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- While playing pirates with her friend Billy, Marie, as Captain Kiddo, finds a strange cross in a book and uses it for their insignia. Marie's mother, a young widow, does not appreciate the forced attentions of Mr. Cross, a suitor whom Marie dislikes. When Jack Laird, a secret service agent looking for opium smugglers, meets Marie after thinking that her insignia is a clue, he teaches her to box, and she introduces him to her mother hoping that if she must have a father, it will be Jack. Jack demands to search Cross, whom Jack thinks is a smuggler, but Marie's mother indignantly says that Jack is insulting her future husband, and Jack leaves dejectedly. Marie, her mother and Billy go with Cross on his yacht. After Marie hides from Billy in a tank containing smuggled goods, she gets stuck. Billy tells Jack, and when Cross, really the smugglers' leader, sees Jack searching, he orders his men to throw the tanks into the ocean. Marie pokes her head through an opening and cries to Jack, who rescues her. To save Marie's mother from notoriety, Jack allows Cross to leave the country. Jack and Marie's mother then marry.
- Prompted by her mother, Baby Marie Watson has been accustomed to recite her bedtime prayers every night. When a misunderstanding results in the separation of Marie's parents, Mr. Watson gains custody of his daughter. Saddened by the loss of her mother, Baby Marie works herself into a fever because she cannot remember her bedtime prayers. She calls for her mother, and the faithful butler, taking pity on the child, fetches her. Brought together by a mutual concern for their daughter, the Watsons decide to reconcile their differences and save their marriage.
- Little Marie, terrified after her drunken father beats her mother, flees from the house. Finding herself alone after her father is arrested for the assault and her mother rushed to the hospital, Marie becomes attached to a little dog that she finds in the park. The maid who is walking the dog is unable to part the two, and so she brings the little girl home to the Greer mansion where Mr. Greer, desperate for the child that his socialite wife is too busy to give him, insists upon adopting Marie. After Marie's mother recovers, she is reluctant to deprive her daughter of the riches she may inherit, and so obtains the position of governess in the Greer household in order to be near her own child. Gradually, a deep attachment develops between Mr. Greer and Marie's mother. After Marie's father is killed during a jailbreak, and Mrs. Greer, suffering from her superficial existence, commits suicide, Greer marries Marie's mother and the reconstituted family begins a new life.