JOE DECKER gave his chair a noisy shove backward from the table, over the uneven floor, shambled across the space between it and the kitchen door, a look of intense disgust on his face, then stopped for his good-morning speech:"You may as well know, first as last, that I\'ve sent for Nan. I\'ve stood this kind of thing just exactly as long as I\'m going to. There ain\'t many men, I can tell you, who would have stood it so long. Such a meal as that! Ain\'t fit for a decent dog!"Nan is coming in the afternoon stage. There must be some place fixed up for her to sleep in. Understand, now, that has got to be done, and I won\'t have no words about it."Then he slammed the door, and went away.[8]Yes, he was talking to his wife! She could remember the time when he used to linger in the door, talking to her, so many last words to say, and when at last he would turn away with a kind "Well, good-by, Mary! Don\'t work too hard."
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