Hetty Gray | Page 6

Rosa Mulholland
said the little girl complacently. "Have you got
a house too?"
"A splendid large house, Hetty," said Mrs. Kane. "You never saw such
a house."
"Is it bigger than the post-office?" said Hetty doubtingly.
"Bigger far."
"Bigger than the forge?"
"Don't be foolish, child, and stop your biggers," said Mrs. Kane; "Mrs.
Rushton's house is the size of the church and more."
Hetty winked with astonishment, and she lay silent for some time, till at
last she said:
"And do you sit in the pulpit?"
Mrs. Rushton laughed more than she was accustomed to laugh at Lady
Harriet Beaton's comic stories. This child's prattle was amusing to her.
"And do you have grave-stones growing round your door?" persisted
Hetty.
"There, ma'am!" cried Mrs. Kane, "she'll worry you with questions if
you give her a bit of encouragement. She'll think of things that'll put

you wild for an answer, so she will. John and I give her up."
Mrs. Rushton was not at all inclined to give her up, however, for she
kept coming day after day to visit the little patient. Hetty became fond
of her pleasant visitor, and watched eagerly for her arrival in the long
afternoons when the flies buzzed so noisily in the small cottage
window-panes, and the child found it hard to lie still and hear the
voices of the village children shouting and laughing at their play in the
distance. As soon as Mrs. Rushton's bright eyes were seen in the
doorway, and her gay dress fluttering across the threshold, Hetty would
stretch out her one little hand in welcome to the delightful visitor, and
laugh to see all the pretty presents that were quickly strewn around her
on the bed. After spending an afternoon with the child, Mrs. Rushton
often went on to Wavertree Hall and finished the evening there with her
brother's family. Mr. and Mrs. Enderby were greatly astonished to find
how completely their lively sister had interested herself in the village
foundling.
"Take care you do not spoil her," said Mr. Enderby.
Mrs. Rushton shrugged her shoulders.
"I can never please you," she said. "One would suppose I had found a
harmless amusement this time at least, and yet you do not approve."
"I do approve," said her brother, "up to a certain point. I only warn you
not to go too far and make the child unhappy by over-petting her. In a
few weeks hence you will have forgotten her existence, and then the
little thing will be disappointed."
"But I have no intention of forgetting her in a few weeks," said Mrs.
Rushton indignantly.
"No; you have no intention--" said Mr. Enderby.
"You certainly are a most unsympathetic person," said Mrs. Rushton;
and she went away feeling herself much ill-used, and firmly believing
herself to be the only kind-hearted member of her family.
"After all, William," said Mrs. Enderby to her husband, "you ought not
to be too hard upon Amy, for you see she has given up talking of going
abroad with Lady Harriet."
"True; I have noticed that. Yet I fear she will not relinquish one folly
without falling into another."
"Her present whim is at all events an amiable one," said Mrs. Enderby
gently. "Let us hope no harm may come of it.'

"I should think it all most natural and right if any other woman than
Amy were in question," said Mr. Enderby; "but one never knows to
what extravagant lengths she will go."
The warnings of her brother had the effect of making Mrs. Rushton still
more eager in her attendance on the child, and a few days after she had
been "lectured" by him, as she put it to herself, she astonished good
Mrs. Kane by saying:
"I think she is quite fit to be moved now, Mrs. Kane, and the doctor
says so. I am going to take her home with me for a week for change of
air."
"Laws, ma'am, you never mean it!"
"But I do mean it. I am going to fatten her up and finish her cure."
"Well, ma'am, I'm sure you are the kindest of the kind. To think of you
troubling yourself and putting yourself out, and all for our little Hetty."
"That is my affair," said Mrs. Rushton laughing; "I don't think a mite
like that will disturb my household very much. Just you pack her up,
and I will carry her off with me to-morrow at three."
The next day the lady carried off her prize, greatly delighted to think of
how shocked her brother would be when he heard of her new "folly."
As soon as she had introduced Hetty to all her dogs, and cats, and
rabbits, Mrs. Rushton went to her desk and wrote a note to her
sister-in-law inviting the entire Wavertree
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