"Oh Wil-lee!" sobbed Aunt Saxon. "That's all right dear! Just

you lie right down in your bed and take a good sleep. I didn't

understand. Auntie didn't understand. All right Willie. I'll keep it

real still. Now you lie down won't you? You will won't you? You'll

really lie down and sleep won't you Willie?"

"Didn't I say I would?" snapped Willie shamedly, and subsided on his

bed again while Aunt Saxon stole painfully, noiselessly over the creak

in the stair, closed the house for the night and crept tearfully to her

own bed, where she lay for hours silently wiping the steady trickle of

hopeless tears. Oh, Willie, Willie! And she had had such hopes!

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But Billy lay staring wide eyed at the open square of his window that

showed the little village nestling among the trees dotted here and

there with friendly winking lights, the great looming mountains in the

distance, and Stark mountain, farthest and blackest of them all. He

shut his eyes and tried to blot it out, but it seemed to loom through

his very eyelids and mock him. He seemed to see Mark, his idol, carried

between those other three dark figures into the blackness of that

haunted house. He seemed to see him lying helpless, bound, on the musty

bed in the deserted room, Mark, his beloved Mark. Mark who had carried

him on his shoulder as a tiny child, who had ridden him on his back,

and taught him to swim and pitch ball and box, Mark who let him go

where even the big boys were not allowed to accompany him, and who

never told on him nor treated him mean nor went back on him in any way!

Mark! He had been the means of putting Mark in that helpless

position, while circumstances which he was now quite sure the devil had

been specially preparing, wove a tangled maze about the young man's

feet from which there seemed no way of extrication.

Billy shut his eyes and tried to sleep but sleep would not come. He

began to doubt if he would ever sleep again. He lay listening to the

evening noises of the village. He heard Jim Rafferty's voice going by

to the night shift, and Tom McMertrie. They were laughing softly and

once he thought he heard the name "Old Hair-Cut." The Tully baby across

the street had colic and cried like murder. Murder! Murder! Now

why did he have to think of that word of all words? Murder? Well, it

was crying like it wanted to murder somebody. He wished he was a baby

himself so he could cry. He'd cry harder'n that. Little's dog was

barking again. He'd been barking all day long. It was probably at that

strange guy at the parsonage. Little's dog never did like strangers.

That creak was Barneses gate with the iron weight hitched on the chain

to make it shut, and somebody laughed away up the street! There went

the clock, nine o'clock! Gee! Was that all? He thought it must be about

three in the morning! And then he must have dozed off for a little, for

when he woke with a start it was very still and dark, as if the moon

had gone away, had been and gone again, and he heard a cautious little

mouse gnawing at the baseboard in his room, gnawing and stopping and

gnawing again, then whisking over the lath like fingers running a scale

on the piano. He had watched Miss Lynn do it once on the organ.




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