Mr. Alder looked at Mr. Ladd. Mr. Ladd looked at Mrs. Alder. They all looked at each other. What should they do? “Well,” said Mrs. Alder at last, “you drive down street with Mr. Ladd and find out if any one has seen her. I will look all about the farm.” The men had not gone far down the street when they met a boy. “Hi, Ned! have you seen our little girl?” called Mr. Alder. “Who, Clematis? Have you lost her?” “No, she has lost herself. Have you seen her?” “My gracious, no.” His blue eyes opened almost as wide as butter plates. “Well, tell any one you see that she’s lost; that’s a good boy.” “My gracious, I guess I will.” Off ran little Ned Atkinson, as fast as his legs would carry him. He told every one he met, but no one had seen Clematis. Not far down the street Mr. Knapp came rolling out of his yard. “Have you seen that little girl of ours, Mr. Knapp?” “Yes, yes. I saw her. She’s a likely gal. Quite spry.” “Where was she?” Both men spoke at once. “Oh, right along here, yesterday morning.” “I mean today. Have you seen her today?” “No, no, I haven’t set eyes on her today. What’s the matter? Is she lost?” “It looks as if she were lost. We can’t find her.” “Well, she’ll be back.
They heard his great voice echo down the river, as they drove on. Nobody had seen Clematis. Nobody knew anything about her. Mrs. Alder looked everywhere at home. Her bag and box were neatly packed and ready, but there was no sign of the little girl who owned them. Many people were looking for Clematis that afternoon. Ned Atkinson ran everywhere, telling people about the lost girl. They looked in the woods and in the fields. They looked all along the river banks. When night came, they were still hunting, but had found no trace of Clematis. “I can’t sleep a wink tonight,” said Mrs. Alder. “I think the child must be crazy, to run off like that.” “I don’t feel much like sleep myself,” Mr. Alder replied. “I wonder where she can be hiding.” The next morning many people came to ask if Clematis had been found. “No, no, no. There isn’t a sign of her anywhere. I don’t know what we shall do.” Mrs. Alder made the same answer to every one. During the day people still looked about in new places. Afternoon came again, but no Clematis came with it. Towards evening, Mr. Brooks was sitting in his chair by his little cottage, reading a book. The sun was sinking behind the mountains in the west. The birds were singing their All was quiet and peaceful. As he sat there, Mr. Brooks heard steps on the path. He looked down and saw a little girl. In her arms was a cat, with a black spot over one eye. The child stumbled as she walked. She seemed ready to drop, she was so tired. “Why, little girl, where did you come from?” cried Mr. Brooks. He got up and went down to meet her. Then she raised her pale face, and he saw that it was Clematis. Her face and hands were soiled; her hair was tangled; her dress was dusty and torn. “Oh, little maid,” he said. “Did you walk way over here to see me?” “Yes,” said Clematis, faintly. “I said I would, and I did.” “Dear child, you are worn out. Come in and rest.” He took her into the little house, and got a basin and water. “There, dear, wash your face and hands. You will feel better. “Now sit down, Clematis,” said Mr. Brooks, when she had finished washing her face and hands, “and we will have a bite to eat.” He cut a slice of bread. On this he spread some butter, and sprinkled a little sugar. Clematis watched him with hungry eyes. “Dear child, you must be starved,” he said, as she took a great bite. “Wouldn’t you be hungry if you hadn’t had any breakfast or dinner?” Clematis took another big bite. “No breakfast? No dinner? Where have you been all day?” “I stayed in the little house where they boil the sap.” The bread was nearly gone now. “Did you run away this morning?” Mr. Brooks was cutting another slice. “No, I stayed there last night.” “You stayed there all last night? Child! I should think you would have frozen. There was frost last night.” “I did freeze,” said Clematis, beginning on the second slice. Mr. Brooks looked at her a moment in silence, while she ate. “I never heard anything to beat that,” he said at last, as he reached once more for the bread. “Mrs. Alder will be very anxious.” Clematis shook her head. “No she won’t. She’ll be glad I’m gone.” Mr. Brooks smiled. “Well, Mr. Alder will, anyway. As soon as you have eaten a few loaves of bread, I’ll get Mr. Giles’s Clematis put down her bread. Her lips quivered, and her eyes filled with tears. “Don’t you want me?” she said. “My dear child, what do you mean?” “You said you wished you had a little girl.” “Did I say that?” “Yes, you said you wished you had a little girl, and you can have me. Nobody wants me, except you. “I can make my bed, and wash dishes, and I don’t say slang words any more, and I can weed everything in your garden.” Poor Clematis, she had never said so much at one time in her life. Then she burst into tears. She was tired, and worn, and faint. Mr. Brooks took her into his lap. He hardly knew what to say to comfort her. “Have you no father or mother?” he asked. “No,” she sobbed, “I haven’t anybody at all.” “You see I am all alone here. I haven’t any good place to keep a little girl.” “I don’t care, I can sleep on the floor.” Her eyes were drooping, and she was growing quiet. Her head rested on his shoulder. Mr. Brooks was thinking what to say, when he looked down at her face. Her brown eyes were closed, and she was fast asleep. He held her there a while. Then he took her into the next room, and laid her on the bed. Covered with a warm blanket, she sighed softly, and sank into a deep slumber. “I can’t take her home tonight. She ought to have a long, quiet sleep,” said Mr. Brooks to himself. He watched her a while. Then he went out, up the mountain to Mr. Giles’s house. There he telephoned to Atkinson’s store. In another minute a little boy “Clematis is found! Clematis is found! She’s up on Bean Hill.” Ned shouted at the top of his voice. Clematis would have been surprised, if she had seen how glad Mrs. Alder was to know that she was safe. They sent a message to Miss Rose, and told her that Clematis was found. Every one was glad. Every one asked how she ever got way up there on Bean Hill, but no one knew. All this time Clematis was sleeping quietly. When Mr. Brooks returned, she had not stirred. He stood and looked at her a long, long time. When he turned away there were tears in his eyes. “Poor little elf,” he whispered. “She thought I meant just what I said.” He spread some blankets on the floor, and lay down, but he did not go to sleep. His thoughts went back to a book he had been reading. It was about Silas Marner, a man who was sad and lonely. Silas Marner took a little girl into his tiny house to care for, and she made his life happy again. “Silas Marner did not have so large a home as this,” he thought. “But he took good care of the little girl. How happy they were together.” The little face, all wet with tears, came before him again and again. “I might keep her for a little while, at least,” he said to himself. “I will see what Mr. Alder thinks in the morning.” |