PART Ⅲ-3
It eenthe coarse- fishing season.
I y in fixing tted ory t ig t moment I’d even told el I o stay at, Rotom’s Family and Commercial. I o knoayed t time I didn’t ing to me at Birming do if I er t over I took young Saunders, o my confidence. o mention t eent o promise t op on a letter from me to tom’s. to tell I migter not e. Saunders understood, or t settled asked any questions, and even if surned suspicious later, an alibi like t ake some breaking.
I drove ter breeze bloops stle reaming across tside esterearing to it t suddenly reminded me of time t t got it in yet. It lay drying in long s drifted across t mixed up rol.
I drove along at a gentle fifteen. ted about on t too satisfied to eat. In Nettlefield, tertle man in a aced across ted o attract my attention. My car’s kno’s only Mr eaver, to insure of cs to knotlefield, not even at the pub.
I drove on. t . It undulating up and do green carpet, a little, kind of t’s like a . It makes you to lie on it. And a bit a for Oxford.
I ill on my usual beat, inside trict’, as t. tural t by a kind of instinct I’d folloe. t y about ted to get t I’d fixed tly e of t-book and tcase in t nearer tually felt a temptation—I kne going to succumb to it, and yet it emptation—to c of feeling t so long as I I ill inside t’s not too late, I t. till time to do table to Pudley, for instance, see t at Pudley) and find out if any neter I could even turn round, go back to of t.
I slo to t I?