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"Is this the first time you have been here?" she asked, with a kind of shy grace. The boy's bright eyes came down to her with a look of surprise as he a.s.sented.
"I am very glad to see you in our Sunday-School," she went on. "I hope it was pleasant."
"It was pleasant enough," said the stranger. "There is a jolly fellow over there asked me to come--Ben Barth; are you his sister?"
"Oh no," said Matilda. "Ben has his own sisters. I am not one of them."
"I thought maybe he told you to speak to me."
"n.o.body told me," said Matilda. By this time they had followed the crowd out at the door, and were taking their way down the street.
"What did you speak to me then, for?" said the boy, with a roguish look at her.
"I thought you were a stranger."
"And what if I was?"
"I think, if you are a stranger anywhere, it is pleasant to have somebody speak to you."
"You're a brick!" was the stranger's conclusion.
"Am I?" said Matilda. "Why am I?"
"You're a girl, I suppose, and don't understand things," said her companion. "Boys know what a brick is--when they see it."
"Why, so do I," said Matilda, "don't I?"
But the boy only laughed; and then asked Matilda where she lived, and if she had any brothers, and where she went to school.
"I go to the other school, you see," said he; "that's how I've never seen you before. I wish you went to my school; and I'd give you a ride on my sled."
"But you'll come to our Sunday-School, won't you?" Matilda asked.
"To be sure I will; but you see, I can't take you on my sled on Sunday.
They'd have all the ministers out after me."
"Oh no!" said Matilda. "I was not thinking of the sled; but you are very kind."
"I should like it," said the boy. "Yes, I am coming to the school; though I guess I've got an old fogy of a teacher. But the minister's a brick; isn't he?"
"He isn't much like _me_," said Matilda, laughing. "And the sort of bricks that I know, one is very much like another."
The boy laughed too, and asked if she didn't want to know his name?
Matilda glanced again at the frank face and nice dress, and said yes.
"My name's Norton Laval. What's yours?"
"Matilda Englefield. I am going this way."
"Yes, you go that way and I go this way, but we shall see each other again. Good-bye."
So at the corner they parted; and Matilda went home, thinking that in this instance at least the welcoming of strangers had paid well. For this was a pleasant new acquaintance, she was sure. She mounted the stairs with happy feet to her room; and there found Maria in a flood of tears. Maria had stayed at home from Sunday-School to-day.
"What is the matter, Maria?" her little sister inquired. "How's mamma?"
"I don't know! Oh, nothing will ever be well again. O Tilly, what will become of us!"
And here a storm of sobs and tears came on, in the midst of which Matilda's questions could get no attention. Matilda knew her sister, however, and waited.
"O Tilly!--it's so dreadful!"
"What?" said Matilda calmly.
"We haven't got anything to live upon. Anne and Letty have been telling me. We haven't. We are going to be as poor as--as poor as anybody. We have got nothing to buy anything with--nothing at all! Anne says so."
"Did mamma say so?"
"Mother's sick. No, Aunt Candy told the girls. It's true. Somebody or something that had mamma's money--to take care of--has gone off, or been ruined, or something; and we are ruined! There is nothing left at all for us to live upon. And that is what has been troubling mamma all these weeks; and now it is certain, and she knows all about it; and I guess it is that has made her sick. Oh, what shall we do?"
The turn of Matilda's head was inimitable and indescribable. It was not arrogance or affectation; it was perfectly natural to the child; but to a bystander it would have signified that she was aware Maria's views and statements were not to be relied upon and could not be made the basis of either opinion or action. She took off her things, and without another word made her way to the room of her elder sisters. They were both sitting there gloomily.
"How is mamma?"
"I don't know. I haven't seen her since dinner."
It was with a little of the same half-graceful, half-competent gesture of the head that Matilda applied herself to Let.i.tia.
"What is all this story, Letty, that Maria has been telling me?"
"How should I know? Maria tells a great many stories."
"I mean, about what has been troubling mamma."
"Maria had no business to tell you, and so trouble you with it."
"But is it true, Letty? Anne, is it true?"
"I suppose it is true--if you mean what she heard from me a little while ago. That is true."
"And mamma has lost all her money?"
"Every cent."
"When did you know it, Anne and Letty?"
"We have known it a day or two. It is true. It is all true, Tilly."
"What is mamma going to do, then?"