“Well, perhaps you’ll enlighten me——” he began, and she complied so willingly that she didn’t let him finish his request.
She gave him Georgie’s revelation in detail, emphasizing and colouring it somewhat with her own interpretations of many things only suggested by the child’s meagre vocabulary; and she was naturally a little indignant when, at first, her husband declined to admit his defeat.
“Why, it’s simply not believable,” he said. “Those people couldn’t seem what they seemed to be last night, and be so depraved. They were genuinely affectionate in the tone they used with each other and they——”
“Good gracious!” Bella cried. “Do you think I’m making this up?”
“No, of course not,” he returned hastily. “But the child may have made it up.”
“About his own father and mother?”
“Oh, I know; yet some children are the most wonderful little story-tellers: they tell absolutely inexplicable lies and hardly know why themselves.”
But at this, Bella looked at him pityingly. “Listen a moment! There was all the sordid daily life of these people laid out before me in the poor little child’s prattle: a whole realistic novel, complete and consistent, and I’d like to know how you account for a child of seven or eight being able to compose such a thing—and on the spur of the moment, too! When children make up stories they make ’em up about extraordinary and absurd things, not about the sordid tragedies of everyday domestic life. Do you actually think this child made up what he told me?”
“Well, it certainly does seem peculiar!”
“ ‘Peculiar?’ Why, it’s terrible and it’s true!”