CHAPTER II.
When the procession of children had pa.s.sed the little cottage at the angle of the roads, the old man who leaned on his staff at the gate turned about and stepped to the porch.
"Did the boy see them?--did he see the children?" said the young woman who held the child by the hand.
"I mak" na doot," said the old man.
He stooped to the little one and held out one long, withered finger. The soft baby hand closed on it instantly.
"Did he laugh? I thought he laughed," said the young woman.
A bright smile played on her lips.
"Maybe so, la.s.s."
"Ralphie has never seen the children before, father. Didn"t he look frightened--just a little frightened--at first, you know? I thought he crept behind my gown."
"Maybe, maybe."
The little one had dropped the hand of his young mother, and, still holding the bony finger of his grandfather, he toddled beside him into the house.
Very cool and sweet was the kitchen, with white-washed walls and hard earthen floor. A table and a settle stood by the window, and a dresser that was an armory of bright pewter dishes, trenchers, and piggins crossed the opposite wall.
"Nay, but sista here, laal man," said the old charcoal-burner, and he dived into a great pocket at his side.
"Have you brought it? Is it the kitten? Oh, dear, let the boy see it!"
A kitten came out of the old man"s pocket, and was set down on the rug at the hearth. The timid creature sat dazed, then raised itself on its hind legs and mewed.
"Where"s Ralphie? Is he watching it, father? What is he doing?"
The little one had dropped on hands and knees before the kitten, and was gazing up into its face.
The mother leaned over him with a face that would have beamed with sunshine if the sun of sight had not been missing.
"Is he looking? Doesn"t he want to coddle it?"
The little chap had pushed his nose close to the nose of the kitten, and was prattling to it in various inarticulate noises.
"Boo--loo--lal-la--mamma."
"Isn"t he a darling, father?"
"It"s a winsome wee thing," said the old man, still standing with drooping head over the group on the hearth.
The mother"s face saddened, and she turned away. Then from the opposite side of the kitchen, where she was making pretense to take plates from a plate-rack, there came the sound of suppressed sobs. The old man"s eyes followed her.
"Nay, la.s.s; let"s have a sup of broth," he said in a tone that carried another message.
The young woman put plates and a bowl of broth on the table.
"To think that I can never see my own child, and everybody else can see him!" she said, and then there was another bout of tears.
The charcoal-burner supped at his broth in silence. A glistening bead rolled slowly down his wizened cheek, and the interview on the hearth went on without interruption:
"Mew--mew--mew." "Boo--loo--lal-la--mamma."
There was a foot on the gravel in front.
"How fend ye, Mattha?" said a voice from without.
"Come thy ways, Gubblum," answered the old man.
Gubblum Oglethorpe entered, dressed differently than of old. He wore a suit of canvas stained deeply with iron ore.
"I"s thinking maybe Mercy will let me warm up my poddish," said Gubblum.
"And welcome," said Mercy, and took down from the dresser a saucepan and porridge thivel. "I"ll make it for you while father sups his broth."
"Nay, la.s.s, you"re as thrang as an auld peat wife, I"s warn. I"ll mak"
it myself. I"s rather partic"lar about my poddish, forby. Dusta know how many faults poddish may have? They may be sour, sooty, sodden, and savorless, soat, welsh, brocken, and lumpy--and that"s mair nor enough, thoo knows."
Gubblum had gone down on the hearth-rug.
"Why, and here"s the son and heir," he said. "Nay, laddie, mind my claes--they"ll dirty thy brand-new brat for thee."
"Is he growing, Gubblum?"
"Growing?--amain."
"And his eyes--are they changing color?--going brown?"
"Maybe--I"ll not be for saying nay."
"Is he--is he very like me?"
"Nay--weel--nay--I"s fancying I see summat of the stranger in the laal chap at whiles."
The young mother turned her head. Gubblum twisted to where Matthew sat.
"That man and all his raggabrash are raking about this morning. It caps all, it does, for sure."
The old charcoal-burner did not answer. He paused with the spoon half raised, glanced at Mercy, and then went on with his broth.
"Hasta heard of the lang yammer in the papers about yon matter?" said Gubblum.
"Nay," said Matthew, "I hears nowt of the papers."