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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Pair of Them, by Evelyn Raymond
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will
+have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
+this eBook.
+
+Title: A Pair of Them
+
+Author: Evelyn Raymond
+
+Release Date: March 20, 2021 [eBook #64891]
+
+Language: English
+
+Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
+ Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced
+ from images generously made available by the Library of Congress)
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PAIR OF THEM ***
+
+
+
+
+A Pair of Them
+
+
+
+
+SUNSHINE LIBRARY.
+
+
+ =Aunt Hannah and Seth.= By James Otis.
+ =Blind Brother= (=The=). By Homer Greene.
+ =Captain’s Dog= (=The=). By Louis Énault.
+ =Cat and the Candle= (=The=). By Mary F. Leonard.
+ =Christmas at Deacon Hackett’s.= By James Otis.
+ =Christmas-Tree Scholar.= By Frances Bent Dillingham.
+ =Dear Little Marchioness.= The Story of a Child’s Faith and Love.
+ =Dick in the Desert.= By James Otis.
+ =Divided Skates.= By Evelyn Raymond.
+ =Gold Thread= (=The=). By Norman MacLeod, D.D.
+ =Half a Dozen Thinking Caps.= By Mary Leonard.
+ =How Tommy Saved the Barn.= By James Otis.
+ =Ingleside.= By Barbara Yechton.
+ =J. Cole.= By Emma Gellibrand.
+ =Jessica’s First Prayer.= By Hesba Stretton.
+ =Laddie.= By the author of “Miss Toosey’s Mission.”
+ =Little Crusaders.= By Eva Madden.
+ =Little Sunshine’s Holiday.= By Miss Mulock.
+ =Little Peter.= By Lucas Malet.
+ =Master Sunshine.= By Mrs. C. F. Fraser.
+ =Miss Toosey’s Mission.= By the author of “Laddie.”
+ =Musical Journey of Dorothy and Delia.= By Bradley Gilman.
+ =Our Uncle, the Major.= A Story of 1765. By James Otis.
+ =Pair of Them= (=A=). By Evelyn Raymond.
+ =Playground Toni.= By Anna Chapin Ray.
+ =Play Lady= (=The=). By Ella Farman Pratt.
+ =Prince Prigio.= By Andrew Lang.
+ =Short Cruise= (=A=). By James Otis.
+ =Smoky Days.= By Edward W. Thomson.
+ =Strawberry Hill.= By Mrs. C. F. Fraser.
+ =Sunbeams and Moonbeams.= By Louise R. Baker.
+ =Two and One.= By Charlotte M. Vaile.
+ =Wreck of the Circus= (=The=). By James Otis.
+ =Young Boss= (=The=). By Edward W. Thomson.
+
+
+THOMAS Y. CROWELL & COMPANY, NEW YORK.
+
+
+[Illustration: “WHY, YES, BONNY-GAY! I’VE COME.” See page 77.]
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ A PAIR OF THEM
+
+ BY EVELYN RAYMOND
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ NEW YORK.
+ Thomas Y. Crowell & Co.
+ Publishers.
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1901,
+ BY THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ I. Where the Houses are Big 1
+
+ II. Where the Houses are Small 15
+
+ III. How the Pair Met 29
+
+ IV. Max Reappears 44
+
+ V. Mary Jane Goes Visiting 59
+
+ VI. The Flight and Fright of Mary Jane 78
+
+ VII. On the Way Home 95
+
+ VIII. Confidences 112
+
+ IX. By the Strength of Love 132
+
+ Afterward 150
+
+
+
+
+A PAIR OF THEM
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+WHERE THE HOUSES ARE BIG
+
+
+“It’s a queer kind of a name, though it suits you,” observed the Gray
+Gentleman, thoughtfully. “How came you by it?”
+
+Bonny-Gay flashed the questioner a smile, hugged Max closer and replied:
+
+“I was born on a Sunday morning. That’s how.”
+
+“Ah, indeed? But I don’t quite understand.”
+
+“Don’t you? Seems easy. Let’s sit down here by ‘Father George’ and I’ll
+explain. If I can.”
+
+The Gray Gentleman was very tall and dignified, yet he had a habit of
+doing whatever Bonny-Gay asked him. So he now doubled himself up and
+perched on the low curb surrounding the monument, while the little
+girl and the big black dog dropped easily down beside him. Then he
+leaned his head back against the iron railing and gazed reflectively
+into the face of the big bronze lion, just opposite.
+
+Both the child and the man were fond of the wonderful lion, which
+seemed a mighty guardian of the beautiful Place, and he, at least, knew
+it to be a world-famous work of art. Bonny-Gay loved it as she loved
+all animals, alive or sculptured, and with much the same devotion she
+gave to Max. The park without either of these four-footed creatures
+would have seemed strange indeed to her, for they were her earliest
+playmates and remained still her dearest.
+
+“Now you can tell me,” again suggested the Gray Gentleman.
+
+“It was Easter, too. All the people were going to the churches, the
+bells were ringing, the organs playing, and everything just beautiful.
+Nurse Nance began it, my mother says. ‘For the child that is born on
+the Sabbath Day is lucky, and bonny, and wise, and gay.’ But my father
+says there isn’t any ‘luck’ and a child like me isn’t ‘wise,’ so they
+had to leave them out and I’m only Bonny-Gay. That’s all.”
+
+“A very satisfactory explanation,” said the Gray Gentleman, with one of
+his rare smiles, and laying his hand kindly upon the golden curls. “And
+now, my dear, one question more. In which of these beautiful houses do
+you live?”
+
+As he spoke, the stranger’s glance wandered all about that aristocratic
+neighborhood of Mt. Vernon Place, to which he had returned after many
+years of absence to make his own home. Since he had gone away all
+the small people whom he used to know and love had grown up, and he
+had felt quite lost and lonely, even in that familiar scene, till he
+had chanced to meet Bonny-Gay, just one week before. Since then, and
+her ready adoption of himself as a comrade, he had had no time for
+loneliness. She was always out in the charming Square, as much a part
+of it as the Washington monument, which the little folks called “Father
+George,” or the bronzes, and the smooth lawns. She seemed as bright as
+the sunshine and almost as well-beloved, for the other children flocked
+about her, the keeper consulted her and the keeper’s dog followed her
+like a shadow.
+
+With a toss of her yellow locks she pointed her forefinger westward.
+
+“There, in that corner one, all covered by vines, with places for the
+windows cut out, and the chimneys all green, and I think it’s the
+prettiest one in the whole place, when it has its summer clothes on.
+Don’t you?”
+
+The Gray Gentleman’s glance followed the direction of the pointing
+finger.
+
+“Yes. It is a very lovely home and a very big one. I hope you are not
+the only child who lives in it.”
+
+“But I am. Why?”
+
+“Why what?”
+
+“Do you hope it?”
+
+“You would be lonely, I should think.”
+
+“Lonely? I? Why--why--I just never have a single minute to myself.
+There’s my thirteen dolls, and the parrot, and the two canaries, and
+the aquarium, and my pony, and--Oh! dear! you can’t guess. That’s why I
+have to come out here--to rest myself.”
+
+“Ah, so! Well, I should judge that you spend the most of your time in
+‘resting,’” commented the other. “Whenever I come out you’re always
+here.”
+
+Bonny-Gay laughed; so merrily that Max lifted his head and licked her
+cheek. That reminded her of something and she asked:
+
+“Have you seen him get his second dinner?”
+
+“Not even his first!”
+
+“You haven’t? How odd!” Bonny-Gay shook out her skirts and proceeded
+to enlighten her comrade’s ignorance. She took it for granted, or she
+had done so, that he knew as much about things as she herself; but if
+not, why, there was a deal to tell. Max’s history first. She began by
+declaring:
+
+“He’s the smartest dog in the world. Everybody knows that. He’s lived
+in the Place nine years. That’s one year longer than I have. All the
+children’s big brothers and sisters have played with him, same’s we do
+now. He never lets a tramp come near. He never steps on a flower bed or
+lets us. If we forget and go on the grass he barks us off. He gets his
+first dinner at our house. When the clocks strike twelve he goes to the
+gardener and gets his basket. Then he walks to our back entrance, puts
+the basket down, stands up on his hind feet and pushes his nose against
+the ’lectric bell. That rings up the cook and--she’s a man just
+now--he--she takes the basket and puts in some food. Then Max walks
+down that side street, about a square, and sits on the curb to eat it.
+‘Just like a beggar,’ the gardener says, ‘’cause he likes to feed his
+own dog his own self.’ I would, too, wouldn’t you?”
+
+“If I owned the ‘smartest dog in the whole world’ I presume I should.”
+
+“Max feels ashamed of it, too; don’t you, dear?”
+
+The dog replied by dropping his black head from Bonny-Gay’s shoulder
+to the ground and by blinking in a deprecating way from that lowly
+position.
+
+“Then, in a few minutes, he comes back to the gardener with the empty
+basket and stands and wags his tail as if he were the hungriest dog
+that ever was. Then the keeper says: ‘Yes. You may go, Max!’ And off he
+trots, away down the other way, to some place where his master lives
+and gets a second basket full. That he brings back here, and the man
+puts a paper on the ground under the bushes and he eats again. Just
+like folks to their own table, that time; don’t you, Max Doggie, smart
+doggie!”
+
+The handsome animal shook his wavy fleece and sprang up, ready for a
+frolic and evidently aware that he had been the subject of discussion.
+
+“No, not yet, sir. The best thing hasn’t been told. Listen, please,
+Mr.----”
+
+The stranger waited a moment, then inquired:
+
+“Mr. what, Bonny-Gay? I wonder if you know my name.”
+
+“Not your truly one, but that doesn’t matter.”
+
+“What do you happen to call me, if you ever speak of me when I’m not
+here?”
+
+The little girl hesitated an instant, then frankly answered:
+
+“Why, just the ‘Gray Gentleman.’ ’Cause you are all gray, you see. Your
+hair, and your moustache, and your eyes, and your clothes, and your
+hat, and your gloves, and--and--things.”
+
+“Exactly. Trust a child to find an appropriate nickname. But I like it,
+little one. Go on, about Max and the best thing yet.”
+
+“That splendid dog has--saved--his--master’s life! As true as true!”
+cried Bonny-Gay, impressively.
+
+“Indeed! Wonderful! How was it?”
+
+“It was pay-day night and Mr. Weems, that’s his name, had a lot of
+money. And some bad men knew it. And they came, do you believe, right
+in the middle of that night, and broke a window in Mr. Weems’s house;
+and Max heard them and flew--and flew--”
+
+The Gray Gentleman stooped and searched for the dog’s wings.
+
+“Well, ran, then,” laughed Bonny-Gay, “and he drove them all off and
+they had revolvers or something and one was shot and a policeman caught
+him and Max was shot and the gardener would have been killed--”
+
+“Only he wasn’t,” interrupted somebody, coming from behind them.
+
+So the child paused in her breathless description of a scene she had
+often pictured to herself and looked up into the face of the hero of
+the affair, himself.
+
+“Why, Mr. Weems! you almost frightened me! and you please tell the
+rest.”
+
+But though the gardener smiled upon her he nodded his head gravely.
+
+“Guess it won’t do for me to think about that just now, or any other
+of our good times, old Max! Good fellow, fine fellow! Poor old doggie!
+It’s going to be as hard on you as on me, I’m afraid.”
+
+By this time Bonny-Gay saw that something was amiss. She half fancied
+that there were tears in the keeper’s eyes, and she always afterward
+declared that there were tears in his voice. As for Max, that sagacious
+animal sank suddenly upon his haunches, looked sternly into his
+master’s face, and demanded by his earnest, startled expression to know
+what was wrong. Something was. He knew that, even more positively than
+did Bonny-Gay.
+
+“It’s an outrageous law. There ought to be exceptions to it. All
+dogs--Well, there’s no other dog like Max. Ah! hum. Old doggie!”
+
+The Gray Gentleman was tempted to ask questions, but the little girl
+was sure to do that; so he waited. In a few minutes she had gotten the
+whole sad story from her old friend, the gardener, and her sunny head
+had gone down upon the dog’s black one in a paroxysm of grief.
+
+A moment later it was lifted defiantly.
+
+“But he shan’t. He shall not! Nobody shall ever, ever take our Max
+away! Why--why--it wouldn’t be the Place without him! Why--why--the
+children--Oh! Nettie! oh! Tom!” and catching sight of a group of
+playmates Bonny-Gay darted toward them, calling as she ran: “They’re
+going to take him away! They’re going to take him away!”
+
+Tom planted his feet wide apart upon the smooth path and obstructed her
+advance.
+
+“Take who away, Bonny-Gay? Where to? When?”
+
+“Max! Our Max! He can never come here any more. This is his last day in
+our park--his very last!” and the child flung herself headlong upon the
+shaven grass, for once regardless of rules.
+
+Not so regardless was Max, the trusty. It didn’t matter to him that
+this was Bonny-Gay, his best-loved playmate, or that her frantic
+sorrow was all on his account. What he saw was his duty and he did it,
+instantly. From a distance the Gray Gentleman watched the dog race
+toward the prostrate little girl and shake her short skirts vigorously,
+loosing them now and then to bark at her with equal vigor.
+
+Presently she sprang up and to the footpath, and again indulged in a
+wild embrace of the faithful canine. Indeed, he was at once the center
+of an ever-increasing company of small people, who seemed to vie with
+each other in attempts to hug his breath away and to outdo everybody in
+the way of fierce indignation. Finally, this assembly resolved itself
+into an advancing army, and with Tom and Bonny-Gay as leaders--each
+tightly holding to one of the dog’s soft ears, as they marched him
+between them--they returned to the spot where the lion calmly awaited
+them, and Tom announced their decision:
+
+“We won’t ever let him go. There’s no need for you nor the law-men
+nor nobody to interfere. This dog belongs to this park; and this
+park belongs to us children; and if anybody tries to--tries
+to--to--do--things--he won’t never be let! So there! And if he is,
+we’ll--we’ll augernize; and we’ll get every boy and girl in all the
+streets around to come, too; and we’ll all go march to where the
+law-men live; and we won’t never, never leave go talking at them till
+they take it all back. ’Cause Max isn’t going to be took. That’s the
+fact, Mr. Weems, and you can just tell them so.”
+
+“Yes,” cried Nettie, “and my big brother goes to the law school and
+he’ll suesan them. And my big sister’s friends will help; and if he
+does have to, I’ll never, never--NEVER--play in this hateful old park
+ever again. I will not!”
+
+“Whew!” whistled the Gray Gentleman, softly. “This looks serious. A
+children’s crusade, indeed. Well, that should be irresistible.” And
+this old lover of all little people looked admiringly over the group of
+flushed and indignant faces; and at the noble animal which was the very
+center of it, and whose silent protest was the most eloquent of all.
+His own heart echoed their indignation and he quietly resolved to make
+an effort on their and Max’s behalf.
+
+But the dire, unspoken threats of the children, and the silent
+resolution of the Gray Gentleman, were useless. For when upon the next
+morning the sun rose over the pleasant Place, and the monument and the
+lion began to cast their shadows earthward, there was no Max to gambol
+at their feet, and over the heart of Bonny-Gay had fallen her first
+real grief.
+
+She was out early, to see if the dreadful thing were true; and the Gray
+Gentleman met her and scarcely knew her--without the smiles.
+
+When he did recognize her he said, hopefully:
+
+“We’ll trust it’s all for the best, my dear. Besides, you will now have
+more time for the thirteen dolls, and the parrot, and the two canaries,
+and--”
+
+“But they--they aren’t Max! He was the only! We loved him so and now
+he’ll just be wasted on strangers! Oh! it’s too bad, too bad!”
+
+The Gray Gentleman clasped the little hand in sympathy.
+
+“I am very sorry for your sorrow, Bonny-Gay, and yet I can’t believe
+that Max is ‘wasted.’ No good thing ever is. Besides that, I have a
+plan in my head. With your parents’ permission, I am going to take you
+this day to visit your twin sister.”
+
+“My--twin--sister! Why there isn’t any. Don’t you remember? I told you.
+I’m the only, only one. There never was any other.”
+
+“Nevertheless, I am obliged to contradict you. Very rude, I know, and
+I shouldn’t do so, if I were not so positive of what I claim. I hope
+you’ll love her and I think you will. After breakfast I’ll see you
+again. Good morning.”
+
+With that he walked briskly away and Bonny-Gay saw him enter the big
+gray house in the middle of the Place. The house where the wooden
+shutters had always been up, ever since she could remember, until just
+this spring, when a few of the windows had been uncovered to let the
+sunlight in.
+
+“My--twin--sister! How queer that is!” mused the watching child.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+WHERE THE HOUSES ARE SMALL
+
+
+Mary Jane dropped her crutches on the floor and readjusted the baby. He
+had a most trying habit of not staying “put,” and sometimes the other
+children slapped him. Mary Jane never did that. She merely set him up
+again, gave his cheek a pat or a kiss, and went on about her business.
+
+For, indeed, she was almost the very busiest small body in the world.
+Besides her own mother’s five other children there were the neighbors’
+broods, big and little, with never a soul to mind them save their
+self-constituted nurse.
+
+That very morning Mrs. Bump had paused in her washing to look up and
+exclaim:
+
+“I never did see how the little things do take to her! She can do just
+wonders with them, that she can; and I reckon it was about the best
+thing ever happened to her, that falling out the top window, like she
+did. Seemed to knock all the selfishness out of her. Maybe it’s _that_
+settled in her poor body. Yes, maybe it’s that, dear heart. Anyhow, her
+inside’s all right. The rightest there ever was. If this world was just
+full of Mary Janes, what a grand place it would be!”
+
+Then, after a regretful sigh for this beatific state of things, the
+mother thrust her strong arms again into the suds, with a splash and a
+rub-a-dub-dub which told plainly enough from whom Mary Jane inherited
+her energy.
+
+Just then Mrs. Stebbins thrust her head out of the window, next door,
+to remark:
+
+“There was fifty-four of them gardens given out. My boy’s goin’ to
+raise cabbages.”
+
+“You don’t say! Now, ain’t that fine? I wish I had a son to get one,
+but all my boys is girls, save the baby, and he don’t count. Though
+he’ll grow, won’t he, mother’s lamb? He’ll grow just as fast as he
+can and get a playground garden, good’s the next one, so he will, the
+precious!” chirruped Mrs. Bump, to the year-old heir of the house.
+
+“Gah, gah!” cooed the baby; and emphasized his reply by losing his
+balance against the wall and rolling over on his face. He was too fat
+and too phlegmatic to right himself, so Mary Jane hopped back across
+the narrow room and set him up again, laughing as if this were the
+funniest thing she had ever seen.
+
+“Pshaw, daughter! If I was you and you was me, I’d leave him lie that
+way a spell. He don’t ’pear to have the sense the rest of you had, no
+he don’t, the sweet! Maybe that’s because he’s a boy. But even a boy
+might learn something after a while, if he was let. Only you’re so
+right on hand all the time he expects you to just about breathe for
+him, seems.”
+
+“Now, mother, now! And you know he’s the biggest, roundest--”
+
+“Pudding-headedest!” growled a masculine voice, at the narrow doorway.
+
+Mrs. Bump wheeled round so sharply that her rubbing-board fell out of
+the tub and scared the baby, who promptly began to scream.
+
+“Why father! You home? It can’t be dinner-time, yet. What’s happened?
+Anything wrong?”
+
+“Is anything ever right?” demanded the man, sulkily.
+
+“Plenty of things,” answered the wife, cheerfully, though her heart
+sank.
+
+“One of the right things is my getting kicked out, I s’pose.”
+
+“Father! you don’t mean it! No.”
+
+“I’m not much of a joker, am I?”
+
+“No. That you’re not. But tell me, man.”
+
+With a quiver in the usually cheerful voice, Mrs. Bump wiped the suds
+from her arms and went to her husband. Laying her hand kindly upon
+his shoulder she demanded, as was her right, to know the facts of the
+disaster that had befallen them.
+
+“’Twon’t take long to tell, woman. The company’s cuttin’ down expenses
+and I was one of the expenses lopped off. That’s all.”
+
+“Is that all--_all_, William Bump?”
+
+The question was sternly put and the man cowered before it.
+
+“It’s the truth, any way. No matter how it happened, here I am and no
+work.” With that he dropped his arms upon the window sill and his face
+upon his arms, and lapsed into a sullen silence.
+
+Mrs. Bump caught her breath, whisked away a tear that had crept into
+her eye, and returned to her tub. Mary Jane ceased staring at her
+parents, tipped the baby’s home-made go-cart on end, rolled him into
+it, righted the awkward vehicle, threw its leather strap over her
+shoulders, called to the children: “Come!” and hopped away upon her
+crutches.
+
+Though she paused, for just one second, beside her father and imprinted
+a hasty kiss upon the back of his bent head. A kiss so light it seemed
+he could scarcely have felt it, though it was quite sufficient to
+thrill the man’s soul with an added sense of regret and degradation.
+
+“We’re off to the park, mother, and I’ve taken a loaf with me!” she
+called backward, as she clicked out of sight.
+
+Again the woman idled for a moment, looking through the open doorway
+toward the small, misshapen figure of her eldest child as it swung
+swiftly forward upon its “wooden feet.” The baby’s soap-box wagon
+rattled and bumped along behind, bouncing his plump body about, and
+drawn by Mary Jane in the only manner possible to her--with a strap
+across her chest. She needed both her hands just then to support
+herself upon her crutches; for her lower limbs were useless and swung
+heavily between these crutches--a leaden weight from which she never
+could be free.
+
+Even so, there were few who could travel as rapidly as Mary Jane and
+this morning she was especially eager to get on. Because down at the
+pretty park upon which her own dingy street terminated, the children’s
+“Playgrounds” had been opened for the summer and the small gardens
+given out. She was anxious to see the planting and seed-sowing, by the
+tiny farmers of this free kindergarten, and down in her heart was a
+faint hope that even to her, a girl, might a bit of land be assigned;
+where she, too, could raise some of the wonderful vegetables which
+would be her very own when the autumn came and the small crops were
+harvested.
+
+The hope was so deep and so intense, that she had to stop, turn about,
+shake up the baby and tell him about it.
+
+“You see, Baby Bump, they don’t give ’em out to just girls. Only I’m
+not a regular plain kind of girl, I’m a crippley sort. That might make
+a difference. Though there’s Hattie Moran, she’s lame, too. Not very
+lame, Baby, only a little lame. She doesn’t have to have crutches, she
+just goes hoppety-pat, hoppety-pat, easy like. Sophia Guttmacher,
+she’s a hunchback, same’s me, course, but she can walk. Besides that
+she doesn’t want a garden and I do. As for Ernest Knabe, his foot’s
+just twisted and that’s all. Then, too, he’s a boy. He could have one
+if he wanted. He’d have to dig one, I guess, if it wasn’t for his foot.
+Oh! Baby dear. Do you s’pose I might--I might, maybe, get one?”
+
+“Goo, goo,” murmured the infant, encouragingly, and vainly trying to
+bring his own foot within reach of his mouth.
+
+“Oh! you sweet! You can’t do that, you know. You’re far too fat. And I
+declare, all the other children have gone on while I’ve stood here just
+talking to you. That won’t do, sir, much as I love you. Sit up, now,
+there’s sister’s little man, and I’ll hurry up.”
+
+But just then, Baby made a final, desperate effort to taste his toes,
+lost his balance, and rolled forward out of his box, as a ball might
+have done.
+
+Mary Jane, burst into a peal of laughter which recalled the other
+children to the spot and she explained between breaths:
+
+“The cute little fellow was trying to make ‘huckleberry-bread’; I do
+believe he was, the darling! Well, he’s so round it doesn’t matter
+which way he tumbles, and he’s so soft nothing ever hurts him. Does it,
+precious?”
+
+They all lent a hand in setting the infant right again. Several holding
+the soap-box level, a couple supporting Mary Jane without her crutches
+which left her arms free to lift and replace the dislodged baby. When
+things were once more in order the caravan started onward afresh.
+
+By this time the small, dingy houses bordering the narrow unpaved
+street had given place to open lots and weedy patches, where the sun
+lay warmly and a fresh breeze blew. To the right of the open space was
+a railway embankment, and on the left there was the cling-clanging of
+a mighty steel structure, in process of building. The railway and the
+monster “sheds” belonged to the same company for which William Bump had
+toiled--when he felt inclined--and by which he had just been discharged.
+
+Mary Jane had been accustomed to look for him, either along the rails,
+with the gang that seemed always to be replacing old “ties” by new
+ones; or else serving the skilled workmen, who hammered, hammered, all
+day long upon the great metal girders. As she now caught the echo of
+these strokes a pang shot through her loving heart and for a moment her
+sunny face clouded. She need look no more, to either right or left, for
+the blue-shirted figure, which had been wont to wave a salutation to
+her as she passed with her brood of nurselings.
+
+Fortunately, the baby was on hand to banish the cloud, which he
+promptly did in his accustomed manner--with a slight variation. For
+his small charioteer had not observed a big stone in the path, though
+the loose ricketty wheel of the wagon found and struck it squarely.
+This raised the soap-box in front and its occupant performed a backward
+somersault.
