Back O' the Moon and Other Stories Author:Oliver Onions Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: 21 CHAPTER II. THE EXECUTIVE. Through the wall-stones of the end of the " Cross Pipes" that abutted on the market-place the soot of the chimneys had in ... more »some mysterious way worked, so that the flues and branchings from the various chambers showed like some grimy inverted cactus. An addition had been built forward to the cobbled space, and up and down it, following the pitch of the roof, ran the name of the house, with every " S" turned the wrong way about. From this again projected the red- curtained bow-window of the parlour; and while the public entrance lay to the right within the stable-arch, the approach to the kitchen and private parts of the house lay on the other side, up a cobbled alley. The March night had fallen, and the lights of the scattered farmhouses of the Shelf might almost have been stars, so lofty were they. The marketplace was filled with the dim illumination that came through the blinds and the chinks of the shuttersof the surrounding houses. A lantern that had been set down for a moment on one of the piece- boards made a dull gleam down the polished surface. The crimson square of the window of the " Pipes" was broken by the shadows of heads within the window-seat, and up the dark alleyway to the kitchen, through [an 'ace-of-heart's perforation in the upper part of the door, another light nickered, as of a candle guttering in a draughty passage. In the kitchen a fire of peats smouldered on the hearth and made a rich glow on the copper kettle that bubbled before it. The lid of the kettle vibrated with a continuous sound of purring metal. Two oil-lamps hung side by side from the low ceiling; and the blur of lamp carbon on the plaster above them was patterned with concentric circles that intersected and made as it were the eyes of an enormous owl. ...« less