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Page 50
"There's some smell of cabbage out there," he admitted reluctantly.
Then he looked at her with a challenge. "It comes from the next
house," he said. "Blows over our house."
"Our house is higher."
"I don't care; you can never account for such things."
"Cordelia," said Mrs. Townsend, "you go over to the next house and
you ask if they've got cabbage for dinner."
Cordelia switched out of the room, her mouth set hard. She came
back promptly.
"Says they never have cabbage," she announced with gloomy triumph
and a conclusive glance at Mr. Townsend. "Their girl was real
sassy."
"Oh, father, let's move away; let's sell the house," cried Adrianna
in a panic-stricken tone.
"If you think I'm going to sell a house that I got as cheap as this
one because we smell cabbage in a vacant lot, you're mistaken,"
replied David firmly.
"It isn't the cabbage alone," said Mrs. Townsend.
"And a few shadows," added David. "I am tired of such nonsense. I
thought you had more sense, Jane."
"One of the boys at school asked me if we lived in the house next
to the vacant lot on Wells Street and whistled when I said 'Yes,'"
remarked George.
"Let him whistle," said Mr. Townsend.
After a few hours the family, stimulated by Mr. Townsend's calm,
common sense, agreed that it was exceedingly foolish to be
disturbed by a mysterious odour of cabbage. They even laughed at
themselves.
"I suppose we have got so nervous over those shadows hanging out
clothes that we notice every little thing," conceded Mrs. Townsend.
"You will find out some day that that is no more to be regarded
than the cabbage," said her husband.
"You can't account for that wet sheet hitting my face," said Mrs.
Townsend, doubtfully.
"You imagined it."
"I FELT it."
That afternoon things went on as usual in the household until
nearly four o'clock. Adrianna went downtown to do some shopping.
Mrs. Townsend sat sewing beside the bay window in her room, which
was a front one in the third story. George had not got home. Mr.
Townsend was writing a letter in the library. Cordelia was busy in
the basement; the twilight, which was coming earlier and earlier
every night, was beginning to gather, when suddenly there was a
loud crash which shook the house from its foundations. Even the
dishes on the sideboard rattled, and the glasses rang like bells.
The pictures on the walls of Mrs. Townsend's room swung out from
the walls. But that was not all: every looking-glass in the house
cracked simultaneously--as nearly as they could judge--from top to
bottom, then shivered into fragments over the floors. Mrs.
Townsend was too frightened to scream. She sat huddled in her
chair, gasping for breath, her eyes, rolling from side to side in
incredulous terror, turned toward the street. She saw a great
black group of people crossing it just in front of the vacant lot.
There was something inexpressibly strange and gloomy about this
moving group; there was an effect of sweeping, wavings and foldings
of sable draperies and gleams of deadly white faces; then they
passed. She twisted her head to see, and they disappeared in the
vacant lot. Mr. Townsend came hurrying into the room; he was pale,
and looked at once angry and alarmed.
"Did you fall?" he asked inconsequently, as if his wife, who was
small, could have produced such a manifestation by a fall.
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