Part 2 (1/2)

LOOKING FOR RUBY.

People who are sick are very quick to hear when anything is wrong, and as soon as the doctor opened the door of the sick-room, Ruby's mamma asked anxiously,--

”Is anything wrong with Ruby? Where is she?”

Just then the only possible explanation of her absence occurred to the doctor, and he answered,

”She is not in her bed, my dear, and I am afraid she has run away and gone over to Ruthy's to spend the night. You know she asked permission to stay all night the last time she went over there for supper, and I suppose she has made up her mind to go without permission. It is too bad in her to act this way and worry you. I will drive over after her right away, and bring her back in a few minutes.”

”I don't believe she would go all the way up to Ruthy's after dark,”

said her mother, in anxious tones. ”I am afraid something has happened to her, though I cannot imagine what it could be.”

”Don't think about it till I bring her back safe and sound,” said the doctor as he hurried away.

But it was a great deal easier to give this advice than to follow it.

Ruby's mamma could not help worrying about her little girl, and while naughty little Ruby was curled up in her blankets, sleeping as sweetly as a little bird in its nest, her mamma was listening to the wheels of the doctor's buggy, rolling out of the yard, with a beating heart, and wondering what had happened to the little girl who had gone to bed not two hours ago.

It did not take very long to drive over to Ruthy's house, and the doctor did not wait to hitch staid old Dobbin, but jumped out and ran up the steps to the house, anxious to know whether Ruby was really there. Although he was quite sure that she must be, yet he was impatient to satisfy himself.

”Is Ruby here?” were his first words, when Mr. Warren opened the door.

”Why, no,” Mr. Warren answered. ”I don't think she has been here to-day.”

”Oh, yes, she was here a little while this afternoon,” said Mrs. Warren coming to the door. ”Why, what is the matter, doctor? Is n't Ruby at home?”

”No, she went to bed all right, but a little while ago when her aunt came and went to look for her, she was gone,” said the doctor, feeling as if he did not know now where to turn to look for the little runaway; for where could she possibly be at that time of night, if she had not come over to visit her little friend? ”Where can the child be?”

”Is n't she in the house somewhere?” asked Mrs. Warren.

”No, we have looked through the house,” the doctor answered. ”I don't know what will become of her mother, if I have to go back without Ruby.

No one could have come into the house and stolen her, that is certain, and yet I cannot conceive where she could have gone to at this hour in the evening. This is dreadful.”

Neither Mr. Warren nor his wife could suggest any place to look for Ruby. It was certainly a very strange thing that she could have disappeared from her bed after dark, without any one knowing anything about it. The doctor got into his buggy again and started towards home, wondering what he should do when he had to tell Ruby's mother that her little girl could not be found.

If Ruby could have known what a heartache her father had, as he drove slowly homeward, dreading to take such sad news back with him, I am quite sure the little girl would have tried to be good, and not make those who loved her so anxious about her.

In the mean time, Ruby had stirred uneasily in her sleep, and at last when the owl who lived in the tall elm-tree close by, gave a long, mournful hoot, she awakened, and sat up, wondering, as she rubbed her eyes open, where she was.

The cool evening breeze fanned her face, and the stars looked down upon her, and all at once Ruby remembered where she had gone to sleep. In the very depths of her heart she wished that she was back again in her own little bed, with her head on her pillow, and the white spread drawn over her. It seemed so very, very desolate to be down here at the end of the garden all alone, with a long, dark walk before her if she should go back to the house; and she began to think that the Swiss Family Robinson had a better time than Robinson Crusoe, since they were all together, and poor Crusoe must often have been very lonely all by himself, before his man Friday came to live with him.

If Ruthy had only been there, Ruby thought she would have made a very good man Friday, but she was quite sure that nothing would have persuaded Ruthy to stay out of doors at night.

”I am not a little 'fraid-cat like Ruthy,” said Ruby to herself, trying to pretend that she was not at all lonely nor frightened. ”I would just as lief stay out here every night. I wonder what time it is. I guess it must be nearly morning. I was asleep just hours and hours, I think. I am dreadfully hungry, so it must be ever so long since I had my supper. I had better eat some provisions, maybe.”

Ruby was not really very hungry, but she wanted to be as much like the Swiss Family Robinson as possible, so she sat up and sleepily nibbled at some cookies.

”I don't think these are very nice cookies,” she said, as she tried to keep up the pretence that she was very hungry. ”I wish they were cocoanuts. They would be ever so much nicer.”

”I wish this was a big, tall cocoanut-tree,” Ruby went on. ”And that it was just full of cocoanuts, and that some monkeys had a nest in it, and would throw me down cocoanuts whenever I wanted one. It would hurt if they hit me on the head though. I guess I would have to live under another tree, so as to be sure the cocoanuts would n't drop on me. I wonder if monkeys live in nests. Of course they don't live in bird's-nests, but maybe they take sticks up into trees, and make little nests, and--and--”