+
+“Oh! my sake! Mary Jane--Mary Jane!” shrieked several small voices in
+wild reproach.
+
+Mary Jane picked up the little one, who smiled, unhurt; and the others
+helped her shake him back to a normal condition and pose. After which,
+the park lying just before them, between the railway and the buildings,
+they scurried into it, and over the slope, and around to a sunny spot
+where scores of other little people were hard at work or play.
+
+“Hi! Mary Jane! Oh, Mary Jane!” shouted one and another; and the
+kind-faced “teachers” who guided the wee ones, also nodded their
+friendly welcome. For well they knew that there was no “assistant”
+in the whole city who could be as useful to them as this same humble
+little girl from Dingy street.
+
+“Thirteen, Mary Jane! I’m thirteen! Come see. Cucumbers!” cried
+Bobby Saunders, dragging her forward so eagerly that the soap-box
+strap slipped up across her throat and choked her. But she quickly
+released herself now from her burden, certain that in the midst of so
+many friends no harm could befall her darling; and once freed from
+this incubus, she outstripped Bobby in reaching the long rows of
+well-prepared garden plots, wherein as yet was never a sign of any
+growing thing.
+
+But oh! how soft and rich and brown the earth did look! How sweet
+the fragrance of it in Mary Jane’s nature-loving nostrils! And how,
+for once, she longed to be a boy! As straight-limbed, as strong,
+as unhindered at her toil, as any of these happy little lads who
+clustered about, each interrupting his neighbor in his eagerness for
+her sympathy and interest.
+
+“Fifty-one, Mary Jane!” cried Joe Stebbins, pointing proudly to the
+numbered stick at the foot of his plot. “Cabbages--cabbages! The
+gardener’s bringing a box of plants this minute. I’ll give you one to
+bile when they get growed. Like that?”
+
+“Prime!” answered the girl, her own face aglow.
+
+“But I’m limas, Mary Jane. I’m Seven. Away over here. I’ve sowed ’em
+and to-morrer I’ll hoe ’em, I guess.”
+
+“And I guess I wouldn’t till they sprout,” laughed she hopping along,
+at perilous speed, to inspect number seven.
+
+“Don’t go so fast, Mary Jane! I can’t keep up with you. See. I’m right
+up front--number Three. I’m tomatuses, I am. Like ’em?” demanded Ned
+Smith, a seven-year-old farmer.
+
+“I’m potatoes. They’re the best for your money,” observed Jimmy
+O’Brien. “We’ll roast some in the ashes, bime-by. Does the baby like
+’tatoes?”
+
+“Don’t he? You just ought to see him eat them--when we have them,” she
+added, cautiously.
+
+“Oh! you’ll have ’em, plenty. When I dig my crop. Why, I s’pose
+there’ll be enough in my ‘farm’ to keep your folks and mine all winter;
+and I might have some to sell on the street,” observed Jimmy, casting a
+speculative glance upon the diminutive plot of ground over which he was
+now master.
+
+“Might you; ain’t that splendid!” commented Mary Jane, delightedly.
+“Why, if you could give us all our potatoes, mother could easy wash for
+the rent and the bread and things. My sake! I ’most forgot the baby.
+Where’s he at? Can you see him?”
+
+“He’s right in the middle of the sand-heap and the teacher has give
+him a little shovel. Say, what you bring him for? this ain’t no
+day-nursery, this ain’t. It’s a playground farm and one-year-olds don’t
+belong.”
+
+“Maybe they don’t, but the baby belongs. That is if I do,” said the
+sister stoutly; “maybe you’ll say next I don’t.”
+
+“No, I shan’t say that. Why, what could we do without you? And say,
+Mary Jane.”
+
+“Well, say it quick. The girls are calling me to swing on the Maypole.
+’Cause that’s one thing I can do without my crutches.”
+
+“Well, in a minute. But, say. Sometimes I used to let you hoe in my
+garden, last summer. Remember?”
+
+“Course. I helped you a lot.”
+
+“Don’t know about that. But you might this year. That is, maybe. If we
+went partners, you see; and if the teacher didn’t get on to it; and if
+there was a medal give and you let me have it, ’cause I’m the one has
+the farm, course. What you say?”
+
+“I say we couldn’t do such a thing without the teacher knowing and I
+wouldn’t if we could. And you’ll never get a medal, you’re too lazy.
+But you’re real gen’rous, too, and I’ll be so glad to help. Oh! I love
+it! I just feel’s if I could put my face right down on that crumbly
+ground and go to sleep. It’s so dear.”
+
+“Huh! If you did I s’pose you’d get earwigs in your ears and--and
+angleworms, and--things. Maybe snakes. But I’ll let you,” concluded
+Jimmy, graciously.
+
+Then they turned around and there was--what seemed to the beholders, a
+veritable small angel!
+
+Mary Jane was so startled she dropped her crutches and, for an instant,
+quite forgot all about the baby. The apparition was clothed in white,
+so soft and fine and transparent that it seemed to enwrap her as a
+cloud; and above the cloud rose a face so lovely and so winning that it
+made Mary Jane’s heart almost stand still in ecstasy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HOW THE PAIR MET
+
+
+But when things cleared a little, it was only Bonny-Gay! and the Gray
+Gentleman was supporting Mary Jane without her crutches--though she
+didn’t realize that, at first. Afterward she was able to look up into
+his face and smile a welcome, because he and she were already quite
+close friends.
+
+What had happened was this: the Gray Gentleman had sent his elderly
+black “boy” with a note to the vine-covered house in Mt. Vernon Place
+and had requested “the favor of Miss Beulah’s company upon a drive,
+that morning. He intended to visit one of the ‘Playgrounds’ in the
+south-western part of the city, and he felt that the little girl whose
+society he so greatly enjoyed would find much to interest her, if she
+might be with him.”
+
+To this he had signed a name which was quite powerful enough to secure
+Mrs. McClure’s instant and delighted assent; and she had at once
+returned a very graceful note of acceptance by the “boy.”
+
+Then at ten o’clock precisely, the Gray Gentleman’s carriage had
+gone around for “Miss McClure,” and she had been lifted into it and
+to a seat beside her friend. A half-hour’s drive followed; through
+streets and avenues which Bonny-Gay had never seen before, and which
+continually grew narrower and more crowded. Even the houses seemed to
+shrink in size, and the little girl had finally exclaimed:
+
+“Why, it’s like the buildings were so little that they just squeeze the
+folks out of them, upon the steps and through the windows. I never,
+never saw! Will they get to be just playhouses, by-and-by?”
+
+“No, Bonny-Gay, I’m sure you never did. Yet it’s the same city in which
+is your own big home, and they are just the same sort of human beings
+as you and I.”
+
+“Are they? It doesn’t--doesn’t just seem so, does it? And why do they
+all stare at us like that?”
+
+“Because we do at them, maybe; and it’s not a common thing to see
+carriages with liveried attendants pass this way. I suppose you, in
+your dainty clothes, are as much a ‘show’ to them as they to you in
+their coarse attire, or rags.”
+
+Bonny-Gay looked thoughtfully at her frock. She would have preferred to
+wear a simpler one; and a comfortable “Tam” instead of the feathered
+hat which adorned her sunny head. But her mother had decided otherwise;
+since the Gray Gentleman had done her the honor of that morning it was
+but courtesy to show appreciation of it by a good appearance.
+
+After a moment she looked up and observed:
+
+“It’s the queerest thing! I feel as if I ought to get out and walk; and
+as if I should give this hat to that little girl who hasn’t any.”
+
+The Gray Gentleman smiled.
+
+“That would be going to the other extreme, my dear, and would help
+neither you nor them. Besides, this is not all we came to see, and here
+we are!”
+
+Then the street had suddenly ended and the carriage had turned in at
+a big gate, to roll almost silently onward till it stopped before a
+“Mansion,” with ancient wooden shutters and a clematis-draped porch.
+This was natural and quite suggestive to Bonny-Gay of her own beloved
+Druid Hill, wherein she was accustomed to take her stately drives in
+her father’s own carriage; and when she heard the shouts and laughter
+of children from the tree-hidden “Playgrounds,” her spirits rose to the
+normal again and she laughed in return.
+
+Dancing along beside him, with her hand in his, she had demanded
+eagerly:
+
+“Is it here I am to see my ‘twin sister?’ Oh! I want to find
+her--quick, quick!”
+
+“Yes, it is here, and this is--she;” answered her guide, as they paused
+behind Jimmy and Mary Jane, toward whom he silently nodded.
+
+This was how the pair met; and while Mary Jane saw what she fancied was
+an “angel” that which Bonny-Gay saw was a girl of her own age, with
+short, limp legs, very long arms, and a crooked back. But the dark head
+above the poor humped shoulders was as shapely as the “angel’s” own;
+the dark eyes as beautiful as the blue ones; and from the wide, merry
+mouth flashed a smile quite as radiant and winning.
+
+As soon as she saw the smile Bonny-Gay began to understand what the
+Gray Gentleman had meant, and she telegraphed him a glance that said
+she did. Then she laughed and held out her two hands to Mary Jane.
+
+“I guess you’re the girl I’ve come to see: my ‘twin sister!’ How-de-do?”
+
+“How-de-do?” echoed Mary Jane, too astonished to say more.
+
+The Gray Gentleman quietly slipped her crutches under the cripple’s
+arms, and seizing Jimmy’s hand walked swiftly away.
+
+Both girls looked after him with regret but he neither glanced back nor
+expected them to follow. Then they regarded each other with curiosity,
+till Mary Jane remembered she was the hostess.
+
+“Let’s sit down,” she said pointing to the grass.
+
+Bonny-Gay hesitated, and, seeing this, the other whisked off her apron
+and spread it for her guest. “You might spoil your dress, that’s so.
+Salt and lemon juice’ll take out grass-stain. My mother uses that when
+there’s spots on the ‘wash.’”
+
+“Does she? I wasn’t thinking of my frock, though, but of _that_;”
+answered the visitor, pointing to a “Keep Off” sign behind them.
+
+“Oh! that? Nobody minds that. You see, this is _our_ park now. We play
+where we choose, only on the terraces and slopey places. You’d better
+use my apron though, it’s such a splendid dress. Your mother would feel
+bad if you smirched it.”
+
+“I suppose she would. She’s very particular.”
+
+“So’s mine. They say she’s the very neatest woman in Dingy street. The
+neighbors say it.”
+
+“And our cook says mine is the ‘fussiest’ one in the Place. That might
+be some of the ‘sister’ part, mightn’t it?”
+
+“It might. Only, course, he’s just fooling.”
+
+“I don’t believe the Gray Gentleman ever fools. He means things. He’s
+made us children think a lot. More’n we ever did before. And he says
+things mean things, too, every single one. Even ‘Father George,’ and
+the lion, and Max, and--and everything.”
+
+After this exhausting speech Bonny-Gay removed her hat and laid it upon
+the grass, where Mary Jane regarded it admiringly. It was so pretty
+she would have liked to touch it, just once. The hat’s owner saw the
+admiration, and remarked:
+
+“Put it on, Mary Jane. See if it will fit you.”
+
+“Oh! I daren’t!” gasped the other. “I might hurt it.”
+
+Bonny-Gay lifted the hat and placed it upon the cripple’s dark head,
+which was held perfectly motionless, while the face beneath the brim
+took on an expression of bewildered happiness.
+
+“My! ain’t it lovely! I should think you’d want to wear it all the
+time!”
+
+“I don’t, then. I like my ‘Tam’ better, and nothing best of all. You
+can wear it as long as I stay, if you wish.”
+
+“That’s good of you. Some of the other girls wouldn’t even let me touch
+their best hats, they wouldn’t.”
+
+“Must be selfish things, then. How old are you, Mary Jane?”
+
+“How’d you know my name? and what’s yours?”
+
+Bonny-Gay stated it and explained:
+
+“I heard that Jimmy boy call you. How old did you say?”
+
+“I didn’t say, but I’m eight, going on nine.”
+
+“Why, so am I. I’m a ‘Sunday’s bairn’.”
+
+“And I!” cried Mary Jane, breathlessly.
+
+After that confidences were swift; and, presently, each little girl
+knew all about the other; till, in one pause for breath, the cripple
+suddenly remembered the baby. Then she caught up her crutches, swung
+herself upon them, and started off in pursuit of him.
+
+Bonny-Gay watched her disappear in the midst of the crowd of children,
+who had all shyly held aloof from herself, saw how they clung about her
+and how some of the tiniest ones held up their faces to be kissed. She
+saw her stoop to tie the ragged shoe of one and button the frock of
+another; saw her pause to listen to the complaint of a sobbing lad and
+smartly box the ears of his tormentor. Then another glimmering of the
+Gray Gentleman’s meaning, when he called these two “sisters,” came into
+Bonny-Gay’s mind.
+
+“She has to take care of the children down here just as I do in our
+park. I suppose we two are the only ones have time to bother, but how
+can she do it! Her face is so pretty--prettier, even, than Nettie’s,
+but I dare not look at the rest of her. I just dare not. Poor little
+girl, how she must ache! Supposing I was that way. My arms stretched
+way down there, and my feet shortened way up here, and my back all
+scrouged up so! Oh! poor, poor Mary Jane! It hurts me just to make
+believe and she has it all the time. But here she comes back and I
+mustn’t let her see I notice her looks. I mustn’t, for anything. It’s
+bad enough to have her body hurt, I mustn’t hurt her feelings, too.”
+
+However, there was no sign of suffering about the little cripple as
+she returned to the side of her guest, dragging the soap-box wagon
+behind her and recklessly rolling the baby about in it, so eager was
+her advance. There were tears in Bonny-Gay’s eyes for a moment, though,
+till she caught sight of the baby and heard Mary Jane exclaim:
+
+“Did you ever see such a sight? What do you s’pose mother will say?
+The teacher set him in the sand-box and somebody gave him a stick of
+’lasses candy, and he’s messed from head to foot. But isn’t he a dear?”
+and dropping to the ground she caught the little one to her breast and
+covered his sandy, bedaubed countenance with adoring kisses.
+
+“He’s the funniest thing I ever saw!” laughed Bonny-Gay, so merrily
+that the Gray Gentleman drew near to join in the fun. After him trailed
+an army of young “farmers” and in another moment the visitor had ceased
+to be a stranger to anybody there.
+
+“Let’s see-saw!” cried Joe Stebbins, seizing her hand and drawing her
+to the playground. Then somebody swung Mary Jane and the baby upon the
+beam beside her, some other girls took the opposite end, and they all
+went tilting up and down, up and down, in the most exciting manner
+possible. Then there was the Maypole, furnished with ropes instead of
+ribbons, from the ends of which they hung and swung, around and around,
+till they dropped off for sheer weariness. And here Bonny-Gay was proud
+to see that Mary Jane could beat the whole company. Her arms were so
+long and so strong, they could cling and outswing all the others; and
+when she had held to her rope until she was the very last one left her
+laughter rang out in a way that was good to hear.
+
+“Seems to me I never heard so much laughing in all my life!” exclaimed
+Bonny-Gay to the Gray Gentleman when, tired out with fun, she nestled
+beside him as he rested on a bench.
+
+“Yes, it’s a fine thing, a fine thing. And you see that it doesn’t take
+big houses or rich clothes to make happiness. All these new friends of
+yours belong to those tiny homes we passed on our way down.”
+
+“They do! Even Mary Jane, my sister?”
+
+“Even in an humbler. Dingy street is just what its name implies. But
+we’ll drive that way back and what do you say to giving Mary Jane a
+ride thus far?”
+
+“Oh! I’d love it! She’s so jolly and friendly and seems never to think
+of her--her poor back and--things.”
+
+“You’ll like her better and better--if you should ever meet again.
+She won my heart the first time I saw her, over a month ago. I met
+her dragging home a basket of her mother’s laundry work, in that same
+soap-box wagon she utilizes for the baby. The family chariot it seems
+to be. I was taking a stroll this way, quite by myself, and thinking of
+other things than where I was walking when I stumbled and my hat flew
+off. Then I heard a rattle and squeak of rusty small wheels, and there
+was Mary Jane hopping up to me on her ‘wooden feet’ and holding out my
+hat, with the most sympathetic smile in the world. ‘Here it is, Mister,
+and I do hope it isn’t hurt; nor you either,’ said she; and in just
+that one glimpse I had of her I saw how sweet and brave and helpful she
+was. So I’ve been proud to call her my friend ever since.”
+
+Just then arose a cry so sudden and boisterous it could have been
+uttered by no lips except the baby’s. For a teacher had tapped a bell,
+and somebody had cried ‘Luncheon!’ and he knew what that meant as well
+as anyone.
+
+So Mary Jane swung round to where he lay upon his back in the sunshine
+and set him up against a rock, and thrust a piece of the loaf she had
+brought into his chubby fists, and cocked her head admiringly while she
+cried out:
+
+“Did anybody ever see so cute a child as he!”
+
+Then she remembered the visitors and with the truest hospitality
+proffered them the broken loaf.
+
+“I ought to have given it to you the first, I know that, but he’d have
+yelled constant if I hadn’t tended him. It’s wonderful, I think, how
+he knows that bell!”
+
+“Wonderful!” echoed the Gray Gentleman, as he bowed and gravely broke a
+tiny portion from the small stale loaf.
+
+Bonny-Gay was going to decline, but when she saw the Gray Gentleman’s
+action, she checked her “No, I thank you” unspoken and also accepted
+a crumbly crust. After which Mary Jane distributed several other bits
+among some clamorous charges and finally sat down with the last morsel
+to enjoy that herself in their presence.
+
+“I think dinner never tastes so good as it does out-doors here, in our
+park,” she remarked with a sigh of satisfaction.
+
+“Dinner!” cried Bonny-Gay and looked into the Gray Gentleman’s face.
+But from something she saw there she was warned to say no more; and
+she made a brave effort to swallow her own crust without letting her
+entertainer see how distasteful a matter it was.
+
+After this the Gray Gentleman saw a cloud arising and though he did not
+fear a shower for himself he was anxious that Bonny-Gay should take no
+harm from her unusual outing. So he called the coachman to bring up
+the carriage and had Mary Jane and the baby lifted in. Then Bonny-Gay
+sprang after them, and the master himself made his adieux to the
+teachers and followed, watched by the admiring, maybe envious, glances
+of many bright eyes.
+
+However, one carriage, no matter how capacious, cannot hold a whole
+kindergarten, and neither could it carry the pleasant “Playgrounds”
+away; so if there was any envy it did not last long. Which was a good
+thing, too, seeing what happened so soon afterward.
+
+The landau had not progressed far toward Dingy street and Mary Jane
+was still wearing the feather-trimmed hat, which her new friend had
+persuaded her to put on just to surprise Mrs. Bump, when there came a
+rush, a bark, a series of shrieks, and the high-spirited horses were
+off at a mad gallop; which grew wilder and wilder, and soon passed
+quite beyond control of coachman or even the Gray Gentleman, who had
+promptly seized the reins as they fell from the driver’s hands, but
+had been powerless to do more than retain them in his tightly clutched
+fingers.
+
+It seemed an age that the frantic beasts sped onward, following their
+own will, before the crash came and they tore themselves free, leaving
+the hindering vehicle to go to ruin against the great post, where
+it struck. But it was, in reality, not more than half a moment, and
+when the reins were wrenched from his grasp the Gray Gentleman looked
+anxiously about him to learn if anyone was hurt.
+
+Mary Jane and the baby were on the floor of the carriage, safe and
+sound. The terrified footman was clinging to his seat behind; the
+coachman had either leaped or been thrown out, but had landed upon his
+feet; but where was Bonny-Gay?
+
+A white, motionless little figure lay face downward in the dust, a rod
+away, and over this bent a black, shaggy dog, whining and moaning in a
+way that was almost human.
+
+“Max! Max! Was it you, was it you! Oh! wretched animal, what have you
+done!”
+
+Max it was. But, at the sight of his silent playmate and the altered
+sound of a familiar voice, a cowed, unhappy Max; who crouched and slunk
+away as the Gray Gentleman lifted from the roadway the limp figure of
+his own beloved Bonny-Gay.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+MAX REAPPEARS
+
+
+There was neither drug store nor doctor’s office near, and the Gray
+Gentleman’s instant decision was to carry Bonny-Gay to Mrs. Bump’s
+house. Strong man though he was he felt almost faint with anxiety as he
+sprang from the carriage and without losing an instant of time lifted
+out Mary Jane and the baby. Then he dropped her crutches beside her and
+ran to the child in the roadway.
+
+Five minutes later, Bonny-Gay was lying on Mrs. Bump’s bed, and
+the Gray Gentleman had gone away in pursuit of aid, leaving a last
+injunction behind him as he disappeared:
+
+“Do everything you can for her, I beg, but keep useless people out.”
+
+Thus it was that, though curious faces peered in at the window, no
+person save Mrs. Stebbins crossed the threshold of their neighbor’s
+house, and the two women were left unhindered to minister to the
+injured child as best they knew how. They were not able, indeed, to
+restore the little girl to consciousness; but they had cleared the
+soil of the street from her face and clothing and had placed the inert
+figure in an easy posture, long before there was heard the rattle and
+dash of another approaching vehicle, and a doctor’s phaeton drew up at
+the door.
+
+The surgeon’s examination showed that one of the child’s legs was
+broken but this did not trouble him half so much as her continued
+unconsciousness. But he worked diligently to restore her and to prepare
+the injured limb for removal to her own home.
+
+From a low seat in the corner and hugging the baby tight, to keep him
+quiet, Mary Jane watched the little sufferer upon her mother’s bed,
+with wide, dry eyes and heaving breast.
+
+“Oh! if I could only take it for her!” she thought, helplessly. “It
+wouldn’t have mattered to anybody like me, ’cause I’m all crooked
+anyhow; but her! She was that straight and beautiful--my sake! It
+mustn’t be--it mustn’t! And she didn’t mind. She let me wear her hat,
+me. Well, that didn’t get hurt, any way. It just tumbled off all safe.
+I had to wear it home, else I couldn’t have dragged the baby, and I
+don’t know not a thing whatever became of his wagon. Never mind that,
+though. If she only would open her eyes, just once, just once!”
+
+But they had not opened even when, a half-hour later, another carriage
+paused before the Bumps’ tenement, and a tall, pale lady descended,
+trembling so that she had almost to be carried by the Gray Gentleman
+who supported her.
+
+This was Mrs. McClure and she had just been stepping into her own
+vehicle for a morning’s shopping when he reached her door, bringing
+his unhappy message. So there was no time lost in securing a vehicle
+and the mother was soon at her child’s bedside. At any other hour she
+might have shrunk from entering so poor a place but at that moment she
+had, for once, forgotten her own high station and thought only of her
+darling.
+
+One glimpse of the lovely face, so still and unresponsive, banished the
+mother’s last vestige of strength and she would have fallen where she
+stood, had not Mrs. Bump slipped an arm about her and motioned Mrs.
+Stebbins to bring the one sound chair the room could boast. The doctor
+held a glass of water to her lips and the faintness passed.
+
+“Is--she--alive?”
+
+“Yes. She is still alive,” answered the physician, gravely, and Mrs.
+McClure turned faint again.
+
+“Of course, she’s alive, lady; and what’s more it won’t be long, I
+reckon, before she’ll be asking a lot of questions all about what’s
+happened her. Oh! yes indeed. I’ve seen ’em a sight worst than she is,
+and up and around again as lively as crickets. Why, there’s my Mary
+Jane--”
+
+But the cripple held up a warning finger and Mrs. Bump ceased speaking.
+Though not her helpful ministrations; for with a whisk to the stove she
+had seized a coarse brown teapot and poured from it a hot draught into
+a cup that had no handle, indeed, yet could serve as well as another to
+refresh an exhausted creature.
+
+“Here, honey, just sip this. Strong, I know, and not the finest, but
+’twill set you up, quick. I know. There, there.”
+
+Moved by the same instinct which had made Bonny-Gay accept her crust
+dinner, Mrs. McClure drank the scalding liquid and did, indeed, revive
+under it. Then the doctor and the Gray Gentleman lifted the injured
+child and placed her gently upon the carriage seat.
+
+Seeing which, the mother hastily rose and followed, supported still,
+though unnoticed on her part, by the strong arms of the other mother
+whose sympathetic tears were now silently flowing; even while her
+cheery voice reiterated, much to the surgeon’s disgust:
+
+“Never you fear, dear lady. She’ll be as right as a trivet. Aye,
+indeed; she’ll be talking to you before you get to your own house. Yes,
+indeed. We poor folks see many an accident and mostly they don’t amount
+to much; even my Mary Jane--”
+
+But there was Mary Jane herself just as the carriage door was closing,
+thrusting something white and feather-trimmed into the pale lady’s lap.
+
+“Her hat, lady. Bonny-Gay’s best hat!”
+
+Mrs. McClure was as kind hearted as most, yet at that moment she was
+already unstrung, and the glimpse she caught of poor Mary Jane’s
+deformity shocked her afresh. Without intending it she did shrink
+away from contact with so “repulsive” a child and Mrs. Bump saw
+the movement. Her own face hardened and she withdrew her arm from
+supporting the stranger to clasp it about her own child.
+
+But Mary Jane saw nothing, save that Bonny-Gay was being carried away
+without her beautiful headgear, and again she thrust it eagerly forward.
