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h together once or twice she felt that no plan she might make for Wallace could possibly succeed. Lying on the old leather couch that first night, between her frequent excursions among the waking family, she had thought that out and abandoned it. But, during the days that followed the funeral, she was increasingly anxious about Wallace. She knew that rumors of the engagement had reached him, for he was restless and irritable. He did not care to go out, but wandered about the house or until late at night sat smoking alone on the terrace, looking down at the town with sunken, unhappy eyes. Once or twice in the evening he had taken his car and started out, and lying awake in her French bed she would hear him coming hours later. In the mornings his eyes were suffused and his color bad, and she knew that he was drinking in order to get to sleep. On the third day after Dick's departure for the West she got up when she heard him coming in, and putting on her dressing gown and slippers, knocked at his door. "Come in," he called ungraciously. She found him with his coat off, standing half defiantly with a glass of whisky and soda in his hand. She went up to him and took it from him. "We've had enough of that in the family, Wallie," she said. "And it's a pretty poor resource in time of trouble." "I'll have that back, if you don't mind." "Nonsense," she said briskly, and flung it, glass and all, out of the window. She was rather impressive when she turned. "I've been a fairly indulgent mother," she said. "I've let you alone, because it's a Sayre trait to run away when they feel a pull on the bit. But there's a limit to my patience, and it is reached when my son drinks to forget a girl." He flushed and glowered at her in somber silence, but she moved about the room calmly, giving it a housekeeper's critical inspection, and apparently unconscious of his anger. "I don't believe you ever cared for any one in all your life," he said roughly. "If you had, you would know." She was straightening a picture over the mantel, and she completed her work before she turned. "I care for you." "That's different." "Very well, then. I cared for your father. I cared terribly. And he killed my love." She padded out of the room, her heavy square body in its blazing kimono a trifle rigid, but her face still and calm. He remained staring at the door when she had closed it, and for some time after. He knew what message f
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