The enjoyment of helping Ellen, of
setting the table and of being consulted on such important
subjects as whether the best china and the finest
tablecloth should be used almost made up to Edna for
being away from home on Thanksgiving day. The
basket sent by Mrs. Conway contained several things
which made the dinner much more of a feast than it
would otherwise have been, for there was a jar of
tomato soup, a small chicken pie with scalloped leaves
and little balls of crust on top, some delicious pickles,
a glass of currant jelly and another of cranberry
sauce. Margaret had brought in a bunch of cut
flowers from Mrs. MacDonald’s greenhouse, the
day before and these set in the middle of the table
were a lovely ornament.
“It’s the foinest lookin’
table iver I saw in this house,” said Ellen
when Edna called her in to see. “What was
it yez were sayin’ about thim little toasty
crusts for the soup. I’d be afther makin’
thim if I cud know wanst.”
“Oh, I can tell you just how,”
said Edna, “for I have watched our cook make
them.” She felt very important to be overseeing
this piece of cookery and went in to call her uncle,
feeling very much pleased at what had been accomplished.
“Well, well, well,” exclaimed
Uncle Justus, “this does look like holiday times.
Who did all this?”
“Ellen and I,” Edna told him, “and
it was lots of fun.”
Uncle Justus nodded. “I
dare say,” he said with a smile, as he sat down.
It was really a merrier repast than
Edna had ever eaten under that roof, for instead of
eating his dinner in silence as he generally did, Uncle
Justus was quite talkative and actually attempted to
joke once in a while. When Ellen was taking away
the plates before she served the dessert, the old
gentleman arose. “I think,” he said,
“that this is just the occasion to open that
jar of ginger Captain Doane sent me awhile ago.”
So he went to his own special cupboard, unlocked the
door and brought forth the wicker bound ginger jar
which had been there several weeks, and it is safe
to say Edna was given her share.
“A famous dinner,” said
Uncle Justus as he rose from the table. “I
can’t remember that I ever had a pleasanter
one, and I have you to thank for it, my dear.
Now, I am afraid I shall have to go to my meeting,
but I know you have an agreeable plan for the evening,
so I do not feel the reluctance in leaving that I
should otherwise.”
Edna helped him on with his overcoat,
handed him his walking stick and saw him off, standing
in the door, and hoping he would look back. He
did this giving her a smile and nod as she waved her
hand. Then she went back to Ellen and together
they did the dishes very carefully. After this
both must get dressed, and an hour later they were
about to start when the bell rang and Ellen opened
the door to Jennie Ramsey.
“I thought I’d just come
for you in the motor car,” she said. “Mother
said Mack could take us for a little ride in the fresh
air so we would have a better appetite for dinner.”
This was quite exciting, for Edna’s
opportunities for riding in an automobile were not
many.
The magnificence of the Ramsey’s
dinner far outdid Aunt Elizabeth’s, but Edna
did not enjoy it one whit the more, although it was
very delightful to be served by a man in livery, and
to have such exquisite china and glass to look at
during the meal. The child felt a little shy in
the presence of so many strangers, and had little
to say. Moreover, she had too often been told
by Aunt Elizabeth that “little children should
be seen and not heard” for her not to remember
she must not chatter. Really the best time came
when she and Jennie went up to bed when Jennie showed
her all her treasures, her pretty room and her rows
of books. They became very confidential as they
snuggled down under the covers, and when Mrs. Ramsey
came in to kiss them both good-night, Edna felt much
happier than had seemed possible she could be when
she first considered that she must spend the day and
night away from her mother.
The club meeting at Helen Darby’s
the next day was a fine affair, too, for Mr. Darby
had provided an entertainment which pleased them all.
A wonderful juggler did all sorts of curious tricks
and a young man sang the drollest of songs. Then,
too, the refreshments were unusually good. It
had been made an inviolable rule that not more than
three articles were to be served, but when there were
ice cream, delicious cakes and bon-bons, surely these
were quite enough.
“You see,” said Helen
in explanation, after some of the girls had protested,
“father said this was a holiday meeting and it
might be a little more elaborate, he thought.”
Uncle Justus took Edna and Celia home
that evening, and if he did not enjoy his visit it
was not the fault of the girls. It is probable
the old gentleman had rarely had such attentions and
such a fuss made over him. He was invited to
the Evans’s to supper on Saturday and to Mrs.
MacDonald’s to dinner on Sunday. He was
taken to drive; he was invited to walk, and really
was quite overcome by all this thought of him from
the members of the G. R. Club.
Monday morning saw everyone but Celia
back at school. Celia having had too much Thanksgiving,
or too much something was not able to go, and indeed,
had to remain at home for the entire week, and it seemed
very much like the old days to Edna when she had to
stay at Uncle Justus’s without her sister.
Aunt Elizabeth returned home on Monday afternoon,
quite “smoothed out” Edna told her mother
afterward. So the week sped along in the old
way till Friday afternoon.