+
+“Her hat! Her lovely hat! She mustn’t go without her Sunday hat!”
+
+It was the sweetest, most sympathetic of voices and almost startling to
+the rich woman, coming as it did from such a source. It made her take
+a second look at the cripple and this time, fortunately, the glance
+rested upon the child’s fine, spiritual face. An instant regret for
+the repugnance she had first felt shot through Mrs. McClure’s mind and
+leaning from the carriage window she dropped the hat upon Mary Jane’s
+dark head.
+
+“Keep it, little girl, as a gift from Bonny-Gay. It will delight her
+that you should have it. Quick now, coachman. Swift and careful!”
+
+Then they were all gone and Mary Jane, bedecked in her unusual finery,
+stood leaning upon her crutches, crying as if her heart would break.
+Her mother glanced at her hastily but thought it best to let “her
+have her cry out. She cries so seldom it ought to do her good,” she
+reflected. Besides, there was the baby rolling on the floor, in
+imminent danger from a wash-boiler full of steaming water; and a whole
+hour wasted from her own exacting labors.
+
+Presently, the hunchback felt something cold and wet touch her
+down-hanging hand and dashed the tears from her eyes to see what it
+might be. There sat a great black dog beside her, so close that he
+almost forced her crutch away. His eyes were fixed upon her face in a
+mute appeal for sympathy, and his whole bearing showed as much sorrow
+as her tears had done. Her first impulse was to shrink away from him,
+even to strike at him with the crutch, as she indignantly exclaimed:
+
+“You’re the very dog did it! You jumped into the wagon and scared the
+horses. If it hadn’t been for you she wouldn’t have been hurt. Go ’way!
+Go away off out of sight! You horrid, ugly, mean old dog!”
+
+Mary Jane’s vehemence surprised even herself and she shook her head so
+vigorously that the feather-trimmed hat fell off into the dust.
+
+Then was a transformation. Max--it was, indeed he!--had already
+dropped flat upon his stomach and crouched thus, whining and moaning
+in a manner that betokened such suffering that it quickly conquered
+the cripple’s anger; and now, as the hat fell right before his nose,
+he began to smell of it and lick it with the most extravagant joy. A
+moment later he had sprung up, caught the hat in his teeth, and was
+gambolling all around and around Mary Jane, as if he were the very
+happiest dog in the world.
+
+“My sake! How you act! And oh--oh--oh! I know you, I know you! You must
+be that Max-dog that she told me about. That she’d known all her life
+and wouldn’t be let come any more to her park! I guess I can see the
+whole thing. I guess you run away from that man the gardener gave you
+to. Maybe you went right back to where ‘Father George’ and the lion
+are; and maybe you saw Bonny-Gay and the Gray Gentleman come away; and
+maybe you followed them. Maybe it was because you were so glad, and not
+bad, that you jumped into the carriage and scared the horses. Oh! you
+poor doggie, if that is how it is!”
+
+Which was, in fact, exactly what had happened; and it seemed that the
+intelligent animal, who had loved Bonny-Gay ever since she was first
+wheeled about the beautiful Place in her baby-carriage, had now a
+comprehension of the damage his delight at finding her again had done.
+
+So Mary Jane hopped back into the house and called Max by that name to
+follow her. He did so, readily, and sat down very near to the foot of
+the bed on which she carefully placed his little mistress’ hat.
+
+“Well, daughter, this has been a morning, hasn’t it? Now, these
+handkerchiefs are ready to iron and I’ve fixed your high seat right
+close to my tub, so whilst I wash you can iron away and tell me the
+whole story and all about it. Here comes father, too, and it’ll pass
+the time for him to hear it. And, oh! William! you never could guess
+whatever has happened right here in this very kitchen, this very
+morning that ever was! But, I must work now, and Mary Jane’ll talk.”
+
+Talk she did and fast; and under her eloquence Bonny-Gay became quite
+the most wonderful child in the world:
+
+“The beautifullest, the kindest, the friendliest that ever lived. It
+didn’t ’pear to make a mite of difference that she was all so fixed up
+in her clothes; she played games as lively as the next one. She hung on
+to the Maypole ropes near as long as I did, and if I’d known what was
+coming I’d have dropped off quick and let her win the count. And my!
+how she did enjoy her dinner off my loaf! To see her little white hands
+hold it up to her lips and see her just nibble, nibble--Why, mother
+Bump! ’Twould have done your heart good!”
+
+“Eat your dinner, did she? Wish to goodness it had choked her!” growled
+William Bump, from the doorstep.
+
+“Why, father! W-h-y!” gasped Mary Jane, amazed.
+
+The man replied only by whistling Max to him, and by stroking the dog’s
+head when the whistle had been obeyed.
+
+But when the cripple had reached that part of her story descriptive of
+the final accident, the father spoke again and this time with even a
+more vindictive earnestness than before.
+
+“Broke her leg, did it? Glad of it. Never was gladder of anything in
+all my life. Hope she’ll suffer a lot. Hope--What better is she, his
+little girl, than you, my Mary Jane? Glad there is something that evens
+matters up. I hope his heart’ll ache till it comes as near breakin’
+as mine--every time I look at your poor crooked shoulders, you poor
+miserable child! So I do!”
+
+Both Mrs. Bump and Mary Jane were aghast at the awfulness of this
+desire. Even the baby had paused open-mouthed and silent, as if he,
+too, could comprehend the dreadful words and be shocked by them. Only
+Max remained undisturbed, even nestled the closer to the blue-shirted
+man, who in some manner reminded him of his old master, Mr. Weems.
+
+Then Mrs. Bump found her voice, and though she was a loyal wife she did
+not hesitate in this emergency to give her husband a very indignant
+reproof. So indignant, in fact, that she forgot the caution of many
+years, and with her hand on William’s shoulder, demanded fiercely:
+
+“You say that, you? You! You dare to rejoice in the misfortunes
+of others when it was by your own fault--your own fault, William
+Bump!--that our poor lass sits yonder a cripple for life. When I
+left her in your care that I might go and intercede for you to be
+given a fresh trial at the works, what was it but that you loved the
+drink better than the child? and left her on the high ledge while you
+slept--a human log! Yet you were sorry enough afterwards and you should
+take shame to yourself for your wickedness. It’s the drink again that’s
+in you, this day; and that has lost you another job and turned your
+once good heart into a cruel beast’s! So that is what I think of you,
+and my--”
+
+Then she turned and there sat Mary Jane, listening, horror-struck and
+broken-hearted!
+
+Regret was useless. The secret, guarded so jealously for years, was now
+disclosed. Till then the hunchback had believed her affliction was hers
+from birth, and had never dreamed that it was the result of a terrible
+fall, due to her own father’s carelessness. He had always seemed to
+love her so, with a sort of remorseful tenderness quite different from
+the attention he gave to his other, healthier children. But if it had
+all been by his fault!
+
+Poor Mary Jane! Alas, alas! Far worse for her was the anger and
+hatred that at that moment sprang to life in her tortured heart. As
+in a picture she saw other little maids, her playmates, even this
+recent vision of Bonny-Gay, straight-limbed, strong, active, enjoying
+everything without aid of those hindering crutches or the heavy
+dragging limbs.
+
+“Oh! father! you did it? you! And I ought to have been like them--I
+ought--I ought!”
+
+Nobody spoke after that. Mary Jane’s head sank down upon the high table
+where stood her little flatiron, fast cooling. Mrs. Bump felt a new and
+deadly faintness seize her own vigorous body and sat weakly down. How
+could she undo the mischief she had wrought? Until now there had been
+between the father and the child such a wonderful affection that it
+had been a matter of constant comment among all the neighbors, and the
+mother had been proud that this was so. Now--what had she done, what
+had she done!
+
+Presently, William Bump rose, put on his hat, whistled to Max, and
+walked out. At the door he paused, cast one miserable glance over the
+little room and his face was very white beneath its stains of toil
+and weather. His eyes seemed mutely to seek for one ray of pity, of
+forgiveness; but Mary Jane’s head was still upon the table and her
+mother’s face was hidden in her own labor-hardened palms.
+
+Only the baby began to coo and gurgle in a way which, under ordinary
+circumstances, would have elicited admiring exclamations, but which now
+secured no response. So, then he rolled over and closed his eyes; and
+not even he saw when the man and the dog passed clear out of sight,
+across the open lots, and toward the marshy places which led to the
+water and the unknown country beyond.
+
+By-and-by, the other children came home from the “Playgrounds,” full of
+chatter about the day’s delights and eager with questions concerning
+the wonderful happening of Mary Jane’s ride. Then the mother roused and
+kept them from troubling their sister, and dispatched them to examine
+the wrecked carriage, away down the street.
+
+By the time they returned Mary Jane’s eyes were no longer red and there
+was nothing out of common in her manner. Mrs. Bump was ironing away
+as if her life depended on it, and even humming the first strains of
+a hymn, “Lord, in the morning, Thou shalt, Thou shalt--Lord, in the
+morning Thou shalt hear.” This always denoted an extra cheerfulness
+on the singer’s part, and the children became boisterously happy in
+proportion.
+
+When supper time came they “set a place for father,” just as always;
+and though even by the end of the meal he had not appeared his unused
+plate was still left, as if he might come in at any moment.
+
+Yet it was quite midnight when Mary Jane, for once unable to sleep,
+crept down to her mother’s room and called, softly:
+
+“Has he come, mother?”
+
+“No dearie, not yet. But it’s not late, you know for--him!” replied
+the wife, so cheerfully, that even her quick-witted daughter did not
+suspect the heartache beneath the cheerfulness, nor the tear-stained
+face upon the pillow.
+
+“When he does, I wish you’d call me. I must tell him it’s--it’s all
+just right.”
+
+“Yes, darling. Trust mother and go to sleep now. I’ll call you sure.”
+
+And neither guessed how long that call would be delayed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MARY JANE GOES VISITING
+
+
+But Mary Jane Bump was not the girl to be gloomy over anything for
+very long; least of all over anything so trifling as her own personal
+afflictions; and the morning saw her hopping about in her narrow home,
+as merry, as loving, and as helpful as ever. Even more helpful, it
+seemed to the conscience-stricken mother, than before she had felt the
+fierce anger of the previous day.
+
+“Appears like she’d try to make even me forget she ever heard what
+I said, poor lamb! Well, I still think, what I’ve so often thought,
+that the Lord did bring sweet out of that bitter, when He made her so
+beautiful inside, even if she is crooked without. And more’n that, to
+me she don’t seem so misshaped. I almost forget she ain’t just like the
+rest. Aye, honey? What’s that you say?”
+
+“If you can spare me, mother, after all the work is done, I’d like to
+go to Bonny-Gay’s house and find out about her. Oh! do you s’pose she
+will get well?”
+
+“Sure, child.”
+
+“I guess she will, too. Can I, mother? When the work’s all done?”
+
+“Bless you, my lass, and that will never be. So there’s no use tarrying
+for such a time. And I don’t blame you for wanting to go. I’d admire to
+hear myself. But I guess it’s a long step from here and I don’t know
+the way, even I don’t. You’d have to ride in a street car and that
+costs money--which is one of the things I can least spare.”
+
+At mention of the car, Mary Jane’s eyes sparkled.
+
+On rare occasions--once when she went to market with her mother,
+at holiday time, and once when the wash had been too large and the
+patron’s home too distant for even her nimble crutches--she had enjoyed
+the luxury of travel by electricity. In imagination, she could still
+feel the swift rush of air against her cheek, could see the houses
+hurrying past, and hear the delightful ting-a-ling of the bell, as the
+motorman stopped to let the passengers on or off. She had not dreamed
+that it would be necessary for her to ride, in order to pay the visit
+she desired; but if it were--Oh! felicity!
+
+The light in the eyes she loved decided the mother upon the indulgence.
+A car-ride meant a nickel, or part of one, at least, for even little
+Mary Jane; and a nickel would buy a loaf, and many loaves were needful
+where there were seven mouths to fill, and every mouth a hungry one.
+More than that, if William were out of work--
+
+Mrs. Bump considered no further. Mary Jane should have the pleasure--no
+matter what happened afterward.
+
+“Of course, you’ll ride! Why not? Don’t suppose I’d let you start off
+a-foot for such a length, do you? I’ve a notion that this Mt. Vernon
+Place is away at the other end the city. Leastwise, it must be a good
+bit from Dingy street, ’cause I never heard of it before, and I’ve been
+around the neighborhood considerable, with the wash, you know. Yes, you
+may go. Fly round right smart and get your clothes changed. What a fine
+thing it is that your other frock is clean, and I must say I did have
+good luck ironing it, last week.”
+
+“You always do have good luck, mother Bump! You’re the very loveliest
+ironer in the world!” and the wooden feet clicked across the room that
+their owner might hug this famous laundress.
+
+“And you’re a partial little girl, honey.”
+
+“But, mother, dear, the work isn’t done--yet. There’s the steps to be
+scrubbed and that other pile of hank’chiefs, and--”
+
+“Well, I reckon we’ll live just as long if our steps ain’t done for one
+day in the year. Besides, I might let one the younger ones do them and
+see. They’re always teasing to, you know. Strange, how human nature
+loves to mess in a pail of soap and water.”
+
+“Who’ll mind the baby, if I go?”
+
+“I will, Mary Jane Bump! Seem to think the precious youngster ain’t
+hardly safe in his own mother’s hands, do you? Run along, run along,
+girlie, and fix yourself fine.”
+
+Away up the narrow stair swung happy Mary Jane; and in a very few
+moments down she swung again. She had exchanged her blue gingham for
+her pink print, had dusted off the shoes which, alas! were so useless
+that they rarely wore out! and had brushed her dark wavy hair till
+it floated about her sweet face, as fine and fleece-like as it was
+possible for hair to be. In her hands she carried two hats; her own
+little plain “sailor,” and the gift of Bonny-Gay.
+
+“Oh! I wouldn’t wear--” began Mrs. Bump, answering the question in Mary
+Jane’s eyes; then seeing the disappointment which crept into them,
+hastily altered her original judgment to fit the case. “I wouldn’t
+wear that old ‘sailor’ if I was a little girl that owned feathers like
+those. Indeedy, that I wouldn’t.”
+
+Mary Jane’s face rippled with smiles and for almost the first time in
+her life she did a coquettish thing. Standing upon her crutches before
+the tiny looking-glass, hung at an angle above the mantel, she adjusted
+and readjusted the pretty leghorn, until she had placed it as nearly in
+the position it had occupied on Bonny-Gay’s yellow curls as she could.
+Then she wheeled about and asked:
+
+“Does it look right, mother? Just as right as she would like to have
+it, when she sees me?”
+
+“Perfect, honey! And though I maybe oughtn’t to say it before you,
+you’re the very sweetest little girl in Baltimore city!”
+
+“Ah! but, mother Bump, you haven’t seen all the others!” laughed the
+child.
+
+“Now, here’s your money. Two nickels, dear. I’ve just given them a bit
+of a polish in the suds while you were up-stairs. One is to go with,
+and one to come home. I’ve been puzzling it out, and the best thing is
+for you to go to the nearest car-line you find; then ask the conductor
+how nigh it will take you to the Place. He’ll be kind to you, I know.
+They’re always obliging, the conductors are, and when it’s anybody
+like you, why they just seem to tear themselves to pieces to be nice.
+You’ll have no trouble, honey, not a mite. And when you get there,
+don’t forget to make your manners, pretty, like I’ve taught you. Say
+everything to cheer the lady up, if she seems down-hearted a bit, and
+good-by, good-by. Bless you, Mary Jane!”
+
+Mrs. Bump stood at her doorway and Mrs. Stebbins at hers, to watch
+the little figure hop away, and when it turned at the corner and they
+caught a glimpse of the radiant face beneath the picture-hat, they
+smiled upon each other well satisfied.
+
+“No harm’ll happen to her!” said Mrs. Stebbins, confidently. “She’s one
+of the Lord’s own.”
+
+“I’m not fearing! though I’m going to miss her powerful,” answered the
+mother, and retired to her tub.
+
+Mary Jane’s heart beat so with excitement that she could hardly
+breathe. Here she was, going alone on an unknown journey, to ride in
+a car quite by herself, and to pay her own fare exactly as if she
+were a grown-up. She had to tightly clutch that corner of her little
+handkerchief wherein the nickles were tied, to make herself realize the
+delightful fact; and already, in her dutiful heart, she was planning
+how she could save, by not eating quite so much of her portion of food,
+and so, in time, make up to her mother for this unwonted extravagance.
+
+Indeed, she thought so fast and deeply, that she stood on the corner
+and let the first car go by without signalling it. Then she brought her
+wits to the present and when the next one whizzed up she was ready for
+it, raising her hand and motioning it to stop, as she had seen other
+people do.
+
+It did stop, of course, and to such a little passenger, also, of
+course, the conductor was quite as kind as Mrs. Bump had prophesied he
+would be. He lifted Mary Jane into the very front seat of all and he
+would have been glad not to take a fare from her. But this his duty
+compelled him to do, and when he had received it he paused a moment
+beside her to inquire:
+
+“Taking a ride, are you? Well, it’s a nice morning.”
+
+“Isn’t it! Just beautiful. Yes, I’m going to Mt. Vernon Place.”
+
+“Whew! you are? Well, this is the wrong car--Never mind. You can
+transfer. Mt. Vernon Place is a long way from here and quite the
+swellest part of the town; you know that, I suppose.”
+
+“It’s where Bonny-Gay lives.”
+
+“Oh! indeed. Well, don’t you worry. I’ll look out for you and pass you
+along. Company allows only one transfer, now, but I’ll fix it. It’ll be
+all right. Don’t worry.”
+
+Mary Jane had not the slightest intention of worrying. That was
+something she had never done until the night before, and then about
+her missing father. But in this brilliant sunshine, with the world all
+her own, so to speak, even that anxiety had disappeared. He would be
+sure to return and very soon. He loved them all so dearly, and even
+for herself, if there were none others, he would come. He couldn’t
+live without her; he had often told her so. Therefore she merely hoped
+he was having as good a time, at that moment, as she was; and settled
+herself serenely in her place to enjoy everything.
+
+She never forgot the first part of that day’s ride. There were few
+passengers in the car and these were all men, quite able to look out
+for themselves; so the conductor remained near her and talked of the
+places they passed, pointing out this building and that, for Mary
+Jane’s enlightenment. She bestowed upon each an attention that was
+quite flattering to her entertainer, till the car turned another corner
+and he had to move away. People came more frequently now and at every
+block of their advance, the men and women seemed to Mary Jane to crowd
+and hurry more and more. They almost crushed her own small person,
+climbing past her, but she still clung sturdily to the outer corner of
+her seat, as her friend, the conductor, had bidden her.
+
+“No need for you to move up, little girl. You’ll be changing after a
+bit, and it’ll be easier for them than you.”
+
+Right in the very business part of the city the car stopped and he came
+back to her, thrusting a pale green slip of paper into her hand, and
+hurriedly lifting her out.
+
+“That’s your transfer. Yonder’s your car. Give that paper to the
+other conductor. He’ll help you on. Say, Snyder!” he called to his
+co-laborer. “This kid’s for Vernon Place. Put her off at Charles
+street, will you? and pass her along. I’ll make it right with the
+company.”
+
+Then he was gone and Mary Jane stood bewildered in the midst of a
+throng of vehicles, and street cars, and busy, rushing people. For
+an instant her head whirled, then she saw the impatient beckoning of
+conductor Snyder, and swung herself toward the waiting car. A man,
+into whose path she had hopped, caught her up and placed her on the
+platform, and again she was off.
+
+But this time she was merely one of a crowd and the ticket collecting
+kept Mr. Snyder too busy to bother with any single passenger. Indeed,
+some slight hindrance just as they reached Charles street put Mary Jane
+and her destination quite out of mind, and it was not until they had
+gone some blocks beyond and he had chanced to come near her again that
+she ventured to ask:
+
+“Are we almost there?”
+
+“Where’s there?”
+
+“He--he said--Charles street,” she answered abashed by his brusque
+manner.
+
+“Charles street! Why, that’s long back. Did you want to get off there?
+Oh! I forgot. You’re the child--Well, such as you ought not to be
+traveling alone. Here. I’ll put you off now, you can walk back. Ask
+anybody you meet, and they’ll direct you. Wait. I’ll give you another
+transfer. It’s against rules, but the other fellow’s responsible.”
+
+This time it was a yellow slip Mary Jane received and again she was
+set down in the midst of a confusing crowd. She was in imminent
+danger of being run over, and saw that; so promptly retreated to the
+curbstone and from thence watched the unending procession of cars,
+which followed one another without a moment’s break. For just there it
+happened that many railway lines used the same tracks and it would have
+puzzled a much more experienced person than Mary Jane to distinguish
+between them.
+
+Finally, she grew so tired and confused with the watching and the
+racket that she resolved to walk; and set out boldly in the direction
+from which she had come, scanning the street name-signs upon the
+corners. It seemed to her she would never come to that she sought, but
+she did, at last; and here a new difficulty presented.
+
+“Which way shall I go? this--or that? Oh! dear! The time is going so
+fast and I don’t get there. I’ll have to ask somebody the way.”
+
+But though she made several shy little efforts to attract attention,
+not a passer-by paused to answer her low question. Almost all fancied
+her an unfortunate, petitioning alms; and some thought her a street
+merchant with something to sell. Many and many an one had gone by, till
+in the midst of all these men she saw a woman.
+
+Only a scrub-woman, to be sure, on her way to some office to her daily
+labor; but she paused when the cripple spoke to her and looked with
+feminine curiosity at the plainly clothed child in her expensive hat.
+
+“Mt. Vernon Place! Why, child alive, it’s miles from here! Away up
+yonder. This is Charles and it does run straight enough, that’s so, to
+where you want to go. But it’s so far, little girl. And you a cripple.
+You’d much best go back home and let some older person do your errand.
+Whatever was your ma thinkin’ of, to send you such a bout?”
+
+“She didn’t send me, I came because I wished. Can you tell me which car
+is right? and will this yellow ticket pay my way?”
+
+The woman examined the transfer-slip, glanced at a clock on a near-by
+building, and shook her head.
+
+“That’s the car, all right, but that transfer’s no good. After fifteen
+minutes they won’t take ’em, and it’s half an hour or more. No. You’ll
+have to pay a second fare. I’ll help you on, if you like. Where do you
+live?”
+
+“Ninety-seven, Dingy street.”
+
+“The land! That’s almost the jumping off place of the city. Did they
+give you only money enough to ride twice.”
+
+“My mother gave me ten cents,” answered Mary Jane, proudly, yet
+somehow, the fortune which had seemed so big, a little while before,
+now appeared very small and inadequate.
+
+“Pshaw! If I had a cent I’d give it to you. I don’t know what you’d
+better do.”
+
+“I know. I’ll walk. And thank you for telling me the way. If I keep
+right on this street, and go up and up, will I surely, surely get
+there.”
+
+“Sure. I know, ’cause I used to clean up in that neighborhood. I hope
+you’ll have luck. Good-by.”
+
+“Good-by,” answered Mary Jane, smilingly.
+
+The momentary pause and conversation had rested her and she now felt
+wholly equal to any demands upon her strength. If she had merely to
+follow this one avenue till she came in sight of the monument and the
+lion, why! that was as easy as A, B, C! So she set out with fresh
+courage and full enjoyment of every novel sight or sound by the way;
+though, all the while, watchfully reading the street sign at every
+corner she reached.
+
+It was almost two hours later that she came in sight of the Place.
+She knew it in a moment, even though she had had but the one brief
+description of it from Bonny-Gay’s lips, and she felt as if she had
+come into a new and wonderful world.
+
+“How big and still and--and--finished it looks! And, oh! how tired I
+am. My arms ache like they never did before, and I can hardly hold my
+crutches. I’ll get to that low stone round the monument--that’s where
+she sits with the Gray Gentleman--and I’ll get rested. Then I’ll look
+all around and pick out her house. I shall know it because she said it
+was all covered with vines and there was a big yard behind, with trees
+and things. Oh! how good it is to sit down.”
+
+So good, indeed, that before she knew it the exhausted little maid had
+dropped her head upon the curbing and fallen fast asleep.
+
+There Mr. Weems discovered her and would have roused her to send her
+home. But a second glance at her convinced him that this was no child
+of that locality, and that she seemed a very weary little girl, indeed.
+So he simply folded his own jacket and placed it under her head and
+left her to recover herself.
+
+She awoke after a little time and sat up, confused and rather
+frightened. Till she suddenly remembered where she was and, seeing a
+gardener at work upon a grass-plot near, decided at once that he must
+be the owner of Max. She saw, too, the coat which had formed her pillow
+and knew that he must have placed it there. With a glad cry she caught
+up her crutches and swung herself toward the keeper:
+
+“Oh! sir, I thank you. I was so tired and the coat was lovely soft. And
+I know you. You’re Mr. Weems, the gardener, and I’ve seen Max. He’s at
+our house, I mean he was--last night. And he will be again, ’cause he’s
+with father, who’ll fetch him back. Father just loves dogs and animals.
+And say, please, which is Bonny-Gay’s house?”
