“I know, but you’ve put so much into the time you have had in camp, and I know that Mrs. Royall will be glad to have you in my place. You can keep on with your training just the same. I want to tell you about the girls.” She told something of the environment of each one—enough to help Laura to understand their needs. “And there’s Elizabeth Page, who is coming to-morrow,” she went on. “I always think of her as the Poor Thing. O, I do so hope the Camp Fire will do a great deal for her—she’s had so pitifully little in her life thus far. Her mother died when she was a baby, and she has been just a drudge for her stepmother and the younger children, and she’s not strong enough for such hard work. She’s never had anything for herself. The camp will seem like paradise to her if she can only get in touch with things—I’m sure it will.”
“I’ll do my best for her,” Laura promised.
“I know you will. And you’ll meet her when she comes, to-morrow?”
“Of course,” Laura returned.
There was no time to spare when they reached the station, but Miss Grandis’ last word was of Elizabeth and her great need.
Laura was at the station early the next day, and would have recognised the Poor Thing even if she had not been the only girl leaving the train at that place. Elizabeth was seventeen, but she might have been taken for fourteen until one looked into her eyes—they seemed to mirror the pain and privation of half a century. Laura’s heart went out to her in a wave of pitying tenderness, but the girl drew back as if frightened by the warm friendliness of her greeting.
All the way back to camp she sat silent, answering a direct question with a nod or shake of the head, but never speaking; and when, at the camp, a crowd of girls came to meet the newcomer, she looked wildly around as if for refuge from all these strangers. Seeing this, Laura, with a whispered word, sent the girls away, and introduced Elizabeth only to Mrs. Royall and Anne Wentworth.
“Another scared rabbit?” giggled Louise Johnson.
“Don’t call her that, Louise,” said Bessie Carroll. “I’m awfully sorry for the poor thing.”
Laura, overhearing the low-spoken words, said to herself, “There it is—Poor Thing. That name is bound to cling to her, it fits so exactly.”