He ached and somewhere it hurt him, as it had when he had fallen running after a football near a gravel pile and scraped nearly all the skin from the side of one leg. Nanny had screamed and there had been a kind of an awful bump after which it seemed to have turned from day to night, as though the sun were gone and it had become quite dark. He had wanted to hold and stroke the kitten. PETER guessed that he must have been hurt in the accident although he could not remember very much from the time he had left the safety of Scotch Nanny's side and run out across the street to get to the garden in the square, where the tabby striped kitten was warming herself by the railing and washing in the early spring sunshine. Strachan's Proof Leads to DifficultiesĬHAPTER SEVENTEEN: Jennie Makes a ConfessionĬHAPTER TWENTY: The `Elite' of Cavendish SquareĬHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: Reunion in Cavendish MewsĬHAPTER TWENTY-TWO: Jennie Makes a DecisionĬHAPTER TWENTY-THREE: Lulu-or, Fishface for Shortġ4. Strachan Furnishes the ProofĬHAPTER FOURTEEN: Mr. An insightful story of cat-ology and the life of homeless cats told as a small boy’s strange dream.ĬHAPTER TWO: Flight from Cavendish SquareĬHAPTER SEVEN: Always Pause on the ThresholdĬHAPTER EIGHT: Hoodwinking of an Old GentlemanĬHAPTER TEN: Price of Two Tickets to GlasgowĬHAPTER ELEVEN: The Countess and the CrewĬHAPTER THIRTEEN: Mr.
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