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When Sara had persuaded her to go downstairs again, and, after setting
her on her way, had come back to her attic, she stood in the middle
of it and looked about her. The enchantment of her imaginings
for Lottie had died away. The bed was hard and covered with its
dingy quilt. The whitewashed wall showed its broken patches,
the floor was cold and bare, the grate was broken and rusty,
and the battered footstool, tilted sideways on its injured leg,
the only seat in the room. She sat down on it for a few minutes
and let her head drop in her hands. The mere fact that Lottie
had come and gone away again made things seem a little worse--
just as perhaps prisoners feel a little more desolate after visitors
come and go, leaving them behind.
"It's a lonely place," she said. "Sometimes it's the loneliest
place in the world."
She was sitting in this way when her attention was attracted by a
slight sound near her. She lifted her head to see where it came from,
and if she had been a nervous child she would have left her seat on
the battered footstool in a great hurry. A large rat was sitting up
on his hind quarters and sniffing the air in an interested manner.
Some of Lottie's crumbs had dropped upon the floor and their scent
had drawn him out of his hole.
He looked so queer and so like a gray-whiskered dwarf or gnome that
Sara was rather fascinated. He looked at her with his bright eyes,
as if he were asking a question. He was evidently so doubtful
that one of the child's queer thoughts came into her mind.
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