+
+“Bless my soul! You don’t say? Then you must belong around here, though
+I didn’t think it. You’ve seen Max, and you ask for our Bonny-Gay!
+Well, you’ve struck trouble both times. He’s in trouble enough, but she
+in worse. That’s her home, yonder, on the west corner. The green house
+I call it; with those doctors’ carriages in front of it.”
+
+“It is? Why, how funny. What’s all that straw for?”
+
+The gardener shook his head, sadly, and hastily flicked away at his
+eyes.
+
+“That’s to deaden all the noise. Bonny-Gay is a very, very sick little
+girl and there’s about one chance in a thousand, folks think, for
+her to get well. She was in an accident, yesterday. Got thrown out a
+carriage. The gentleman that took her driving is almost crazy with
+grief about it and--What’s that? What’s that you say? You was with her?
+You? And that’s her hat--Upon my word, it is. She showed it to me, the
+very first day she had it, while she was out here waiting to go driving
+with her folks. And she’s the only one they’ve got. I reckon her poor
+father would give all his millions of dollars and not stop a minute to
+think about it, if he could make her well by doing it. Poor man, I pity
+him!”
+
+“It was Max did it, you know. I’ve come to see her, and you mustn’t
+tell me she’s so sick as that. Why, she was that beautiful to
+me--I--I--”
+
+Waiting not an instant longer, and despite the gardener’s warning, Mary
+Jane clicked across the smooth path, over the street, and up to the
+very front door of the mansion, wherein lay a precious little form,
+incessantly watched by a crowd of nurses and friends.
+
+The outer door was ajar, a footman standing just within, keeping guard
+and ready to answer in a whisper the constant string of inquiries which
+neighbors sent to make. Past him, while he was talking to another,
+slipped Mary Jane, her crutches making no sound upon the thick carpet.
+One thought possessed her, one only; and made her almost unconscious
+of the novel scenes about her. Bonny-Gay was ill. Bonny-Gay might die.
+Well, she would have one more glimpse of that beloved face, no matter
+who tried to stop her.
+
+Her brain worked fast. Sick people were generally up-stairs; up-stairs
+she sped. Sick folks had to be quiet. She paused an instant and peered
+down the dim corridor. She saw that as the people passing along
+this hall approached a distant door they moved even more gently and
+cautiously. In that room, then, lay her darling!
+
+It seemed like the passage of some bird, so swift she was and so
+unerring, for before even the most watchful of the nurses could
+intervene she had entered the darkened chamber and crossed to a white
+cot in the middle of it. By that time it was too late to stop her. Any
+noise, any excitement, however trivial, might prove fatal, the doctors
+thought.
+
+Bonny-Gay lay, shorn of her beautiful curls, almost as white as her
+pillows. But the small head moved restlessly, incessantly, and the
+silence of the night had given place to a delirious, rambling talk. All
+her troubled fancies seemed to be of the last scenes she had witnessed:
+the “Playgrounds,” with the eager children crowding them. She was
+see-sawing with Jimmy O’Brien, and hoeing cabbages with the baby. She
+laughed at some inner picture of his absurd accidents, and finally, as
+some peril menaced him, raised her shoulders slightly and shrieked:
+
+“Mary Jane! Oh! Mary Jane--come quick!”
+
+All the watchers caught their breath--startled, fearful of the worst.
+Yet upon the silence that followed the cry, there rose the sweetest,
+the gladdest of voices:
+
+“Why, yes, Bonny-Gay! I’ve come!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE FLIGHT AND FRIGHT OF MARY JANE
+
+
+Again Mary Jane’s thoughts had been swift. She recalled the fact that
+“when Joe Stebbins had the fever and talked crazy-like, the doctor said
+we must answer just as if ’twas the way he said. ’Twould have made
+him worse to argue him different,” and with this reflection made her
+instant response.
+
+Now Bonny-Gay had either been less ill than they fancied, or the crisis
+had been reached; for at that cheerful reply she opened her blue eyes
+and looked into the eager face so near them. For a brief time she said
+no more, seeming to seek for some explanation of those troubled dreams
+from the steadfast smile of her new friend; then she stretched out her
+hand and Mary Jane caught it rapturously between her own palms.
+
+“You--you look nice in my hat. But I thought--I thought--I was at your
+park. Yet it’s home, isn’t it, after all. How dark it is, and how tired
+I am. I guess I’ll go to sleep a few minutes. Though I’m very pleased
+to see you, Mary Jane.”
+
+Through the hearts of all in the room shot a thrill of thankfulness,
+yet nobody moved as the injured child dropped at once into a quiet
+sleep which meant, the doctors knew, the saving of her life and reason.
+
+Mrs. McClure had kept up bravely, till that moment, but now her
+strength was leaving her in the shock of her sudden relief and joy.
+
+“Tell the girl not to move nor draw her hand away--till Bonny herself
+releases it;” she whispered, as an attendant led her noiselessly out of
+the chamber.
+
+She did not know how long and difficult a task she had set the
+unwelcome visitor; for while she herself sank into a much needed rest
+the sick child still slept that deep, refreshing slumber which was to
+restore her to health.
+
+The hours passed. The doctors went silently away. One nurse took up a
+watchful position near the bed and remained almost as motionless as the
+chair she occupied. A gray-haired man appeared at the doorway, took
+one long, delighted look at the small figure on the cot, barely seeing
+the other child beside it, and went away again. This was the anxious
+father and he moved with the lightness of one from whom an intolerable
+burden has been removed.
+
+Meanwhile, a second nurse took observation now and then of Mary Jane.
+The position into which the cripple had sprung, in her eager clasp of
+Bonny-Gay’s hand, was a trying one. Half-bent forward, with no support
+for any portion of her body save that sidewise seat upon the foot
+of the cot, it was inevitable that muscles should stiffen and limbs
+ache, even in a stronger frame than Mary Jane’s. Besides that, she was
+very hungry, almost faint. Her slight breakfast had been taken very
+early, and since then she had not tasted any food, though it was now
+midafternoon. Presently, she felt her head grow dizzy. Bonny-Gay’s face
+upon the pillow appeared to be strangely contorted and the clasp of
+the small hand within her own to become vise-like and icy in its grip.
+She began to suffer tortures, all over, everywhere. Even her useless
+legs were prickling and “going to sleep,” like any overtaxed limb. She
+feared she would fall forward, in spite of all her will, and that
+might mean--death to Bonny-Gay! She knew, of her own intuition, that
+she must not move, even without the whispered command of Mrs. McClure,
+and in her heart she began to say a little prayer for strength to hold
+herself steady till her task was at an end.
+
+Then, all at once, she felt that the crutches resting against her side
+were being noiselessly lifted away. Somebody, who moved as if on air,
+was putting a rolled up pillow under her own tired chest; another at
+her side--her back; and beneath the heavy feet a great soft cushion
+that was like her own mother’s lap, for restfulness.
+
+She turned her head and looked up into the kind face of the trained
+nurse and smiled her most grateful smile, for she dared not speak.
+The white-capped woman smiled back and silently held forward a plate
+on which was some carefully cut up food. Then she forked a morsel and
+held it to Mary Jane’s lips, which opened and closed upon it with an
+eagerness that was almost greedy, so famished was she.
+
+“How queer it is!” thought the little girl, “that anybody should bother
+that way about just me!” then swallowed another mouthful of the
+delicious chicken. A bit of roll followed the chicken, and after that a
+glass of milk. With every portion so administered, Mary Jane’s fatigue
+and dizziness disappeared till, by the time the nurse had fed her all
+that the plate contained, she felt so rested and refreshed she fancied
+that she could have sat on thus forever, if Bonny-Gay had so needed.
+
+“Oh! how good I feel!”
+
+Bonny-Gay was awake at last, and, of her own accord, withdrew her hand
+from Mary Jane’s clasp.
+
+“Why--why, is that you, Mary Jane? Why doesn’t somebody make it light
+in here? How came you--Oh! I remember. You came to see me and I went to
+sleep. I don’t know what made me do that. Wasn’t very polite, was it?
+Now, I’ll get up and be dressed and then we’ll play something.”
+
+But as she tried to rise she sank back in surprise.
+
+“That’s queer. There’s something the matter with me. One of my legs
+feels--it doesn’t feel at all. Seems as if it was a marble leg, like
+‘Father George’s.’ Whatever ails me?”
+
+Mary Jane’s answer was prompt enough, though the nurses would have
+suppressed it if they had had time.
+
+“I guess it’s broken. That’s all.”
+
+“Broken! My leg? What do you mean?”
+
+“Oh! I forgot. You haven’t been real awake since it happened. Max--”
+
+“Child!” interposed the nurse who had fed her.
+
+“Oh! mustn’t I tell?”
+
+The two white-capped women exchanged glances. After all, their patient
+would have to learn about her own condition; and children had often
+ways of their own which proved wiser than grown folks thought.
+
+“Ye-s, you may tell.”
+
+“You were thrown out the carriage. Don’t you remember? Max had run
+away to find you, and when he did, he didn’t stop to think of anything
+else. He just jumped right into the carriage, where you and the Gray
+Gentleman and the baby and I were all riding splendid. That made the
+horses afraid and they acted bad. You got tumbled out and broke your
+leg. That’s all.”
+
+“That’s--all! Why, Mary Jane! You say it as if--as if--you didn’t care!”
+
+Bonny-Gay began to cry, softly.
+
+“Yes I did say that’s all, because that isn’t much. It’s a good job
+it wasn’t your head. A broken leg gets well quick; quicker’n ever if
+it’s only a little leg like yours. If it was your mother’s now, or
+your father’s, you might worry. But, my sake! I wouldn’t mind a little
+thing like that if I were you. To lie in this heavenly room, with all
+the pictures and pretty things, and folks to wait on you every minute,
+why--I’d think I was the best off little girl in the world if I were
+you.”
+
+“But I can’t walk on it, nobody knows when. Nor go out-doors,
+nor--nor--I think you’re a mean girl, Mary Jane Bump!”
+
+The cripple was too astonished to reply. She had pushed herself from
+her hard position upon the cot’s foot to a chair which the nurse had
+placed for her, and was leaning back in it with supreme content. In
+all her little life she had never sat upon anything so luxurious and
+restful. How could any child mind anything, who was as fortunate as
+the daughter of such a home? Astonishment, also, at finding that her
+new friend was not wholly the “angel” she had hitherto supposed her to
+be, kept her silent. But she was rather glad to find this out. It made
+the other girl seem nearer to her own level of imperfection, and she
+speedily reflected that sick people were often cross, yet didn’t mean
+to be so.
+
+Bonny-Gay herself swiftly repented her hard speech and looking around
+the room, inquired:
+
+“Did I sleep very long?”
+
+“Yes, dear, a long time. We are all so glad of that,” answered the
+nurse, holding a spoon to the patient’s lips, just as she had done to
+Mary Jane’s, who laughed outright exclaiming:
+
+“That was the funniest thing! When I was holding your hand, Bonny-Gay,
+she fed me just that way, too! Me! Mary Jane Bump! Chicken, and biscuit
+and milk! ’Twas prime, I tell you!”
+
+“Fed you? Why?”
+
+“’Cause I was holding your hand and couldn’t feed myself. I s’pose she
+thought, maybe, I was hungry. I was, too.”
+
+“Did you hold it all the time I was asleep, Mary Jane?”
+
+“Yes. Course. You wasn’t to be waked up till you did it yourself.”
+
+A moment’s silence; then said Bonny-Gay:
+
+“I am too ashamed of myself to look at you. What must you think of me,
+Mary Jane?”
+
+“I think I love you, dearly.”
+
+“I don’t see how you can, but I’m glad of it. Where is my mother,
+nurse?”
+
+Mrs. McClure bent over the cot and kissed her daughter, murmuring
+tender words of love and delight; and for a space neither remembered
+Mary Jane.
+
+However, she had just remembered her own mother and the fact that she
+had been long from home. Also, that that home lay at the end of a long,
+strange and distracting journey, for one so ignorant of travel as she,
+and that through the window she could see that it was already twilight.
+She waited a bit, for a chance to bid good-night to Bonny-Gay and to
+say how glad she was that she was better, and to thank the nurse for
+being so kind to herself. But nobody seemed to have any thought for her
+just then.
+
+The gray-haired father had come into the room and bent beside his wife
+over the cot where lay their one darling child; and, seeing the parents
+thus occupied with their own feelings, both nurses had considerately
+turned their backs upon the scene and were busying themselves in
+arranging the chamber for the night’s watch.
+
+“I dare not wait a minute longer! I should be afraid, I think, to get
+in the car alone at night. I was hardly ever out after dark. I’d like
+to make my manners pretty, as mother said, but I can’t wait.”
+
+Moved by the same delicacy which had made the nurses turn their
+backs upon the group at the bedside, Mary Jane silently picked up
+her crutches and hopped away. Finding the way out was easier, even,
+than finding it in. The halls were now all lighted by wonderful lamps
+overhead and the same stately footman stood just within the outer
+entrance.
+
+“However did such a creature as this get in and I not see her?” he
+wondered, as the little hunchback came swiftly toward him. “Well,
+better out than in, that’s sure. No knowing what harm it would do the
+little missy if she caught sight of an object like that!”
+
+Which shows how little the people who live in one house may understand
+of each other’s ideas; and explains the rapidity with which he showed
+Mary Jane through the door and closed it upon her.
+
+After the lighted hallway the outside world seemed darker than ever,
+even though the days were yet long and twilight lingered. But to-night
+the sky was clouded and a storm impending. Already in the west there
+were flashes of lightning, and though, in ordinary, Mary Jane delighted
+in an electric storm, just then it made her think the more longingly of
+home and its security.
+
+“Besides, if I should get my fresh clean dress all wet, that would make
+work for mother. I’m glad I forgot that hat, though. That’ll have to be
+dry, anyway, now; and maybe after all, when Bonny-Gay gets well she may
+want it herself. It was her mother gave it to me, not her. Now which
+way--I guess this. Oh! I know! I’ll find that gardener, Mr. Weems, and
+he’s so nice and kind he’ll show me the way to go. Maybe, after all,
+there is another car goes nearer to Dingy street than that one I took
+first and--There’s a man. It might be him. I’ll run and see.”
+
+But when she had clicked across the path to where the man stood he had
+already begun to move away, and she saw that he was not at all like the
+gardener. So she paused, irresolute, trying to recall by which of the
+several avenues leading from it she had entered the Place.
+
+There were people hurrying homeward in each direction, and a few smart
+equipages were whirling past; but nobody paused to glance at her, save
+with that half-shudder of repugnance to which she was quite accustomed
+when she met strangers, and that had rarely wounded her feelings as it
+did just then and there.
+
+“Well, I can’t help that. And I don’t mind it for myself, not now at
+all, since I know about poor father. He’s the one feels worst for it.
+And that I shall tell him the very minute I see him. So let them look
+and turn away, if they wish. Looks don’t hurt, really, and oh! dear! if
+I only could remember the street I ought to take. Charles, of course. I
+know that and there it is; but whether to go to that side or this--”
+
+In the midst of her perplexity the electric current was turned on and
+the Place was suddenly and noiselessly flooded with a light as of day.
+Courage came back and after another hasty scrutiny of the streets, to
+discover some landmark that she could recall, she saw the monument and
+the lion, and ran toward them as if they had been old friends.
+
+“Bonny-Gay loves them, and so does the Gray Gentleman, and they do look
+as quiet and peaceful as can be. I stopped there, I know, and maybe
+I’ll think it out better there.”
+
+Yet even in that reposeful place Mary Jane could gain no new ideas as
+to her course, nor was anybody near to whom she could apply.
+
+The gardener had long since gone home for the night, and in
+desperation, Mary Jane determined to appeal to the very first person
+who came by. This proved to be a young man, with a cane and eyeglasses;
+and he appeared to be extremely busy. The little girl thought he
+must also be one of the “aristocratics” of whom her father spoke so
+contemptuously, because when she had asked him to “please tell me the
+way to Dingy street?” he had scarcely glanced at her but had haughtily
+replied: “Never heard of such a place.”
+
+“Hmm. Too bad. Father says they don’t any of them know very much, and
+I’m sorry. Don’t know where Dingy street is, indeed! when I know it
+myself, even a little girl like me and have lived there always. I mean
+ever since I was a baby and we left the country. That, mother says,
+was the mistake we made. In the country father didn’t drink and lose
+his work. Well, we’ll go again, some day, when I get big and strong,
+and can help more with the wash. We could earn a lot, mother and me
+together, if I was big.”
+
+She lost herself in her day dreams for a little and awoke from them
+with a start, to find the twilight altered to real night, while the
+electric gleams from the lamps overhead were brighter than ever and
+their shadows more like ink upon the pavement. Mary Jane had never seen
+such brilliancy as this, and again she forgot herself in studying her
+surroundings and enjoying the vivid green of the grass and shrubs.
+
+A certain clump of flowers, glowing in the radiance, attracted her
+especially and she felt that she must put her face down on them, to
+smell them, before she lost sight of them forever.
+
+“For I don’t s’pose I’ll ever come this way again. I couldn’t expect
+it. Mother couldn’t spare the money even if she could me and--even if
+I ever get back to her again!” she concluded, with a frightened sigh.
+But the beautiful blossoms enticed her, and in her own down town park,
+which had been thrown open to whoever of the poor would enjoy them,
+there were few “Keep off” signs and the few quite disregarded. This she
+had explained to Bonny-Gay; and what was true of one park in the city
+should be true of all.
+
+So she hopped nimbly over the velvet lawn to where the flowers gleamed
+scarlet and white and wonderful, and bending above them thrust her face
+deep down into their loveliness. Oh! how sweet they were! and so crisp
+and almost caressing in their touch upon her cheek.
+
+“Dear flowers! I wouldn’t hurt you, you know that, don’t you! I
+wouldn’t break a single one of you, no, not for anything. Seems like
+you’d feel it if your stems were broken, poor things. But I’ll not harm
+you. No, indeedy. Only I wish--I wish I could just take one tiny, tiny
+piece home to mother. But I wouldn’t break you, even for her!”
+
+“Well, I guess you’d better not! What are you doing here? How dare you
+come on this grass? Can’t you read the signs?”
+
+Mary Jane looked up, and was immediately terrified. It was a policeman
+who held her arm, and all the wild stories she had heard of arrests and
+imprisonment flashed into her mind.
+
+In Dingy street there was, also, a policeman; but a friendly soul whom
+all the children loved, and whose own home was close to theirs. It was
+he who had saved many a baby’s life, from careless passing vehicles,
+when busy mothers had not the time to watch them as they should; and
+his blue uniform represented to Mary Jane’s mind an all-powerful
+guardian, to whom appeal was never made in vain.
+
+But this six-foot officer, with his glitter and dignity, his harsh
+voice and vise-like clutch--this was the majesty of law outraged.
+
+“Oh! what have I done! I didn’t mean it--I didn’t--” gasped the
+frightened child, and wrenching herself loose swung away upon her
+crutches, faster even than the officer could have pursued her, even if
+he had been so minded.
+
+He did not even attempt to follow her, but watched her flight, with a
+chuckle of amusement.
+
+“Scared her well, that time, the little vagrant. Well, it’s right a
+lesson was given ’em. If every child who wanted to smell the bushes was
+let, what would our parks look like!”
+
+“Like bits of Paradise, as they should;” answered a voice behind him,
+so suddenly that the policeman wheeled about to find himself face to
+face with a resident of the Place himself.
+
+As for Mary Jane she neither saw whither she fled nor scarcely breathed
+before she had collided with a swiftly advancing figure, and found both
+herself and it thrown down. Captured after all! Her eyes closed with
+a snap, as there seemed to rise before them the vision of a station
+house, filled with frowning policemen, and herself in the midst, a
+helpless prisoner.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+ON THE WAY HOME
+
+
+“Well, upon my word!”
+
+Mary Jane opened her eyes. Then she rubbed them to see more clearly.
+Indeed, she rubbed them twice before she made out her mistake and was
+able to say:
+
+“Oh! I am so sorry! I--I didn’t mean--but I can’t be arrested! I
+can’t--my mother--I--.”
+
+She scrambled up somehow, picked her crutches from the ground and set
+off again. She dared not look behind her but was quite sure that the
+hard-faced policeman was in full pursuit. Off she was, indeed, only to
+be brought to a sudden stop, while a shiver of fear ran through her.
+But she made no further outcry and rested quietly upon her wooden feet,
+to hear her doom.
+
+“Why, you poor little girl! You look scared. You haven’t done any harm,
+not a bit. In fact, you’ve saved me quite a chase. I’m not so swift as
+you are, hard as I tried to catch you.”
+
+Mary Jane shivered and still said nothing, nor could she lift her eyes
+from the ground. Their gaze rested idly upon the man’s feet and she
+fancied that the gloss upon his shoes equalled the radiance of the
+electric light.
+
+“And now that I have caught you, I want to thank you, with all my
+heart, for your kindness to my precious child. I believe the good Lord
+sent you, just in the nick of time, with your ready answer and your
+readier sympathy. Yet to think that, after all this, you should run
+away, at night and alone. You poor, brave little child.”
+
+Then she heard, through her puzzled understanding, another voice
+speaking in jesting surprise.
+
+“Turn your back on an old friend, would you, Miss Bump! Well, we will
+have to see about that, indeed!”
+
+Those were tones to banish fear! and now, in truth, Mary Jane’s eyes
+were raised and she saw standing there and smiling down upon her none
+other than the Gray Gentleman.
+
+The revulsion of feeling was too much for her self-control, and
+dropping her face against his hand she began to cry, with all the
+abandon of those who seldom weep.
+
+“Why, little girl! What is it? Were you so badly frightened as all
+that? There, there. You’re with friends now, child, who love you and
+will take care of you.”
+
+With that she felt herself lifted in the Gray Gentleman’s arms, and
+her head forced gently down upon his shoulder, while her crutches fell
+noisily to the stones. However, they were promptly picked up again by
+the other gentleman, who was also gray--as to hair and beard--and who
+made almost as much noise as the crutches, because he kept blowing
+his nose so vigorously. Then she heard him softly slap her own Gray
+Gentleman’s free shoulder and exclaim, in a husky voice:
+
+“It’s all right, neighbor! The Lord has been good to us. Bonny-Gay
+is almost herself again and was laughing--actually laughing--to see
+me, her dignified daddy, run out of her room to try a race with Miss
+Mary Jane here. Oh! it’s too good to be true!” and again there was a
+tremendous flourish of handkerchief, and a sound like a small fog horn.
+
+“Thank God!” murmured the Gray Gentleman, and Mary Jane felt him
+tremble. Instinctively she raised her head to comfort him and touched
+his thin cheek timidly with her lips.
+
+But there was no timidity in the kiss he returned her as he set her
+upon the ground, and with all his usual cheerfulness, demanded:
+
+“Well, little traveler, how do you propose to get home again?”
+
+“I don’t know!” The tone was a happy one and seemed to mean: “And I
+don’t care! You are to find the way for me!”
+
+“You don’t, eh? But I’m thinking that good mother of yours will be
+hungry for a sight of your face, and it’s time we remembered her.
+Mothers are queer bodies. They like to have their youngsters around
+them, be they never so bothersome. Yet, since she’s waited so long,
+I think it will do no harm for her to wait a while longer. I’d like
+to have you pay me a little visit, as well as Bonny-Gay, and I’ll
+invite you to my house to take supper with a lonely old fellow who’ll
+entertain you as well as he can.”
+
+It was hard to refuse, she would so much have liked to see the home of
+her friend, of the friend of all the children whom she knew. But the
+vision of her mother, waiting and anxious, was too much for her loyal
+heart, so she declined as prettily as she knew how, only requesting:
+
+“Now, please, you are to tell me the quickest way home to Dingy street
+and I’ll go. You must know it, for you’ve been there so often.”
+
+“Yes, I know it, and I’ll take you at once. I’ll do more. I’ll invite
+myself to supper with you after I get there, since you can’t stop with
+me.”
+
+“Very well,” said Mary Jane, though not with much enthusiasm. She was
+afraid he would think her mother’s supper a poor one. However, he was
+quite welcome to what they had, and she added more cordially: “I know
+mother’d think it an honor, only I’d have to stop at the baker’s on the
+way.”
+
+She didn’t quite understand why both gentlemen laughed so heartily.
+They now seemed in a mood, each one of them, to laugh at any and
+everything which happened, and Bonny-Gay’s father teased the other
+a little about his great appetite, which required the contents of a
+bake-shop to satisfy. Then he added, with a manner that admitted of no
+denial:
+
+“But you’ll have to defer your visit, neighbor, till another time. I
+claim the privilege of conveying this young lady to her destination,
+and my man has already summoned a cab. Here it comes, now; for I’d
+rather trust a city cabby to find out odd places than my own coachman.”
+
+Here came the cab, indeed, and from the vine-clad mansion on the corner
+also came a liveried servant bearing a big basket tightly covered.
+
+“With the mistress’ compliments, and Miss Bonny-Gay is sending this to
+the baby.”
+
+“Good enough!” answered the happy father, and took Mary Jane from
+the Gray Gentleman’s arms; who handed her crutches in after her, and
+himself closed the door of the cab with a cheerful snap.
+
+“Some other time, then, Mary Jane, I’ll expect a visit from you. My
+regards to your mother and I will be down your way before long.
