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d voice. "No! not Burke, old man! . . . ah, don't!" gasped the rich tenor voice pleadingly from the snow--"ah, don't, Burke! . . . remember, remember . . . St. Agnes' Eve-- "St. Agnes' Eve. Ah! bitter chill it was, The--" It broke--that throbbing voice with its strange, impassioned appeal. Far away over the snow the faint, silvery ring of a locomotive gong fell upon the ears of the trio almost like the deep, solemn tolling of bells. Then slowly, and seemingly in pain, the prostrate man arose. And yet! Redmond mused, sorry a figure as he cut just then, minus fur-cap and plastered with snow, alone with the shame which was his, he had an air, a certain dignity of mien, this man, Yorke, which stamped him far above the common run of men. The junior constable, as he noted the dark hair, silvering and worn away at the temples, adjudged him to be somewhere between thirty and forty--thirty-five was his exact age as he ascertained later. Now, with the air of a fallen angel, he stood there in the cold, snow-dazzling moonlight; his face registering silent resignation as to whatever else might befall him. The sergeant had stepped forward. Redmond looked on, in dazed apprehension. A solemn hush had fallen upon the strange scene, and stranger trio. Their figures flung weird, fantastic shadows across the diamond-sparkling snow-crust. George glanced at Slavin, and that individual's demeanor amazed him still further. The big man's face was transformed. There seemed something very terrible just then in the pathetic working of his rugged features, as if he were striving to allay some powerful inward emotion. Then huskily, but not unkindly--as perchance the father may have spoken to the prodigal son--came his soft brogue: "Get yu tu bed, Yorkey! get yu tu bed, man! . . . an' thry me no more! . . . ." Mutely, like a child, Yorke obeyed the order. Glancing at Redmond he turned and walked unsteadily into the detachment. Perturbed and utterly mystified at the sordid drama he had witnessed, its amazing combination of brutality and pathos, George remained rooted to the spot as one in a dream. Instinctively though, he felt that this was not the first time of its enactment. Mechanically he watched the door close; then sounding far off and indistinct, Slavin's hoarse whisper in his ear brought him down to Mother Earth again with a vengeance: "Did ye mark him stoop an' 'plant' th' 'hootch?'" George nodded.
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