A TIMELY RESCUE
“I will save her if I can,” said Grant
to himself.
The task, however, was not an easy
one. The drunken man was tall and strongly made,
and his condition did not appear to interfere with
his locomotion. He was evidently half crazed with
drink, and his pursuit of the young girl arose probably
from a blind impulse; but it was likely to be none
the less serious for her. Grant saw at once that
he was far from being a match for the drunkard in physical
strength. If he had been timid, a regard for his
personal safety would have led him to keep aloof.
But he would have despised himself if he had not done
what he could for the girl—stranger though
she was—who was in such peril.
It chanced that Grant had cut a stout
stick to help him on his way. This suggested
his plan of campaign. He ran sideways toward the
pursuer, and thrust his stick between his legs, tripping
him up. The man fell violently forward, and lay
as if stunned, breathing heavily. Grant was alarmed
at first, fearing that he might be seriously hurt,
but a glance assured him that his stupor was chiefly
the result of his potations.
Then he hurried to overtake the girl,
who, seeing what had taken place, had paused in her
flight.
“Don’t be frightened,”
said Grant. “The man can’t get up
at present. I will see you home if you will tell
me where you live.”
“I am boarding at Mrs. Granger’s,
quarter of a mile back, mamma and I,” answered
the girl, the color, temporarily banished by fright,
returning to her cheeks.
“Where did you fall in with this man?”
inquired Grant.
“I was taking a walk,”
answered the girl, “and overtook him. I
did not take much notice of him at first, and was
not aware of his condition till he began to run after
me. Then I was almost frightened to death, and
I don’t think I ever ran so fast in my life.”
“You were in serious danger.
He was fast overtaking you.”
“I saw that he was, and I believe
I should have dropped if you had not come up and saved
me. How brave you were!”
Grant colored with pleasure, though
he disclaimed the praise.
“Oh, it was nothing!”
he said, modestly. “But we had better start
at once, for he may revive.”
“Oh, let us go then,”
exclaimed the girl in terror, and, hardly knowing
what she did, she seized Grant’s arm. “See,
he is beginning to stir. Do come quickly!”
Clinging to Grant’s arm, the
two hastened away, leaving the inebriate on the ground.
Grant now had leisure to view more
closely the girl he had rescued. She was a very
pretty girl, a year or two younger than himself, with
a bright, vivacious manner, and her young rescuer thought
her very attractive.
“Do you live round here?” she asked.
“I live in Colebrook, the village
close by. I was walking from Somerset.”
“I should like to know the name
of the one who has done me so great a service.”
“We will exchange names, if
you like,” said Grant, smiling. “My
name is Grant Thornton. I am the son of Rev.
John Thornton, who is minister in Colebrook.”
“So you are a minister’s
son. I have always heard that minister’s
sons are apt to be wild,” said the girl, smiling
mischievously.
“I am an exception,” said Grant, demurely.
“I am ready to believe it,”
returned his companion. “My name is Carrie
Clifton; my mother is a minister’s daughter,
so I have a right to think well of ministers’
families.”
“How long have you been boarding
in this neighborhood, Miss Carrie?”
“Only a week. I am afraid
I shan’t dare to stay here any longer.”
“It is not often you would meet
with such an adventure as this. I hope you won’t
allow it to frighten you away.”
“Do you know that drunken man? Does he
live nearby?”
“I think he is a stranger—a
tramp. I never saw him before, and I know almost
everybody who lives about here.”
“I am glad he doesn’t live here.”
“He will probably push on his
way and not come this way again during the summer.”
“I hope you are right.
He might try to revenge himself on you for tripping
him up.”
“I don’t think he saw
me to recognize me. He was so drunk that he didn’t
know what he was about. When he gets over his
intoxication he probably won’t remember anything
that has happened.”
By this time they had reached the
gate of the farmhouse where Carrie was boarding, and
Grant prepared to leave her.
“I think you are safe now,” he said.
“Oh, but I shan’t let
you go yet,” said the girl. “You must
come in and see mother.”
Grant hesitated, but he felt that
he should like to meet the mother of a young lady
who seemed to him so attractive, and he allowed himself
to be led into the yard. Mrs. Clifton was sitting
in a rustic chair under a tree behind the house.
There Grant and his companion found her. Carrie
poured forth her story impetuously, and then drawing
Grant forward, indicated him as her rescuer.
Her mother listened with natural alarm,
shuddering at the peril from which her daughter had
so happily escaped.
“I cannot tell how grateful
I am to you for the service you have done my daughter,”
she said, warmly. “You are a very brave
boy. There is not one in ten who would have had
the courage to act as you did.”
“You praise me more than I deserve,
Mrs. Clifton. I saw the man was drunk, and I
did not really run much risk in what I did. I
am very thankful that I was able to be of service
to Miss Carrie.”
“It is most fortunate that you
were at hand. My daughter might have been killed.”
“What do you think, mother?
He is a minister’s son,” said Carrie,
vivaciously.
“That certainly is no objection
in my eyes,” said Mrs. Clifton, smiling, “for
I am a minister’s daughter. Where does your
father preach?”
“His church is only a mile distant, in the village.”
“I shall hear him, then, next
Sunday. Last Sunday Carrie and I were both tired,
and remained at home, but I have always been accustomed
to go to church somewhere.”
“Papa will be here next Sunday,”
said Carrie. “He can only come Saturday
night on account of his business.”
“Does he do business in New York?” asked
Grant.
“Yes; his store is on Broadway.”
“We live on Madison Avenue,
and whenever you are in the city we shall be very
glad to have you call,” said Mrs. Clifton, graciously.
“Thank you; I should like to
call very much,” answered Grant, who was quite
sincere in what he said. “But I don’t
often go to New York.”
“Perhaps you will get a place
there some time,” suggested Carrie.
“I should like to,” replied Grant.
“Then your father does not propose
to send you to college?” It was Mrs. Clifton
who said this.
“He wishes me to go, but I think
I ought to go to work to help him. He has two
other children besides me.”
“Is either one a girl?” asked Carrie.
“Yes; I have a sister of thirteen, named Mary.”
“I wish you would bring her
here to see me,” said Carrie. “I haven’t
got acquainted with any girls yet.”
Mrs. Clifton seconded the invitation,
and Grant promised that he would do so. In fact,
he was pleased at the opportunity it would give him
of improving his acquaintance with the young lady from
New York. He returned home very well pleased
with his trip to Somerset, though he had failed in
the object of his expedition.