Peggy-Alone - novelonlinefull.com
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"Oh, Polly-Wog, what shall I do to make you pay up for this?"
"The jar? Did it cost so awfully much?"
"The jar you gave me when I came in, I thought you were in a trance! I had a wild notion to lose no time in bringing the doctor!"
She glanced ruefully at the broken vase.
"I was just wondering if it could be pieced together again--"
"Before the ogre got back?"
Alene perched herself on the arm of his chair with one arm around his shoulders.
"You're more like a fairy G.o.dmother--father, I mean."
"How did the terrible accident occur?"
"I picked it up to admire it and my hand got sort o' dizzy and let it fall."
"And you didn't think of running away and pretending you knew nothing about it, or blaming it on the maid?"
"Now, Uncle Fred--as if I'd be so dishonorable!"
"Well, I might, if I had such an ogre for an uncle as yours appears to be! I shouldn't fancy being ground to sausages!"
"Like Andy Daly's pig was, I guess! I must tell you about him, but there's something else to ask you first--something very important!
Since you're the good fairy, you ought to grant me three wishes but I'll let you off with one."
"I'll not insist on granting the three until I hear Number One--Here goes! One, two, three--"
"Can I--may I--join the Happy-Go-Luckys?" implored Alene in an impressive voice, with clasped hands.
"The Happy-Go-Luckys! You're sure you don't mean the Ku Klux Klan?
Hark, there's Kizzie coming to announce dinner. Come along and you can tell me all about it while we eat."
She took his arm with a mock fine-lady air, and walked beside him with mincing steps across the hall to the dining-room.
It was a square apartment with windows opening upon a green vista of gardens, now shut away by latticed blinds, through which the fresh spring air found way.
The bay window was filled with immense potted palms; another window led to a balcony where baskets with myrtle and other vines hung round like a heavy green curtain. The room was finished in light colored woodwork. A square rug in a pattern of tiny green and white tiles partly covered the polished floor; in the center stood a cosy round table, whose snowy napery and old silver and china were lit by a bronze lamp with an ornamental shade that resembled a gorgeous peony.
Seated opposite her Uncle, Alene, in her eagerness to relate her afternoon's adventure, almost forgot to touch the tempting dishes which Kizzie, the maid, served so deftly.
Her usually pale cheeks glowed and her eyes beamed brightly while she told of her new friends and the club.
Mr. Dawson listened with flattering attention.
"You may, you shall, you must, join the Happy-Go-Luckys! As a society for the prevention of loneliness to Peggy-Alone or any other forlorn little girl, it strikes me as a good thing," he declared.
"Oh, Uncle, you're a dear old thing!"
"An article of _virtu_ as it were. Be careful how you handle me!"
Alene gave him a reproachful look.
"There, don't start that deadly stare again! I'm not insinuating anything!"
His air of alarm amused Alene. She laughed merrily. Her joy over his permission to join the Happy-Go-Luckys banished from her Uncle's mind any doubts he may have had of her mother's approval. However, he knew something of Alene's new friends, being personally acquainted with Mr.
Lee, whose work as a riverman allowed him little time at home, while Mrs. Bonner was a widow who kept a small boarding house; both families, though poor, were highly respectable.
"Since I'm left in charge of Alene, I'll use my own judgment, which tells me that it's the very thing for her. She looks improved already and I'll not let any sn.o.bbish question deprive her of happiness."
Which settled the matter there and then for all concerned.
"What's the matter now, Alene, that you pucker your brows over that ponderous tome?"
It was after supper, and Uncle Fred, seated in an easy chair beside the reading table in the library, was lazily puffing a pipe.
A stand near by held a large dictionary over whose pages Alene's head was bent.
Glancing up with a puzzled expression, she said: "I don't quite understand; this book says it means 'plain,' and I'm sure lots of children are quite ugly long before they are that age, and I don't think the girls are plain--Laura has lovely eyes and I never heard I was. Am I ugly, Uncle?"
"Well, one wouldn't pick you out in a crowd when all the lights were out, for a fright--"
"Oh, Uncle Fred, do be sober a minute!"
"Alene, I'm ashamed of you to hint that your guardian is ever anything else!"
"I mean grave!"
"A 'most potent, reverend and grave' old fellow am I!"
"Why, sometimes, Uncle Fred, you act as if you weren't any more than nine," said Alene, returning to the book with an air of tolerant resignation that amused the young man. He crossed to her side.
"Tell me what you are hunting; perhaps I can help you."
Alene ignored his air of exaggerated solemnity.
"You see, Laura said one must be twelve years old to be legible--to the Club, you know."
"Then if I'm not too old, I'm old enough to belong! But if I were you, I'd quit the L's and try something else very like it, with an E before," suggested Uncle Fred.
"Eligible, of course--how stupid of me!"
On the way upstairs that night Alene paused and gave way to a fit of laughter.
"What's the fun now?" called Uncle Fred from his cosy position by the table.