
A rain‑slicked Broadway at night becomes a chaotic maze for Claire Lang, a small, determined girl trying to catch a streetcar in the midst of a November storm. As the crowd pushes her toward danger, an unseen force seems to lift her back onto the curb, leaving her both startled and angry at the careless world around her. Her indignation quickly turns into a fierce resolve as she confronts the indifferent driver with a trembling voice and a drenched umbrella.
In that frantic moment a towering, mother‑like stranger appears, her broad shoulders and calm demeanor cutting through the turmoil. She steps in with a confident command, halting the streetcar and offering Claire a place on board, while the conductor balks at the unexpected interference. Their brief, witty exchange hints at a partnership forged in the storm, promising more of the city’s hidden grit and unexpected kindness as Claire’s night unfolds.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (232K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1864–1952
A versatile early 20th-century writer, she moved easily between novels, plays, poetry, criticism, and political writing. Her best-known story, Martha By-the-Day, reached the stage, and another novel later became the 1919 film The Hoodlum.
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