The Argosy - Vol. 51, No. 5, May, 1891 by Various
page 130 of 151 (86%)
page 130 of 151 (86%)
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there they be now beside you on the settle," retorted Mrs. Forest. John
looked in the place his wife had indicated, and there, sure enough, lay the brown kid gloves. This evidence did seem conclusive. John shook his grey head as he held the dainty gloves across his rough palm, and presently said, "You have kept her too short, wife--girls wants their bits of things." He paused and sighed heavily, and then added, "I'll go and look for her." "It's all your fault, John," broke out his wife as he rose to go. "You as good as told her to do it." "You ought to have given her some money, Eliza, and you've been nagging at her and driven her out this cold night; if harm comes of it--" said John as he went out. "Fiddlesticks about harm; what harm can come to her, I should like to know?" retorted his wife, without allowing him to complete his sentence. Then the door closed and Eliza Forest was alone, with the ticking of the eight-day clock to bear her company. Slowly the hand of the clock travelled on. A clock is a weird companion--above all, one that strikes the hour after a preliminary groaning sound as this clock did. Mrs. Forest tried to occupy herself with the stocking she was knitting, but she was uneasy and let her work fall in her lap while she reflected to the accompaniment of that metallic "Tick-tick" of the clock. "My mother always said that my temper would get me down and worry me," she meditated; "and I believe it _will_ before it's done." Ten o'clock struck--eleven o'clock, and Mrs. Forest grew really alarmed. |
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