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CHAPTER V. A WILD MARCH MORNING.
 Josephine was half-asleep. A woman would have thought about her and sent her early to bed. “Uncle Joe” thought of nothing now save the array of common and names in the city directory. He counted and recounted the “Smiths,” “Smyths,” and “Smythes,” and down his figures in a notebook. He copied, also, any address of any Smith whose residence was in a locality which he considered suitable for relatives of his small guest. He became so absorbed in this study that an hour had passed before he remembered her, and the extraordinary quiet of her lively tongue.  
Josephine had and waked, dozed and waked, and dreamed many dreams during that hour of silence. Her tired little brain was all[64] confused with the pictures of tortured men gazing at her from the trunks of gnarled trees, and thoughts of a of uncles, each wearing eyeglasses, and sitting with bald head beneath a brilliant light. The light dazzled her, the dreams terrified her, and the little face that dropped at length upon the open page of the great folio was and .
 
“For goodness sake! I suppose she’s sleepy. I believe that children do go to bed early. At least they should. If I’m to be a correct sort of ‘uncle,’ even for one night, I must get her there. I wonder how!” considered the gentleman.
 
The first thing was to wake her, and he attempted it, saying:
 
“Josephine! Josephine!”
 
The child stirred uneasily, but on.
 
“Uncle Joe” laid his hand upon her shoulder rather gingerly. He was much more afraid of her than she could ever be of him.
 
“Miss Josephine! If you please, wake up.”
 
[65]She responded with a suddenness that startled him.
 
“Why—where am I? Oh! I know. Did I go to sleep, Uncle Joe?”
 
“I should judge that you did. Would you like to go to bed?”
 
“If you please, uncle.”
 
He smiled faintly at the odd situation in which he found himself, playing nurse to a little girl. A boy would have been less disconcerting, for he had been a boy himself, once, and remembered his childhood. But he had never been a little girl, had never lived in a house with a little girl, and didn’t know how little girls expected to be treated. He volunteered one question:
 
“If somebody takes you to your room, could you—could you do the rest for yourself, Josephine?”
 
“Why, course. I began when I was eight years old. That was my last birthday that ever was. Big Bridget was not to wait on me any more after that, mamma said. But she did. She loved it. Mamma, even, loved it,[66] too. And nobody need go upstairs with me. I know the way. I remember it all. If— May I say my prayers by you, Uncle Joe? Mamma”—
 
One glance about the strange room, one thought of the absent mother, and the little girl’s lip quivered. Then came a second thought, and she remembered her promise. She was never to cry again, if she could help it. By very fast and thinking about other things than mamma and home she would be able to help it.
 
Before he touched her shoulder to wake her, Mr. Smith had rung for Peter, who now stood waiting orders in the parting of the portière, and a sight such as he had never dreamed to see in that great, lonely house: Josephine kneeling beside his master’s knee, saying aloud the Lord’s Prayer and the familiar “Now I lay me.”
 
Then she rose, flung her arms about the gentleman’s neck, saw the moisture in his eyes, and asked in surprise:
 
“Do you feel bad, Uncle Joe? Aren’t you[67] happy, Uncle Joe? Can’t I help you, you dear, dear man?”
 
The “dear” man’s arms went round the little figure, and he drew it close to his lonely heart with a jealous wish that he might always keep it there. All at once he felt that he hated that other unknown, rightful uncle to whom this charming “parcel” belonged, and almost he wished that no such person might ever be found. Then he unclasped her clinging arms and—actually kissed her!
 
“You are me very greatly, Josephine. You are a dear child. Peter will see that your room is all right for the night. Tell him anything you need and he’ll get it for you. Good-night, little girl.”
 
“Good-night, Uncle Joe. Dear Uncle Joe. I think—I think you are just too sweet for words! I hope you’ll rest well. Good-night.”
 
She vanished through the curtains, looking back and kissing her finger-tips to him, and smiling trustingly upon him to the last. But the old man sat long looking after her before he turned again to his books, reflecting:
 
[68]“Strange! Only a few hours of a child’s presence in this silent place, yet it seems transfigured. ‘An angel’s visit,’ maybe. To show me that, after all, I am something softer and more human than the crusty old bachelor I thought myself. What would her mother say, that absent, perfect ‘mamma,’ if she knew into what strange hands her darling had fallen? Of course, my first duty to-morrow is to hunt up this mislaid uncle of little Josephine’s and restore her to him. But—Well, it’s my duty, and of course I shall do it.”
 