+Good-by.”
+
+Mary Jane’s head whirled with the strangeness of it all. What a day
+it had been! And how simple and kind was this gray-haired father, who
+didn’t look half so strong as her own absent one, but who talked so
+fast and asked so many questions that, before she at all realized what
+she was doing, the cripple had given him their whole family history.
+Save and excepting, of course, anything which related to her own
+affliction and its cause, or any possible fault of her beloved father.
+
+“He works--I mean, he did work--for the B. & B. railroad folks.
+He--he--isn’t working just now. He went away, for a little while, but
+I guess he’s back again. Won’t he be surprised to hear all that’s
+happened to me? He’ll be glad, after all, that she didn’t--Oh! my sake!
+what am I saying!”
+
+At mention of the Company, the gentleman beside her had given a little
+start of surprise, but Mary Jane fancied that the jolting of the cab
+had moved him. She expressed her regret for the accident and added:
+
+“But I like it. I never rode in a carriage but once before. That was
+yesterday when Bonny-Gay was hurt. But she’ll soon be well, now, I
+think. Don’t you?”
+
+“So I trust. So I trust and believe. But, tell me a little further of
+your father. What sort of work did he do? I happen to know something
+about that company and am interested in the details of all its
+concerns.”
+
+“Sometimes he was helping along the tracks; straightening them,
+changing the ties, and such things. Sometimes he was over at the great
+sheds they’re building--monstrous ones, they are, almost all of steel.
+You ought just to see them by daylight. Though I guess I can show them
+to you even to-night, ’cause they’re not so very far from our house.”
+
+“Indeed! Did you say what street it was? I heard my neighbor give some
+directions to the driver for us, but paid little attention.”
+
+“Dingy street, number 97.”
+
+“Dingy street! You don’t say! Why, I know that locality well. Very
+well, indeed. A great many of--of the Company’s employees live around
+there.”
+
+“Most all of them do, I guess.”
+
+“So your father’s out of work, just now?”
+
+“Yes. But he’ll soon be ‘on’ again, I think. When he does work he gets
+real good wages. That is, if he isn’t ‘docked.’ I reckon the Company is
+pretty strict. My mother says they don’t allow for anything. A man must
+do his task or leave it, and that’s the end.”
+
+“But that is quite right and just, is it not?”
+
+“I--suppose--it is. Though poor men can’t always--I mean, they get
+discouraged sometimes. That makes them do and say things they wouldn’t
+else. It’s queer and unjust, my father says, for the Company to have so
+much money and their men so little. That’s what made him glad--I mean
+not so sorry--when--when--things happen.”
+
+Mary Jane paused, confused. Twice she had nearly told this other father
+that her own father had been glad when Bonny-Gay had been hurt. She
+knew William Bump would not have said anything so cruel if he had not
+been drinking; she was sure of that, for he was generally so kind of
+heart. But even yet she did not imagine that her companion was himself
+the president and head of that Company whose wages her father gladly
+accepted even when he talked against it most fiercely.
+
+However, Mr. McClure greatly enjoyed listening to this frank story
+of the underworkings of his vast enterprises. He was not only a very
+wealthy and powerful man, he was also a wise and just one. He felt the
+responsibilities of his position, and made it his business to know all
+employees by name and character, so far as that was possible. Over this
+particular portion of his affairs, right in his own city, he had an
+almost daily supervision, and he knew William Bump, in some respects,
+much better than this loyal little daughter did. His opinion of the
+father was very poor, and he had himself given orders, on the previous
+day, that the said William was never again to be taken on by his
+managers, “not in any capacity whatsoever.”
+
+For some distance the gentleman made no response to Mary Jane’s last
+remark, and the silence was broken only by the roll of their own
+wheels, the ordinary sounds of the streets through which they passed,
+and the increasing rumble of the thunder. The storm was drawing nearer
+and he wished to escape it, if possible. He signalled the driver, after
+a while, and seeming to rouse himself from some deep thought, to: “Make
+haste!”
+
+The cabman lashed his horses into a gallop, and remembering the
+accident of her one other ride, Mary Jane began to grow afraid. She was
+afraid now, also, of this silent gentleman beside her and longed for
+her journey to end. To pass the time she tried to count the lamps on
+the street corners as they flew past her in the gloom, and to watch for
+the illuminating flashes of lightning, which came faster and faster.
+
+Suddenly, into this silence, Mr. McClure hurled a stern question, that
+compelled a truthful reply, whether she liked to give it or no.
+
+“Mary Jane, of what was your father glad when that accident occurred?”
+
+She caught her breath in alarm; then answered, frankly:
+
+“He was glad because--because Bonny-Gay was hurt.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Oh! I don’t know. I mean--I guess he was so sorry about me--being like
+I am--and he thought it wasn’t fair. She was as beautiful and perfect
+as I was--was ugly; and her father had all the money and he had none.
+But it wasn’t right and it wasn’t him. Indeed, indeed, it wasn’t. He
+didn’t know you, of course, and he didn’t dream that you could love
+her same as he loves me. But he’d be the first--the very first--to be
+sorry, after he came to himself.”
+
+“Hmm. No man, rich or poor, has a right ever to be other than himself.”
+
+“I suppose not. But things haven’t gone right with father since we came
+from the country.”
+
+“Humph!” was the contemptuous comment, and the little girl said no more.
+
+Oh! if they would only ever get to 97 Dingy street! Twice, now, she had
+been allowed the luxury of a carriage ride and each time how wretched
+she had been. At first she had liked Bonny-Gay’s father almost as much
+as she had the Gray Gentleman, when she first knew that good friend.
+She had chattered away to him almost as freely; yet after awhile he had
+allowed her to keep up the chatter rather for his own information than
+because he had seemed interested in her affairs. He was now become so
+stern and indifferent that she realized she had deeply offended him.
+To her relief, the cab turned sharply around the next corner and there
+she was, at last, in dear, familiar Dingy street, with its tiny houses
+that were yet homes; in one of which was mother Bump, her four sisters,
+and the wonderful baby! Possibly, also, her father; though of him she
+thought less, just then, than of the motherly face which was, to her,
+the comeliest in all the world.
+
+The cab stopped with a jerk. The cabman leaped down and opened the
+door. Then he lifted out the covered basket, and afterward swung Mary
+Jane to the ground and supported her till the gentleman who remained
+inside the vehicle handed out her crutches.
+
+The house door flew open, also, at the sound of wheels, and Mrs. Bump
+peered out into the night.
+
+“What is it?” she called, her voice trembling with anxiety. That a
+carriage should stop before her humble home foreboded harm to some of
+her loved ones, and her first thought was of her crippled daughter.
+
+“Here am I, Mother! Home at last;” answered that daughter’s voice,
+cheerily.
+
+Then she turned to thank Mr. McClure for his kindness to her, but he
+did not hear her, apparently. The cab was already being whirled around,
+and the driver lashing his horses. A brilliant gleam of lightning,
+followed instantly by a terrific clap of thunder, startled them into a
+thought of shelter only. Mrs. Bump saw through the cab window that the
+gentleman raised his hat, then she seized the basket from the ground,
+and hurried Mary Jane indoors, just as the first great drops of a heavy
+shower came dashing down.
+
+“Oh! mother Bump! I never saw such a lovely place as this dear old
+home! How glad I am to be here. Has father come yet?”
+
+“Not yet, dearie. But he will soon, no doubt.”
+
+“I hope he isn’t anywhere out in this storm; poor father.”
+
+“Bless you, child! The man has sense, hasn’t he? Even dumb creatures
+know enough to go in when it rains. But tell me fast, darling, all
+that’s happened to you since you went away. My heart! this has been the
+longest day I ever knew! have you had anything to eat? What made you
+so late? How came you to be riding home in such grand style? and where
+got you this basket?”
+
+“It’s the baby’s, mother. Bonny-Gay sent it to him;” cried the happy
+girl, running to seize that crowing infant from his trundle-bed and to
+cover his face with kisses. Then she dropped her crutches and herself
+upon the floor, drew the baby to her lap, and from that lowly position
+began a swift, but rather mixed history of events since she had said
+good-by and hopped away in the morning.
+
+The mother listened, losing never a word, and deftly simplifying
+matters now and then by a leading question, while at the same time she
+explored the big basket. It had evidently been filled in haste, and by
+the direction of Bonny-Gay, herself.
+
+“This is for the _baby_, is it?” laughingly demanded Mrs. Bump, lifting
+out a great loaf of rich cake, carefully wrapped in waxed paper. “Fine
+food for a year-old, that is. And this? and this? My heart, but whoever
+filled this basket had a generous streak!”
+
+A fine roasted chicken, mate to that of which Mary Jane had already
+partaken, it might be, followed the cake. Then came a picture-book,
+a jumble of toys, a box of candy, and an odd mixture of the things
+nearest at hand, and of which the sick child could think.
+
+But crowning all these gifts, and the only one packed with any attempt
+at care, was the beautiful leghorn hat, with its nodding ostrich plumes
+and its general air of elegance.
+
+“The darling, the darling! She did mean me to keep it, then!” cried
+Mary Jane, so delightedly that the baby immediately pat-a-caked with
+noisy vigor.
+
+Of course, even though they had long since enjoyed their ordinary
+supper, the watchful children were not to be put off without at least
+a taste of the baby’s good things; so the mother cut and divided with
+exact equality; and after a feast so hilarious that it brought Joe
+Stebbins in from next door to see what was the matter, everybody was
+sent to bed; even the tired Mary Jane, whose heart seemed brim full of
+both joy and anxiety.
+
+She had explained to her mother how she had chattered to Mr. McClure,
+hiding nothing, even her unwise statement of William Bump’s animosity
+toward the other, happier father.
+
+Mrs. Bump had listened quietly, and she had pooh-poohed the little
+girl’s regrets! but her heart sank. Mr. McClure was the name of the
+head of the Company. She knew that, though Mary Jane did not; and
+she realized that her husband’s last chance of reinstatement in the
+Company’s employ had been ruined by the very one who would have
+sacrificed her very self to do him good.
+
+“Poor little daughter! But she must never know. Never. It would break
+her loving heart! And it matters little now whether William comes home
+or not!” sighed the troubled wife and mother, as she laid her own weary
+head on her pillow for the night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+CONFIDENCES
+
+
+“Oh! I am so tired! If I could only just get up once!” sighed Bonny-Gay.
+
+“Sick folks always have to stay in bed. How’d they look, sitting up,
+I’d like to know?” answered Mary Jane.
+
+“But I’m not sick. I’m not sick one bit. I’m just as well as--as that
+parrot, yonder.”
+
+“Tell the truth, tell the truth, tell the truth!” shrieked Polly.
+
+Mary Jane laid down the thirteenth doll and clapped her hands to her
+sides. “That bird is the absurdest thing. He makes me laugh till I
+ache.”
+
+“That’s a story, that’s a story!” corrected Poll.
+
+“No, it isn’t! No, it isn’t! No, it isn’t!” mocked Mary Jane, gaily.
+
+Bonny-Gay laughed, too, and cried out:
+
+“Mary Jane, you’re the very nicest girl I know!”
+
+“Thank you. That’s a dear thing for you to say. But you’re partial,
+like mother. Besides, there isn’t any other girl here, just now.”
+
+“But I mean it. There isn’t another girl in the world would come here
+and be shut up in the house, day after day, just to amuse me, ’cause my
+leg’s broken, except you.”
+
+“Yes, there is,” said Mary Jane, confidently.
+
+“Who?”
+
+“You!”
+
+“Oh! you funny child!”
+
+“Wouldn’t you? If you and I were each other--I mean changed places and
+I was the sick one, wouldn’t you?”
+
+“Maybe. I don’t know. I never did like indoors and would never stay in
+if I could help it. Do you s’pose it will be very long now?”
+
+“No, I guess not. Not if you’re good and lie still. Wait. I’ll bring
+all the playthings around to that other side the bed and that will rest
+you. You’ve been looking out this way a good while now.”
+
+So Mary Jane industriously hopped around and transported the thirteen
+dolls, the bird cages, and the parrot stand to a new position, and
+leaning on her crutches gently helped the sick child to turn about as
+far as she was permitted to do. A trained nurse was still always in the
+room, and Mrs. McClure herself passed in and out very frequently; but
+it was Mary Jane who did most for her friend; Bonny-Gay declaring that,
+“Next to Mamma” there was nobody who understood her whims and desires
+without being told them, as the little cripple did.
+
+“That’s because we’re just an age, I guess. Queer, wasn’t it? That you,
+up in this big house, and me down in my dear little one, should both
+be sent to our folks the very same day that ever was? ‘Sunday bairns’
+should be the best ones in the world, my mother says. Only, I wasn’t in
+my Dingy street house when I came. I was in the country;” and for some
+unexplained reason Mary Jane’s sunny face clouded suddenly.
+
+For weeks now, and because Bonny-Gay had “taken such an extreme fancy
+to her”--as Mrs. McClure had herself explained to Mrs. Bump, when she
+herself went to ask the favor of Mary Jane’s attendance in the sick
+room--the helpful child had spent the greater portion of each day
+there. It had become quite a matter of habit in Dingy street that a
+carriage should roll up to the door of 97 and that Mary Jane should
+go away in it; to be returned at six o’clock precisely, of the same
+afternoon. Dingy street felt itself proud of this state of things, and
+every householder held her head a bit higher because of it. Who’d ever
+have dreamed that their own small hunchback would get to be “carriage
+folks?” Well, there was no telling when such glory might not fall to
+their own lot, and she’d do them all credit wherever she went, she had
+such pretty, loving ways with her. That she had.
+
+Now, it was sometimes an inconvenience to the McClure household that
+this trip must be made twice a day; and that very morning Mrs. McClure
+entered the chamber to speak with Mary Jane about it. She had now
+overcome her first repugnance at sight of the deformed little body and
+saw only the sweet face and helpfulness. She had, also, offered Mrs.
+Bump some compensation for her daughter’s “services; just the same as
+any other nurse’s;” but the poorer mother gently declined.
+
+“If the dear Lord has given her a chance to do something for your girl,
+whom she so loves, I guess He means it as a sort of compensation to her
+for her own afflictions. No, indeed, Mrs. McClure, I wouldn’t like to
+taint the sympathy between those two by any thought of money.”
+
+To this there could be no answer, and so the matter rested.
+
+“Mary Jane, we begin to feel almost as if you belonged with us, you
+have been so kind and good to Bonny-Gay; and what do you say to staying
+up here at night, now? At least for a few nights together, with then
+one at home?” asked the lady, as she sat down beside the cot and
+watched the undressing of the china seventh doll, preparatory to its
+bath.
+
+Mary Jane looked up quickly, with a sort of fear coming into her
+telltale face.
+
+“Oh! I shouldn’t like that. I mean--of course, you’re very kind--but
+I’d have to go home. I would, indeed.”
+
+“It’s not kindness on my part, especially. I thought it might save
+trouble to both sides; but, never mind. We’ll go on as usual, for the
+present; though I wish you would speak to your mother about it, when
+you see her, this evening. Now, Bonny-Gay, I have to go out. Is there
+anything you fancy, that I can bring you? I shall be at market and do
+some shopping. Think and see, darling.”
+
+Bonny-Gay’s eyes had rested searchingly upon Mary Jane’s face. She
+would have been delighted herself if her playmate could have remained
+all the time in the Place, but she saw the sudden fear and was puzzled
+by it. Yet she did not urge the matter, and the only request she made
+of her indulgent mother was:
+
+“Just bring something new for the baby.”
+
+Again Mary Jane’s face was troubled and she exclaimed:
+
+“Please, Bonny-Gay don’t! He has too many things already, that you have
+sent him. I’d rather not, please.”
+
+“Very well,” said Mrs. McClure, as she kissed her little girl and went
+away. But she was considerably annoyed. She felt that she did not
+exactly “know how to deal with that class of people,” to which Mary
+Jane belonged. She wished that Bonny-Gay had not taken this absurd
+fancy of hers. She wished that the Gray Gentleman had never done that
+unwise thing of carrying her daughter into the region and knowledge of
+Dingy street. It was all very well for him to devote his time still,
+as he had all his life and fortune, toward making the lives of poor
+children brighter. Everybody must have a hobby, and that was his, she
+supposed. Of course, he was a noble man, and his name was known far
+and wide as that of a philanthropist. Still--Hmm. It would soon end,
+anyway. Bonny-Gay was improving rapidly, and was so perfectly healthy
+that there was nothing to fear. And if she needed her own carriage that
+evening, and Mary Jane remained still obstinate, she must be sent home
+in a cab. That was all.
+
+With these thoughts she departed, but she had in some way left an
+altered atmosphere behind her. Her difficulty in understanding “that
+class of people” arose from the simple fact that she had, as yet, no
+real sympathy with them. It seemed to her that they were altogether
+different from herself; that they were duller, less capable of any true
+nobility. But she was, in reality, kind and good at heart, with many
+social cares to tax her nerves, and she was one day to have her present
+ignorance enlightened.
+
+In the silence that followed her exit, Bonny-Gay’s hand stole softly
+out and touched Mary Jane’s cheek, down which a tear was rolling. And
+in the child’s touch was that perfect sympathy which the mother’s tone
+had lacked.
+
+“Don’t cry, Mary Jane. He’ll come back.”
+
+Mary Jane’s head lifted instantly and her face brightened.
+
+“How’d you know ’twas that I was thinking about?”
+
+“Oh! I knew. After a minute. Not just at first. Mother didn’t
+understand. I don’t s’pose she’s heard yet that he was gone. Move up
+nearer. Fix yourself comf’table. Let’s talk, instead of play dolls,
+now.”
+
+Mary Jane pushed her low chair to the side of the cot, so close now
+that she could rest her head against Bonny-Gay’s own pillow.
+
+“Tell the truth, tell the truth, tell the truth!” admonished Polly,
+and in their laughter at his opportune command they failed to hear
+that somebody had entered the room and sat down quite near them. This
+was Bonny-Gay’s father, and he liked sometimes to surprise her by an
+unexpected visit of this sort, as well as to listen to the innocent
+chatter of this pair of “Sunday bairns.”
+
+“How long is it, Mary Jane?”
+
+“It was the very day you were hurt. Two whole weeks.”
+
+“Well. That’s all right. Max is with him, isn’t he?”
+
+“I don’t know. He went away with him. They both felt bad, I guess. That
+made them like to be together. Father’s powerful fond of dogs, any way.”
+
+“And of the country, you said, too. I s’pose he’s in the country
+somewheres.”
+
+“But where! I do want to see him so much. There is something I must
+tell him. Something he thinks is wrong, something that made him feel
+bad but should not. Something--Oh! I’ve seen all through things so
+clear, since he went. Every time he saw me I s’pose he was reminded
+that--My sake! What am I saying. But I’m so sorry about your mother not
+liking to send for me. I must have bothered her no end. I wouldn’t have
+come only--”
+
+“You wouldn’t have come? Why, it was I who wanted you, who must have
+you. Don’t you know, you are my ‘twin sister?’ It’s all right. Mother
+would give me anything to have me pleased. Don’t think a thing about
+that. Let’s talk about the rest. Say, Mary Jane, say!” Excitedly.
+
+“There you are. Off you go! Have a care!” warned Polly.
+
+“Oh! keep still, you bird. Listen, Mary Jane. You know I’m going to the
+country, don’t you? We all are, just as soon as I get well.”
+
+“Yes. I think it will be just lovely for you.”
+
+“For you, too, you go with me and--find him!” almost shouted Bonny-Gay.
+
+“Oh! you darling! Might I?”
+
+“Course. Why shouldn’t you? My father owns a lot of country. Ever and
+ever so much. He has so much he says it’s a sin and shame it isn’t
+doing anybody any good. But he’s too busy to tend to it himself and he
+can’t trust many folks. They would waste his money, dreadful. There’s
+our big house and park, and all the gardens and things; and then there
+are fields and fields and fields. Miles of them, I guess. Just as like
+as not he’s gone around there some place. Just supposing! If he has,
+why, pooh! You could find him in a minute. Oh! you must go with me and
+look. It won’t be so long, maybe. If this old leg would only get itself
+well. I love the country. It’s all out-doors there.”
+
+Mary Jane said nothing, but her face was rapturous with anticipation.
+Finally, Bonny-Gay announced:
+
+“I guess that’s all settled, then. There’s nothing to do about it only
+ask our folks. Let’s make believe things. Let’s pretend we had all the
+money in the world and could do just what we wanted to with it; what
+would you do, first?”
+
+“Why, I wouldn’t dare think. ’Cause it couldn’t ever come true, you
+know.”
+
+“Supposing it couldn’t? The things that don’t come true are the
+sweetest things there are, I think. You begin.”
+
+Mary Jane drew a deep breath. Under the inspiration of this other more
+imaginative child, she was fast forgetting the hard, dry facts of life;
+and whether this were best or no, it was, at least, delightful.
+
+“Well, I’d go to your father and I’d pay him money, and I’d get all
+those miles and miles of country to do with exactly as I pleased. Then
+I’d take some more of the money and I’d get the men that build houses
+to make a house, right in the very prettiest spot there ever was. Where
+there was water if I could, ’cause my father, he’s so fond of fishing.
+He’s quit work, lots of times, to go fishing down the bay. I’d buy him
+a fish-pole and lines and hooks. I’d buy him and mother a cow and a
+horse and a market-wagon. They had a market-wagon once, but a man came
+along and told him he could make more money in the city; and he sold
+their things and lost the little farm and came. He’d be all right if he
+was back in that country, I guess. I’d like to see it, myself.”
+
+The eager speaker stopped short. Again she had almost revealed what
+no loyal daughter should,--a parent’s fault. But Bonny-Gay was so
+interested, she seemed so to know beforehand what was in a body’s mind
+that words slipped out of themselves.
+
+“Have a care. Tell the truth!” adjured Polly.
+
+“Of course I will,” answered the cripple. “Now, Bonny-Gay, it’s your
+turn. What would you do if you had all the money and could?”
+
+The unseen father leaned forward a little. He was profoundly interested
+in any possible desires his darling might express, and, for the matter
+of that, she rarely did ask for anything. Maybe, because almost all
+desirable things came to her without the asking.
+
+“I hardly know. Yes, I do, too. I’d buy all the parks in this city and
+in every other one. I’d hunt up all the little children in the cities.
+I’d make free ‘Playgrounds’ for them, every one. Even the little girls
+should have their little cunning ‘farms,’ just the same. I guess they’d
+want to plant flowers, though, wouldn’t they? instead of cabbages
+and limas. Then I’d take all the grown-ups who wanted to go into the
+country and couldn’t, and I’d send them. And I’d let them stay a whole
+week, I guess. If I could. If there was room enough. And when Christmas
+came I’d have everybody that was poor come to my house, just like the
+Gray Gentleman does to the halls he hires, and I’d make them as happy
+as--I am. I wouldn’t let anybody in the whole wide world be sick nor
+sorry; I wouldn’t let anybody hurt nice dogs or turn them out of their
+own parks; and--Oh! Mary Jane, do you s’pose we’ll ever see dear old
+Max again?”
+
+“Why, Bonny-Gay? Didn’t you just make me feel ’t he was right with
+father? Course, then, when father comes he’ll come; and if you aren’t
+well by that time I’ll coax father to lead him up here to see you. If
+he’ll be coaxed;” she added gravely.
+
+The child on the cot glanced through the window. “There goes the Gray
+Gentleman, to see ‘Father George’ and the lion. I wish he’d come to
+see me; but he’s afraid my mother blames him for taking me that day, I
+think, though nobody ever said so.”
+
+“I’ll go ask him!”
+
+Before she could be stopped, Mary Jane hopped across the room and down
+to the door. Mr. McClure rose with considerable noise and approached
+the cot. He had been deeply touched by the fact that neither of the
+two innocently dreaming “Sunday bairns” had planned anything for her
+own especial gratification. The witness of such unselfishness was
+refreshing in a world such as that wherein most of his waking hours
+were passed.
+
+“Well, little woman, how goes it? Getting well, fast?”
+
+Bonny-Gay held up her arms to be loved.
+
+“Fine, father dear. It won’t be long before I’m out in the park again,
+watching for you to come home from business.”
+
+They found so much to say to each other that they quite forgot Mary
+Jane; who had, indeed, swung across the square to intercept the path of
+her friend. She had something of her own to say to the Gray Gentleman
+besides delivering her playmate’s message. She was in trouble and knew
+that he would help her in some way too wise for her to think of.
+
+“Well, upon my word! If here isn’t Mary Jane! I thought I heard a
+cheerful little clicke-e-ty-click, such as only one small energetic
+body could make. What’s it now, Miss Bump?”
+
+“I’d like to talk to you, please.”
+
+“Don’t doubt I need it. Yet if the ‘talking to’ is to be very severe,
+I’d like to have the support of the lion. Let’s rest against him.
+That’s comfortable. Now, my child--talk!”
+
+“First off, Bonny-Gay wants you to come and see her.”
+
+“Shall be delighted, I’m sure. Please make my regards to Miss McClure
+and I will wait upon her at any hour she designates.” Which dignified
+yet whimsical remark set Mary Jane to smiling.
