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whether there were anybody in the house; and decided that there must be, for there was smoke coming out of the stove pipe piercing the roof of the wing at the rear.

      Mr. Lander brought himself under censure by venturing, without his wife's authority, to lean forward and tap on the door-frame with the butt of his whip. At the sound, a shrill voice called instantly from the region of the stove pipe, “Clem! Clementina? Go to the front dooa! The'e's somebody knockin'.” The sound of feet, soft and quick, made itself heard within, and in a few moments a slim maid, too large for a little girl, too childlike for a young girl, stood in the open doorway, looking down on the elderly people in the buggy, with a face as glad as a flower's. She had blue eyes, and a smiling mouth, a straight nose, and a pretty chin whose firm jut accented a certain wistfulness of her lips. She had hair of a dull, dark yellow, which sent out from its thick mass light prongs, or tendrils, curving inward again till they delicately touched it. Her tanned face was not very different in color from her hair, and neither were her bare feet, which showed well above her ankles in the calico skirt she wore. At sight of the elders in the buggy she involuntarily stooped a little to lengthen her skirt in effect, and at the same time she pulled it together sidewise, to close a tear in it, but she lost in her anxiety no ray of the joy which the mere presence of the strangers seemed to give her, and she kept smiling sunnily upon them while she waited for them to speak.

      “Oh!” Mrs. Lander began with involuntary apology in her tone, “we just wished to know which of these roads went to South Middlemount. We've come from the hotel, and we wa'n't quite ce'tain.”

      The girl laughed as she said, “Both roads go to South Middlemount'm; they join together again just a little piece farther on.”

      The girl and the woman in their parlance replaced the letter 'r' by vowel sounds almost too obscure to be represented, except where it came last in a word before a word beginning with a vowel; there it was annexed to the vowel by a strong liaison, according to the custom universal in rural New England.

      “Oh, do they?” said Mrs. Lander.

      “Yes'm,” answered the girl. “It's a kind of tu'nout in the wintatime; or I guess that's what made it in the beginning; sometimes folks take one hand side and sometimes the other, and that keeps them separate; but they're really the same road, 'm.”

      “Thank you,” said Mrs. Lander, and she pushed her husband to make him say something, too, but he remained silently intent upon the child's prettiness, which her blue eyes seemed to illumine with a light of their own. She had got hold of the door, now, and was using it as if it was a piece of drapery, to hide not only the tear in her gown, but somehow both her bare feet. She leaned out beyond the edge of it; and then, at moments she vanished altogether behind it.

      Since Mr. Lander would not speak, and made no sign of starting up his horse, Mrs. Lander added, “I presume you must be used to havin' people ask about the road, if it's so puzzlin'.”

      “O, yes'm,” returned the girl, gladly. “Almost every day, in the summatime.”

      “You have got a pretty place for a home, he'e,” said Mrs. Lander.

      “Well, it will be when it's finished up.” Without leaning forward inconveniently Mrs. Lander could see that the partitions of the house within were lathed, but not plastered, and the girl looked round as if to realize its condition and added, “It isn't quite finished inside.”

      “We wouldn't, have troubled you,” said Mrs. Lander, “if we had seen anybody to inquire of.”

      “Yes'm,” said the girl. “It a'n't any trouble.”

      “There are not many otha houses about, very nea', but I don't suppose you get lonesome; young folks are plenty of company for themselves, and if you've got any brothas and sistas—”

      “Oh,” said the girl, with a tender laugh, “I've got eva so many of them!”

      There was a stir in the bushes about the carriage, and Mrs. Lander was aware for an instant of children's faces looking through the leaves at her and then flashing out of sight, with gay cries at being seen. A boy, older than the rest, came round in front of the horse and passed out of sight at the corner of the house.

      Lander now leaned back and looked over his shoulder at his wife as if he might hopefully suppose she had come to the end of her questions, but she gave no sign of encouraging him to start on their way again.

      “That your brotha, too?” she asked the girl.

      “Yes'm. He's the oldest of the boys; he's next to me.”

      “I don't know,” said Mrs. Lander thoughtfully, “as I noticed how many boys there were, or how many girls.”

      “I've got two sistas, and three brothas, 'm,” said the girl, always smiling sweetly. She now emerged from the shelter of the door, and Mrs. Lander perceived that the slight movements of such parts of her person as had been evident beyond its edge were the effects of some endeavor at greater presentableness. She had contrived to get about her an overskirt which covered the rent in her frock, and she had got a pair of shoes on her feet. Stockings were still wanting, but by a mutual concession of her shoe-tops and the border of her skirt, they were almost eliminated from the problem. This happened altogether when the girl sat down on the threshold, and got herself into such foreshortening that the eye of Mrs. Lander in looking down upon her could not detect their absence. Her little head then showed in the dark of the doorway like a painted head against its background.

      “You haven't been livin' here a great while, by the looks,” said Mrs. Lander. “It don't seem to be clea'ed off very much.”

      “We've got quite a ga'den-patch back of the house,” replied the girl, “and we should have had moa, but fatha wasn't very well, this spring; he's eva so much better than when we fust came he'e.”

      “It has the name of being a very healthy locality,” said Mrs. Lander, somewhat discontentedly, “though I can't see as it's done me so very much good, yit. Both your payrints livin'?”

      “Yes'm. Oh, yes, indeed!”

      “And your mother, is she real rugged? She need to be, with such a flock of little ones!”

      “Yes, motha's always well. Fatha was just run down, the doctas said, and ought to keep more in the open air. That's what he's done since he came he'e. He helped a great deal on the house and he planned it all out himself.”

      “Is he a ca'penta?” asked Mrs. Lander.

      “No'm; but he's—I don't know how to express it—he likes to do every kind of thing.”

      “But he's got some business, ha'n't he?” A shadow of severity crept over Mrs. Lander's tone, in provisional reprehension of possible shiftlessness.

      “Yes'm. He was a machinist at the Mills; that's what the doctas thought didn't agree with him. He bought a piece of land he'e, so as to be in the pine woods, and then we built this house.”

      “When did you say you came?”

      “Two yea's ago, this summa.”

      “Well! What did you do befoa you built this house?”

      “We camped the first summa.”

      “You camped? In a tent?”

      “Well, it was pahtly a tent, and pahtly bank.”

      “I should have thought you would have died.”

      The girl laughed. “Oh, no, we all kept fast-rate. We slept in the tents--we had two—and we cooked in the shanty.” She smiled at the notion in adding, “At fast the neighbas thought we we'e Gipsies; and the summa folks thought we were Indians, and wanted to get baskets of us.”

      Mrs. Lander did not know what to think, and she asked, “But didn't it almost perish you, stayin' through the winter in an unfinished house?”

      “Well, it was pretty cold. But it was so dry, the air was, and the woods kept the wind off nicely.”

      The

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