It had begun to snow a little when
Edna started out to the club meeting which was held
at Florence Gittings’s. The little girl
had no fear, however, for she expected to meet Dorothy
and Agnes and go home with them, but for some reason
neither was present. Later on it was learned
that Mr. Evans had called for them at their aunt’s
and had taken them home fearing a heavy storm would
prevent their going later. A telegram which they
sent to Edna at Florence Gittings’s was not delivered
till after the child had left the house.
“You aren’t going off
by yourself,” said Florence when the club meeting
was over. It had seemed rather a poor little affair
after the brilliancy of Helen’s entertainment,
and with both Agnes and Celia missing. However
they had all done their best, but it broke up rather
earlier than usual.
“Oh, I must go,” said
Edna. “I am sure Agnes and Dorothy will
be at the railway station, and we can all go out together.”
“But it is snowing so hard and
the wind is making the snow drift,” continued
Florence.
“Oh, but the cars go all the
way to the station. I won’t have to walk,
and very likely mother will send one of the boys, Cousin
Ben, perhaps, to meet me.”
“I wish we had a telephone,”
said Florence, “but we haven’t, and I
suppose you can telephone from the station if you want
to.”
“I might do that,” said Edna.
“I think you’d better go back to your
Uncle Horner’s,” suggested Helen.
“Oh, but ”
Edna did not want to do this. A whole week at
the school without Celia was about all she thought
she could stand. “I shall do all right,”
she insisted. “I’m sure the girls
will be at the station.” So the others
saw her depart without urging her further.
Owing to the snow which was drifting
heavily, the cars were running much more slowly than
usual, and when Edna reached the station her train
had just gone. It was the train her father always
took and she had hoped to see him. She decided
to telephone and took out her purse to see what money
she had. Alas! she had but ten cents, not enough
for an out-of-town toll. She had her school ticket
fortunately. Celia was the one who always carried
the money for the expenses, and Edna remembered that
her mother had told her to be sure to provide herself
with enough. “If you find you run short,”
she told the child, “either send down to your
father for some change or borrow it from Aunt Elizabeth.”
Edna would rather have done almost
anything than borrow from Aunt Elizabeth and she had
forgotten to look in her purse anyhow, before starting.
“Even if I had,” she told herself, “I
would have thought I had enough for I didn’t
expect to need anything but car fare.” The
next train would leave at five, but as it was a short
run Edna thought she might venture to take it, even
though it might be dark when she reached the station.
She could telephone to the house from there, if necessary.
So she waited patiently till it should be time for
her train to be ready and then she went out and took
her seat. It was snowing desperately hard she
noticed as they moved along, and the train stopped
frequently, but at last she reached her own station
and got off feeling very thankful to be this near
home. She looked around; not a soul was there
to meet her. She would have to telephone.
She turned toward the waiting-room, but to her consternation
found the door locked.
There was not a soul in sight.
She stood still for a while. It was getting colder,
and the snow was drifting and swirling around at a
great rate. What should she do? The station
master had probably gone home to his supper, for there
were no more trains till nearly six o’clock from
either direction. He had not counted on his presence
being needed between whiles once he had seen to his
freight and baggage, and he had gone to the back of
the building where he lived.
It was not more than a ten minutes’
walk to her home in good weather, and Edna at last
thought she would venture. She pulled her hat
down over her ears and her coat collar up around her
neck and started. It was desperate walking here
in the country where the sharp wind seemed to search
out every unprotected part of the body. The snow
nearly blinded her, and cut her face like a knife.
Every little while she had to stop to get breath,
and as she found the difficulties increasing she thought
of all the stories she had heard of persons perishing
in the snow a few yards from their own door-ways.
“I wish I had gone back to Uncle Justus,”
she murmured. “Oh, dear, I don’t believe
I will ever get there.”
The whiteness of the snow made it
possible for her to see a little of the way when she
first started, but as she went on and it grew darker
she began to wonder if she were in the road. She
brushed away the stinging flakes and looked around,
peering into the darkness gathering around her.
Through the blinding, hurrying flakes she could see
twinkling lights here and there, and presently she
located the piece of woods just beyond her own home,
but it was far to the left, and she realized that
she had turned into a by-road instead of keeping to
the main one. The tears began to course down
her cheeks when she appreciated how far she was from
her own house. “I can never go back,”
she sobbed. “I can’t. I am so
cold and so tired, I’m afraid I can’t get
there. It would never do to stand still,”
she realized and presently she made up her mind to
struggle on toward the nearest light a little ahead.
She bowed her head again and pressed
on through the drifts, feeling her strength would
do no more than get her to this refuge. At last
it was reached, a little house, by the wayside, a
tiny garden in front and a small cow-shed behind.
Managing to get the gate open, Edna went upon the
porch and knocked at the door.
It was opened by a little girl about
her own age. “Why,” she exclaimed,
“who is it? I thought you were mother.
