<h3 align="center">Chapter III</h3>
<p>By the next morning all the city was in a commotion over little
Ellen's disappearance. Woods on the outskirts were being searched,
ponds were being dragged, posters with a stare of dreadful meaning in
large characters of black and white were being pasted all over the
fences and available barns, and already three of the local editors
had been to the Brewster house to obtain particulars and photographs
of the missing child for reproduction in the city papers.</p>
<p>The first train from Boston brought two reporters representing
great dailies.</p>
<p>Fanny Brewster, white-cheeked, with the rasped redness of tears
around her eyes and mouth, clad in her blue calico wrapper, received
them in her best parlor. Eva had made a fire in the best parlor stove
early that morning. “Folks will be comin' in all day, I
expect,” said she, speaking with nervous catches of her breath.
Ever since the child had been missed, Eva's anxiety had driven her
from point to point of unrest as with a stinging lash. She had pelted
bareheaded down the road and up the road; she had invaded all the
neighbors' houses, insisting upon looking through their farthest and
most unlikely closets; she had even penetrated to the woods, and
joined wild-eyed the groups of peering workers on the shore of the
nearest pond. That she could not endure long, so she had rushed home
to her sister, who was either pacing her sitting-room with
inarticulate murmurs and wails of distress in the sympathizing ears
of several of the neighboring women, or else was staring with haggard
eyes of fearful hope from a window. When she looked from the eastern
window she could see her mother-in-law, Mrs. Zelotes Brewster, at an
opposite one, sitting immovable, with her Bible in her lap, prayer in
her heart, and an eye of grim holding to faith upon the road for the
fulfilment of promise. She felt all her muscles stiffen with anger
when she saw the wild eyes of the child's mother at the other window.
“It is all her fault,” she said to
herself—“all her fault—hers and that bold trollop
of a sister of hers.” When she saw Eva run down the road, with
her black hair rising like a mane to the morning wind, she was an
embodiment of an imprecatory psalm. When, later on, she saw the three
editors coming—Mr. Walsey, of <cite>The Spy</cite>, and Mr.
Jones, of <cite>The Observer</cite>, and young Joe Bemis, of
<cite>The Star</cite>, on his bicycle—she watched jealously to
see if they were admitted. When Fanny's head disappeared from the
eastern window she knew that Eva had let them in and Fanny was
receiving them in the parlor. “She will tell them all about the
words they had last night, that made the dear child run away,”
she thought. “All the town will know what doings there are in
our family.” Mrs. Zelotes made up her mind to a course of
action. Each editor was granted a long audience with Fanny and Eva,
who entertained them with hysterical solemnity and displayed Ellen's
photographs in the red plush album, from the last, taken in her best
white frock, to one when she was three weeks old, and seeming weakly
and not likely to live. This had been taken by a photographer
summoned to the house at great expense. “Her father has never
spared expense for Ellen,” said Fanny, with an outburst of
grief. “That's so,” said Eva. “I'll testify to
that. Andrew Brewster never thought anything was too good for that
young one.” Then she burst out with a sob louder than her
sister's. Eva had usually a coarsely well-kempt appearance, her heavy
black hair being securely twisted, and her neck ribbons tied with
smart jerks of neatness; but to-day her hair was still in the fringy
braids of yesterday, and her cotton blouse humped untidily in the
back. Her face was red and her lips swollen; she looked like a very
bacchante of sorrow, and as if she had been on some mad orgy of
grief.</p>
<p>Mr. Walsey, of <cite>The Spy</cite>, who had formerly conducted a
paper in a college town and was not accustomed to the feminine
possibilities of manufacturing localities, felt almost afraid of her.
