during
which she always declines to speak when spoken to.
Jane looks at her a second and then says in a playful manner, "Oh, it's all right, Esther, I
can guess what it was; what nonsense. I'll go and attend to my plants. Why, I declare it's a
quarter past eleven already, and I have got to comb my hair before dinner, too. Oh! my,
how time flies!"
So off Jane goes to her plants in the parlor, leaving Esther in the dining room and Olive
in the kitchen getting dinner ready as fast as she can.
Olive had just gone behind the kitchen door that leads into the yard to get another stick of
wood for the fire when she was startled by a scream; she feels instinctively that one of
her children is in danger, and she is right, for little George has just been saved from a
horrible death by Maud Weldon, their next door neighbor. The little scamp had managed
to crawl through the fence and get as far as the middle of the street, when Maud saw him,
and was just in time to prevent him from being run over by a heavy wagon drawn by a
pair of horses that were being driven at a breakneck pace past the house. Of course the
fair Maud screamed, young women generally do at such times; but she saved George all
the same. Her piercing shriek brought the stately Miss Sibley and her mother to the door
of their house, which is almost directly opposite Dan's, and also caused Mrs. Mitchell and
Mrs. Bell to become so nervous that they kept their children in the house for the rest of
the day, when they heard of the dangerous adventure George had had, for they both
arrived too late to witness the rescue. The watchfulness and care they both bestowed on
their little ones for the next week was so much time thrown away, however, for it so
happened that no more fast teams came through that particular street for about a month.
Well, after the brave blonde, Maud Weldon, had become the heroine of the hour, she
went into Dan's cottage with Esther and Jane, who both ran out when they heard the
scream. Olive had already taken her boy in, washed his little hands and face, put on his
clean over-dress, and was now holding him in her lap in the large rocking-chair. Maud
Weldon was in the parlor with Jane and Esther looking at the flowers and telling them
about her new beau, how handsome he was, and that she intended to marry him if he
asked her, winding up her conversation on the subject of beaux with the remark that she
was bound not to die an old maid, but was going to get married for she wanted to have a
house of her own to keep. And so the conversation ran on between the three girls in the
parlor until dinner was nearly ready, when Mrs. Hicks, Maud's aunt, called her and she
went home.
After dinner, Esther and Olive were washing the dishes in the kitchen and talking over
George's narrow escape, when Esther suddenly made up her mind to tell her sister what
she was about to do when Jane's rather unexpected return from the shop put an end to
their conversation. So after having put all the dishes away in the pantry, she told Olive if
she would promise not to tell anybody, not even Dan, she would tell her something that
must be kept a secret, because if it became known it might make people nervous and
could do no good.
"Very well," replied Olive, "wait until I get my sewing, then we will go into the parlor,
you can tell me all about it, and I promise that I won't tell."
So they went into the parlor. Esther sat in the rocking-chair and Olive on the sofa.
"Well, Olive," said Esther. "Now don't laugh, for it is about a dream."
"A dream!" exclaimed Olive. "A dream! go on, let me hear it."
"Well," began Esther, "last night I sat for two hours on the front step looking at the stars.
After I came in I went down into the cellar in my stocking feet and drank about a pint of
butter-milk and a large rat ran between my feet; then Jane and I went to our room, shut
the door, said our prayers and went to bed, and in a short time we both fell asleep, and I
dreamt that when I got up in the morning every thing and every body was changed except
myself. This cottage instead of being yellow was green; you, Dan, Jane, brother William,
John Teed, Willie and George, all had heads like bears,
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