"Yassah," Andy breathed softly as he disappeared trembling and wondering.
CHAPTER XXIX
THE DREGS IN THE CUP
Norton walked quickly to the window, drew back the draperies, opened the casement and looked out to see if Andy were eavesdropping. He watched the lazy figure cross the lawn, glancing back at the house. The full moon, at its zenith, was shining in a quiet glory, uncanny in its dazzling brilliance.
He stood drinking in for the last time the perfumed sweetness and languor of the Southern night. His senses seemed supernaturally acute. He could distinctly note the odors of the different flowers that were in bloom on the lawn. A gentle breeze was blowing from the path across the old rose garden. The faint, sweet odor of the little white carnations his mother had planted along the walks stole over his aching soul and he was a child again watching her delicate hands plant them, while grumbling slaves protested at the soiling of her fingers. She was looking up with a smile saying:
"I love to plant them. I feel that they are my children then, and I'm making the world sweet and beautiful through them!"
Had he made the world sweeter and more beautiful?
He asked himself the question sternly.