Maida's Little Shop eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 195 pages of information about Maida's Little Shop.

Maida's Little Shop eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 195 pages of information about Maida's Little Shop.

“The strange thing about the moon, though, was that it grew larger instead of smaller.  It rose higher and higher, growing bigger and bigger, until it was half-way up the curve of the sky.  Then it stopped short.  Klara watched it, her eyes bulging out of her head.  In all her experience she had never seen such a surprising thing.  And while she watched, another remarkable thing happened.  A great door in the moon opened suddenly and there on the threshold stood a little old lady.  A strange little old lady she was—­a little old lady with short red skirts and high, gayly-flowered draperies at her waist, a little old lady with a tall black, sugar-loaf hat, a great white ruff around her neck and little red shoes with bright silver buckles on them—­a little old lady who carried a black cat perched on one shoulder and a broomstick in one hand.

“The little old lady stooped down and lifted something over the threshold.  Klara strained her eyes to see what it was.  It looked like a great roll of golden carpeting.  With a sudden deft movement the little old lady threw it out of the door.  It flew straight across the ocean, unrolling as swiftly as a ball of twine that you’ve flung across the room.  It came nearer and nearer.  The farther it got from the moon, the faster it unrolled.  After a while it struck against the shore right under Klara’s window and Klara saw that it was the wake of the moon.  She watched.

“The little old lady had disappeared from the doorway in the moon but the door did not close.  And, suddenly, still another wonderful thing happened.  The golden wake lifted itself gradually from the water until it was on a level with Klara’s window.  Bending down she touched it with both her soft little hands.  It was as firm and hard as if it had been woven from strands of gold.

“‘Now’s my time to run away from my cross mother,’ Klara said to herself.  ’I guess that nice old lady in the moon wants me to come and be her little girl.  Well, I’ll go.  I guess they’ll be sorry in this house to-morrow when they wake up and find they’re never going to see me again.’

“Opening the window gently that nobody might hear her, she stepped on to the Wake of Gold.  It felt cool and hard to her little bare feet.  It inclined gently from her window.  She ran down the slope until she reached the edge of the sea.  There she hesitated.  For a moment it seemed a daring thing to walk straight out to the moon with nothing between her and the water but a path of gold.  Then she recalled how her mother had sent her to bed and her heart hardened.  She started briskly out.

“From Klara’s window it had looked as though it would take her only a few moments to get to the moon.  But the farther she went, the farther from her the doorway seemed to go.  But she did not mind that the walk was so long because it was so pretty.  Looking over the edge of the Wake of Gold, deep down in the water, she could see all kinds of strange sights.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Maida's Little Shop from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.