There were a lot of books and magazines in his bedroom,too.But he kept them under his bed.He read them sometimes at nigth,but he didnt like those them during the day.They were about babies,and the diseases that babies could get,befoer they were born.There were some terrible things in the books,terrible pictures.He ddint' like to think about them,but he couldn't stop.He thought about them all day,all the time.
Today,as he sat staring out of the window at the sea,he could ont stop his hands shaking.Every morning he rang the hospital,to ask if his daughter Christien MacDonald was there.He had rung this morning,and a nurse had said yes,Christine was there,and the baby was coming.That had been four hours ago.For two hours John hand sat by the telephone,afraid to ring the hospital again.Three times he had picked it up,and three times he had put it down again.
He picked it up again,and rang the number.Seven...five...eight...three...it was no good.He put the phone down again.He could not hear the news from the cold voice of a nurse over the telephone.He had to see the baby for himself.
He got up,put on his coat,and went downstairs.There was a cold wind outside,blowing from the sea.The sea and the sky were grey and miserable.He went into a shop and bought some flowers.He chose them carefully-bright red and yellow colours -and the shopkeeper put paper around them to keep them safe.John took them and walked quickly,nervously,along the windy road by the sea,towards the hospital.
It was raining out at sea.Already the rain was falling on the sandbanks where the seals used to live.Soon it would be falling on the town.John Duncan shivered,and turned his coatclooar up.Then,with his bright flowers in his hand,he walked on,into the winter wind.