She looked so kind and nice that Steve struggled to get up and further reassure her, but there seemed weights holding him down and a sharp pain thrust through and through his left arm.
“I am afraid you have broken your arm,” said the woman anxiously. “Nancy, you run right over to the store and get your father,” she said to the little girl. And Steve watched a white pinafore and flying yellow curls through a half-conscious dream mist, with a satisfied sense that he was at last in the new world of his visions.
And he was, for he had stumbled blindly through a bit of wood at the back of Mr. Follet’s, the station-master’s home, and just in time to rescue his little girl.
Mrs. Follet had heard the child’s screams, for the tree was in the edge of the wood only a little way from the house, and she reached the place just after Steve had fallen to the ground, having seen the child’s perilous position and Steve’s rescue. She had dampened her handkerchief in a near-by spring and worked over the boy until consciousness returned.
The little white pinafore was soon running back with Mr. Follet walking rapidly.
“What under the canopee does all this mean?” he asked excitedly as he came up, although Nancy 61 had told him about the accident. “Are you hurt much, boy?” he went on.
Steve heard what was said in a vague way, but he couldn’t reply and Mrs. Follet explained that she didn’t think the boy was fully conscious yet, and they would have to try to get him to the house.
So Mr. Follet, who was a small but very wiry man, soon had him up in his arms, while Mrs. Follet supported his head and together they carried him to the house and laid him down on a couch. Then Mrs. Follet quickly fixed him a hot drink and gave it slowly to him. With each swallow the sturdy boy felt stronger, and by the time he had taken a cup full, was able to talk freely.
“Where under the canopee did you come from anyway? You don’t live hereabouts, do you?” asked Mr. Follet, who was of the restless, nervous temperament which must know things at once.
“Now, Pa,” said Mrs. Follet, “you must get the doctor to set his arm before you ask him anything,” and Mr. Follet started off.