[Mother by Maxim Gorky]@TWC D-Link book
Mother

CHAPTER XIII
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I've come straight from the prison." He spoke in a strange voice.

He seized Vlasov's hand and wrung it violently as he added: "Pavel sends you his regards." Irresolutely seating himself in a chair he scanned the room with his gloomy, suspicious look.
The mother was not fond of him.

There was something in his angular, close-cropped head and in his small eyes that always scared her; but now she was glad to see him, and with a broad smile lighting her face she said in a tender, animated voice: "How thin you've become! Say, Andriusha, let's dose him with tea." "I'm putting up the samovar already!" the Little Russian called from the kitchen.
"How is Pavel?
Have they let anybody else out besides yourself ?" Nikolay bent his head and answered: "I'm the only one they've let go." He raised his eyes to the mother's face and said slowly, speaking through his teeth with ponderous emphasis: "I told them: 'Enough! Let me go! Else I'll kill some one here, and myself, too!' So they let me go!" "Hm, hm--ye-es," said the mother, recoiling from him and involuntarily blinking when her gaze met his sharp, narrow eyes.
"And how is Fedya Mazin ?" shouted the Little Russian from the kitchen.
"Writing poetry, is he ?" "Yes! I don't understand it," said Nikolay, shaking his head.

"They've put him in a cage and he sings.

There's only one thing I'm sure about, and that is I have no desire to go home." "Why should you want to go home?
What's there to attract you ?" said the mother pensively.


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