer
,
"
would
be
the
proper
thing
.
But
now
that
she
and
her
Mother
and
that
awful
sheet
of
newspaper
were
alone
in
the
room
together
,
she
found
that
she
could
say
nothing
.