A Little Book for Christmas by Cyrus Townsend Brady
page 27 of 95 (28%)
page 27 of 95 (28%)
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"Are you Santa Claus?" the voice whispered in his ear. "Crackerjack" dropped the paper and turned like a flash, knife upraised in his clenched hand, to confront a very little girl and a still smaller boy staring at him in open-eyed astonishment, an astonishment which was without any vestige of alarm. He looked down at the two and they looked up at him, equal bewilderment on both sides. "I sought dat Santy Claus tame down de chimney," said the younger of the twain, whose pajamas bespoke the nascent man. "In all the books he has a long white beard. Where's yours?" asked the coming woman. This innocent question no less than the unaffected simplicity and sincerity of the questioner overpowered "Crackerjack." He sank back into a convenient chair and stared at the imperturbable pair. There was a strange and wonderful likeness in the sweet-faced golden-haired little girl before him to the worn, haggard, and ill-clad little girl who lay shivering in the mean bed in the upper room where God was not--or so he fancied. "You're a little girl, aren't you?" he whispered. No voice had been or was raised above a whisper. It was a witching hour and its spell was upon them all. "Yes." |
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