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motion, being conjugated: "I've been in prison." "You've been in prison. He's been in prison." Beneath the seeming acquiescence of a man subject to domination from his birth up, those four words covered in Hughs such a whirlpool of surging sensation, such ferocity of bitterness, and madness, and defiance, that no outpouring could have appreciably relieved its course. The same four words summed up in Mrs. Hughs so strange a mingling of fear, commiseration, loyalty, shame, and trembling curiosity at the new factor which had come into the life of all this little family walking giraffe-like back to Kensington that to have gone beyond them would have been like plunging into a wintry river. To their son the four words were as a legend of romance, conjuring up no definite image, lighting merely the glow of wonder. "Don't lag, Stanley. Keep up with your father." The little boy took three steps at an increased pace, then fell behind again. His black eyes seemed to answer: 'You say that because you don't know what else to say.' And without alteration in their giraffe-like formation, but again in silence, the three proceeded. In the heart of the seamstress doubt and fear were being slowly knit into dread of the first sound to pass her husband's lips. What would he ask? How should she answer? Would he talk wild, or would he talk sensible? Would he have forgotten that young girl, or had he nursed and nourished his wicked fancy in the house of grief and silence? Would he ask where the baby was? Would he speak a kind word to her? But alongside her dread there was guttering within her the undying resolution not to 'let him go from her, if it were ever so, to that young girl.' "Don't lag, Stanley!" At the reiteration of those words Hughs spoke. "Let the boy alone! You'll be nagging at the baby next!" Hoarse and grating, like sounds issuing from a damp vault, was this first speech. The seamstress's eyes brimmed over. "I won't get the chance," she stammered out. "He's gone!" Hughs' teeth gleamed like those of a dog at bay. "Who's taken him? You let me know the name." Tears rolled down the seamstress's cheeks; she could not answer. Her little son's thin voice rose instead: "Baby's dead. We buried him in the ground. I saw it. Mr. Creed came in the cab with me." White flecks appeared suddenly at the corners of Hughs' lips. He wiped the back of his hand across his mouth, and once more, giraffe-like, the li
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