Cinderella eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Cinderella.

Cinderella eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Cinderella.

It was quite late, and he had recovered from his hunger, and only felt a sick tired ache at his heart.  His feet were heavy and numb, and he was very sleepy.  People passed him continually, and doors opened into churches and into noisy glaring saloons and crowded shops, but it did not seem possible to him that there could be any relief from any source for the sorrow that had befallen him.  It seemed too awful, and as impossible to mend as it would be to bring the crushed plaster into shape again.  He considered dully that his uncle would miss him and wait for him, and that his anger would increase with every moment of his delay.  He felt that he could never return to his uncle again.

Then he came to another park, opening into a square, with lighted saloons on one side, and on the other great sheds, with ships lying beside them, and the electric lights showing their spars and masts against the sky.  It had ceased snowing, but the air from the river was piercing and cold, and swept through the wires overhead with a ceaseless moaning.  The numbness had crept from his feet up over the whole extent of his little body, and he dropped upon a flight of steps back of a sailors’ boarding-house, and shoved his hands inside of his jacket for possible warmth.  His fingers touched the figure he had hidden there and closed upon it lightly, and then his head dropped back against the wall, and he fell into a heavy sleep.  The night passed on and grew colder, and the wind came across the ice-blocked river with shriller, sharper blasts, but Guido did not hear it.

“Chuckey” Martin, who blacked boots in front of the corner saloon in summer and swept out the bar-room in winter, came out through the family entrance and dumped a pan of hot ashes into the snow-bank, and then turned into the house with a shiver.  He saw a mass of something lying curled up on the steps of the next house, and remembered it after he had closed the door of the family entrance behind him and shoved the pan under the stove.  He decided at last that it might be one of the saloon’s customers, or a stray sailor with loose change in his pockets, which he would not miss when he awoke.  So he went out again, and picking Guido up, brought him in in his arms and laid him out on the floor.

There were over thirty men in the place; they had been celebrating the coming of Christmas; and three of them pushed each other out of the way in their eagerness to pour very bad brandy between Guido’s teeth.  “Chuckey” Martin felt a sense of proprietorship in Guido, by the right of discovery, and resented this, pushing them away, and protesting that the thing to do was to rub his feet with snow.

A fat oily chief engineer of an Italian tramp steamer dropped on his knees beside Guido and beat the boy’s hands, and with unsteady fingers tore open his scarf and jacket, and as he did this the figure of the plaster Virgin with her hands stretched out looked up at him from its bed on Guido’s chest.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Cinderella from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.