+
+“I’m glad that’s fixed before I forgot. Because I’m in dreadful
+trouble, myself.”
+
+“You look it!” he exclaimed, smiling into her confiding face; then
+dropped his playful manner as he saw that she was really in earnest.
+
+Whereupon she promptly told him about Mrs. McClure and why, in
+anticipation of her father’s possible return, she must, she must go
+home every night. “And how can I? I mustn’t put them out--they are so
+good to me. I mustn’t stay away, if Bonny-Gay needs me. There’s all the
+dolls to be dressed, you see; and the canaries must be fed, or they’d
+die; and Polly is about as much care as the baby. She’s always dropping
+things and squawking till she gets them picked up for her--though she
+throws them right straight down again. I don’t see how Bonny-Gay can be
+so patient with that bird, do you?”
+
+“I’m sure I shouldn’t be.”
+
+“So, I couldn’t not come, course. And what I want you to tell me,
+please, is there a shorter way I could come? So I could walk here?
+’Cause I couldn’t ride in the car. We couldn’t afford that.”
+
+“If you would ride in the car I know, without asking, that Mrs. McClure
+would be more than glad to bear the expense.”
+
+“But father wouldn’t like that. He never likes me to have rich folks
+do things for me. He--he seems to about hate them. He wouldn’t let me
+go to the Empty Stocking Trees, ’cause he does. You’re the only one
+he doesn’t mind. And he likes the ‘Playgrounds’ ’cause they’re not
+charity. They belong to the city and we do, same’s the rich ones. They
+teach the children to work and learn farming, too. He likes that. But I
+couldn’t take the money from her. I wouldn’t so displease him, even if
+I had to stay away.”
+
+The Gray Gentleman pondered deeply. He would not offend the confiding
+child by offering himself to pay her car fare. He too greatly respected
+her honest pride and her loyalty to her father to do that. But, after a
+moment, he looked up.
+
+“Miss Mary Jane Bump, once before I invited you to call at my house
+and you declined. Now, I invite you again. I think I have something
+there that will solve your difficulties--and my own. May I have the
+pleasure? I’ll detain you from the Poll parrot but a few moments.”
+
+“Oh! I’d love it!”
+
+It was a very cheerful click the crutches gave now. The mere telling
+of her perplexities had half-banished them, and Mary Jane had implicit
+faith in the wisdom of this simple, true-hearted gentleman, who was,
+as Mrs. McClure had reflected, “the friend of all poor children
+everywhere.”
+
+The Gray Gentleman’s big, empty, plainly furnished house, seemed very
+lonely to the little girl, whose own small home was so crowded; and
+she wondered at the slowness of the one colored “boy”--as gray as his
+master--who answered that master’s ring.
+
+“Boy, go up-stairs, please, to my bedroom. Open the top drawer of the
+chiffonier and bring me all the socks you find there. You’d better use
+a basket--they are many in number.”
+
+The “Boy” half fancied that his master had lost his common sense, then
+leaped to the conclusion that this was probably one of their many
+pensioners upon whom the articles demanded were to be bestowed. He
+obeyed without comment, however, save by a respectful bow; and soon
+returned. Meanwhile Mary Jane had been shown the few pictures upon the
+walls and told their stories, and the place had begun to seem more
+cheerful to her.
+
+The “Boy” was dismissed; the basket heaped with fine hosiery placed on
+the table beside the visitor, and herself bidden to look the contents
+over.
+
+“What do you think of them, Mary Jane?”
+
+“I never knew one person have so many stockings; and, my sake, there
+isn’t a single pair but has a hole in it--not one single sock, even. I
+know. I guess you want me to mend them for you, don’t you? I often help
+mother with the darning. She thinks I can do it quite well.”
+
+“I’m sure you can, and that is just what I do want. I cannot put on a
+ragged garment, poor old fellow though I am. They always come from the
+laundry, broken somewhere, and I am always buying new. That’s how I
+have so many. If you want to save my money for me you can do it.”
+
+“I’d love to! I’ll take them home and fix them nights, after Bonny-Gay
+is through with me.”
+
+“Let’s be business like, Miss Bump. What would be your charges, per
+pair?”
+
+“My--charges? Nothing. I’d be so _glad_ to do something for you, who
+have always been doing things for me.”
+
+“I’ve known you a few weeks, little girl, and I’ve done very little.
+Will five cents a pair be satisfactory?”
+
+“I couldn’t take so much. I couldn’t take anything.”
+
+“That or nothing. I’m business. That would make you quite independent
+of all help except your own, and be a great benefit to me.”
+
+“Of course, then. And oh! thank you!”
+
+“Now, pack up your work, little bread-winner, and let’s back to
+Bonny-Gay.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+BY THE STRENGTH OF LOVE
+
+
+The days sped by. The summer heat deepened and there were thankful
+hearts in the vine-covered mansion in Mt. Vernon Place. For Bonny-Gay
+was well again; able to run about her beloved park, and to play in the
+shadow of the lion with the few children left still in that part of the
+city.
+
+Nearly all the big houses were now closed, however, and their owners
+departed to seashore or mountain. The McClures themselves were making
+preparations for their own summer flitting to the great country house
+of which the little girls had talked. They would have still enjoyed
+being together, but that could no longer be.
+
+A very few days after Mary Jane had made her business contract with
+the Gray Gentleman, and he had himself spoken to the conductors of
+the cars upon which she would have to take her daily ride--so that
+everything was made easy and safe for her--those rides had ceased.
+William Bump returned as suddenly as he had departed, and, with all his
+old enmity against more fortunate folk, had immediately forbidden them.
+
+But Mrs. Bump had herself gone to Mrs. McClure and explained enough of
+matters to prove that Mary Jane was neither ungrateful nor forgetful;
+and Mrs. McClure had accepted the explanation with great cheerfulness.
+It was a much easier way out of a difficult position than she had
+anticipated; because Bonny-Gay still talked about inviting Mary Jane
+with them to the country, and this her mother did not at all desire.
+
+However, a compromise was effected. Mary Jane was to be asked to care
+for the thirteen dolls, the two canaries, the aquarium, and Polly; only
+the pony being allowed to accompany his little mistress on her summer
+outing. So, one morning, the carriage came around again and all these
+creatures were stowed in it, along with Bonny-Gay and a maid. They had
+been taken straight to Dingy street, where they were left with many
+injunctions and much sage advice, as to their proper care. Then the two
+little “Sunday bairns” had kissed each other many times, and had torn
+themselves weeping from each other’s embrace, while the dignified maid
+looked coldly on, urging:
+
+“If you please, Miss McClure, you would much better be going. The train
+goes at two o’clock and there’s much to pack, still.”
+
+“Very well, Hawkins. I’m coming. Good-bye, Mary Jane, dear, dear Mary
+Jane! I’ll write you as soon as I get there and maybe, maybe, your
+father and my mother will let you come out to our house and make me a
+beautiful long visit. I’d teach you to ride on the pony just the same
+as if your legs were good, or in the goat cart or--”
+
+“Come, come, Miss Bonny-Gay!” called Hawkins.
+
+The coachman cracked his whip, there was a last glimpse of a bare sunny
+head thrust from the carriage window, the tossing of ecstatic kisses,
+and Bonny-Gay had passed out of Mary Jane’s life, probably forever.
+That is, if the intentions of her parents could be carried out. When
+they returned, in the autumn, a man could be dispatched for the dolls
+and things, if their owner still desired them. If not, they might
+remain the property of the small Bumps, and so well rid of them. The
+parrot had been misbehaving of late, and using expressions not wholly
+suited to the proprieties of Mt. Vernon Place. Originally owned and
+trained by a man of the “slums,” she was returning to the rude speech
+of earlier years.
+
+But she was well received in the Bump household, save by William,
+its head. He had frowned upon the coming into it of Bonny-Gay’s
+treasures and only consented to the arrangement because of Mary Jane’s
+disappointment. For ever since his return the father and daughter had
+been always together and each seemed doubly anxious to do nothing that
+would give the other pain. And after a time, even he became interested
+in the queer bird and joined his children in inciting it to talk;
+though his interest was not fully won until there sounded along the
+street a familiar cry, to which nobody paid much heed except Polly.
+
+She was suddenly transformed. She fluttered her feathers, stretched
+her neck, cocked her head on one side, and in a tone that was almost
+human in its mimicry burst forth:
+
+“Crab-crab-crab-crab--crab-crab-crab! Devil-devilled-devil-devilled-crabs!
+Heah’s-de-crab-man! Is yo’ hongry? Crab-man-goin’-to-baid-now! Dis yo’
+las’ chance for yo’ nice-fried-hot-fried-devil-devilled-crabs! C-R-A-B-S!
+OU-OU-OUCH!”
+
+After which remarkable exploit mistress Polly became the idol of Dingy
+street and even of William Bump.
+
+The disposition of her new charges, so that they should not take up
+too much space in her little home, and the careful packing away in the
+top-cupboard of the food Bonny-Gay had provided for her pets, kept Mary
+Jane busy all morning; and her mother had dinner on the table before
+she observed how the time had flown. But when she heard the cheerful
+summons:
+
+“Come, father. Come children!” and smelled the freshly cooked fish, she
+realized that she had given more attention than she meant to her new
+cares.
+
+“Oh! mother, I didn’t think I was so long! And I wanted to get my part
+of the ironing done; because I promised Bonny-Gay that I’d go to the
+park, if you could spare me, and watch her train go by. It’s that fast
+express, that whizzes so; but she’s to sit on the park side the parlor
+car, she called it, and she’s to watch for me and I for her. She’ll
+wave and I’ll wave and that will be our really last good-by. Till she
+comes home again.”
+
+“That would be how-de-do? Wouldn’t it, child? And the ironing’s all
+right. I’ve done that so, if father wants to go watch the men this
+afternoon, you can go with him. Now eat your dinner and be thankful for
+all your blessings.”
+
+Everybody was always hungry at that table and the dinner was soon over.
+Then William Bump arose, put on his hat, whistled to a big black dog
+who lay on the doorstep and started off for his afternoon of loafing.
+
+Mary Jane watched the pair with a pitying love.
+
+“Those two seem just alike, some ways, don’t they mother? Father lost
+his home and his work and so did Max. Dearly as Bonny-Gay loves that
+dog, ever since he got her hurt, he doesn’t want to be with her like
+he used. Didn’t you notice, this morning? When she hugged him and bade
+him good-by, he was just a little pleased; yet he kept one eye on
+father and soon’s he could walked back and lay down beside him. Father
+is dreadful good to Max, isn’t he? He often says he’d never have come
+back if it hadn’t been for--for us--”
+
+“For you, daughter. Mostly for you, it was, dear.”
+
+“Well, Max helped. He staid right close and coaxing like. Oh! I do wish
+the Company would give father another try.”
+
+“It won’t. But I’m in hopes, after awhile, he’ll find something else
+to do. Meanwhile you stay close to him. Don’t give him a chance to get
+down-hearted again and--you know. Didn’t you say your Gray Gentleman
+was coming to the park to look at the ‘farms’ this very day? Why,
+maybe, child, maybe he’d know of a job somewhere. You might ask him.”
+
+“Yes, I might. I will. What’s father going to do now? he’s taken to the
+track.”
+
+“He says that, though he has no work there, there isn’t any law forbids
+him sitting round, watching his old friends who have. He likes to talk
+with men, you know; and if you’re handy by he’s quite satisfied. Father
+doesn’t like to go wrong any better than we like to have him. He trusts
+you to watch out for him, honey. So, if I were you, instead of taking
+the baby and going along the street to the gate I’d go to the park by
+the railroad. You can climb up the embankment at an easy place, and
+stay near father. Then you’d be able to see everything. The children
+in the ‘Playgrounds,’ and the Gray Gentleman if he goes to them, and
+Bonny-Gay’s train when it comes, and all. Only--only, Mary Jane--take
+care to give the cars plenty of room.”
+
+“Course I will. ‘Look out for the cars when the bell rings!’”
+laughingly quoted the child. “And you look out for the parrot when the
+crab-man comes! I guess you’re right. I’d better not take the baby. If
+I climb up the bank I might let him slip. Good-by. I’ll make father all
+right and happy, don’t you fear.”
+
+The mother watched her darling out of sight, thinking how sunshiny and
+helpful she was, then settled the baby safely among his new playthings
+and resumed her endless toil. But she was wholly happy and contented
+now. They were poor, indeed, but they were not suffering, and her
+hopeful heart was sure that in some way a task would be found for her
+husband which would keep him out of idleness and evil company. She
+began her one hymn of cheerfulness: “Lord, in the morning Thou shalt,
+Thou shalt, Lord, in the morning Thou shalt hear, my voice ascending
+high.”
+
+Meanwhile, Mary Jane had hopped along the road till she came to a part
+of the railway embankment which she could climb, then scrambled to its
+top. Just before her the rails were laid over a long trestle above the
+deep bed of a stream, now almost dry. A little water still ran among
+the stones below but Mary Jane did not look down upon that. She made
+her way swiftly, yet cautiously, beside the track, pushed rapidly along
+the trestle, and reached her father’s side, at the further end of it.
+
+“Here am I, father. I’m going to watch for the train from here.”
+
+“All right, daughter.”
+
+A fellow workman looked up and remonstrated:
+
+“You oughtn’t to let that girl walk that trestle, Bump. If her crutches
+slipped it--the bottom’s rough and deep down.”
+
+“Oh! I’m not afraid. I don’t often, either, though I’ve played about
+this railroad ever since I was born. All the Dingy street children play
+there. How pretty the park looks, down yonder;” interrupted Mary Jane,
+anxious that her father should not be blamed, especially for what was
+not his doing.
+
+“That’s right. You oughtn’t, daughter,” he said.
+
+“I won’t again, then, father, if you don’t like. But I was safe enough.
+What’s that team for, that’s coming?”
+
+“They’re going to haul off that pile of ties that have been taken up.
+Company gives ’em for the hauling. Only things it ever does give, too.”
+
+“They ought to work faster. See. They keep dropping them on the track.
+If a train should come by it would get thrown off. Don’t they know
+that?”
+
+“Oh, they know it all right, but they’ll be in time. They’re used to
+it.”
+
+It was in this very hardihood of custom that the danger lay. A beginner
+at such a task would have watched constantly for the approach of a
+train, but this “gang” did not. For the greater ease of handling they
+rolled the heap of heavy ties over upon the track, as the anxious
+girl had observed, and two men lifting leisurely placed the weighty,
+worn out timber upon the wagon. The mule team before the wagon stood
+half-over the edge of the embankment, heads dropped, themselves
+enjoying the rest regardless of position.
+
+The men laughed and talked. William Bump joined in the chatter and
+forgot Mary Jane. The talk grew more interesting, to the speakers, and
+became a torture to the listening girl, though she paid no attention to
+the words. She realized, merely, that they were growing more and more
+indolent; the pile of ties upon the rails lessened very, very slowly.
+It was already long past noon, she knew that. She was familiar enough
+with the running of trains to know, also, that the through express
+was the next one due. It was upon this through express that Bonny-Gay
+would travel. She began to feel cold with her anxiety. She must speak
+to those men, even if it should displease her father, who hated
+interference of that sort.
+
+So she moved forward a little way and touched the arm of the foreman.
+
+“Will you tell me the time, please?”
+
+“Ten minutes to two, little girl. Pretty hot up here, isn’t it?” he
+answered, good naturedly.
+
+“Mary Jane, don’t meddle. Children should be seen not heard.”
+
+“Yes, father. Only ten minutes! Why, you’ve been ever and ever so long
+taking off less than half the ties. Can you finish in ten minutes? Can
+you?” she demanded, eagerly.
+
+“Why, kid, what’s the hurry? Got another job for us, eh?”
+
+“The hurry? The train. The two o’clock express. It’s almost due.”
+
+The foreman’s face paled a trifle. Then he whistled.
+
+“Whew, sis, you’re right! Jim, lead that team off the bank. We’ll just
+roll the rest down to the bottom and drive round there to load up. Now,
+with a will! there ain’t no time to spare! here she goes!”
+
+The mules were led away by one man while the others exerted themselves
+to clear the tracks in any and every manner possible. There was no
+longer any talking. There were no false movements. They knew that
+there was no way of signalling the express, just there, even if there
+should be need. But there must be no need, the tracks must be cleared.
+Must be!
+
+William Bump moved down upon the bank and watching from an apparently
+safe place called upon Mary Jane to follow him.
+
+She did not hear him. She stood, resting upon her crutches, anxiously
+watching the toilers, straining forward, as if in that attitude she
+could help them, and listening--listening--with every nerve at tension.
+She did not see the Gray Gentleman, who had come into the park awhile
+before and having caught sight of his favorite’s pink frock, crossed
+the level space from the “Playgrounds” to the embankment to see what so
+interested her. As he reached the spot below the end of the trestle he,
+also, began to comprehend what was passing in Mary Jane’s mind and his
+own cheek whitened.
+
+“Hark! It’s coming--it’s coming!” cried the girl. “Work--work!”
+
+They did work with a will. There was no need for anybody to urge them.
+They, also, heard the low rumble of wheels along the distant track, the
+shiver and tremble of the rails. The heavy ties rolled down--fast and
+faster. The way was almost clear. There was only one tie left and that--
+
+A man turned to look over his shoulder. “The train! The train! It’s on
+us!”
+
+The whole gang leaped to safety and waited. The one big timber still
+lay crosswise above the trestle. It meant destruction. They knew it,
+Mary Jane knew it. They could not move; but she could. That menacing
+log should not destroy!
+
+Ah! but those long, strong, useful arms of hers stood her in good stead
+just then. All the strength of her body was in them. The crutches went,
+she knew not where. She was lying flat, forcing, pushing, compelling
+that last tie down, over the edge. The train was almost there. She knew
+that, also, but she felt no fear. She must do her task--she must--she
+could!
+
+The men on the bank watched breathless, but not one went to her aid.
+Even William Bump seemed stricken to stone.
+
+There came a crash. The log was over--the track was clear!
+
+But where was Mary Jane?
+
+As he rounded the curve just before the trestle the engineer had seen
+the child upon the track, but though he instantly reversed his engine
+the train could not be brought to a stand-still till it had quite
+crossed the openwork space, and he stepped down from it with horror in
+his heart.
+
+A horror which quickly changed to a shout of joy, though the peril was
+yet not over.
+
+Again these long, strong arms had done their owner good service. As the
+train came upon the trestle she slipped down and dropped between the
+ties, clinging to one for her life. She scarcely heard now that rumble
+and roar above her; all her consciousness was fixed in the clutch of
+her fingers upon that cross-beam.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was the Gray Gentleman who first reached the spot and prostrating
+himself upon the roadbed reached down to clasp her arms and draw her up
+to safety.
+
+“You precious child! You heroine!”
+
+She opened her eyes at that, gave him one radiant smile, and promptly
+fainted away. Which, she afterward declared, was a very foolish thing
+for a sensible girl to do.
+
+She as promptly revived, however, and there was Bonny-Gay hugging
+and thanking her, but not saying good-by, at all! And there was Mrs.
+McClure, that proud and dignified lady, snatching the crooked little
+figure from the Gray Gentleman’s arms, to enfold it in her own and to
+weep and cry over it in the most astonishing fashion.
+
+“Oh! you darling, darling child! You’ve saved our lives, saved
+Bonny-Gay, who’s more than life to us. Little did I guess how noble you
+are. Nobler, Mary Jane, than anybody I ever knew.”
+
+It was like a dream. The people, all the passengers and trainmen,
+crowding round to thank and bless the little hunchback, who now rested
+in her own father’s arms, while he beamed upon her, proud and happy,
+but with soul-cleansing tears streaming down his softened face. And
+there was Mr. McClure, laying his hand kindly upon William Bump’s
+shoulder and begging:
+
+“For any injustice I’ve done you, for any injustice you’ve done me, let
+this hour make amends. As man to man--trust me, William Bump.”
+
+“Aye, Boss. I will, I will and the poor man looked into the face of the
+rich man and behold! it was as that of a brother.”
+
+“What’s all this to-do?” cried Mrs. Stebbins, to Mrs. Bump. “The
+express has stopped and there’s a crowd of people coming this way.”
+
+“I don’t know, I’m sure. I just heard the train go by. I hope nothing’s
+wrong.”
+
+“Not wrong, sure. The men are tossing their hats and cheering and the
+women--they’re laughing and talking like they’d struck a gold mine.
+They’re headed this way.”
+
+But Mrs. Bump was too busy to look. She had a lot of clear-starching to
+do and she was engaged in a new, therefore interesting, task; she was
+teaching Polly to sing a hymn!
+
+“Yes, you smart bird. If you can talk crab-man’s talk, that always
+sounds sort of wicked, though, of course, it isn’t, you can learn
+better things just as easy.”
+
+“So I can, so I can. Tell the truth, tell the truth, tell the truth,”
+answered Polly.
+
+“Oh! I’m telling it, never fear. Learn it you shall. Now begin--”
+
+But the lesson was interrupted. The voices of the crowd were near
+at hand; were at the door; were in the very room! What did it mean?
+William was placing Mary Jane in her mother’s arms, as if she had been
+the baby himself--helpful Mary Jane! And Mrs. McClure was clasping Mrs.
+Bump’s neck, and sobbing and laughing on her shoulder.
+
+Everybody was talking at once, but suddenly somebody cleared a space
+and placed a chair behind the startled mistress of the house. She sank
+into it gratefully, her knees now trembling too much to support her.
+But the facts had penetrated to her consciousness, at last, and with
+a cry that hushed all speech of others, she held her precious “Sunday
+bairn” to her heart with a thankfulness beyond words.
+
+Suddenly, upon this sacred silence, there fell a voice which seemed
+neither bird nor human, yet strangely reverent and opportune:
+
+ “Lord, in the morning Thou shalt, Thou shalt,
+ Lord, in the morning Thou shalt hear
+ My voice ascending high.”
+
+At this interruption there were some who wept--but none who smiled.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+AFTERWARD
+
+
+Of course there was an afterward. There always is.
+
+The fallow fields of the McClure estate no longer lie idle under the
+blue sky, a reproach to their owner. The property was not quite of the
+“miles and miles” in extent which Bonny-Gay had imagined, but it was
+still sufficient to set apart a goodly number of acres as a home for
+Mary Jane, who had never known how beautiful the country was until she
+was driven one day, along a smooth road, under over-hanging trees, and
+over bridges crossing here and there the prettiest trout stream in the
+world. The drive was interrupted, “to let the horses rest,” where there
+was a fine view of a cottage, freshly painted in cream and white, and
+with the most inviting of piazzas extending from its sides.
+
+Mary Jane had been allowed to make a little visit at the home of
+Bonny-Gay, and had been absent from Dingy street for one whole week.
+This day her absence was to end, even with this day; and she thought it
+a little odd that Bonny-Gay should seem so extravagantly happy, as if
+she were glad that the visit were over. Though, of course, the guest
+knew better than that. There was not the slightest doubt in the heart
+of either “Sunday bairn” concerning their mutual love.
+
+“Oh! what a pretty house! We haven’t come this way before, have we? Is
+it on the road to the station, Bonny-Gay? How happy the folks must be
+who live there. But I’m happy, too. Dingy street will seem perfectly
+lovely to me when I get there. Do you suppose the baby has grown much?
+I wonder if Polly has learned any new things. Mother’s a master hand to
+teach, mother is. She taught me my letters while she was working round.
+She thinks I can, maybe, be spared to go to school--sometime. How I
+want to see her. Seems as if I could hardly wait.”
+
+“Oh! I’m so glad, so glad!” laughed Bonny-Gay, and even the old
+coachman’s face beamed with smiles, though in ordinary he felt that it
+was his business, when on duty, to conduct himself like an automaton.
+
+“I s’pose you’ll write to me, won’t you? You promised, that other time,
+before you started, you know.”
+
+“No. I shall do no such thing.”
+
+“Bonny-Gay!” There was a volume of reproach in the tones.
+
+“No. Not a line.”
+
+“Whose house is this, do you suppose?”
+
+“I don’t ‘suppose’ when I know things.”
+
+“Whose, then?”
+
+“Let’s go ask.”
+
+“Why Beulah Standish McClure! What would your mother say? If there’s
+anything she wants you to be it’s a lady. So I’ve heard her say, time
+and again.”
+
+“So have I. I’m tired of hearing it. I mean, I’m trying to be one. She
+wouldn’t care. She’d do it herself, if she were here.”
+
+“Never! She never, never would be so rude.”
+
+Bonny-Gay made a funny little grimace, then leaned sidewise and hugged
+her friend.
+
+“Do the Dingy street folks know better how to behave than the Place
+folks, missy?”
+
+“Yes, Bonny-Gay, I think they do”; answered Mary Jane with dignity. For
+she had now been associated with the McClure household long enough to
+get a fair idea of the proprieties; and she was sure that driving up
+to the doors of strange houses and inquiring their owners’ names, was
+not one. However, she could do nothing further, for it was Bonny-Gay’s
+carriage and not hers.
+
+“Drive in, please.”
+
+So the phaeton turned into the pretty driveway, bordered with shrubs,
+and around the lawn by a freshly prepared curve to the very front door
+itself. Mary Jane had turned her head away and utterly refused to look.
