Gradually, however, as he became accustomed to the place, he saw upon the long table in the corner where Arthur Tracy had moved it months before, what looked like a human form stretched at full length and lying upon its back, with its white, stony face upturned to the rafters above, and no sound or motion to tell that it still lived.
With an exclamation of surprise, Harold sprang forward and laid his hand upon the pale forehead of the woman, but started back as quickly with a cry of horror, for by the touch of the ice-cold flesh he knew the woman was dead.
‘Frozen to death!’ he whispered, with ashen lips; and then, as something stirred under the gray cloak which partly covered the woman, he conquered his terror and went forward again to the table, over which he bent curiously.
Again the cry, which was more like ‘mah-nee’ now than ‘mamma,’ met his ear, and, stooping lower, he saw a curly head nestle close to the bosom of the woman, while a little fat white hand was clasping the neck as if for warmth and protection.
At this sight all Harold’s fear vanished, and, bending down so that his lips almost touched the bright, wavy hair, he said:
’Poor little girl!’—he felt instinctively that it was a girl—’poor little girl! come with me away from this dreadful place!’ and he tried to lift up her head, but she drew it away from him, and repeated the piteous cry of ‘Mah-nee, mah-nee!’
At last, however, as Harold continued to talk to her, the cries ceased, and, cautiously lifting her head, she turned toward him a fat, chubby face and a pair of soft, blue eyes in which the great tears were standing. Then her lips began to quiver in a grieved kind of way, as if the horror of the previous night had stamped itself upon her tender mind and she were asking for sympathy.
‘Mah-nee!’ she said again, placing one hand on the cold, dead face, and stretching the other toward Harold, who put out his arms to take her.
But something resisted all his efforts, and a closer inspection showed him a long, old-fashioned carpet-bag, which enveloped her body from her neck to her feet, and into which she had evidently been put to protect her from the cold.
‘Not a bad idea either,’ Harold said, as he comprehended the situation; ’and your poor mother gave you the most of her cloak, too, and her shawl,’ he continued, as he saw how carefully the child had been wrapped, while the mother, if it were her mother, had paid for her unselfishness with her life.
‘What is your name, little girl?’ he asked.
The child, who had been staring at him while he talked as if he were a lunatic, made no reply until he had her in his arms, when she, too, began to talk in a half-frightened way. Then he looked at her as if she were the lunatic, for never had he heard such speech as hers.
‘I do believe you are a Dutchman,’ he said, as he wrapped both shawl and cloak around her and started for the door, which he kicked against some time in order to make an opening wide enough to allow of his egress with his burden.