CHAPTER XXXII - AND A VOICE
“Can you hear me, little Miss
Harris?” The voice came from the dusky shed,
high up against the wall.
But the child did not turn her head.
“Yes Mr. Achilles I can
hear you very well,” she said softly.
“Don’t look this way,”
said the voice. “Get down and look at the
chickens and listen to what I tell you.”
The child dropped obediently to her
knees, her head a little bent, her face toward the
open light outside.
The woman, going about her work in
the kitchen, looked out and saw her and nodded to
her kindly
The child’s lips made a little
smile in return. They were very pale.
“I come to take you home,”
said the voice. It was full of tenderness and
Betty Harris bent her head, a great wave of homesickness
sweeping across her.
“I can’t go, Mr. Achilles.”
It was like a sob. “I can’t go.
They will kill you. I heard them. They will
kill anybody that comes !”
She spoke in swift little whispers and
waited. “Can you hear me say it?”
she asked. “Can you hear me say it, Mr.
Achilles?”
“I hear it yes.”
The voice of Achilles laughed a little. “They
will not kill little lady, and you go home with
me to-night.” The voice dropped
down from its high place and comforted her.
She reached out little hands to the
chickens and laughed tremulously. “I am
afraid,” she said softly, “I am afraid!”
But the low voice, up in the dusk,
steadied her and gave her swift commands and
repeated them till she crept from the dim
shed into the light and stood up blinking
a little and looked about her and
laughed happily.
And the woman came to the door and
smiled at her. “You must come in,”
she called.
“Yes Mrs. Seabury ”
The child darted back into the shed and gathered up
the spoon and basin from the board and looked about
her swiftly. In the slatted box, the mother hen
clucked drowsily, and wise cheeps from beneath her
wings answered bravely. The child glanced at the
box, and up at the dusky boards of the shed, peering
far in the dimness. But there was no one not
even a voice just the high, tumbled pile
of boards and the few nests along the wall
and the mother hen clucking cosily behind her slats and
the wise little cheeps.