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you came. I don't want to give you up. How nice it will be some day to have a big daughter to take care of me!" Anne looked up with shining, affectionate eyes. "I'm most big now, you know, Mrs. Patterson," she said. "I'm eight years old and going on nine. I love to be your girl, but--" her lip quivered--"I do wish I knew where Uncle Carey was." "Suppose, Anne, you write to some of your relatives," suggested Miss Drayton,--"any whose addresses you know. The Aunt Charity you speak of so often--where does she live? Is she your mother's sister or your father's?" Anne's laughter shook the teardrops from her lashes. "Why, Miss Drayton," she replied, "I thought you knew. Aunt Charity is black. She was my nurse. She and Uncle Richard--he's her husband--lived with us from the time I can remember." "Oh!" said Miss Drayton. "But cousins? Those people you talk about and call cousin--Marjorie and Patsy and Dorcas and Dick and Cornelius and the others--they are real cousins, aren't they? Do you know how near? First? or second? or third?" Anne looked perplexed. "There are a lot of cousins. Yes, Miss Drayton, they're real. I don't know what kin any of them are. I call them 'cousin' because mother did. They lived near home--five or six or ten miles away. And they'd spend a day or week with us. And we'd go to see them." "Oh! Virginia cousins!" Mrs. Patterson laughed. "Some time you and I'll go to see them and take Honey-Sweet, won't we?--Sarah, Sarah! Let's not make any more investigations. Wait, like our old friend, Mr. Micawber, for 'something to turn up.'" The mails were watched with interest for the promised letter from the New York police, but day after day passed without bringing it. The American party lingered at the Liverpool hotel. Mrs. Patterson pleaded each day that she needed to rest a little longer before making the journey to Nantes. The doctor, called in to prescribe for her, looked grave and suggested that she consult a certain famous physician in Paris. Miss Drayton was so disturbed about her sister's illness that she paid little attention to Pat and Anne. The children, left to their own devices, wandered about the streets in a way that would have been thought shocking had any one thought about the matter. Once when Anne was walking with Pat and again when she was driving with Mrs. Patterson and Miss Drayton, she caught a glimpse of the steerage passenger who had spoken to her on the dock, and felt
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