The great bed in the guest room was big enough, Josephine thought, to have held mamma herself, and even big Bridget without crowding. It was far softer than her own little white cot in the San Diegan cottage, and in its great depths the small traveller instantly fell asleep. She did not hear Peter come in and lower the light, and knew nothing more, indeed, till morning. Then she roused with a confused feeling, not quite realizing where she was or what had happened to her. For a few moments she lay still, expecting[69] mamma’s or big Bridget’s face to appear beneath the silken curtains which draped the bed’s head; then she remembered everything, and that in a house without women she was bound to do all things for herself.
 
“But it’s dreadful dark everywhere. I guess I don’t like such thick curtains as Uncle Joe has. Mamma’s are thin white ones and it’s always sunshiny at home—’xcept when it isn’t. That’s only when the rains come, and that’s most always the nicest of all. Then we have a dear little fire in the grate, and mamma reads to me, and big Bridget bakes and cooks the best things. We write letters to papa, and mamma sings and plays, and—it’s just lovely! Never mind, Josephine. You’ll be back there soon’s papa gets well again, and Uncle Joe was sort of cryey round his eyes last night. Mamma said I was to be like his own little daughter to him and take care of him and never make him any trouble. So I will.”
 
There was no prouder child in that city that morning than the little stranger within its[70] gates. She prepared her bath without aid, brushed her hair and dressed herself . It was true that her curls did not look much as they did after mamma’s loving fingers had handled them, and the less said about those on the back of her head the better. Nor were the buttons in the right places to match the buttonholes, and the result was that the little frock which had always been so tidy hung at a curious angle from its wearer’s shoulders.
 
But who’d mind a trifle like that, in a beginner?
 
Not Uncle Joe, who saw only the fair front of his visitor, as she ran down the hall to meet him, emerging from his own . Indeed, he was not now in a mood to observe anything save himself, though he answered Josephine’s gay “Good morning” with another rather grimly spoken.
 
The child paused, astonished. There were no longer tears in his eyes, but he looked as if a “good cry” would be relief. His face was distorted with pain, and every time he put one of his feet to the floor he as if it hurt[71] him. He seemed as dim and as the day outside, and that was beyond anything the little Californian had ever seen. The snow had fallen all the night, and the avenue was almost impassable. A few milk-carts forced their way along, and a man in a gray uniform, with a leather bag over his shoulder, was up each flight of steps to the above them and handing in the morning mail.
 
“Aren’t you well, Uncle Joe? Didn’t you rest well?” she inquired .
 
“No, I’ve got that wretched old gout again,” he snapped.
 
“What’s that?”
 
“It’s a horrible, useless, nerve-racking ‘misery’ in my foot. It’s being out in that storm yesterday, and this senseless heap of snow on the ground. March is supposed to be spring, but this beastly climate doesn’t know what spring means. Ugh!” he .
 
“Doesn’t it?” she asked, amazed by this statement.
 
“Hum, child. There’s no need of your repeating[72] everything I say in another question. I’m always cross when I’m gouty. Don’t me. Just enjoy yourself the best you can, for I don’t see how I’m to hunt up your uncle for you in such weather.”
 
Josephine thought he was talking queerly, but said nothing; only followed him slowly to the breakfast room, which Peter had done his best to make cheerful.
 
Mr. Smith sat down at table and began to open the pile of letters which lay beside his plate. Then he unfolded his newspaper, looked at a few items, and his coffee. He had forgotten Josephine, though she had not forgotten him, and sat waiting until such time as it should please him to ask the .
 
For the sake of her patient yet eager face, Peter took an unheard-of liberty: he nudged his master’s shoulder.
 
“Hey? What? Peter!” angrily demanded Mr. Smith.
 
“Yes, suh. Certainly, suh. But I reckon little missy won’t eat withouten it.”
 
It was almost as disagreeable to the gentleman[73] to be reminded of his duty, and that, too, by a servant, as to suffer his present physical . But he swallowed the lesson with the remainder of his coffee, and bowed his head, resolving that never again while that brown-eyed child sat opposite him should such a be necessary.
 
As before, with the conclusion of the simple grace, Josephine’s tongue and appetite were released from guard, and she commented:
 
“This is an awful funny Baltimore, isn’t it?”
 
“I don’t know. Do you always state a thing and then ask it?” returned Uncle Joe, crisply.
 
“I ’xpect I do ask a heap of questions. Mamma has to correct me sometimes. But I can’t help it, can I? How shall I know things I don’t know if I don’t ask folks that do know, you know?”
 
“You’ll be a very knowing young person if you keep on,” said he.
 
“Oh! I want to be. I want to know every single thing there is in the whole world. Papa used to say there was a ‘why’ always, and I like to find out the ‘whys.’”
 
[74]“I believe you. Peter, another chop, please.”
 
“With your foot, Massa Joe?” the butler.
 
“No. With my roll and fresh cup of coffee,” was the retort.
 
