The Miracle Man by Frank L. (Frank Lucius) Packard
page 61 of 266 (22%)
page 61 of 266 (22%)
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"I need very little," the Patriarch wrote back. "You must not worry about me. My garden supplies nearly all my wants, and there are many in the village, I am sure, who will help me with that when the snow is gone." "I am quite certain of that," Madison's pencil agreed. "But here in the house you cannot be alone--there are so many things to do, little things that I am sure you have not thought of--some one must cook for you, for instance. You will need a woman's hand here--have you no one, no relative that you can call upon?" The Patriarch lowered the slate from his eyes, shook his head a little pathetically, and began to write. "I do not think they would have cared to come, even if they were still alive; but they are all gone many years ago--except perhaps a grand-niece, and I do not know what has become of her." "Why, that's just the thing," wrote Madison. "Suppose we try to find her?" Again the Patriarch shook his head. "I am afraid that would be impossible. I do not even know that she is alive. I know only of her birth, and that is twenty years ago." "Even that is not hopeless," wrote Madison optimistically, and his face as he looked at the Patriarch was seriously thoughtful. "Where was she born?" |
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