+She was amazed at Bonny-Gay, her hitherto model, but she’d be a party
+to no such impertinence; not she.
+
+Then her head was suddenly seized by her mate’s hands and her face
+forced about toward that unknown doorway.
+
+“Look, Mary Jane Bump! You shall look! You shall. If you don’t, you’ll
+break my heart. Look quick!”
+
+Mary Jane’s lids flew open. Then she nearly tumbled off the seat. The
+Gray Gentleman was coming down the steps, smiling and holding out his
+hand. Smiling and calling, too:
+
+“They’ve come, Mrs. Bump! They’ve come!” Mary Jane, in her newly
+acquired ideas of etiquette, wondered to hear such a quiet person speak
+so loudly or jest upon such themes. She had instantly decided that this
+was some friend’s country house, where he, too, was visiting. Odd that
+his hostess’ name should be like her own.
+
+But all her primness vanished when out from that charming cottage
+flew a woman with a baby in her arms. A woman in a print gown,
+clear-starched as only one laundress could do it, and a baby so big and
+round and rosy he had to be spelled with a capital letter.
+
+“Mother! My mother and the Baby!”
+
+“Welcome home, my child! Welcome home!”
+
+And the Baby cooed and gurgled something that sounded very like “Ome,”
+without an H.
+
+“Has everybody gone crazy?”
+
+“Not quite!” answered William Bump, appearing from another corner.
+He was as washed and starched as his wife, and had done for himself
+even something more, in honor of this great occasion--he was smoothly
+shaved. He looked years younger than his child had ever seen him and
+oh! how much happier and more self-respectful. He had found his right
+place again. He was once more a tiller of the soil; and there is
+nothing so conducive to true manliness as finding one’s congenial task
+and feeling the ability to accomplish it.
+
+Mary Jane’s head buzzed with the strangeness and wonder and delight of
+it all. Yet the explanation was very simple and sensible.
+
+It was impossible but that the McClures should do something to evince
+their gratitude to the little saver of their child’s and their own
+lives and they did that which they knew would be most acceptable to
+her; they gave her this home in the country.
+
+For the house, with its deed was made to Mary Jane Bump, herself; but
+over the wide fields surrounding it her father was made overseer and
+farmer, for his old “Boss,” at good but not extravagant wages. The
+house had long stood empty, ever since the railroad magnate had dropped
+his former scheme of agriculture on a big scale, but it was in good
+repair and quite large enough to accommodate even the household of
+Bump. A coat of paint made it like new and during the cripple’s absence
+from Dingy street the flitting was accomplished.
+
+Bonny-Gay’s own summer home was near at hand, though she had driven
+Mary Jane to the cottage by such a roundabout way; and her delight had
+lain in her knowledge of the happiness that was coming to her friend.
+
+This was a year ago. As yet no cloud has marred the perfect sunshine
+of Mary Jane’s new life. She now rides to school in a smart little
+cart, drawn by the sedatest of piebald ponies. She is apt and ambitious
+and is learning fast. Indeed, she is confidently looking forward to a
+day in the future when, being both old and wise enough, she shall be
+matriculated at a certain famous woman’s college; to don the cap and
+gown whose ample folds shall hide, at last, her physical deformity. God
+speed you, Mary Jane! and all your happy sisterhood!
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
+
+
+ Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
+
+ Emboldened text is surrounded by equals signs: =bold=.
+
+ Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+ Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
+
+
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+ A Pair of Them, by Evelyn Raymond&mdash;A Project Gutenberg eBook
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.1em; font-weight:bold'>
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Pair of Them, by Evelyn Raymond
+</div>
+
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+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:table;margin-bottom:1em;'>
+ <div style='display:table-row;'>
+ <div style='display:table-cell;padding-right:0.5em;'>Title:</div>
+ <div style='display:table-cell;'>A Pair of Them</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:table;margin-bottom:1em;'>
+ <div style='display:table-row;'>
+ <div style='display:table-cell;padding-right:0.5em;'>Author:</div>
+ <div style='display:table-cell;'>Evelyn Raymond</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin-bottom:1em;'>Release date: March 20, 2021 [eBook #64891]
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin-bottom:1em;'>Language: English</div>
+
+<div style='display:table;margin-bottom:1em;'>
+ <div style='display:table-row;'>
+ <div style='display:table-cell;vertical-align:top;'>Produced&nbsp;by:&nbsp;</div>
+ <div style='display:table-cell;'>D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by the Library of Congress)</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin-bottom:1.4em;'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PAIR OF THEM ***</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<h1>A Pair of Them</h1>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="bbox">
+<p class="ph1">SUNSHINE LIBRARY.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="verse"><b>Aunt Hannah and Seth.</b> By James Otis.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Blind Brother</b> (<b>The</b>). By Homer Greene.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Captain&#8217;s Dog</b> (<b>The</b>). By Louis &Eacute;nault.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Cat and the Candle</b> (<b>The</b>). By Mary F. Leonard.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Christmas at Deacon Hackett&#8217;s.</b> By James Otis.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Christmas-Tree Scholar.</b> By Frances Bent Dillingham.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Dear Little Marchioness.</b> The Story of a Child&#8217;s Faith and Love.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Dick in the Desert.</b> By James Otis.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Divided Skates.</b> By Evelyn Raymond.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Gold Thread</b> (<b>The</b>). By Norman MacLeod, D.D.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Half a Dozen Thinking Caps.</b> By Mary Leonard.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>How Tommy Saved the Barn.</b> By James Otis.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Ingleside.</b> By Barbara Yechton.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>J. Cole.</b> By Emma Gellibrand.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Jessica&#8217;s First Prayer.</b> By Hesba Stretton.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Laddie.</b> By the author of &#8220;Miss Toosey&#8217;s Mission.&#8221;</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Little Crusaders.</b> By Eva Madden.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Little Sunshine&#8217;s Holiday.</b> By Miss Mulock.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Little Peter.</b> By Lucas Malet.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Master Sunshine.</b> By Mrs. C. F. Fraser.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Miss Toosey&#8217;s Mission.</b> By the author of &#8220;Laddie.&#8221;</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Musical Journey of Dorothy and Delia.</b> By Bradley Gilman.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Our Uncle, the Major.</b> A Story of 1765. By James Otis.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Pair of Them</b> (<b>A</b>). By Evelyn Raymond.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Playground Toni.</b> By Anna Chapin Ray.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Play Lady</b> (<b>The</b>). By Ella Farman Pratt.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Prince Prigio.</b> By Andrew Lang.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Short Cruise</b> (<b>A</b>). By James Otis.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Smoky Days.</b> By Edward W. Thomson.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Strawberry Hill.</b> By Mrs. C. F. Fraser.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Sunbeams and Moonbeams.</b> By Louise R. Baker.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Two and One.</b> By Charlotte M. Vaile.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Wreck of the Circus</b> (<b>The</b>). By James Otis.</div>
+<div class="verse"><b>Young Boss</b> (<b>The</b>). By Edward W. Thomson.</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="ph2">THOMAS Y. CROWELL &amp; COMPANY,<br />
+NEW YORK.</p>
+</div></div></div></div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">&#8220;WHY, YES, BONNY-GAY! I&#8217;VE COME.&#8221; See page <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_titlepage.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="titlepage">
+<p><span class="xlarge">A PAIR OF THEM</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="large">BY EVELYN RAYMOND</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">New York.</span><br />
+Thomas Y. Crowell &amp; Co.<br />
+Publishers.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1901,<br />
+By</span> THOMAS Y. CROWELL &amp; CO.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
+
+
+<tr><td class="tdr"><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td> Where the Houses are Big</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td> Where the Houses are Small</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_15"> 15</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td> How the Pair Met</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_29"> 29</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td> Max Reappears</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_44"> 44</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td> Mary Jane Goes Visiting</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_59"> 59</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td> The Flight and Fright of Mary Jane</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_78"> 78</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td> On the Way Home</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_95"> 95</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td> Confidences</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_112"> 112</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td> By the Strength of Love</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>Afterward</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_150"> 150</a></td></tr>
+
+</table>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
+
+<p class="ph3"><span class="smcap">A Pair of Them</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
+
+
+<small>WHERE THE HOUSES ARE BIG</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;It&#8217;s</span> a queer kind of a name, though it suits
+you,&#8221; observed the Gray Gentleman, thoughtfully.
+&#8220;How came you by it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay flashed the questioner a smile,
+hugged Max closer and replied:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was born on a Sunday morning. That&#8217;s
+how.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, indeed? But I don&#8217;t quite understand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you? Seems easy. Let&#8217;s sit down
+here by &#8216;Father George&#8217; and I&#8217;ll explain. If
+I can.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Gray Gentleman was very tall and dignified,
+yet he had a habit of doing whatever
+Bonny-Gay asked him. So he now doubled
+himself up and perched on the low curb surrounding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
+the monument, while the little girl and
+the big black dog dropped easily down beside
+him. Then he leaned his head back against the
+iron railing and gazed reflectively into the face
+of the big bronze lion, just opposite.</p>
+
+<p>Both the child and the man were fond of the
+wonderful lion, which seemed a mighty guardian
+of the beautiful Place, and he, at least,
+knew it to be a world-famous work of art.
+Bonny-Gay loved it as she loved all animals,
+alive or sculptured, and with much the same
+devotion she gave to Max. The park without
+either of these four-footed creatures would have
+seemed strange indeed to her, for they were
+her earliest playmates and remained still her
+dearest.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now you can tell me,&#8221; again suggested the
+Gray Gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was Easter, too. All the people were
+going to the churches, the bells were ringing,
+the organs playing, and everything just beautiful.
+Nurse Nance began it, my mother says.
+&#8216;For the child that is born on the Sabbath Day
+is lucky, and bonny, and wise, and gay.&#8217; But
+my father says there isn&#8217;t any &#8216;luck&#8217; and a
+child like me isn&#8217;t &#8216;wise,&#8217; so they had to leave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
+them out and I&#8217;m only Bonny-Gay. That&#8217;s
+all.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A very satisfactory explanation,&#8221; said the
+Gray Gentleman, with one of his rare smiles,
+and laying his hand kindly upon the golden
+curls. &#8220;And now, my dear, one question more.
+In which of these beautiful houses do you live?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, the stranger&#8217;s glance wandered
+all about that aristocratic neighborhood of Mt.
+Vernon Place, to which he had returned after
+many years of absence to make his own home.
+Since he had gone away all the small people
+whom he used to know and love had grown up,
+and he had felt quite lost and lonely, even in
+that familiar scene, till he had chanced to meet
+Bonny-Gay, just one week before. Since then,
+and her ready adoption of himself as a comrade,
+he had had no time for loneliness. She was
+always out in the charming Square, as much a
+part of it as the Washington monument, which
+the little folks called &#8220;Father George,&#8221; or the
+bronzes, and the smooth lawns. She seemed
+as bright as the sunshine and almost as well-beloved,
+for the other children flocked about
+her, the keeper consulted her and the keeper&#8217;s
+dog followed her like a shadow.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>With a toss of her yellow locks she pointed
+her forefinger westward.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There, in that corner one, all covered by
+vines, with places for the windows cut out, and
+the chimneys all green, and I think it&#8217;s the
+prettiest one in the whole place, when it has its
+summer clothes on. Don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Gray Gentleman&#8217;s glance followed the
+direction of the pointing finger.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. It is a very lovely home and a very
+big one. I hope you are not the only child who
+lives in it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I am. Why?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why what?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you hope it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You would be lonely, I should think.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Lonely? I? Why&mdash;why&mdash;I just never
+have a single minute to myself. There&#8217;s my
+thirteen dolls, and the parrot, and the two canaries,
+and the aquarium, and my pony, and&mdash;Oh!
+dear! you can&#8217;t guess. That&#8217;s why I have
+to come out here&mdash;to rest myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, so! Well, I should judge that you
+spend the most of your time in &#8216;resting,&#8217;&#8221;
+commented the other. &#8220;Whenever I come out
+you&#8217;re always here.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>Bonny-Gay laughed; so merrily that Max
+lifted his head and licked her cheek. That reminded
+her of something and she asked:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Have you seen him get his second dinner?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not even his first!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You haven&#8217;t? How odd!&#8221; Bonny-Gay
+shook out her skirts and proceeded to enlighten
+her comrade&#8217;s ignorance. She took it for
+granted, or she had done so, that he knew as
+much about things as she herself; but if not,
+why, there was a deal to tell. Max&#8217;s history
+first. She began by declaring:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s the smartest dog in the world. Everybody
+knows that. He&#8217;s lived in the Place
+nine years. That&#8217;s one year longer than I have.
+All the children&#8217;s big brothers and sisters have
+played with him, same&#8217;s we do now. He never
+lets a tramp come near. He never steps on a
+flower bed or lets us. If we forget and go on
+the grass he barks us off. He gets his first dinner
+at our house. When the clocks strike
+twelve he goes to the gardener and gets his
+basket. Then he walks to our back entrance,
+puts the basket down, stands up on his hind
+feet and pushes his nose against the &#8217;lectric
+bell. That rings up the cook and&mdash;she&#8217;s a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
+man just now&mdash;he&mdash;she takes the basket and
+puts in some food. Then Max walks down that
+side street, about a square, and sits on the curb
+to eat it. &#8216;Just like a beggar,&#8217; the gardener
+says, &#8216;&#8217;cause he likes to feed his own dog his
+own self.&#8217; I would, too, wouldn&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If I owned the &#8216;smartest dog in the whole
+world&#8217; I presume I should.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Max feels ashamed of it, too; don&#8217;t you,
+dear?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The dog replied by dropping his black head
+from Bonny-Gay&#8217;s shoulder to the ground and
+by blinking in a deprecating way from that
+lowly position.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Then, in a few minutes, he comes back to
+the gardener with the empty basket and stands
+and wags his tail as if he were the hungriest
+dog that ever was. Then the keeper says:
+&#8216;Yes. You may go, Max!&#8217; And off he trots,
+away down the other way, to some place where
+his master lives and gets a second basket full.
+That he brings back here, and the man puts a
+paper on the ground under the bushes and he
+eats again. Just like folks to their own table,
+that time; don&#8217;t you, Max Doggie, smart
+doggie!&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>The handsome animal shook his wavy fleece
+and sprang up, ready for a frolic and evidently
+aware that he had been the subject of
+discussion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, not yet, sir. The best thing hasn&#8217;t been
+told. Listen, please, Mr.&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger waited a moment, then inquired:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mr. what, Bonny-Gay? I wonder if you
+know my name.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not your truly one, but that doesn&#8217;t matter.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do you happen to call me, if you ever
+speak of me when I&#8217;m not here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The little girl hesitated an instant, then
+frankly answered:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, just the &#8216;Gray Gentleman.&#8217; &#8217;Cause
+you are all gray, you see. Your hair, and your
+moustache, and your eyes, and your clothes,
+and your hat, and your gloves, and&mdash;and&mdash;things.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Exactly. Trust a child to find an appropriate
+nickname. But I like it, little
+one. Go on, about Max and the best thing
+yet.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That splendid dog has&mdash;saved&mdash;his&mdash;master&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
+life! As true as true!&#8221; cried Bonny-Gay,
+impressively.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Indeed! Wonderful! How was it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was pay-day night and Mr. Weems,
+that&#8217;s his name, had a lot of money. And some
+bad men knew it. And they came, do you believe,
+right in the middle of that night, and
+broke a window in Mr. Weems&#8217;s house; and
+Max heard them and flew&mdash;and flew&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Gray Gentleman stooped and searched
+for the dog&#8217;s wings.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, ran, then,&#8221; laughed Bonny-Gay,
+&#8220;and he drove them all off and they had revolvers
+or something and one was shot and a
+policeman caught him and Max was shot and
+the gardener would have been killed&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Only he wasn&#8217;t,&#8221; interrupted somebody,
+coming from behind them.</p>
+
+<p>So the child paused in her breathless description
+of a scene she had often pictured to herself
+and looked up into the face of the hero of the
+affair, himself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, Mr. Weems! you almost frightened
+me! and you please tell the rest.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But though the gardener smiled upon her he
+nodded his head gravely.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>&#8220;Guess it won&#8217;t do for me to think about
+that just now, or any other of our good times,
+old Max! Good fellow, fine fellow! Poor old
+doggie! It&#8217;s going to be as hard on you as on
+me, I&#8217;m afraid.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>By this time Bonny-Gay saw that something
+was amiss. She half fancied that there were
+tears in the keeper&#8217;s eyes, and she always afterward
+declared that there were tears in his voice.
+As for Max, that sagacious animal sank suddenly
+upon his haunches, looked sternly into
+his master&#8217;s face, and demanded by his earnest,
+startled expression to know what was wrong.
+Something was. He knew that, even more
+positively than did Bonny-Gay.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s an outrageous law. There ought to be
+exceptions to it. All dogs&mdash;Well, there&#8217;s no
+other dog like Max. Ah! hum. Old doggie!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Gray Gentleman was tempted to ask
+questions, but the little girl was sure to do that;
+so he waited. In a few minutes she had gotten
+the whole sad story from her old friend, the
+gardener, and her sunny head had gone down
+upon the dog&#8217;s black one in a paroxysm of
+grief.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later it was lifted defiantly.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>&#8220;But he shan&#8217;t. He shall not! Nobody
+shall ever, ever take our Max away! Why&mdash;why&mdash;it
+wouldn&#8217;t be the Place without him!
+Why&mdash;why&mdash;the children&mdash;Oh! Nettie! oh!
+Tom!&#8221; and catching sight of a group of playmates
+Bonny-Gay darted toward them, calling
+as she ran: &#8220;They&#8217;re going to take him away!
+They&#8217;re going to take him away!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Tom planted his feet wide apart upon the
+smooth path and obstructed her advance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Take who away, Bonny-Gay? Where to?
+When?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Max! Our Max! He can never come here
+any more. This is his last day in our park&mdash;his
+very last!&#8221; and the child flung herself headlong
+upon the shaven grass, for once regardless
+of rules.</p>
+
+<p>Not so regardless was Max, the trusty. It
+didn&#8217;t matter to him that this was Bonny-Gay,
+his best-loved playmate, or that her frantic sorrow
+was all on his account. What he saw was
+his duty and he did it, instantly. From a distance
+the Gray Gentleman watched the dog
+race toward the prostrate little girl and shake
+her short skirts vigorously, loosing them now
+and then to bark at her with equal vigor.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>Presently she sprang up and to the footpath,
+and again indulged in a wild embrace of the
+faithful canine. Indeed, he was at once the
+center of an ever-increasing company of small
+people, who seemed to vie with each other in
+attempts to hug his breath away and to outdo
+everybody in the way of fierce indignation.
+Finally, this assembly resolved itself into an advancing
+army, and with Tom and Bonny-Gay
+as leaders&mdash;each tightly holding to one of the
+dog&#8217;s soft ears, as they marched him between
+them&mdash;they returned to the spot where the lion
+calmly awaited them, and Tom announced their
+decision:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We won&#8217;t ever let him go. There&#8217;s no
+need for you nor the law-men nor nobody to interfere.
+This dog belongs to this park; and
+this park belongs to us children; and if anybody
+tries to&mdash;tries to&mdash;to&mdash;do&mdash;things&mdash;he
+won&#8217;t never be let! So there! And if he is,
+we&#8217;ll&mdash;we&#8217;ll augernize; and we&#8217;ll get every boy
+and girl in all the streets around to come, too;
+and we&#8217;ll all go march to where the law-men
+live; and we won&#8217;t never, never leave go talking
+at them till they take it all back. &#8217;Cause
+Max isn&#8217;t going to be took. That&#8217;s the fact,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
+Mr. Weems, and you can just tell them
+so.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; cried Nettie, &#8220;and my big brother
+goes to the law school and he&#8217;ll suesan them.
+And my big sister&#8217;s friends will help; and if
+he does have to, I&#8217;ll never, never&mdash;NEVER&mdash;play
+in this hateful old park ever again. I will
+not!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Whew!&#8221; whistled the Gray Gentleman,
+softly. &#8220;This looks serious. A children&#8217;s
+crusade, indeed. Well, that should be irresistible.&#8221;
+And this old lover of all little people
+looked admiringly over the group of flushed
+and indignant faces; and at the noble animal
+which was the very center of it, and whose silent
+protest was the most eloquent of all. His
+own heart echoed their indignation and he
+quietly resolved to make an effort on their and
+Max&#8217;s behalf.</p>
+
+<p>But the dire, unspoken threats of the children,
+and the silent resolution of the Gray
+Gentleman, were useless. For when upon the
+next morning the sun rose over the pleasant
+Place, and the monument and the lion began
+to cast their shadows earthward, there was
+no Max to gambol at their feet, and over the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
+heart of Bonny-Gay had fallen her first real
+grief.</p>
+
+<p>She was out early, to see if the dreadful
+thing were true; and the Gray Gentleman met
+her and scarcely knew her&mdash;without the smiles.</p>
+
+<p>When he did recognize her he said, hopefully:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll trust it&#8217;s all for the best, my dear.
+Besides, you will now have more time for the
+thirteen dolls, and the parrot, and the two canaries,
+and&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But they&mdash;they aren&#8217;t Max! He was the
+only! We loved him so and now he&#8217;ll just be
+wasted on strangers! Oh! it&#8217;s too bad, too
+bad!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Gray Gentleman clasped the little hand in
+sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am very sorry for your sorrow, Bonny-Gay,
+and yet I can&#8217;t believe that Max is
+&#8216;wasted.&#8217; No good thing ever is. Besides that,
+I have a plan in my head. With your parents&#8217;
+permission, I am going to take you this day to
+visit your twin sister.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My&mdash;twin&mdash;sister! Why there isn&#8217;t any.
+Don&#8217;t you remember? I told you. I&#8217;m the
+only, only one. There never was any other.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>&#8220;Nevertheless, I am obliged to contradict
+you. Very rude, I know, and I shouldn&#8217;t do
+so, if I were not so positive of what I claim. I
+hope you&#8217;ll love her and I think you will. After
+breakfast I&#8217;ll see you again. Good
+morning.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>With that he walked briskly away and
+Bonny-Gay saw him enter the big gray house
+in the middle of the Place. The house where
+the wooden shutters had always been up, ever
+since she could remember, until just this spring,
+when a few of the windows had been uncovered
+to let the sunlight in.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My&mdash;twin&mdash;sister! How queer that is!&#8221;
+mused the watching child.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
+
+
+<small>WHERE THE HOUSES ARE SMALL</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mary Jane</span> dropped her crutches on the floor
+and readjusted the baby. He had a most trying
+habit of not staying &#8220;put,&#8221; and sometimes
+the other children slapped him. Mary
+Jane never did that. She merely set him up
+again, gave his cheek a pat or a kiss, and went
+on about her business.</p>
+
+<p>For, indeed, she was almost the very busiest
+small body in the world. Besides her own
+mother&#8217;s five other children there were the
+neighbors&#8217; broods, big and little, with never a
+soul to mind them save their self-constituted
+nurse.</p>
+
+<p>That very morning Mrs. Bump had paused
+in her washing to look up and exclaim:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I never did see how the little things do take
+to her! She can do just wonders with them,
+that she can; and I reckon it was about the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
+best thing ever happened to her, that falling out
+the top window, like she did. Seemed to knock
+all the selfishness out of her. Maybe it&#8217;s <i>that</i>
+settled in her poor body. Yes, maybe it&#8217;s that,
+dear heart. Anyhow, her inside&#8217;s all right.
+The rightest there ever was. If this world was
+just full of Mary Janes, what a grand place
+it would be!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then, after a regretful sigh for this beatific
+state of things, the mother thrust her strong
+arms again into the suds, with a splash and
+a rub-a-dub-dub which told plainly enough from
+whom Mary Jane inherited her energy.</p>
+
+<p>Just then Mrs. Stebbins thrust her head out
+of the window, next door, to remark:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There was fifty-four of them gardens given
+out. My boy&#8217;s goin&#8217; to raise cabbages.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t say! Now, ain&#8217;t that fine? I
+wish I had a son to get one, but all my boys is
+girls, save the baby, and he don&#8217;t count.
+Though he&#8217;ll grow, won&#8217;t he, mother&#8217;s lamb?
