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    Chapter 28 - Page 2

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    to Margaret the idea that he had
    been drinking--not enough to intoxicate himself, but enough to
    make his thoughts bewildered. 'But she were younger than me.'
    Still he pondered over the event, not looking at Margaret, though
    he grasped her tight. Suddenly, he looked up at her with a wild
    searching inquiry in his glance. 'Yo're sure and certain she's
    dead--not in a dwam, a faint?--she's been so before, often.'

    'She is dead,' replied Margaret. She felt no fear in speaking to
    him, though he hurt her arm with his gripe, and wild gleams came
    across the stupidity of his eyes.

    'She is dead!' she said.

    He looked at her still with that searching look, which seemed to
    fade out of his eyes as he gazed. Then he suddenly let go his
    hold of Margaret, and, throwing his body half across the table,
    he shook it and every piece of furniture in the room, with his
    violent sobs. Mary came trembling towards him.

    'Get thee gone!--get thee gone!' he cried, striking wildly and
    blindly at her. 'What do I care for thee?' Margaret took her
    hand, and held it softly in hers. He tore his hair, he beat his
    head against the hard wood, then he lay exhausted and stupid.
    Still his daughter and Margaret did not move. Mary trembled from
    head to foot.

    At last--it might have been a quarter of an hour, it might have
    been an hour--he lifted himself up. His eyes were swollen and
    bloodshot, and he seemed to have forgotten that any one was by;
    he scowled at the watchers when he saw them. He Shook himself
    heavily, gave them one more sullen look, spoke never a word, but
    made for the door.

    'Oh, father, father!' said Mary, throwing herself upon his
    arm,--'not to-night! Any night but to-night. Oh, help me! he's
    going out to drink again! Father, I'll not leave yo'. Yo' may
    strike, but I'll not leave yo'. She told me last of all to keep
    yo' fro' drink!'

    But Margaret stood in the doorway, silent yet commanding. He
    looked up at her defyingly.

    'It's my own house. Stand out o' the way, wench, or I'll make
    yo'!' He had shaken off Mary with violence; he looked ready to
    strike Margaret. But she never moved a feature--never took her

    deep, serious eyes off him. He stared back on her with gloomy
    fierceness. If she had stirred hand or foot, he would have thrust
    her aside with even more violence than he had used to his own
    daughter, whose face was bleeding from her fall against a chair.

    'What are yo' looking at me in that way for?' asked he at last,
    daunted and awed by her severe calm. 'If yo' think for to keep me
    from going what gait I choose, because she loved yo'--and in my
    own house, too, where I never asked yo' to come, yo're mista'en.
    It's very hard upon a man that he can't go to the only
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