<h3 align="center">Chapter VII</h3>
<p>Ellen had clung fast all the time to her doll, her bunch of pinks,
and her cup and saucer; or, rather, she had guarded them jealously.
“Where did you get all these things?” her aunt Eva had
asked her, amazedly, when she first caught sight of her, and then had
not waited for an answer in her wild excitement of joy at the
recovery of the child. The great, smiling wax doll had ridden between
Jim and Eva in the buggy, Eva had held the pink cup and saucer with a
kind of mechanical carefulness, and Ellen herself clutched the pinks
in one little hand, though she crushed them against her aunt's bosom
as she sat in her lap. Ellen's grandmother and aunt had glanced at
these treasures with momentary astonishment, and so had her mother,
but curiosity was in abeyance for both of them for the time; rapture
at the sight of the beloved child at whose loss they had suffered
such agonies was the one emotion of their souls. But later
investigation was to follow.</p>
<p>When Ellen did not seem to care for her hot milk liberally
sweetened in her own mug, and griddle-cakes with plenty of syrup, her
mother looked at her, and her eyes of love sharpened with inquiry.
“Ain't you hungry?” she said. Ellen shook her head. She
was sitting at the table in the dining-room, and her father, mother,
and aunt were all hovering about her, watching her. Some of the
neighbor women were also in the room, staring with a sort of
deprecating tenderness of curiosity.</p>
<p>“Do you feel sick?” Ellen's father inquired,
anxiously.</p>
<p>“You don't feel sick, do you?” repeated her
mother.</p>
<p>Ellen shook her head.</p>
<p>Just then Mrs. Zelotes Brewster came in with her
black-and-white-checked shawl pinned around her gaunt old face, which
had in it a strange softness and sweetness, which made Fanny look at
her again, after the first glance, and not know why.</p>
<p>“We've got our blessing back again, mother,” said her
son Andrew, in a broken voice.</p>
<p>“But she won't eat her breakfast, now mother has gone and
cooked it for her, so nice, too,” said Fanny, in a tone of
confidence which she had never before used towards Mrs. Zelotes.</p>
<p>“You don't feel sick, do you, Ellen?” asked her
grandmother.</p>
<p>Ellen shook her head. “No, ma'am,” said she.</p>
<p>“She says she don't feel sick, and she ain't hungry,”
Andrew said, anxiously.</p>
<p>“I wonder if she would eat one of my new doughnuts. I've got
some real nice ones,” said a neighbor—the stout woman
from the next house, whose breadth of body seemed to symbolize a
corresponding spiritual breadth of motherliness, as she stood there
looking at the child who had been lost and was found.</p>
<p>“Don't you want one of Aunty Wetherhed's nice
doughnuts?” asked Fanny.</p>
<p>“No; I thank you,” replied Ellen. Eva started suddenly
with an air of mysterious purpose, opened a door, ran down cellar,
and returned with a tumbler of jelly, but Ellen shook her head even
at that.</p>
<p>“Have you had your breakfast?” said Fanny.</p>
<p>Then Ellen was utterly quiet. She did not speak; she made no sign
or motion. She sat still, looking straight before her.</p>
<p>“Don't you hear, Ellen?” said Andrew. “Have you
had your breakfast this morning?”</p>
<p>“Tell Auntie Eva if you have had your breakfast,” Eva
said.</p>
<p>Mrs. Zelotes Brewster spoke with more authority, and she went
further.</p>
<p>“Tell grandmother if you have had your breakfast, and where
you had it,” said she.</p>
<p>But Ellen was dumb and motionless. They all looked at one another.
“Tell Aunty Wetherhed: that's a good girl,” said the
stout woman.</p>
<p>“Where are those things she had when I first saw her?”
asked Mrs. Zelotes, suddenly. Eva went into the sitting-room, and
fetched them out—the bunch of pinks, the cup and saucer, and
the doll. Ellen's eyes gave a quick look of love and delight at the
doll.</p>
<p>“She had these, luggin' along in her little arms, when I
first caught sight of her comin',” said Eva.</p>
<p>“Where did you get them, Ellen?” asked Fanny.
