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ll. He must see his brother. He stood in no little awe of that brother, who was his exact antithesis in almost everything. They had not got along particularly well. If his father had been inside the door he would have hesitated with his hand on the knob. If his father had not been ill he would not have attempted to face his brother. But his anxiety, which was increased by a sudden foreboding, for Janet, the maid, had looked at him so strangely, moved him to quick action. He threw the door open instantly. What he saw did not reassure him. William was clad in funeral black. He wore a long frock coat instead of the usual knockabout suit he affected on the farm. His face was white and haggard. There was an instant interchange of names. "John!" "William!" And then-- "Is father ill?" burst out the younger. "Janet said--" "Dead!" interposed William harshly, all his indignation flaming into speech and action as he confronted the cause of the disaster. "Dead! Good God!" "God had nothing to do with it." "You mean?" "You did it." "I?" "Yes. Your drunken revelry, your reckless extravagance, your dissipation with women, your unfeeling silence, your--" "Stop!" cried the younger. "I have come to my senses, I can't bear it." "I'll say it if it kills you. You did it, I repeat. He longed and prayed and waited and you didn't come. You didn't write. We could hear nothing. The best father on earth." The younger man sank down in a chair and covered his face with his hands. "When?" he gasped out finally. "Three days ago." "And have you--" "He is buried beside mother in the churchyard yonder. Now that you are here I thank God that he didn't live to see what you have become." The respectable elder brother's glance took in the disreputable younger, his once handsome face marred--one doesn't foregather with swine in the sty without acquiring marks of the association--his clothing in rags. Thus errant youth, that was youth no longer, came back from that far country. Under such circumstances one generally has to walk most of the way. He had often heard the chimes at midnight, sleeping coldly in the straw stack of the fields, and the dust of the road clung to his person. Through his broken shoes his bare feet showed, and he trembled visibly as the other confronted him, partly from hunger and weakness and shattered nerves, and partly from shame and horror and for what reason God only knew. The tall,
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