Page:Peter Pan (1928).pdf/65

] ''the room. They listen, for her remonstrances are not inaudible.'')

. Be brave, my dears.

. He is chaining Nana up!

(This unfortunately is what he is doing, though we cannot see him. Let us hope that he then retires to his study, looks up the word ‘temper’ in his Thesaurus, and under the influence of those benign pages becomes a better man. In the meantime the children have been put to bed in unwonted silence, and lights the night-lights over the beds.)

(as the barking below goes on). She is awfully unhappy.

. That is not Nana’s unhappy bark. That is her bark when she smells danger.

(remembering that boy). Danger! Are you sure, Wendy?

(the one of the family, for there is one in every family, who can be trusted to know or not to know). Oh yes.

(Her mother looks this way and that from the window.)