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. Here and there a shutter had broken loose and was sagging on rusted hinges. Houses are apt to follow the direction their owners take. I knew I was being watched, though I cannot tell how I knew it. Yet I saw nothing until I was nearly at our door. I remember I was noticing the green stain from the brass knocker on its paneling, when my horse snorted and stopped dead in his tracks. From the overgrown clump of lilacs that flanked the granite stone which served as a door-step something was glinting in the sun, and then as I looked more closely, I saw a face peering at me from between the twigs, a face of light mahogany with thick lips that showed the presence of negro blood. It was Brutus, my father's half-caste servant. Dark and saturnine as ever, he glided out into the path in front of me, thrusting something back into the sash around his waist, moved toward me, and took my horse's head. His teeth shone when I spoke to him, but he said never a word in return to my greeting. There was a touch of Indian in his blood that made his speech short and laconic. Nevertheless, he was glad to see me. He grasped my shoulder as I dismounted, and shook me gently from side to side. His great form loomed before me, his lips framed in a cheerful grin, his eyes appraising and friendly. And then I noticed for the first time the livid welt of a cut across his cheek. Brutus read my glance, but he only shook his head in answer. "What do you mean, hiding in those bushes?" I asked him roughly. "Always must see who is coming," said Brutus. "Monsieur may not want to see who is coming--you understan'?" "No," I said, "I don't understand." His grasp on my shoulder tightened. "Then you go home," he said, "You go home now. Something happen. Monsieur very angry. Something bad--you understan'?" "He is in the house?" I asked. Brutus nodded. "Then take this horse," I said, and swung open the front door. A draft eddied through the broad old hallway as I stepped over the threshold, and there was a smell of wood smoke that told me the chimneys were still cold from disuse. Someone had stored the hall full of coils of rope and sailcloth, but in the midst of it the same tall clock was ticking out its cycle, and the portraits of the Shelton family still hung against the white panels. The long, brown rows of books still lined the walls of the morning room. The long mahogany table in the center was still littered with maps and papers.
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