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The Poor Little Rich Girl
by
“And let’s hurry,” urged the Man-Who-Makes-Faces. “It’s coming night in the City. And all these lights’ll be needed soon.”
Very soon, indeed. For even as he spoke it happened—with a sharp click. Instantly the pink glow was blotted out. As suddenly thick blackness shut down.
Except straight ahead! There Gwendolyn made out an oblong patch of sky in which were a few dim stars.
“Never mind,” went on the little old gentleman, soothingly. “Because we’re close to the place where there’s light all the time.”
“All the time?” repeated Gwendolyn, surprised.
“It’s where light grows.”
“Grows?“
“Well, it’s where candle-light grows.”
“Candle-light!” she cried. “You mean—! Oh, it’s where my fath-er comes!”
“Sometimes.”
“Will he be there now?”
“Only the Bird can tell us that.”
Then she understood Jane’s last gasping admonition—”Get you-know-what out of the way! A certain person mustn’t talk to it! If she does she’ll find—”
It was the Doctor’s hand that steadied her as she hurried forward in the darkness. It was a big hand, and she was able to grasp only two fingers of it. But that clinging hold made her feel that their friendship was established. She was not at all surprised at her complete change of attitude toward him. It seemed to her now as if he and she had always been on good terms.
The others were near. She could hear the tinkle-tankle of the Piper’s pipes, the scuff of Puffy’s paws, the labored breathing of the little old gentleman as he trudged, the heavy tramp, tramp of the Policeman. She made her bare feet travel as fast as she could, and kept her look steadily ahead on the dim stars.
And saw, moving from one to another of them, in quick darts—now up, now down—a small Something. She did not instantly guess what it was—flitting across that half-darkened sky. Until she heard the wild beating of tiny pinions!
“Why, it’s a bird!” she exclaimed.
“A bird?” repeated the Policeman, all eagerness.
“Must be the Bird!” declared the Man-Who-Makes-Faces, triumphantly.
It was. Even in the poor light her eager eyes made out the bumps on that small feathered head. And saw that on the down-drooping tail, nicely balanced, and gleaming whitely, was a lump.
Remembering what she had heard about that bit of salt, she ran forward. At her approach, his wings half-lifted. And as she reached out to him, pointing a small finger, he sprang sidewise, alighting upon it.
“Oh, I’m glad you’ve come!” he panted.
He was no larger than a canary; and seemed to be brown—a sparrow-brown. Prejudiced against him she had been. He had tattled about her—worse, about her father. Yet seeing him now, so tiny and ruffled and frightened, she liked him.
She brought him to a level with her eyes. “What’s the matter?” she asked soothingly.
“I’m afraid.” He thrust out his head, pointing. “Look.”
She looked. Ahead the tops of the grass blades were swaying this way and that in a winding path—as if from the passage of some crawling thing!
“She tried to get me out of the way!”
“Oh, tell me where is my fath-er!”
“Why, of course. They say he’s—”
He did not finish; or if he did she heard no end to the sentence. Of a sudden her face had grown almost painfully hot—as a great yellow light flamed against it, a light that shimmered up dazzlingly from the surface of a broad treeless field. This field was like none that she had ever imagined. For its acres were neatly sodded with mirrors.
The little company was on the beveled edge of the field. To halt them, and conspicuously displayed, was a sign. It read—
“‘Keep off the glass,'” read Gwendolyn. “And I don’t wonder. ‘Cause we’d crack it.”
“We don’t crack it, we cross it,” reminded the Man-Who-Makes-Faces. And stepped boldly upon the gleaming plate.
“My! My!” exclaimed the Piper. “Ain’t there a fine crop this year!”
A fine crop? Gwendolyn glanced down. And saw for the first time that the mirrored acres were studded, flower-like, with countless silk-shaded candles!
What curious candles they were! They did not grow horizontally, as she had imagined they must, but upright and candle-like. Above their sticks, which were of brass, silver and decorated porcelain, was a flame, ruddy of tip, sharply pointed, but fat and yellow at the base, where the soft white wax fed the fire; at the other end of the sticks, as like the top light as if it were a perfect reflection, was a second flame. These were candles that burned at both ends.