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Leah Mordecai by Belle K. (Belle Kendrick) Abbott
page 88 of 235 (37%)
within the grate, and the gas-light overhead added its mellow
brightness to the apartment. Arrayed in a comfortable crimson silk
wrapper, the girl sat before the fire, with her slippered foot upon
the fender, and gazed steadily and thoughtfully into the fantastic
coals. Without, the world was cold and bright, for a pale, tremulous
moon filled the world with its beauty. The wind came in across the
sea, and mingling with the murmur of the waters, produced a weird
and ghost-like sound, as it swept through half-deserted streets,
penetrating rudely the abodes of poverty, and whistling around the
mansions of the rich. This sound Leah heard faintly, as it sought
ingress at her windows, and down the half-closed chimney. She
shuddered; yet it was not an unusual or a frightful sound, and not
half so saddening as the sound that floated up the stairs: the sound
of low, sweet singing-Mark Abrams singing with flute-like voice to
her sister Sarah, who was soon, very soon, expected to become his
wife. Leah had heard that voice before, had listened to its melody,
attuned to other words, and as she recalled the vanished time, she
trembled, shuddered, with an indefinable terror.

As the sound of the music ceased, she arose and walked to the
window. With both hands pressed closely beside her face, so as to
exclude every gleam of light from within, she looked steadily out of
the window. All without was bright, and cold, and beautiful. White
fleecy clouds drifted about the heavens, like so many phantom barks
upon the deep blue sea.

"It's cold without and cold within," she muttered, and then, as if
startled by some sudden resolve, she turned from the window back to
a small escritoire, saying:

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