Elsie's children eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about Elsie's children.

Elsie's children eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about Elsie's children.

These were Cal and Dr. Barton, and they also dismounted in hot haste and disappeared from her sight beneath the veranda.  Certainly something very dreadful had happened.  Oh would nobody come to tell her!

The minutes dragged their slow length along seeming like hours.  She lay back in her chair in an agony of suspense, the perspiration standing in cold drops on her brow.

But the sound of wheels roused her and looking out she saw the Oaks and Ion carriages drive up, young Horace and Rosie alight from the one, Mr. Travilla and Elsie from the other.

“Oh!” thought Molly, “Cousin Elsie will be sure to think of me directly and I shall not be left much longer in this horrible suspense.”

Her confidence was not misplaced.  Not many minutes had elapsed when her door was softly opened, a light step crossed the floor and a sweet fair face, full of tender compassion, bent over the grief-stricken girl.

Molly tried to speak; her tongue refused its office, but Elsie quickly answered the mute questioning of the wild, frightened, anguished eyes.

“There is life,” she said, taking the cold hands in hers, “life in both; and ‘while there is life there is hope.’  Our dear old grandfather has a broken leg and arm and a few slight cuts and bruises, but is restored to consciousness now, and able to speak.  Your poor mother has fared still worse, we fear, as the principal injury is to the head, but we will hope for the best in her case also.”

Molly dropped her head on her cousin’s shoulder while a burst of weeping brought partial relief to the overburdened heart.

Elsie clasped her arms about her and strove to soothe and comfort her with caresses and endearing words.

“If I could only nurse mother now,” sobbed the girl, “how glad I’d be to do it.  O cousin, it most breaks my heart now to think how I’ve vexed and worried her since—­since this dreadful trouble came to me.  I’d give anything never to have said a cross or disrespectful word to her.  And now I can do nothing for her! nothing, nothing!” and she wrung her hands in grief and despair.

“Yes, dear child; there is one thing you can do,” Elsie answered, weeping with her.

“What, what is that?” asked Molly, half incredulously, half hopefully, “what can I do chained here?”

“Pray for her, Molly, plead for her with him unto whom belong the issues from death; to him who has all power in heaven and in earth and who is able to save to the uttermost.”

“No, no, even that I can’t do,” sobbed Molly, “I’ve never learned to pray, and he isn’t my friend as he is yours and your children’s!”

“Then first of all make him your friend; oh, he is so kind and merciful and loving.  He says, ’Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.’  ’Him that cometh to me, I will in no wise cast out.’”

“Oh, if I only knew how!” sighed Molly, “nobody needs such a friend more than I. I’d give all the world to have him for mine.”

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Project Gutenberg
Elsie's children from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.