What Two Children Did eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 110 pages of information about What Two Children Did.

What Two Children Did eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 110 pages of information about What Two Children Did.

The first Sunday that the children were at the seashore was warm and beautiful.

Mrs. Rayburn and Mrs. Stevens went to church in the picturesque stone chapel built by a sea captain, as a memorial to his daughter who was drowned on the coast some years before this.

“We’ll be really better girls to stay at home some of the church time,” said Ethelwyn at breakfast, “we’ll go this evening with Miss Dorothy.”

“My dolls are needing a bath and their best clothes for Sunday-school,” said Beth to Ethelwyn, who had decided to go down on the beach; “and I can do it all comfy and nice while you are gone.”

So Ethelwyn and ’Vada went for a run on the beach, and mother Elizabeth, with a look of happy care on her face, and her beloved six dolls in her arms, came out on the porch, where she had already taken a basin of water, soap, a tiny sponge, and towels.

Directly she became aware of some one near her, and looking up saw a girl with dark eyes and short, straight hair watching the proceedings with much interest, her hands clasped behind her back.

“My name is Nan,” said the visitor as soon as she caught Elizabeth’s eye, “Who are you?  Is this your house?  We’ve just come, and mother is in bed with a headache, and father’s gone to church, so I’m roaming around seeking something to devour—­”

“Does that mean eat?” said Elizabeth, a scene in one of her picture books of lions devouring their prey coming into her mind.

“I think it’s what my father calls a figure of speech.  He’s a minister—­a clergyman, you know.  We’ve come down here to board, and he’s going to have the services in the Chapel of the Heavenly Rest.  Mother’s sick about always, so I have to roam around—­Say, I know a game; let’s baptize your children.”

“They don’t need it; they’re not born in sin—­”

“Everything is,” emphatically.  “Don’t try to teach a minister’s child things, for pity’s sake.  I’ll do the baptizing.  Come along.”

The rainwater barrel, half sunken in the ground, was at one of the rear corners of the house.

“We are not allowed to play in that, I think,” said Elizabeth uneasily.

“That doesn’t mean me, I’m older’n you.  Here, give me the doll without a wig.”

Down went the beloved “bawheady” with a thud that carried desolation to Beth’s tender heart.  Four others followed in quick succession before Beth could protest.  Then clinging to Arabella, she started to run.  Nan tried to run after her, but caught her foot on the barrel’s brim and straightway joined the five dolls.  Elizabeth opened her mouth to shriek, when in an opportune moment, a young man appeared on the scene, and speedily fished out Miss Nan, who dripped and coughed and choked; inarticulate, but evidently wrathy sounds wrestled for utterance in her throat.  At last she shook herself free.

“I’m perfectly degusted with this whole preformance,” she said as she went stalking off, dripping as she went.

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Project Gutenberg
What Two Children Did from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.