The Fatal Glove by Clara Augusta
page 6 of 169 (03%)
page 6 of 169 (03%)
|
pocket full of pennies, and you shall have an orange, mother, and ever
so many nice things besides. See, mother dear!" He displayed a handful of coin, but she did not notice him. He looked at her through the gloom of the twilight, and a feeling of terrible awe stole over him. He crept to her side, and touched her cheek with his finger. It was cold as ice. A mortal pallor overspread his face; the pennies and the flowers rolled unheeded to the floor. "Dead! dead! My mother is dead!" he cried. He did not display any of the passionate grief which is natural to childhood--there were no tears in his feverish eyes. He took her cold hand in his own, and stood there all night long, smoothing back the beautiful hair, and talking to her as one would talk to a sick child. It was thus that Mat Miller found him the next morning. Mat was a little older than himself--a street-sweeper also. She and Arch had always been good friends; they sympathized with each other when bad luck was on them, and they cheered lustily when fortune smiled. "Hurrah, Arch!" cried Mat, as she burst into the room; "it rains again, and we shall get a harvest! Good gracious, Arch! is--your--mother--dead?" "Hush!" said the boy, putting down the cold hand; "I have been trying to warm her all night, but it is no use. Only just feel how like ice my hands are. I wish I was as cold all over, and then they would let me stay with my mother." "Oh, Arch!" cried the girl, sinking down beside him on the desolate |
|