He had never seen a woman of that sort, and thought vaguely of the
French Revolution and fish-wives when she gave vent to her distress
over the loss of the child. He fairly jumped when she cut short a
question of his with a volley of self-recriminatory truths,
accompanied with fierce gesturing. He stood back involuntarily out of
reach of those powerful, waving arms. “Do I know of any reason
for the child to run away?” shrieked Eva, in a voice shrilly
hideous with emotion, now and then breaking into hoarseness with the
strain of tears. “I guess I know why, I guess I do, and I wish
I had been six foot under ground before I did what I did. It was all
my fault, every bit of it. When I got home, and found that Fan had
been making that precious young one a dress out of my old blue one, I
pitched into her for it, and she gave it back to me, and then we
jawed, and kept it up, till Andrew, he grabbed the dress and flung it
into the fire, and did just right, too, and took Ellen and run over
to old lady Brewster's with her; then Ellen, she see him cryin', and
it scared her 'most to death, poor little thing, and she heard him
say that if it wasn't for her he'd quit, and then she come runnin'
home to her mother and me, and her mother said the same thing, and
then that poor young one, she thought she wa'n't wanted nowheres, and
she run. She always was as easy to hurt as a baby robin; it didn't
take nothing to set her all of a flutter and a twitter; and now she's
just flown out of the nest. Oh my God, I wish my tongue had been torn
out by the roots before I'd said a word about her blessed little
dress; I wish Fan had cut up every old rag I've got; I'd go dressed
in fig-leaves before I'd had it happen. Oh! oh! oh!”</p>
<p>Young Joe Bemis, of <cite>The Star</cite>, was the first to leave,
whirling madly and precariously down the street on his wheel, which
was dizzily tall in those days. Mrs. Zelotes, hailing him from her
open window, might as well have hailed the wind. Her family
dissensions were well aired in <cite>The Star</cite> next morning,
and she always kept the cutting at the bottom of a little rosewood
work-box where she stored away divers small treasures, and never
looked at the box without a swift dart of pain as from a hidden sting
and the consciousness as of the presence of some noxious insect caged
therein.</p>
<p>Mrs. Zelotes was more successful in arresting the progress of the
other editors, and (standing at the window, her Bible on the little
table at her side) flatly contradicted all that had been told them by
her daughter-in-law and her sister. “The Louds always give way,
no matter what comes up. You can always tell what kind of a family
anybody comes from by the way they take things when anything comes
across them. You can't depend on anything she says this morning. My
son did not marry just as I wished; everybody knows that; the Louds
weren't equal to our family, and everybody knows it, and I have never
made any secret as to how I felt, but we have always got along well
enough. The Brewsters are not quarrelsome; they never have been.
There were no words whatever last night to make my granddaughter run
away. Eva and Fanny are all wrong about it. Ellen has been stolen; I
know it as well as if I had seen it. A strange-looking woman came to
the door yesterday afternoon; she was the tallest woman I ever saw,
and she took the widest steps; she measured her dress skirt every
step she took, and she spoke gruff. I said then I knew she was a man
dressed up. Ellen was playing out in the yard, and she saw the child
as she went out, and I see her stoop and look at her real sharp, and
my blood run kind of cold then, and I called Ellen away as quick as I
could; and the woman, she turned round and gave me a look that I
won't ever forget as long as I live. My belief is that that woman was
laying in wait when Ellen was going across the yard home from here
last night, and she has got her safe somewhere till a reward is
offered. Or maybe she wants to keep her, Ellen is such a beautiful
child. You needn't put in your papers that my grandchild run away
because of quarrelling in our family, because she didn't. Eva and
Fanny don't know what they are talking about, they are so wrought up;
and, coming from the family they do, they don't know how to control
themselves and show any sense. I feel it as much as they do, but I
have been sitting here all the morning; I know I can't do anything to
help, and I am working a good deal harder, waiting, than they are,
rushing from pillar to post and taking on, and I'm doing more good. I
shall be the only one fit to do anything when they find the poor
child. I've got blankets warming by the fire, and my tea-kettle on,
and I'm going to be the one to depend on when she's brought
home.” Mrs. Zelotes gave a glance of defiant faith from the
window down the road as she spoke. Then she settled back in her chair
and resumed her Bible, and dismissed the tall and forbidding woman
whom she had summoned to save the honor of her family resolutely from
her conscience. The editors of <cite>The Spy</cite> and <cite>The
Observer</cite> had a row of ingratiating photographs of little Ellen
from three weeks to seven years of age; and their opinions as to the
cause of her disappearance, while fully agreeing in all points of
sensationalism with those of young Bemis, of <cite>The Star</cite>,
differed in detail.</p>
<p>Young Bemis read about the mysterious kidnapper, and wondered, and
the demand for <cite>The Star</cite> was chiefly among the immediate
neighbors of the Brewsters. Both <cite>The Observer</cite> and
<cite>The Spy</cite> doubled their circulation in one day, and every
face on the night cars was hidden behind poor little Ellen's baby
countenances and the fairy-story of the witch-woman who had lured her
away. Mothers kept their children carefully in-doors that evening,
and pulled down curtains, fearful lest She look in the windows and be
tempted. Mrs. Zelotes also waylaid both of the Boston reporters, but
with results upon which she had not counted. One presented her story
and Fanny's and Eva's with impartial justice; the other kept wholly
to the latter version, with the addition of a shrewd theory of his
own, deduced from the circumstances which had a parallel in actual
history, and boldly stated that the child had probably committed
suicide on account of family troubles. Poor Fanny and Eva both saw
that, when night was falling and Ellen had not been found. Eva rushed
out and secured the paper from the newsboy, and the two sisters
gasped over the startling column together.</p>
<p>“It's a lie! oh, Fanny, it's a lie!” cried Eva.
