Sardotopolis stood over it without moving.
Then she sat down in a chair beside it and began to cry.
* * * * *
When Mr. Sardotopolis and his three brothers came home from driving the
wagon they found her still crying.
"Joe is dead," she said.
The other children were all properly noisy. Mr. Sardotopolis said, "I will
call my sisters and mother." He went over, looked at the child that lay
dead on the table and stroked its head.
The sisters and mothers arrived. They took charge of the big pot with the
three chickens in it, of the eight squalling little ones and of the silent
bundle on the table. There were four sisters. As it grew dark Mrs.
Sardotopolis found that she was sitting alone in a corner of the room. She
felt tired. There was no use hugging the baby any more. Joe was dead. In a
few days he would be buried. Tears. Yes, particularly since in a few
months he would have had a smaller brother. Now Mrs. Sardotopolis was
frightened. Joe was the first to die.
She walked out of the house, down the dark hallway into the street. "It
will do her good," said her mother-in-law, who watched her.
In the street there was nothing to do. There were no errands to make.
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