"The men did not attempt any resistance to the arrest?" Violet said inquiringly.
"No; they saw it would be quite useless."
After a little more talk the captain said, "Now I think it will be best for us all to go to our beds again and try to sleep till the usual hour for rising."
"Papa, I feel so afraid," said Grace, holding tight to him as he would have laid her in the bed.
"My darling, try not to feel so," he said, caressing her; "try to believe that God will take care of you."
"Please ask him again, papa," she pleaded.
Then they all knelt while the captain asked in a few simple, earnest words that He who neither slumbers nor sleeps would be their shield, defending them from all evil, and that trusting in His protecting care they might be able to banish every fear and lay them down in peace and sleep.
"I am not afraid now, papa," Grace said, as they rose from their knees. "You may please put me in my bed, and I think I'll go to sleep directly, for I'm very tired."
"You will allow them to sleep past the usual hour, my dear, will you not?" asked Violet.
"Yes," he said, "I wish you, children, to sleep on as long as you can, and if possible make up all you have lost by the visit of the burglars; it will not matter if you take your breakfast later than usual by even so much as an hour or two."