“She never would; oh, she never would! That little thing, just
because she heard you and me scoldin', and you said that to her, that
if it wasn't for her you'd go away. She never would.”</p>
<p>“Go away?” sobbed Fanny—“go away? I
wouldn't go away from hell if she was there. I would burn; I would
hear the clankin' of chains, and groans, and screeches, and devils
whisperin' in my ears what I had done wrong, for all eternity, before
I'd go where they were playin' harps in heaven, if she was there. I'd
like it better, I would. And I'd stay here if I had twenty sisters I
didn't get along with, and be happier than I would be anywhere else
on earth, if she was here. But she couldn't have done it. She didn't
know how. It's awful to put such things into papers.”</p>
<p>Eva jumped up with a fierce gesture, ran to the stove, and crammed
the paper in. “There!” said she; “I wish I could
serve all the papers in the country the same way. I do, and I'd like
to put all the editors in after 'em. I'd like to put 'em in the stove
with their own papers for kindlin's.” Suddenly Eva turned with
a swish of skirts, and was out of the room and pounding up-stairs,
shaking the little house with every step. When she returned she bore
over her arm her best dress—a cherished blue silk, ornate with
ribbons and cheap lace. “Where's that pattern?” she asked
her sister.</p>
<p>“She wouldn't ever do such a thing,” moaned Fanny.</p>
<p>“Where's that pattern?”</p>
<p>“What pattern?” Fanny said, faintly.</p>
<p>“That little dress pattern. Her little dress pattern, the
one you cut over my dress for her by.”</p>
<p>“In the bureau drawer in my room. Oh, she
wouldn't.”</p>
<p>Eva went into the bedroom, returned with the pattern, got the
scissors from Fanny's work-basket, and threw her best silk dress in a
rustling heap upon the table.</p>
<p>Fanny stopped moaning and looked at her with wretched wonder.
“What be you goin' to do?”</p>
<p>“Do?” cried Eva, fiercely—“do? I'm goin'
to cut this dress over for her.”</p>
<p>“You ain't.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I be. If I drove her away from home, scoldin' because
you cut over that other old thing of mine for her, I'm goin' to make
up for it now. I'm goin' to give her my best blue silk, that I paid a
dollar and a half a yard for, and 'ain't worn three times. Yes, I be.
She's goin' to have a dress cut out of it, an' she's comin' back to
wear it, too. You'll see she is comin' home to wear it.”</p>
<p>Eva cut wildly into the silk with mad slashes of her gleaming
shears, while two neighboring women, who had just come into the room,
stared aghast, and even Fanny was partly diverted from her
sorrow.</p>
<p>“She's crazy,” whispered one of the women, backing
away as she spoke.</p>
<p>“Oh, Eva, don't; don't do so,” pleaded Fanny,
tremulously.</p>
<p>“I be,” said Eva, and she cut recklessly up the front
breadth.</p>
<p>“You ain't cutting it right,” said the other neighbor,
who was skilful in such matters, and never fully moved from her own
household grooves by any excitement. “If you are a-goin' to cut
it at all, you had better cut it right.”</p>
<p>“I don't care how I cut it,” returned Eva, thrusting
the woman away. “Oh, I don't care how I cut it; I want to waste
it. I will waste it.”</p>
<p>The other neighbor backed entirely out of the room, then turned
and fled across the yard, her calico wrapper blowing wildly and
lashing about her slender legs, to her own house, the doors of which
she locked. Presently the other woman followed her, stepping with the
ponderous leisure which results from vastness of body and philosophy
of mind. The autumn wind, swirling in impetuous gusts, had little
effect upon her broadside of woollen shawl. She had not come out on
that raw evening with nothing upon her head. She shook the kitchen
door of her friend, and smiled with calm reassurance when it was
cautiously set ajar to disclose a wide-eyed and open-mouthed face of
terror. “Who is it?”</p>
<p>“It's me. What have you got your door locked for?”</p>
<p>“I think that Eva Loud is raving crazy. I'm afraid of
her.”</p>
<p>“Lord! you 'ain't no reason to be 'fraid of her. She ain't
crazy. She's only lettin' the birds that fly over your an' my heads
settle down to roost. You and me, both of us, if we was situated jest
as she is, might think of doin' jest what she's a-doin', but we won't
neither of us do it. We'd let our best dresses hang in the closet,
safe and sound, while we cut them up in our souls; but Eva, she's
different.”</p>
<p>“Well, I don't care. I believe she's crazy, and I'm going to
keep my doors locked. How do you know she hasn't killed Ellen and put
her in the well?”</p>
<p>“Stuff! Now you're lettin' your birds roost, Hattie
Monroe.”</p>
<p>“I read something that wasn't any worse than that in the
paper the other day. I should think they would look in the well. Have
Mrs. Jones and Miss Cross gone home?”</p>