“Who gave them to you?”</p>
<p>Ellen was silent, with all their inquiring eyes fixed upon her
face like a compelling battery. “Where have you been, Ellen,
all the time you have been gone?” asked Mrs. Zelotes.
“Now you have got back safe, you must tell us where you have
been.”</p>
<p>Andrew stooped his head down to the child's, and rubbed his rough
cheek against her soft one, with his old facetious caress.
“Tell father where you've been,” he whispered. Ellen gave
him a little piteous glance, and her lip quivered, but she did not
speak.</p>
<p>“Where do you s'pose she got them?” whispered one
neighbor to another.</p>
<p>“I can't imagine; that's a beautiful doll.”</p>
<p>“Ain't it? It must have cost a lot. I know, because my
Hattie had one her aunt gave her last Christmas; that one cost a
dollar and ninety-eight cents, and it didn't begin to compare with
this. That's a handsome cup and saucer, too.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but you can get real handsome cups and saucers to
Crosby's for twenty-five cents. I don't think so much of
that.”</p>
<p>“Them pinks must have come from a greenhouse.”</p>
<p>“Yes, they must.”</p>
<p>“Well, there's lots of greenhouses in the city besides the
florists. That don't help much.” Then the first woman inclined
her lips closely to the other woman's ear and whispered, causing the
other to start back. “No, I can't believe she would,”
said she.</p>
<p>“She came from those Louds on her mother's side,”
whispered the first woman, guardedly, with dark emphasis.</p>
<p>“Ellen,” said Fanny, suddenly, and almost sharply,
“you didn't take those things in any way you hadn't ought to,
did you? Tell mother.”</p>
<p>“Fanny!” cried Andrew.</p>
<p>“If she did, it's the first time a Brewster ever
stole,” said Mrs. Zelotes. Her face was no longer strange with
unwonted sweetness as she looked at Fanny.</p>
<p>Andrew put his face down to Ellen's again. “Father knows she
didn't steal the things; never mind,” he whispered.</p>
<p>Suddenly the stout woman made a soft, ponderous rush out of the
room and the house. She passed the window with oscillating
swiftness.</p>
<p>“Where's Miss Wetherhed gone?” said one woman to
another.</p>
<p>“She's thought of somethin'.”</p>
<p>“Maybe she left her bread in the oven.”</p>
<p>“No, she's thought of somethin'.”</p>
<p>A very old lady, who had been sitting in a rocking-chair on the
other side of the room, rose trembling and came to Ellen and leaned
over her, looking at her with small, black, bright eyes through
gold-rimmed spectacles. The old woman was deaf, and her voice was
shrill and high-pitched to reach her own consciousness. “What
did such a good little girl as you be run away from father and mother
for?” she piped, going back to first principles and the root of
the whole matter, since she had heard nothing of the discussion which
had been going on about her, and had supposed it to deal with
them.</p>
<p>Ellen gasped. Suddenly all her first woe returned upon her
recollection. She turned innocent, accusing eyes upon her father's
loving face, then her mother's and aunt's. “You said—you
said—you—” she stammered out, but then her father
and mother were both down upon their knees before her in her chair
embracing her, and Eva, too, seized her little hands. “You
mustn't ever think of what you heard father and mother say,
Ellen,” Andrew said, solemnly. “You must forget all about
it. Father and mother were both very wrong and
wicked—”</p>
<p>“And Aunt Eva, too,” sobbed Eva.</p>
<p>“And they didn't mean what they said,” continued
Andrew. “You are the greatest blessing in this whole world to
father and mother; you're all they have got. You don't know what
father and mother have been through, thinking you were lost and they
might never see their little girl again. Now you mustn't ever think
of what they said again.”</p>
<p>“And you won't ever hear them say it again, Ellen,”
Fanny Brewster said, with a noble humbling of herself before her
child.</p>
<p>“No, you won't,” said Eva.</p>
<p>“Mother is goin' to try to do better, and have more
patience, and not let you hear such talk any more,” said Fanny,
kissing Ellen passionately, and rising with Andrew's arm around
her.</p>
<p>“I'm going to try, too, Ellen,” said Eva.</p>
<p>The stout woman came padding softly and heavily into the room, and
there was a bright-blue silken gleam in her hand. She waved a whole
yard of silk of the most brilliant blue before Ellen's dazzled eyes.
