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"Why, yes, Dorothy, of course I would. The idea! But I'm rich, or my people are, which is the same thing. But he's poor. His feelings may not, cannot, be the same as our sort have."
"Why can't they? I don't like to have you think that way. You ought not. Gwen you must not. For that will make us break friendship square off. I'm not poor Dawkins's niece, though I might be much worse off than that, but once I was 'poor' like Robin. I was a deserted baby, adopted by a poor letter carrier. Now, what do you think of that?
Can't I have nice feelings same as you? And am I a bit better--in myself--because in reality I belonged to a rich old family, than I was when I washed dishes in Mother Martha's kitchen? Tell me that, before we go one step further."
Dorothy had stopped short in the hall and faced about, anxiously studying the face of this "Peer," who had now become so dear to her.
Gwendolyn's face was a puzzle; as, for a time, the old opinions and the new struggled within her. But the struggle was brief. Her pride, her justice, and now her love, won the victory.
"No, you darling, brave little thing, you are not. Whatever you are you were born such, and I love you, I love you. If I'd only been born in the States I'd have had no silly notions."
"Don't you believe that, Gwen. Aunt Betty says that human nature is the same all the world over. You'd have been just as much of a sn.o.b if you'd been 'raised in ol' Ferginny' as you are here. Oh! my! I didn't mean that. I meant--You must understand what I mean!"
A flush of mortification at her too plain speaking made Dorothy hide her face, but her hands were swiftly pulled down and a kiss left in their place.
"Don't you fret, Queenie! It's taken lots of Mamma's plain speaking to keep me half-way decent to others less rich than I, and I'm afraid it'll take lots of yours, too, to put the finishing touches to that lesson. Come on. We love each other now, and love puts everything right. Come on. Let's find that Robin and see what we can do for him without hurting his feelings."
"Oh! yes, come, let's hurry! But first to the Lady Princ.i.p.al. Maybe we can help them both. Won't that be fine?"
But they were not to help Robin just then. A groan from the servants'
parlor, a pleasant room opening from the kitchen, arrested their attention and made them pause to listen. Punctuated by other sounds, a querulous voice was complaining:
"Seems if there warn't a hull spot left on my old body that ain't bruised sore as a bile. Why, sir, when I fell off that blamed sled we'd tinkered up"--groan--"I didn't know anything. Just slid--an'
slid--an' rolled over and over, never realizin' which side of me was topmost till I fetched up--kerwhack! to the very bottom. Seemed as if I'd fell out o' the sky into the bottomless pit. Oh! dear!"
Dawkins's voice it was that answered him, both pitying and teasing him in the same breath:
"I'm sure it's sorry I am, Mr. Gilpin, for what's befell; but for a man that's lived in a tobogganing country ever since he was born, you begun rather late in life to learn the sport. Why--"
"Ain't no older'n the Bishop! Can't one man do same's t'other, I'd like to know, Mis' Dawkins?"
"Seems not;" laughed the maid. "But, here, take this cup of hot spearmint tea. 'Twill warm your old bones and help 'em to mend; an'
next time you start playin' children's game--why don't! And for goodness' sake, John, quit groanin'! Takin' on like that don't help any and I tell you fair and square I've had about all the strain put on my nerves, to-day, 't I can bear. What was your bit of a roll down that smooth ice compared to what our girls went through?"
"Has you got any nuts in your pockets? Has you?" broke in Millikins-Pillikins, who had been a patient listener to the confab between the farmer and the nurse till she could wait no longer. Never had the old man come to Oak Knowe without some dainty for the little girl and she expected such now.
"No, sissy, I haven't. I dunno as I've got a pocket left. I dunno nothing, except--except--What'll SHE say when I go home all lamed up like this! Oh! hum! Seems if I was possessed to ha' done it, and so she thought. But 'twas Robin's fault. If Robin hadn't beset me so I'd never thought of it. Leastwise, not to go the length I did. If I'd--But there! What's the use? But one thing's sure. I'll get shut of that boy, see if I don't. He's well now an' why should I go to harboring _reptiles_ in my buzzum? Tell me that if ye can! _Reptiles._ That's what he was, a-teasin' an' misleadin' a poor old man into destruction. Huh! I'll make it warm for him--trust John Gilpin for that!"
Dawkins had long since departed, unable to bear the old man's lamentations, and leaving the cup, or pot, of hot tea on the table beside him. But little Grace couldn't tear herself away. She lingered, first hoping for the nuts she craved, and later in wonder about the "_reptile_" he said was in his bosom. There were big books full of pictures in the library, that Auntie Prin sometimes let her see. She loved to have them opened on the rug and lie down beside them to study them. She knew what "reptiles" were. That was the very one of all the Natural History books with the blue bindings that she liked best, it was so delightfully crawly and sent such funny little thrills all through her. If a picture could do that what might not the real thing do!
"Show it to me, please, Mr. Gilpin. I never saw a reptile in all my whole life long! Never!"
The farmer had paid scant attention to her chatter; indeed, he scarcely heard it, his mind being wholly engrossed now with what his dame would say to him, on his return home; and in his absent-mindedness he reached out for the drink good Dawkins had left him and put the pot to his lips taking a great draught.
An instant later the pot flew out of his hand and he sprang to his feet, clutching frantically at his bosom and yelling as if he were stung. For the contents of the pot were boiling hot and he had scalded his throat most painfully.
