Mother Elsie was not at home. The door to the Little House was wide

open, as it always is when cold or rain does not close it, and huge old

Tabby with one eye purred on the doorstep in the sun. A bird was nesting

in the wisteria vine above the door and her soft whirring bespoke an

interesting domestic event as near at hand. It did not in the least

disturb Tab, and I wondered at the harmony between traditional enemies

that I met on Mother Spurlock's very doorstep. I went in and drew myself

a drink of fresh cool water from the cistern at the back door, looked in

a tin box over the kitchen table and took three crisp tea cakes

therefrom. I picked up a half knitted sock from beside the huge split

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rocker in the shade of the gnarled old apple tree, which was a rooftree

in every sense of the word, for it crowded close against the door and

hovered in the whole tiny house. Just before I left I put all the loose

change I had in my white linen skirt pocket in an old lacquered tea

canister which had a slit in it cut with a can opener, and that stood

on the shelf of the old rock chimney in the low living room. I had

never heard that canister mentioned by Mother Spurlock and I don't know

how I knew that out of it came the emergency funds for many a crisis in

the Settlement. Then last I picked a blush rose from the monthly bloomer

trailing up and over the window and laid it on the empty, worn old Bible

on the wide arm of the rocker beside a pair of horn-rimmed spectacles.

Then I hesitated. I had been so sure of finding Mother Spurlock at home

and having her hunt up Martha for me that I found it difficult to adjust

myself to my first complexity of plans. And while I hesitated a resolve

came into my mind with the completeness of a spoken direction.

"She lives at the Last Chance and I'll go right down there and find

her," I said to myself, as I started along the peony-bordered path to

the front gate of the Little House, over which a huge late snowball was

drooping, loaded down with snowy balls that would hold their own until

almost the time for frost. At my own decision I had a delicious little

feeling of fear, which was at least justifiable when I thought of that

huge drunken figure wrestling with Billy in the darkness and whom I

knew to be the proprietor of the resort into which I had determined to

penetrate. Also, from my early youth I had heard Jacob Ensley and the

Last Chance spoken of in tones of dread disapproval. Before I should

become really frightened I hurried down the hill, past the squalid and

tumble-down mill cottages which I had never really seen before, where it

seemed to me millions of children swarmed in and around and about, and

at last arrived at the infamous social center of the Settlement.




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