Little Folks Astray eBook

Rebecca Sophia Clarke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 100 pages of information about Little Folks Astray.

Little Folks Astray eBook

Rebecca Sophia Clarke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 100 pages of information about Little Folks Astray.

“Have things to eat?” asked the little stranger, in a solemn whisper.

There were a few chairs with broken backs, a few shelves with clean dishes, a few children with hungry faces.  In one corner was a clumsy bedstead, and in a tidy bed lay a pale man.

“Who’ve you got there, Maria?” said he.  “Bring her along, and stick her up on the bed.”

“Don’t be afraid,” said Mrs. Brooks; “it’s only pa; wouldn’t the little girl like to talk to him?  He’s sick.”

Flyaway was not at all afraid, for the man smiled pleasantly, and did not look as if he would hurt anybody.  Mrs. Brooks set her on the bed, and Maria, afraid of losing her, held her by one foot.  The children all crowded around to see the little lady in a silk bonnet holding a button-hole bouquet to her bosom.

“Ain’t she a ducky dilver!” said the oldest boy.  “Pa’ll be pleased, for he don’t see things much.  Has to keep abed all the time.”

Mr. Brooks tried to smile, and Flyaway whispered to Maria, with sudden pity,—­

“Sorry he’s sick.  Has he got to stay sick?  Can’t you find the camphor bottle?”

“O, father, she thinks if ycu had some camphor to smell of, ’twould cure you.”

Then they all laughed, and Fly timidly offered the sick man her flowers.

“What, that pretty posy for me?  Bless you, baby, they’ll do me a sight more good than camfire!”

“There,” said Maria, joyfully, “now pa is pleased; I know by the sound of his voice.  Poor pa! only think, little girl, a stick of timber fell on him, and lamed him for life!”

“Yes,” said Bennie, “the lower part of him is as limber as a rag.”

“She don’t sense a word you say,” remarked Mrs. Brooks, shaking up a pillow, “See what we can get out of her.  What’s your name, dear?”

“Katie Clifford.”

“Where do you live?”

“I have been borned in Nindiana.”

Fly spoke with some pride.  She considered her birth an honor to the state.

“But where did you come from, Katie?  That’s what we mean.”

“I camed from heaven,” said the child, with one of her wise looks.

“Beats all, don’t she?” cried Mr. Brooks, admiringly.  “Looks like an angel, I declare for’t.  Did you just drop down out of the sky?”

“No, sir,” answered Flyaway, folding her little hands as if she were saying her prayers; “I camed down when I was a baby.”

[Illustration:  “I CAMED DOWN WHEN I WAS A BABY.”]

“That’s what makes your hair so goldy,” said Bennie.  “Mother, did you ever see such eyes?  Say, did you ever?  So soft, and kinder shiny, too.”

“Children, don’t stare at her; it makes her uneasy.”

I can’t stare at her,” said Maria, bitterly.  “I suppose you don’t mean me, mother.”

Mrs. Brooks only answered her poor daughter by a kiss.

“Well, little Katie, after you were born in Nindiana, you came to New York.  When did you come?”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Little Folks Astray from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.