“There!” said she, triumphantly, “if you will tell
Aunty Wetherhed where you've been, and all about it, she'll give you
all this beautiful silk to make a new dress for your new
dolly.”</p>
<p>Ellen looked in the woman's face, she looked at the blue silk, and
she looked at the doll, but she was silent.</p>
<p>“Only think what a beautiful dress it will make!” said
a woman.</p>
<p>“And see how pretty it goes with the dolly's light
hair,” said Fanny.</p>
<p>“Ellen,” whispered Andrew, “you tell father, and
he'll buy you a whole pound of candy down to the store.”</p>
<p>“I shouldn't wonder if I could find something to make your
dolly a cloak,” said a woman.</p>
<p>“And I'll make her a beautiful little bonnet, if you'll
tell,” said another.</p>
<p>“Only think, a whole pound of candy!” said Andrew.</p>
<p>“I'll buy you a gold ring,” Eva cried
out—“a gold ring with a little blue stone in
it.”</p>
<p>“And you shall go to ride with mother on the cars
to-morrow,” said Fanny.</p>
<p>“Father will get you some oranges, too,” said
Andrew.</p>
<p>But Ellen sat silent and unmoved by all that sweet bribery, a
little martyr to something within herself; a sense of honor, love for
the lady who had concealed her, and upon whom her confession might
bring some dire penalty; or perhaps she was strengthened in her
silence by something less worthy—possibly that stiff-neckedness
which had descended to her from a long line of Puritans upon her
father's side. At all events she was silent, and opposed successfully
her one little new will to the onslaught of all those older and more
experienced ones before her, though nobody knew at what cost of agony
to herself. She had always been a singularly docile and obedient
child; this was the first persistent disobedience of her whole life,
and it reacted upon herself with a cruel spiritual hurt. She sat
clasping the great doll, the pinks, and the pink cup and saucer
before her on the table—a lone little weak child, opposing her
single individuality against so many, and to her own hurt and horror
and self-condemnation, and she did not weaken; but all at once her
head drooped on one side, and her father caught her.</p>
<p>“There! you can all stop tormentin' this blessed
child!” he cried. “Ellen, Ellen, look at Father! Oh,
mother, look here; she's fainted dead away!”</p>
<p>“Fanny!”</p>
<p>When Ellen came to herself she was on the bed in her mother's
room, and her aunt Eva was putting some of her beautiful cologne on
her head, and her mother was trying to make her drink water, and her
grandmother had a glass of her currant wine, and they were calling to
her with voices of far-off love, as if from another world.</p>
<p>And after that she was questioned no more about her mysterious
journey.</p>
<p>“Wherever she has been, she has got no harm,” said
Mrs. Zelotes Brewster, “and there's no use in trying to drive a
child, when it comes of our family. She's got some notion in her
head, and you've got to leave her alone to get over it. She's got
back safe and sound, and that's the main thing.”</p>
<p>“I wish I knew where she got those things,” Fanny
said. Looseness of principle as to property rights was not as strange
to her imagination as to that of her mother-in-law.</p>
<p>For a long time afterwards she passed consciously and uneasily by
cups and saucers in stores, and would not look their way lest she
should see the counterpart of Ellen's, which was Sèvres, and
worth more than the whole counterful, had she only known it, and she
hurried past the florists who displayed pinks in their windows. The
doll was evidently not new, and she had not the same anxiety with
regard to that.</p>
<p>No one was allowed to ask Ellen further questions that day, not
even the reporters, who went away quite baffled by this infantile
pertinacity in silence, and were forced to draw upon their
imaginations, with results varying from realistic horrors to Alice in
Wonderland. Ellen was kissed and cuddled by some women and young
girls, but not many were allowed to see her. The doctor had been
called in after her fainting-fit, and pronounced it as his opinion
that she was a very nervous child, and had been under a severe
strain, and he would not answer for the result if she were to be
further excited.</p>
<p>“Let her have her own way: if she wants to talk, let her,
and if she wants to be silent, let her alone. She is as delicate as
that cup,” said the doctor, looking at the shell-like thing
which Ellen had brought home, with some curiosity.</p>
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