But wide-eyed little Grace did not understand his wild action, as, still clutching his shirt front, he hurled the pot far from him. Of course, the "reptile" was biting! That must be why he screeched so, and now all her desire for a personal acquaintance with such a creature vanished. She must get as far away from it as possible before it appeared on the surface of his smock and, darting doorward, was just in time to receive the pot and what was left in it upon her curly head. Down she dropped as if she had been shot, and Dorothy entering was just in time to see her fall. The scene apparently explained itself. The angry face of the old man, his arm still rigid, in the gesture of hurling, the fallen child and the broken pot--who could guess that it was horror at his uncalculated deed which kept him in that pose?
Not Dorothy, who caught up little Grace and turned a furious face upon poor John, crying out in fierce contempt:
"Oh! you horrible old man! First you tried to kill me and now you have killed her!"
CHAPTER XIV
EXPLANATIONS ARE IN ORDER
Dorothy ran straight to the Lady Princ.i.p.al's room, too horrified by what she imagined was the case to pause on the way and too excited to feel the heavy burden she carried.
n.o.body met her to stop her or inquire what had happened. Gwendolyn had been called to join her mother and had seen nothing of the incident, and Dorothy burst into the pretty parlor--only to find it empty.
Laying Millikins down on the couch she started to find help, but was promptly called back by the child herself.
"Where you going, Dolly Doodles? What you carry me for, running so?"
"Why--why--darling--can you _speak_? Are you _alive_? Oh! you dear--you dear! I thought you were killed!" cried the relieved girl kneeling beside the couch and hugging the astonished little one.
"Why for can't I speak, Dorothy? Why for can't I be alive? The 'reptile' didn't bite me, it bited _him_. That's why he hollered so and flung things. See, Dolly, I'm all wet with smelly stuff like 'meddy' some kind, that Dawkins made him. And what you think? Soon's he started drinking it the 'reptile' must not have liked it and must have bited him to make him stop--'Ou-u-c-ch!' Just like that he said it, an' course I runned, an' the tea-pot flew, an' I fell down, and you come, grabbed me and said things, and--and--But the reptile didn't get Gracie, did it? No it didn't, 'cause I runned like anything, and 'cause you come, and--Say, Dolly! I guess I'd rather see 'em in the book. I guess I don't want to get acquainted with no live ones like I thought I did. No, sir!"
"What in the world do you mean, Baby? Whatever are you talking about?
Oh! you mischief, you gave poor Dolly such a fright when you fell down like that!"
"Why, Dolly Doodles, how funny! I fall down lots of times. Some days I fall down two-ten-five times, and sometimes I'd cry, but Auntie Prin don't like that. She'll say right off: 'There, Millikins, I wouldn't bother to do that. You haven't hurt the floor any.' So course I stop.
'Cause if I had hurted the floor she'd let me cry a lot. She said so, once. Mr. Gilpin didn't have a single nut in his pockets. He said so.
And he talked awful funny! Not as if to me at all, so must ha' been to the 'reptile' in his 'buzzum.' Do 'reptiles' buzz, Dolly, same as sting-bees do? And wouldn't you rather carry nuts in your pockets for such nice little girls as me, than crawly things inside your smock to bite you? I think a smock's the funniest kind of clothes, and Mr.
Gilpin's the funniest kind of man inside 'em. Don't you?"
"If either one can match you for funniness, you midget, I'll lose my guess. Seems if this had been the 'funniest' kind of day ever was. But I'll give you up till you get ready to explain your 'reptile' talk.
Changing the subject, did you get a slide to-day?"
"Yes, lots of them. What do think? I didn't have anybody give me a nice new toboggan with my name on it, like you had; so the Bishop he told Auntie Prin that he'd look out for me this year same's he did last year. I hadn't grown so much bigger, he thought. Course he's terrible big and I'm terrible little, so all he does is tuck me inside his great toboggan coat. b.u.t.tons it right around me--this way--so I never could slip out, could I? And I don't have to hold on at all he holds on for me and Auntie's not afraid, that way. Don't you think it was terrible nice for Gwendolyn to give you your things?"
"What things, dear? Gwen has given me nothing that I know of. Is this another mystery of yours?"
"It isn't not no mystery, I don't know what them are, except when girls like you get lost right in their own houses and don't get found again right soon. But I know 'secrets.' Secrets are what the one you have 'em about don't get told. That was a secret about your things, Gwen said. You didn't get told, did you?"
"I have a suspicion that I'm being told now," answered Dorothy, soberly. "Suppose you finish the telling, dear, while we are airing the subject. What are the things you're talking about?"
"Why, aren't you stupid, Dolly? About the be-a-u-tiful blankets were made into your suit. Auntie said they were the handsomest ever was.
Lady Jane had bought 'em to have new things made for Gwen, 'cause Lady Jane's going far away across the ocean and she wanted to provide every single thing Gwen might want. In case anything happened to Gwen's old one.
"So Gwen said, no, she didn't need 'em and you did. She guessed your folks hadn't much money, she'd overheard the Bishop say so. That's the way she knows everything is 'cause she always 'overhears.' I told Auntie Prin that I thought that was terrible nice, and I'd like to learn overhearing; and she sauced me back the funniest! My! she did!
Said if she ever caught me overhearing I'd be put to bed with nothing but bread and water to eat, until I forgot the art. Just like that she said it! Seems if overhearing is badness. She does so want Gwendolyn to be really n.o.ble. Auntie Prin thinks it n.o.ble for Gwen to give up her blankets and to have that be-a-u-tiful toboggan bought for you with your name on it. You aren't real poor, are you, Dolly? Not like the beggar folks come 'tramping' by and has 'victuals' given to them? Bishop says all little girls must be good to the poor. That's when he wants me to put my pennies in my Mite Box for the little heathen. I don't so much care about the heathen and Hugh--"
But Dorothy suddenly put the child down, knowing that once started upon the theme of "Brother Hugh" the little sister's talk was endless.
And she was deeply troubled.