Taken Alive eBook

Edward Payson Roe
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 425 pages of information about Taken Alive.

Taken Alive eBook

Edward Payson Roe
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 425 pages of information about Taken Alive.

But the crisis had come at last; and on this dreary December day she was face to face with absolute want.  The wolf, with his gaunt eyes, was crouched beside her cold hearth.  A pittance owed to her for work had not been paid.  The little food left in the house had furnished the children an unsatisfying breakfast; she had eaten nothing.  On the table beside her lay a note from the agent of the estate of which her home was a part, bidding her call that morning.  She knew why—­the rent was two months in arrears.  It seemed like death to leave the house in which her husband had placed her, and wherein she had spent her happiest days.  It stood well away from the crowded town.  The little yard and garden, with their trees, vines, and shrubbery, some of which her husband had planted, were all dear from association.  In the rear there was a grove and open fields, which, though not belonging to the cottage, were not forbidden to the children; and they formed a wonderland of delight in spring, summer, and fall.  Must she take her active, restless boy Jamie, the image of his father, into a crowded tenement?  Must golden-haired Susie, with her dower of beauty, be imprisoned in one close room, or else be exposed to the evil of corrupt association just beyond the threshold?

Moreover, her retired home had become a refuge.  Here she could hide her sorrow and poverty.  Here she could touch what he had touched, and sit during the long winter evenings in his favorite corner by the fire.  Around her, within and without, were the little appliances for her comfort which his hands had made, flow could she leave all this and live?  Deep in her heart also the hope would linger that he would come again and seek her where he had left her.

“O God!” she cried suddenly.  “Thou wouldst not, couldst not permit him to die without one farewell word,” and she buried her face in her hands and rocked back and forth, while hard, dry sobs shook her slight, famine-pinched form.

The children stopped their play and came and leaned upon her lap.

“Don’t cry, mother,” said Jamie, a little boy of ten.  “I’ll soon be big enough to work for you; and I’ll get rich, and you shall have the biggest house in town.  I’ll take care of you if papa don’t come back.”

Little Sue knew not what to say, but the impulse of her love was her best guide.  She threw her arms around her mother’s neck with such an impetuous and childlike outburst of affection that the poor woman’s bitter and despairing thoughts were banished for a time.  The deepest chord of her nature, mother love, was touched; and for her children’s sake she rose up once more and faced the hard problems of her life.  Putting on her bonnet and thin shawl (she had parted with much that she now so sorely needed), she went out into the cold December wind.  The sky was clouded like her hopes, and the light, even in the morning hours, was dim and leaden-hued.

She first called on Mr. Jackson, the agent from whom she rented her home, and besought him to give her a little more time.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Taken Alive from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.