<p>“No; they are over there. There's poor Andrew coming now; I
wonder if he has heard anything?”</p>
<p>Both women eyed hesitatingly poor Andrew Brewster's dejected
figure creeping up the road in the dark.</p>
<p>“You holler and ask him,” said the woman in the
door.</p>
<p>“I hate to, for I know by his looks he 'ain't heard anything
of her. I know he's jest comin' home to rest a minute, so he can
start again. I know he 'ain't eat a thing since last night. Well,
Maria has got some coffee all made, and a nice little piece of steak
ready to cook.”</p>
<p>“You holler and ask him.”</p>
<p>“What is the use? Just see the way he walks; I know without
askin'.”</p>
<p>However, as Andrew neared his house he involuntarily quickened his
pace, and his head and shoulders became suddenly alert. It had
occurred to him that possibly Fanny and Eva might have had some news
of Ellen during his absence. Possibly she might have come home
even.</p>
<p>Then he was hailed by the stout woman standing at the door of the
next house. “Heard anything yet, Andrew?”</p>
<p>Andrew shook his head, and looked with despairing eyes at the
windows where he used to see Ellen's little face. She had not come,
then, for these women would have known it. He entered the house, and
Fanny greeted him with a tremulous cry. “Have you heard
anything; oh, have you heard anything, Andrew?”</p>
<p>Eva sprang forward and clutched him by the arm.</p>
<p>“Have you?”</p>
<div align="center">
<SPAN href="images/plimage2.jpg">
<ANTIMG src="images/plimage2.jpg" width-obs="445" height-obs="688" alt="Eva sprang forward and clutched him by the arm"></SPAN></div>
<p>Andrew shook his head, and moved her hand from his arm, and pushed
past her roughly.</p>
<p>Fanny stood in his way, and threw her arms around him with a wild,
sobbing cry, but he pushed her away also with sternness, and went to
the kitchen sink to wash his hands. The four women—his wife,
her sister, and the two neighbors—stood staring at him; his
face was terrible as he dipped the water from the pail on the sink
corner, and the terribleness of it was accentuated by the homely and
every-day nature of his action.</p>
<p>They all stared, then Fanny burst out with a loud and desperate
wail. “He won't speak to me, he pushes me away, when it is our
child that's lost—his as well as mine. He hasn't any feelings
for me that bore her. He only thinks of himself. Oh, oh, my own
husband pushes me away.”</p>
<p>Andrew went on washing his hands and his ghastly face, and made no
reply. He had actually at that moment not the slightest sympathy with
his wife. All his other outlets of affection were choked by his
concern for his lost child; and as for pity, he kept reflecting, with
a cold cruelty, that it served her right—it served both her and
her sister right. Had not they driven the child away between
them?</p>
<p>He would not eat the supper which the neighbors had prepared for
him; finally he went across the yard to his mother's. It seemed to
him at that time that his mother could enter into his state of mind
better than any one else.</p>
<p>When he went out, Fanny called after him, frantically, “Oh,
Andrew, you ain't going to leave me?”</p>
<p>When he made no response, she gazed for a second at his retreating
back, then her temper came to her aid. She caught her sister's arm,
and pulled her away out of the kitchen. “Come with me,”
she said, hoarsely. “I've got nobody but you. My own husband
leaves me when he is in such awful trouble, and goes to that old
woman, that has always hated me, for comfort.”</p>
<p>The sisters went into Fanny's bedroom, and sat down on the edge of
the bed, with their arms round each other. “Oh, Fanny!”
sobbed Eva; “poor, poor Fanny! if Andrew turns against you, I
will stand by you as long as I live. I will work my fingers to the
bone to support you and Ellen. I will never get married. I will stay
and work for you and her. And I will never get mad with you again as
long as I live, Fanny. Oh, it was all my fault, every bit my fault,
but, but—” Eva's voice broke; suddenly she clasped her
sister tighter, and then she went down on her knees beside the bed,
and hid her tangled head in her lap. “Oh, Fanny,” she
sobbed out miserably, “there ain't much excuse for me, but
there's a little. When Jim Tenny stopped goin' with me last summer,
my heart 'most broke. I don't care if you do know it. That's what
made me so much worse than I used to be. Oh, my heart 'most broke,
Fanny! He's treated me awful, but I can't get over it; and now little
Ellen's gone, and I drove her away!”</p>
<p>Fanny bent over her sister, and pressed her head close to her
bosom. “Don't you feel so bad, Eva,” said she. “You
wasn't any more to blame than I was, and we'll stand by each other as
long as we live.”</p>
<p>“I'll work my fingers to the bone for you and Ellen, and
I'll never get married,” said Eva again.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />