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PAGE 5

Where’s Nora?
by [?]

“Spake for yourselves!” exclaimed one of the listeners. “You do be like Father Ross, always pr’achin’ that we ‘d best want less than want more. He takes honest folks for fools, poor man,” said Mary Ann Duffy, who had no patience at any time with new ideas.

“An’ so she wint on the next two or free days,” said Patrick approvingly, without noticing the interruption, “being as quiet as you ‘d ask, and being said by her aunt in everything; and she would n’t let on she was homesick, but she ‘d no tark of anything but the folks at Dunkinny. When there ‘d be nothing to do for an hour she ‘d slip out and be gone wit’ herself for a little while, and be very still comin’ in. Last Thursday, after supper, she ran out; but by the time I ‘d done me pipe, back she came flying in at the door.

“‘I ‘m going off to a place called Birch Plains to-morrow morning, on the nine, Uncle Patsy,’ says she; ‘do you know where it is?’ says she. ‘I do,’ says I; ”t was not far from it I broke me leg wit’ the dam’ derrick. ‘T was to Jerry Ryan’s house they took me first. There’s no town there at all; ‘t is the only house in it; Ryan ‘s the switchman.’

“‘Would they take me to lodge for a while, I d’ know?’ says she, havin’ great business. ‘What ‘d ye be afther in a place like that?’ says I. ‘Ryan ‘s got girls himself, an’ they ‘re all here in the mills, goin’ home Saturday nights, ‘less there’s some show or some dance. There’s no money out there.’ She laughed then an’ wint back to the door, and in come Mickey Dunn from McLoughlin’s store, lugging the size of himself of bundles. ‘What’s all this?’ says I; ”t ain’t here they belong; I bought nothing to-day.’ ‘Don’t be scolding!’ says she, and Mickey got out of it laughing. ‘I ‘m going to be cooking for meself in the morning!’ says she, with her head on one side, like a cock-sparrow. ‘You lind me the price o’ the fire and I’ll pay you in cakes,’ says she, and off she wint then to bed. ‘T was before day I heard her at the stove, and I smelt a baking that made me want to go find it, and when I come out in the kitchen she ‘d the table covered with her cakeens, large and small. ‘What’s all this whillalu, me topknot-hin?’ says I. ‘Ate that,’ says she, and hopped back to the oven-door. Her aunt come out then, scolding fine, and whin she saw the great baking she dropped down in a chair like she’d faint and her breath all gone. ‘We ‘ont ate them in ten days,’ says she; ‘no, not till the blue mould has struck them all, God help us!’ says she. ‘Don’t bother me,’ says Nora; ‘I ‘m goin’ off with them all on the nine. Uncle Patsy ‘ll help me wit’ me basket.’

“‘Uncle Patsy ‘ont now,’ says Bridget. Faix, I thought she was up with one o’ them t’ree days’ scolds she ‘d have when she was young and the childre’ all the one size. You could hear the bawls of her a mile away.

“‘Whishper, dear,’ says Nora; ‘I don’t want to be livin’ on anny of me folks, and Johnny O’Callahan said all the b’ys was wishing there was somebody would kape a clane little place out there at Birch Plains,–with something to ate and the like of a cup of tay. He says ’tis a good little chance; them big trains does all be waiting there tin minutes and fifteen minutes at a time, and everybody’s hungry. “I ‘ll thry me luck for a couple o’ days,” says I; “’tis no harm, an’ I’ve tin shillings o’ me own that Father Daley gave me wit’ a grand blessing and I l’aving home behind me.”‘”