Who'll yer bet it is? Old Adam Ward
his-self, heh?"
Little Maggie's face brightened joyously. "Maybe it's the princess
lady, Bobby."
"And who is this that you call the princess lady, Maggie?" asked the
Interpreter.
Bobby answered for his sister. "Aw, she means old Adam's daughter.
She's allus a-callin' her that an' a-makin' up stories about her."
"Oh, so you know Miss Helen Ward, too, do you?" The Interpreter was
surprised.
The boy turned his back on the landscape as though it held nothing more
of interest to him. "Naw, we've just seen her, that's all."
Stealing timidly back to the side of the wheel chair, the little girl
looked wistfully up into the Interpreter's face. "Do yer--do yer know
the princess lady what lives in the castle?" she asked.
The old basket maker, smiling down at her, answered, "Yes, dear, I have
known your princess lady ever since she was a tiny baby--much smaller
than you. And did you know, Maggie, that she was born in the old house
down there, next door to Charlie and Mary Martin?"
"An'--an' did she live there when she was--when she was as big as me?"
Bobby interrupted with an important "Huh, I know her brother John is a
boss in the Mill. He was in the war, too, with Captain Charlie.
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