“Excuse me, Massa Joe, but you told me last time that next time I was to remember you ’bout the doctor saying ‘no meat with the gout.’”
 
“Doctors know little. I’m hungry. If I’ve got to suffer I might as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb. I’ve already eaten two chops. Another, Peter, and a juicy one.”
 
The order was obeyed, though the old negro knew that soon he would be reprimanded as much for yielding to his master’s as he had already been for opposing it.
 
“Doctor Mack knows everything,” said Josephine.
 
“Huh! Everybody belonging to you is perfect, I conclude,” said the host, with some .
 
“I don’t like him, though. Not very well. He gives me medicine sometimes, though[75] mamma says I don’t need it. I’m glad he’s gone to eat those philopenas. Aren’t you?”
 
“I don’t care a rap where he goes,” answered Uncle Joe .
 
Josephine opened her eyes to their widest. This old man in the soiled green dressing-gown, unshaven, frowning and in a horrible manner, was like another person to the handsome gentleman with whom she had dined overnight. He was not half so agreeable, and— Well, mamma often said that nobody in this world had a right to be “cross” and make themselves unpleasant to other people. She was sorry for poor Uncle Joe, and remembered that he had not had the advantage of mamma’s society and wisdom.
 
“Uncle Joe, you look just like one of them picture-men that was shut up in a tree trunk. You know. You showed them to me last night. I wish you wouldn’t make up such a face,” she observed.
 
Mr. Smith’s mouth flew open in sheer , while Peter tossed his hands aloft and rolled his eyes till the whites alone were visible.[76] In all his service he had never heard anybody dare to speak so plainly to his master, whose temper was none of the mildest. He what would follow, and was more astonished than ever when it proved to be a quiet:
 
“Humph! Children and fools speak truth, ’tis said. You’re a sharp-eyed, unflattering little lady, Miss Josephine; but I’ll try to control my ugly visage for your benefit.”
 
The tone in which this was said, rather than the words themselves, was a to the child, who immediately left her place, ran to her uncle’s side, and laid her hand pleadingly upon his arm.
 
“Please forgive me, poor Uncle Joe. I guess that was . I—I didn’t think. That’s a way I have. I say things first, and think them . I guess it isn’t a nice way. I’ll try to get over that. My! won’t that be fun? You trying not to make up faces, and I trying not to say wrong things. I’ll tell you. Have you got a little box anywhere?”
 
“Yes, I presume so. Go eat your breakfast, child. Why?”
 
[77]“’Cause. Did you know there was heathens?” she asked gravely.
 
“I’ve heard so. I’ve met a few.”
 
“You have? How !” came the swift .
 
“I didn’t find it so. Why, I say?” he inquired.
 
“Each of us that forgot and broke over must put a penny, a cent, I mean, in the box. It must be shut tight, and the cover gum-mucilaged down. You must make a hole in the cover with your penknife, and when you screw up your face, just for nothing, you put a penny in. I’ll watch and tell you. Then I’ll put one in when I say wrong things. I’ve a lot of money in my . Mamma and Doctor Mack each gave me some to buy things on the way. But there wasn’t anything to buy, and I can use it all, only for Rudanthy’s new head. Can we go buy that to-day, Uncle Joe?”
 
“No. Nobody knows when I’ll get out again, if this weather holds. The idea of a snowstorm like this in March. In March!” angrily.
 
[78]“Yes, suh,” responded Peter respectfully, since some reply seemed expected.
 
“Here, boy. Carry my mail to the library. Get a good heat on. Fetch that old soft shawl I put over my foot when it’s bad, and, for goodness sake, keep that child out of the way and , somehow.”
 
Josephine had gone to the window, pulled the draperies apart, and was looking out on a very different world from any she had ever seen. White was every object on which her eye rested, save the red fronts of the houses, and even these were festooned with snowy wreaths wherever such could find a resting place. The scene impressed and almost frightened her; but when, presently, it stopped snowing, and a boy ran out from a neighboring house, dragging a red sled through the drifts, her spirits rose. It had been one long, long week since she had exchanged a single word with any child, and this was an opportunity to be improved. She from the room, sped to the hall door, which stood ajar for Lafayette’s[79] convenience in clearing off the steps, and dashed outward.
 
Her feet sank deep into the cold, soft stuff, but she didn’t even notice that, as she cried, eagerly:
 
“Little boy! Oh, little boy! Come here quick! I want somebody to play with me.”
 
A moment’s pause of surprise, that a child should issue from “old Mr. Smith’s,” and the answer came cheerily back:
 
“Wish I could; but I’m going sledding.”
 
“I’ll go with you! I never went a-sledding in all my”—
 
The sentence was never finished, for somebody jerked her forcibly back within doors just as a great express crawled to a pause before the entrance.

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