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PAGE 7

My Unwilling Neighbor
by [?]

“Mr. Warren,” said she, “you haven’t any way of getting breakfast, have you?”

“Oh, no,” said I.”My servants are up there in their cabin, and I suppose they are too much scared to come down. But I am going to town to see what can be done about my house, and will get my breakfast there.”

“It’s a long way to go without anything to eat,” she said, “and we can give you some breakfast. But I want to ask you something. I am in a good deal of perplexity. Our two servants are out at the front of the house, but they positively refuse to come in; they are afraid that your house may begin sliding again and crush them all, so, I shall have to get breakfast. But what bothers me is trying to find our well. I have been outside, and can see no signs of it.”

“Where was your well?” I gasped.

“It ought to be somewhere near the back of your house,” she said.”May I go through your hall and look out?”

“Of course you may,” I cried, and I preceded her to my back door.

“Now, it seems to me,” she said, after surveying the scene of desolation immediately before, and looking from side to side toward objects which had remained untouched, “that your house has passed directly over our well, and must have carried away the little shed and the pump and everything above ground. I should not wonder a bit,” she continued slowly, “if it is under your porch.”

I jumped to the ground, for the steps were shattered, and began to search for the well, and it was not long before I discovered its round dark opening, which was, as Miss Carson had imagined, under one end of my porch.

“What can we do?” she asked.”We can’t have breakfast or get along at all without water.”It was a terribly depressing thing to me to think that I, or rather my house, had given these people so much trouble. But I speedily, assured Miss Carson that if she could find a bucket and a rope which I could lower into the well, I would provide her with water.

She went into her house to see what she could find, and I tore away the broken planks of the porch, so that I could get to the well. And then, when she came with a tin pail and a clothes- line, I went to work to haul up water and carry it to her back door.

“I don’t want mother to find out what has happened to the well,” she said, “for she has enough on her mind already.”

Mrs. Carson was a woman with some good points in her character. After a time she called to me herself, and told me to come in to breakfast. But during the meal she talked very earnestly to me about the amazing trespass I had committed, and about the means which should be taken to repair the damages my house had done to her property. I was as optimistic as I could be, and the young lady spoke very cheerfully and hopefully about the affair, so that we were beginning to get along somewhat pleasantly, when, suddenly, Mrs. Carson sprang to her feet. “Heavens and earth!” she cried, “this house is moving!”

She was not mistaken. I had felt beneath my feet a sudden sharp shock–not severe, but unmistakable. I remembered that both houses stood upon slightly sloping ground. My blood turned cold, my heart stood still; even Miss Carson was pale.

When we had rushed out of doors to see what had happened, or what was going to happen, I soon found that we had been needlessly frightened. Some of the broken timbers on which my house had been partially resting had given way, and the front part of the building had slightly descended, jarring as it did so the other house against which it rested. I endeavo
red to prove to Mrs. Carson that the result was encouraging rather than otherwise, for my house was now more firmly settled than it had been. But she did not value the opinion of a man who did not know enough to put his house in a place where it would be likely to stay, and she could eat no more breakfast, and was even afraid to stay under her own roof until experienced mechanics had been summoned to look into the state of affairs.