How It Happened eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 129 pages of information about How It Happened.

How It Happened eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 129 pages of information about How It Happened.

Following the child up the flight of stone steps, Van Landing stood at the top and looked across at the arriving cars, whose occupants were immediately lost to sight in the tunnel, as his new acquaintance called it, and then he looked at her.

Very blue and big and wonder-filled were her eyes, and, tense in the effort to gain the last glimpse of the gorgeously gowned guests, she stood on tiptoe, leaning forward eagerly, and suddenly Van Landing picked her up and put her on top of the railing.  Holding on to his coat, the child laughed gaily.

“Aren’t we having a good time?” Her breath was drawn in joyously.  “It’s almost as good as being inside.  Wouldn’t you like to be?  I would.  I guess the bride is beautiful, with real diamonds on her slippers and in her hair, and—­” She looked down on Van Landing.  “My father is in there.  He goes to ’most all the scrimptious weddings that have harps to them.  He plays on the harp when the minister is saying the words.  Do you think it is going to be a very long wedding?”

A note of anxiety in the child’s voice made Van Landing look at her more closely, and as she raised her eyes to his something stirred within him curiously.  What an old little face it was!  All glow and eagerness, but much too thin and not half enough color, and the hat over the loose brown curls was straw.

“I don’t think it will be long.”  His voice was cheerfully decisive.  “That kind is usually soon over.  Most of a wedding’s time is taken in getting ready for it.  Did you say your father was over there?”

The child’s head nodded.  “They have a harp, so I know they are nice people.  Father can’t give lessons any more, because he can’t see but just a teensy, weensy bit when the sun is shining.  He used to play on a big organ, and we used to have oysters almost any time, but that was before Mother died.  Father was awful sick after she died, and there wasn’t any money, and when he got well he was almost blind, and he can’t teach any more, and ’most all he does now is weddings and funerals.  I love him to go to weddings.  He makes the others tell him everything they see, and then he tells me, and we have the grandest time making out we were sure enough invited, and talking of what we thought was the best thing to eat, and whose dress was the prettiest, and which lady was the loveliest—­Oh, my goodness!  Look there!”

Already some of the guests were departing; and Van Landing, looking at his watch, saw it was twenty minutes past six.  Obviously among those present were some who failed to feel the enthusiasm for weddings that his new friend felt.  With a smile he put the watch away, and, placing the child’s feet more firmly on the railing, held her so that she could rest against his shoulder.  She could hardly be more than twelve or thirteen, and undersized for that, but the oval face was one of singular intelligence, and her eyes—­her eyes were strangely like the only eyes on earth he had ever loved, and as she settled herself more comfortably his heart warmed curiously, warmed as it had not done for years.  Presently she looked down at him.

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Project Gutenberg
How It Happened from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.