Charlotte blinked as the newcomer's face relaxed in her appealing smile, and she came forward and took Mrs. Whipp's hard, unexpectant hand in her soft grasp. "Such a fortunate girl I am, Mrs. Whipp," she said, "I'm sure I shall inconvenience you at first (this fact had been too plainly legible on the weazened face to be ignored), but I will try to make up for it—try my very best, and it may not be for long."
Charlotte mumbled some inarticulate greeting, falling an instant victim to the young creature's humility and loveliness.
"I look very queer, I know," continued Geraldine, "but you see I just came down out of the sky."
"She really did," put in Miss Upton. "She came in Mr. Barry's areoplane."
"Shan't I die!" commented Mrs. Whipp, continuing to stare with a pertinacity equal to Rufus Carder's own. "I believe it. She looks like an angel," she thought. Miss Mehitable watched her melting mood with inward amusement.
"What a beautiful cat!" said Geraldine. "She's tame, isn't she? Will she let you touch her?"
"Well," said Charlotte with a broader smile than had been seen on her countenance for many a day, "I guess they don't have cats in the sky." She lifted Pearl and bestowed her in Geraldine's arms.
The girl met the lazy, golden eyes rather timorously, but she took her.
"All the cats where—where I was—were wild—and no one—no one fed them, you see."
"Well, this cat is named Pearl," said Miss Mehitable. "She's Charlotte's jewel and you can bet she does get fed. How about us, Charlotte?" She turned to the waiting table. "I want to give Miss Melody her supper and put her to bed, and after she has slept twelve hours we'll get her to tell us how it feels to fly. Thank Heaven, she's here with no broken bones."