Come right in out of the storm. Isn’t it
a dreadful one?”
Edna, scarce able to speak, tottered
into the room, warm from a bright fire in a base-burner
stove and cheerful by reason of a lighted lamp.
“You are all covered with snow,”
the little girl went on. “Do come to the
fire and take off your hat and coat. You must
be nearly frozen and I expect your feet are wet and
cold. I’ll take off your shoes.”
She stooped down and began to unfasten
the snowy shoes after removing the rubbers Edna had
been fortunate enough to have put on.
In a moment the wanderer was able
to tell her story, and to thank her little hostess
for her attentions. “I don’t know
what I am going to do,” she said. “I’m
afraid I can’t get home, and there isn’t
any way to send them word to come for me. Of
course they will think I have stayed in the city.
If I had known how bad the storm was going to be I
would never have started, but I did want to see my
mother.”
“And I want to see my mother,”
replied her hostess. “She went down the
road this morning to see my aunt who is ill, and she
was coming back on this train that got in a little
while ago, the train you must have come on.”
“I didn’t see anyone get
off,” Edna told her, “only two or three
men who got into a wagon and drove off before I left
the station. Most everyone I know comes out on
the train before that, but I missed it, you see.”
“Well, I am very glad to have
you here,” said the other. “If mother
did not come on that train she won’t come at
all, I am sure, for the next ones don’t stop
at my aunt’s station, and I should have been
here all alone. What is your name?”
“My name is Edna Conway, and
I live on the main road just this side of that piece
of woods you see after you pass Mrs. MacDonald’s.
Hers is the big gray house with the greenhouses, you
know.”
“Oh, yes I know it very well.
My name is Nettie Black. My mother and I live
here just by ourselves since my father died.”
“Oh,” Edna felt very sorry
that Nettie was fatherless, but she did not know exactly
what to say about it. “Will your mother
be worried about your being here alone?” she
asked after a moment.
“I s’pose she will, but
it can’t be helped. I know she would have
come if she could. I only hope my aunt isn’t
worse. I wish she could know I am not to be alone.”
“And I wish, my mother knew
I was safe,” returned Edna. “I am
sure, though, that she thinks I am at my uncle’s
in the city, and I hope she does think so.”
“Are you quite warm, now?”
asked Nettie. “If you are we will have some
supper.”
“Oh, you are very kind,”
returned Edna a little embarrassed. “I think
it is very hard on you to have me come in this way
like a stray cat.”
Nettie laughed. “I like
stray cats, and we always take them in. There
is a lovely one in the kitchen, now, that we make
a great pet of. He came to us so thin and miserable,
but now he is as fat as butter.”
“I’d love to see him,”
returned Edna, “and won’t you let me help
you get supper?”
“There isn’t so very much
to get,” returned Nettie a little shamefacedly.
“There is only bread and butter and what is left
of the rice-pudding I had for dinner. We could
toast the bread, and there’s milk. If you
don’t mind my taking part of the milk for it,
I could have milk-toast and we could drink cambric
tea.”
“I like cambric tea,”
replied Edna, “and I am very fond of milk-toast.
Oh, dear, I am so thankful to be here instead of out
in the cold.”
“I am thankful, too. I’ll
go out and make the toast. Will you come?”
Edna was pleased enough to do this,
to make the acquaintance of the big black cat, and
to help make the toast. “I don’t see
how you will ever know how to make the dip part,”
she said to Nettie.
“Oh, but I do know. Mother
taught me, and I can do it very well. The great
thing is not to let the milk burn and to put in only
the least little bit of thickening.”
Edna watched the process admiringly.
Nettie was so very expert and bustled around like
an experienced housekeeper. The house was very
small, only two rooms downstairs and two up, with an
attic over all, but everything was neat and clean,
and the dishes, of course, were set out in an orderly
manner upon a white tablecloth. The dish of smoking
toast flanked by the rice pudding made an excellent
meal. Nettie poured the tea and served her guest
in the most hospitable way. They ate their meal
in the front room before the fire, and now that she
was warmed and was no longer hungry, Edna began to
be interested in her surroundings. It was a plainly
furnished room, a faded carpet on the floor, an old-fashioned
sofa against one wall, a claw-footed mahogany table
against the other, a bookcase between the windows.
One or two engravings hung on the wall and a dingy
portrait in an old frame. The chairs matched
the sofa, one being a comfortable rocker with cover
of haircloth.
After they had washed the supper dishes,
Nettie made ready for the night by putting more coal
on the fires and carefully barring the shutters and
doors below. Then with a small lamp in her hand
she escorted her guest to the upstairs room.
It was rather chilly and was also plainly furnished,
though the old-fashioned four-poster bed was made up
neatly, and the high bureau showed a clean cover.
The wind howled and whistled around the house, the
sharp snow crystals clicked against the panes, but
as Edna crept under the covers she could feel only
thankful that she had this shelter and was soon asleep
with Nettie beside her already in the land of Dreams.