+He&#8217;ll grow just as fast as he can and get a playground
+garden, good&#8217;s the next one, so he will,
+the precious!&#8221; chirruped Mrs. Bump, to the
+year-old heir of the house.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Gah, gah!&#8221; cooed the baby; and emphasized<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
+his reply by losing his balance against
+the wall and rolling over on his face. He was
+too fat and too phlegmatic to right himself, so
+Mary Jane hopped back across the narrow
+room and set him up again, laughing as if this
+were the funniest thing she had ever seen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Pshaw, daughter! If I was you and you
+was me, I&#8217;d leave him lie that way a spell. He
+don&#8217;t &#8217;pear to have the sense the rest of you
+had, no he don&#8217;t, the sweet! Maybe that&#8217;s because
+he&#8217;s a boy. But even a boy might learn
+something after a while, if he was let. Only
+you&#8217;re so right on hand all the time he expects
+you to just about breathe for him, seems.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now, mother, now! And you know he&#8217;s
+the biggest, roundest&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Pudding-headedest!&#8221; growled a masculine
+voice, at the narrow doorway.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bump wheeled round so sharply that
+her rubbing-board fell out of the tub and scared
+the baby, who promptly began to scream.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why father! You home? It can&#8217;t be dinner-time,
+yet. What&#8217;s happened? Anything
+wrong?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Is anything ever right?&#8221; demanded the
+man, sulkily.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>&#8220;Plenty of things,&#8221; answered the wife,
+cheerfully, though her heart sank.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;One of the right things is my getting
+kicked out, I s&#8217;pose.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Father! you don&#8217;t mean it! No.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not much of a joker, am I?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No. That you&#8217;re not. But tell me, man.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>With a quiver in the usually cheerful voice,
+Mrs. Bump wiped the suds from her arms
+and went to her husband. Laying her hand
+kindly upon his shoulder she demanded, as was
+her right, to know the facts of the disaster that
+had befallen them.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Twon&#8217;t take long to tell, woman. The company&#8217;s
+cuttin&#8217; down expenses and I was one of
+the expenses lopped off. That&#8217;s all.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Is that all&mdash;<i>all</i>, William Bump?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The question was sternly put and the man
+cowered before it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the truth, any way. No matter how
+it happened, here I am and no work.&#8221; With
+that he dropped his arms upon the window sill
+and his face upon his arms, and lapsed into a
+sullen silence.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bump caught her breath, whisked
+away a tear that had crept into her eye, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
+returned to her tub. Mary Jane ceased staring
+at her parents, tipped the baby&#8217;s home-made
+go-cart on end, rolled him into it, righted the
+awkward vehicle, threw its leather strap over
+her shoulders, called to the children: &#8220;Come!&#8221;
+and hopped away upon her crutches.</p>
+
+<p>Though she paused, for just one second, beside
+her father and imprinted a hasty kiss upon
+the back of his bent head. A kiss so light it
+seemed he could scarcely have felt it, though it
+was quite sufficient to thrill the man&#8217;s soul with
+an added sense of regret and degradation.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re off to the park, mother, and I&#8217;ve
+taken a loaf with me!&#8221; she called backward,
+as she clicked out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>Again the woman idled for a moment, looking
+through the open doorway toward the
+small, misshapen figure of her eldest child as
+it swung swiftly forward upon its &#8220;wooden
+feet.&#8221; The baby&#8217;s soap-box wagon rattled and
+bumped along behind, bouncing his plump body
+about, and drawn by Mary Jane in the only
+manner possible to her&mdash;with a strap across her
+chest. She needed both her hands just then to
+support herself upon her crutches; for her
+lower limbs were useless and swung heavily between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
+these crutches&mdash;a leaden weight from
+which she never could be free.</p>
+
+<p>Even so, there were few who could travel as
+rapidly as Mary Jane and this morning she
+was especially eager to get on. Because down
+at the pretty park upon which her own dingy
+street terminated, the children&#8217;s &#8220;Playgrounds&#8221;
+had been opened for the summer and
+the small gardens given out. She was anxious
+to see the planting and seed-sowing, by the tiny
+farmers of this free kindergarten, and down in
+her heart was a faint hope that even to her, a
+girl, might a bit of land be assigned; where she,
+too, could raise some of the wonderful vegetables
+which would be her very own when the autumn
+came and the small crops were harvested.</p>
+
+<p>The hope was so deep and so intense, that she
+had to stop, turn about, shake up the baby and
+tell him about it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You see, Baby Bump, they don&#8217;t give &#8217;em
+out to just girls. Only I&#8217;m not a regular plain
+kind of girl, I&#8217;m a crippley sort. That might
+make a difference. Though there&#8217;s Hattie
+Moran, she&#8217;s lame, too. Not very lame, Baby,
+only a little lame. She doesn&#8217;t have to have
+crutches, she just goes hoppety-pat, hoppety-pat,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
+easy like. Sophia Guttmacher, she&#8217;s a
+hunchback, same&#8217;s me, course, but she can
+walk. Besides that she doesn&#8217;t want a garden
+and I do. As for Ernest Knabe, his foot&#8217;s just
+twisted and that&#8217;s all. Then, too, he&#8217;s a boy.
+He could have one if he wanted. He&#8217;d have to
+dig one, I guess, if it wasn&#8217;t for his foot. Oh!
+Baby dear. Do you s&#8217;pose I might&mdash;I might,
+maybe, get one?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Goo, goo,&#8221; murmured the infant, encouragingly,
+and vainly trying to bring his own
+foot within reach of his mouth.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! you sweet! You can&#8217;t do that, you
+know. You&#8217;re far too fat. And I declare, all
+the other children have gone on while I&#8217;ve
+stood here just talking to you. That won&#8217;t do,
+sir, much as I love you. Sit up, now, there&#8217;s
+sister&#8217;s little man, and I&#8217;ll hurry up.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But just then, Baby made a final, desperate
+effort to taste his toes, lost his balance, and
+rolled forward out of his box, as a ball might
+have done.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane, burst into a peal of laughter
+which recalled the other children to the spot
+and she explained between breaths:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The cute little fellow was trying to make<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
+&#8216;huckleberry-bread&#8217;; I do believe he was, the
+darling! Well, he&#8217;s so round it doesn&#8217;t matter
+which way he tumbles, and he&#8217;s so soft nothing
+ever hurts him. Does it, precious?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They all lent a hand in setting the infant
+right again. Several holding the soap-box
+level, a couple supporting Mary Jane without
+her crutches which left her arms free to lift and
+replace the dislodged baby. When things were
+once more in order the caravan started onward
+afresh.</p>
+
+<p>By this time the small, dingy houses bordering
+the narrow unpaved street had given place
+to open lots and weedy patches, where the sun
+lay warmly and a fresh breeze blew. To the
+right of the open space was a railway embankment,
+and on the left there was the cling-clanging
+of a mighty steel structure, in process of
+building. The railway and the monster
+&#8220;sheds&#8221; belonged to the same company for
+which William Bump had toiled&mdash;when he felt
+inclined&mdash;and by which he had just been
+discharged.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane had been accustomed to look for
+him, either along the rails, with the gang that
+seemed always to be replacing old &#8220;ties&#8221; by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
+new ones; or else serving the skilled workmen,
+who hammered, hammered, all day long upon
+the great metal girders. As she now caught
+the echo of these strokes a pang shot through
+her loving heart and for a moment her sunny
+face clouded. She need look no more, to either
+right or left, for the blue-shirted figure, which
+had been wont to wave a salutation to her as
+she passed with her brood of nurselings.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, the baby was on hand to banish
+the cloud, which he promptly did in his accustomed
+manner&mdash;with a slight variation. For
+his small charioteer had not observed a big
+stone in the path, though the loose ricketty
+wheel of the wagon found and struck it
+squarely. This raised the soap-box in front
+and its occupant performed a backward somersault.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! my sake! Mary Jane&mdash;Mary Jane!&#8221;
+shrieked several small voices in wild reproach.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane picked up the little one, who
+smiled, unhurt; and the others helped her shake
+him back to a normal condition and pose. After
+which, the park lying just before them, between
+the railway and the buildings, they scurried into
+it, and over the slope, and around to a sunny<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
+spot where scores of other little people were
+hard at work or play.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hi! Mary Jane! Oh, Mary Jane!&#8221;
+shouted one and another; and the kind-faced
+&#8220;teachers&#8221; who guided the wee ones, also
+nodded their friendly welcome. For well they
+knew that there was no &#8220;assistant&#8221; in the
+whole city who could be as useful to them as this
+same humble little girl from Dingy street.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thirteen, Mary Jane! I&#8217;m thirteen! Come
+see. Cucumbers!&#8221; cried Bobby Saunders,
+dragging her forward so eagerly that the soap-box
+strap slipped up across her throat and
+choked her. But she quickly released herself
+now from her burden, certain that in the midst
+of so many friends no harm could befall her
+darling; and once freed from this incubus,
+she outstripped Bobby in reaching the long
+rows of well-prepared garden plots, wherein as
+yet was never a sign of any growing thing.</p>
+
+<p>But oh! how soft and rich and brown the
+earth did look! How sweet the fragrance of it
+in Mary Jane&#8217;s nature-loving nostrils! And
+how, for once, she longed to be a boy! As
+straight-limbed, as strong, as unhindered at her
+toil, as any of these happy little lads who clustered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
+about, each interrupting his neighbor in
+his eagerness for her sympathy and interest.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Fifty-one, Mary Jane!&#8221; cried Joe Stebbins,
+pointing proudly to the numbered stick
+at the foot of his plot. &#8220;Cabbages&mdash;cabbages!
+The gardener&#8217;s bringing a box of plants this
+minute. I&#8217;ll give you one to bile when they get
+growed. Like that?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Prime!&#8221; answered the girl, her own face
+aglow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;m limas, Mary Jane. I&#8217;m Seven.
+Away over here. I&#8217;ve sowed &#8217;em and to-morrer
+I&#8217;ll hoe &#8217;em, I guess.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And I guess I wouldn&#8217;t till they sprout,&#8221;
+laughed she hopping along, at perilous speed, to
+inspect number seven.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t go so fast, Mary Jane! I can&#8217;t keep
+up with you. See. I&#8217;m right up front&mdash;number
+Three. I&#8217;m tomatuses, I am. Like &#8217;em?&#8221;
+demanded Ned Smith, a seven-year-old farmer.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m potatoes. They&#8217;re the best for your
+money,&#8221; observed Jimmy O&#8217;Brien. &#8220;We&#8217;ll
+roast some in the ashes, bime-by. Does the
+baby like &#8217;tatoes?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t he? You just ought to see him eat<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
+them&mdash;when we have them,&#8221; she added, cautiously.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! you&#8217;ll have &#8217;em, plenty. When I dig
+my crop. Why, I s&#8217;pose there&#8217;ll be enough in
+my &#8216;farm&#8217; to keep your folks and mine all winter;
+and I might have some to sell on the street,&#8221;
+observed Jimmy, casting a speculative glance
+upon the diminutive plot of ground over which
+he was now master.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Might you; ain&#8217;t that splendid!&#8221; commented
+Mary Jane, delightedly. &#8220;Why, if you
+could give us all our potatoes, mother could
+easy wash for the rent and the bread and things.
+My sake! I &#8217;most forgot the baby. Where&#8217;s
+he at? Can you see him?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s right in the middle of the sand-heap
+and the teacher has give him a little shovel.
+Say, what you bring him for? this ain&#8217;t no day-nursery,
+this ain&#8217;t. It&#8217;s a playground farm and
+one-year-olds don&#8217;t belong.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Maybe they don&#8217;t, but the baby belongs.
+That is if I do,&#8221; said the sister stoutly; &#8220;maybe
+you&#8217;ll say next I don&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I shan&#8217;t say that. Why, what could we
+do without you? And say, Mary Jane.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, say it quick. The girls are calling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
+me to swing on the Maypole. &#8217;Cause that&#8217;s one
+thing I can do without my crutches.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, in a minute. But, say. Sometimes
+I used to let you hoe in my garden, last summer.
+Remember?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Course. I helped you a lot.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t know about that. But you might
+this year. That is, maybe. If we went partners,
+you see; and if the teacher didn&#8217;t get on to
+it; and if there was a medal give and you let me
+have it, &#8217;cause I&#8217;m the one has the farm, course.
+What you say?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I say we couldn&#8217;t do such a thing without
+the teacher knowing and I wouldn&#8217;t if we could.
+And you&#8217;ll never get a medal, you&#8217;re too lazy.
+But you&#8217;re real gen&#8217;rous, too, and I&#8217;ll be so glad
+to help. Oh! I love it! I just feel&#8217;s if I could
+put my face right down on that crumbly
+ground and go to sleep. It&#8217;s so dear.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Huh! If you did I s&#8217;pose you&#8217;d get earwigs
+in your ears and&mdash;and angleworms, and&mdash;things.
+Maybe snakes. But I&#8217;ll let you,&#8221;
+concluded Jimmy, graciously.</p>
+
+<p>Then they turned around and there was&mdash;what
+seemed to the beholders, a veritable small
+angel!</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>Mary Jane was so startled she dropped her
+crutches and, for an instant, quite forgot all
+about the baby. The apparition was clothed in
+white, so soft and fine and transparent that it
+seemed to enwrap her as a cloud; and above the
+cloud rose a face so lovely and so winning that
+it made Mary Jane&#8217;s heart almost stand still in
+ecstasy.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
+
+
+<small>HOW THE PAIR MET</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">But</span> when things cleared a little, it was only
+Bonny-Gay! and the Gray Gentleman was supporting
+Mary Jane without her crutches&mdash;though
+she didn&#8217;t realize that, at first. Afterward
+she was able to look up into his face and
+smile a welcome, because he and she were already
+quite close friends.</p>
+
+<p>What had happened was this: the Gray Gentleman
+had sent his elderly black &#8220;boy&#8221; with
+a note to the vine-covered house in Mt. Vernon
+Place and had requested &#8220;the favor of Miss
+Beulah&#8217;s company upon a drive, that morning.
+He intended to visit one of the &#8216;Playgrounds&#8217;
+in the south-western part of the city, and he
+felt that the little girl whose society he so
+greatly enjoyed would find much to interest
+her, if she might be with him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>To this he had signed a name which was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
+quite powerful enough to secure Mrs. McClure&#8217;s
+instant and delighted assent; and she
+had at once returned a very graceful note of
+acceptance by the &#8220;boy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then at ten o&#8217;clock precisely, the Gray Gentleman&#8217;s
+carriage had gone around for &#8220;Miss
+McClure,&#8221; and she had been lifted into it and
+to a seat beside her friend. A half-hour&#8217;s drive
+followed; through streets and avenues which
+Bonny-Gay had never seen before, and which
+continually grew narrower and more crowded.
+Even the houses seemed to shrink in size, and
+the little girl had finally exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, it&#8217;s like the buildings were so little
+that they just squeeze the folks out of them,
+upon the steps and through the windows. I
+never, never saw! Will they get to be just
+playhouses, by-and-by?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, Bonny-Gay, I&#8217;m sure you never did.
+Yet it&#8217;s the same city in which is your own big
+home, and they are just the same sort of human
+beings as you and I.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Are they? It doesn&#8217;t&mdash;doesn&#8217;t just seem
+so, does it? And why do they all stare at us
+like that?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Because we do at them, maybe; and it&#8217;s not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
+a common thing to see carriages with liveried
+attendants pass this way. I suppose you, in
+your dainty clothes, are as much a &#8216;show&#8217; to
+them as they to you in their coarse attire, or
+rags.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay looked thoughtfully at her frock.
+She would have preferred to wear a simpler
+one; and a comfortable &#8220;Tam&#8221; instead of the
+feathered hat which adorned her sunny head.
+But her mother had decided otherwise; since
+the Gray Gentleman had done her the honor of
+that morning it was but courtesy to show appreciation
+of it by a good appearance.</p>
+
+<p>After a moment she looked up and observed:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the queerest thing! I feel as if I ought
+to get out and walk; and as if I should give this
+hat to that little girl who hasn&#8217;t any.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Gray Gentleman smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That would be going to the other extreme,
+my dear, and would help neither you nor them.
+Besides, this is not all we came to see, and here
+we are!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then the street had suddenly ended and the
+carriage had turned in at a big gate, to roll almost
+silently onward till it stopped before a
+&#8220;Mansion,&#8221; with ancient wooden shutters and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
+a clematis-draped porch. This was natural and
+quite suggestive to Bonny-Gay of her own beloved
+Druid Hill, wherein she was accustomed
+to take her stately drives in her father&#8217;s own
+carriage; and when she heard the shouts and
+laughter of children from the tree-hidden
+&#8220;Playgrounds,&#8221; her spirits rose to the normal
+again and she laughed in return.</p>
+
+<p>Dancing along beside him, with her hand in
+his, she had demanded eagerly:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Is it here I am to see my &#8216;twin sister?&#8217;
+Oh! I want to find her&mdash;quick, quick!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, it is here, and this is&mdash;she;&#8221; answered
+her guide, as they paused behind Jimmy and
+Mary Jane, toward whom he silently nodded.</p>
+
+<p>This was how the pair met; and while Mary
+Jane saw what she fancied was an &#8220;angel&#8221;
+that which Bonny-Gay saw was a girl of her
+own age, with short, limp legs, very long arms,
+and a crooked back. But the dark head above
+the poor humped shoulders was as shapely as
+the &#8220;angel&#8217;s&#8221; own; the dark eyes as beautiful
+as the blue ones; and from the wide, merry
+mouth flashed a smile quite as radiant and
+winning.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>As soon as she saw the smile Bonny-Gay began
+to understand what the Gray Gentleman
+had meant, and she telegraphed him a glance
+that said she did. Then she laughed and held
+out her two hands to Mary Jane.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess you&#8217;re the girl I&#8217;ve come to see:
+my &#8216;twin sister!&#8217; How-de-do?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How-de-do?&#8221; echoed Mary Jane, too astonished
+to say more.</p>
+
+<p>The Gray Gentleman quietly slipped her
+crutches under the cripple&#8217;s arms, and seizing
+Jimmy&#8217;s hand walked swiftly away.</p>
+
+<p>Both girls looked after him with regret but
+he neither glanced back nor expected them to
+follow. Then they regarded each other with
+curiosity, till Mary Jane remembered she was
+the hostess.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s sit down,&#8221; she said pointing to the
+grass.</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay hesitated, and, seeing this, the
+other whisked off her apron and spread it for
+her guest. &#8220;You might spoil your dress, that&#8217;s
+so. Salt and lemon juice&#8217;ll take out grass-stain.
+My mother uses that when there&#8217;s spots
+on the &#8216;wash.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Does she? I wasn&#8217;t thinking of my frock,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
+though, but of <i>that</i>;&#8221; answered the visitor,
+pointing to a &#8220;Keep Off&#8221; sign behind them.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! that? Nobody minds that. You see,
+this is <i>our</i> park now. We play where we
+choose, only on the terraces and slopey places.
+You&#8217;d better use my apron though, it&#8217;s such a
+splendid dress. Your mother would feel bad
+if you smirched it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose she would. She&#8217;s very particular.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So&#8217;s mine. They say she&#8217;s the very neatest
+woman in Dingy street. The neighbors say
+it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And our cook says mine is the &#8216;fussiest&#8217;
+one in the Place. That might be some of the
+&#8216;sister&#8217; part, mightn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It might. Only, course, he&#8217;s just fooling.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe the Gray Gentleman ever
+fools. He means things. He&#8217;s made us children
+think a lot. More&#8217;n we ever did before.
+And he says things mean things, too, every single
+one. Even &#8216;Father George,&#8217; and the lion,
+and Max, and&mdash;and everything.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>After this exhausting speech Bonny-Gay removed
+her hat and laid it upon the grass, where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
+Mary Jane regarded it admiringly. It was so
+pretty she would have liked to touch it, just
+once. The hat&#8217;s owner saw the admiration,
+and remarked:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Put it on, Mary Jane. See if it will fit
+you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I daren&#8217;t!&#8221; gasped the other. &#8220;I
+might hurt it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay lifted the hat and placed it upon
+the cripple&#8217;s dark head, which was held perfectly
+motionless, while the face beneath the
+brim took on an expression of bewildered happiness.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My! ain&#8217;t it lovely! I should think you&#8217;d
+want to wear it all the time!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t, then. I like my &#8216;Tam&#8217; better, and
+nothing best of all. You can wear it as long
+as I stay, if you wish.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s good of you. Some of the other girls
+wouldn&#8217;t even let me touch their best hats, they
+wouldn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Must be selfish things, then. How old
+are you, Mary Jane?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How&#8217;d you know my name? and what&#8217;s
+yours?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay stated it and explained:</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>&#8220;I heard that Jimmy boy call you. How old
+did you say?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t say, but I&#8217;m eight, going on nine.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, so am I. I&#8217;m a &#8216;Sunday&#8217;s bairn&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And I!&#8221; cried Mary Jane, breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>After that confidences were swift; and, presently,
+each little girl knew all about the other;
+till, in one pause for breath, the cripple suddenly
+remembered the baby. Then she caught
+up her crutches, swung herself upon them, and
+started off in pursuit of him.</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay watched her disappear in the
+midst of the crowd of children, who had all
+shyly held aloof from herself, saw how they
+clung about her and how some of the tiniest
+ones held up their faces to be kissed. She saw
+her stoop to tie the ragged shoe of one and
+button the frock of another; saw her pause to
+listen to the complaint of a sobbing lad and
+smartly box the ears of his tormentor. Then
+another glimmering of the Gray Gentleman&#8217;s
+meaning, when he called these two &#8220;sisters,&#8221;
+came into Bonny-Gay&#8217;s mind.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She has to take care of the children down
+here just as I do in our park. I suppose we
+two are the only ones have time to bother, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
+how can she do it! Her face is so pretty&mdash;prettier,
+even, than Nettie&#8217;s, but I dare not look
+at the rest of her. I just dare not. Poor little
+girl, how she must ache! Supposing I was that
+way. My arms stretched way down there, and
+my feet shortened way up here, and my back
+all scrouged up so! Oh! poor, poor Mary Jane!
+It hurts me just to make believe and she has
+it all the time. But here she comes back and
+I mustn&#8217;t let her see I notice her looks. I
+mustn&#8217;t, for anything. It&#8217;s bad enough to have
+her body hurt, I mustn&#8217;t hurt her feelings, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>However, there was no sign of suffering
+about the little cripple as she returned to the
+side of her guest, dragging the soap-box wagon
+behind her and recklessly rolling the baby about
+in it, so eager was her advance. There were
+tears in Bonny-Gay&#8217;s eyes for a moment,
+though, till she caught sight of the baby and
+heard Mary Jane exclaim:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did you ever see such a sight? What do
+you s&#8217;pose mother will say? The teacher set
+him in the sand-box and somebody gave him a
+stick of &#8217;lasses candy, and he&#8217;s messed from
+head to foot. But isn&#8217;t he a dear?&#8221; and dropping
+to the ground she caught the little one to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
+her breast and covered his sandy, bedaubed
+countenance with adoring kisses.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s the funniest thing I ever saw!&#8221;
+laughed Bonny-Gay, so merrily that the Gray
+Gentleman drew near to join in the fun. After
+him trailed an army of young &#8220;farmers&#8221; and
+in another moment the visitor had ceased to be
+a stranger to anybody there.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s see-saw!&#8221; cried Joe Stebbins, seizing
+her hand and drawing her to the playground.
+Then somebody swung Mary Jane and the baby
+upon the beam beside her, some other girls took
+the opposite end, and they all went tilting up
+and down, up and down, in the most exciting
+manner possible. Then there was the Maypole,
+furnished with ropes instead of ribbons, from
+the ends of which they hung and swung, around
+and around, till they dropped off for sheer
+weariness. And here Bonny-Gay was proud to
+see that Mary Jane could beat the whole company.
+Her arms were so long and so strong,
+they could cling and outswing all the others;
+and when she had held to her rope until she was
+the very last one left her laughter rang out in
+a way that was good to hear.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Seems to me I never heard so much laughing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
+in all my life!&#8221; exclaimed Bonny-Gay to
+the Gray Gentleman when, tired out with fun,
+she nestled beside him as he rested on a bench.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, it&#8217;s a fine thing, a fine thing. And
+you see that it doesn&#8217;t take big houses or rich
+clothes to make happiness. All these new
+friends of yours belong to those tiny homes we
+passed on our way down.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They do! Even Mary Jane, my sister?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Even in an humbler. Dingy street is just
+what its name implies. But we&#8217;ll drive that
+way back and what do you say to giving Mary
+Jane a ride thus far?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I&#8217;d love it! She&#8217;s so jolly and
+friendly and seems never to think of her&mdash;her
+poor back and&mdash;things.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll like her better and better&mdash;if you
+should ever meet again. She won my heart
+the first time I saw her, over a month ago. I
+met her dragging home a basket of her mother&#8217;s
+laundry work, in that same soap-box wagon she
+utilizes for the baby. The family chariot it
+seems to be. I was taking a stroll this way,
+quite by myself, and thinking of other things
+than where I was walking when I stumbled and
+my hat flew off. Then I heard a rattle and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
+squeak of rusty small wheels, and there was
+Mary Jane hopping up to me on her &#8216;wooden
+feet&#8217; and holding out my hat, with the most
+sympathetic smile in the world. &#8216;Here it is,
+Mister, and I do hope it isn&#8217;t hurt; nor you
+either,&#8217; said she; and in just that one glimpse
+I had of her I saw how sweet and brave and
+helpful she was. So I&#8217;ve been proud to call
+her my friend ever since.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Just then arose a cry so sudden and boisterous
+it could have been uttered by no lips except
+the baby&#8217;s. For a teacher had tapped a bell,
+and somebody had cried &#8216;Luncheon!&#8217; and he
+knew what that meant as well as anyone.</p>
+
+<p>So Mary Jane swung round to where he lay
+upon his back in the sunshine and set him up
+against a rock, and thrust a piece of the loaf she
+had brought into his chubby fists, and cocked
+her head admiringly while she cried out:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did anybody ever see so cute a child as
+he!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then she remembered the visitors and with
+the truest hospitality proffered them the broken
+loaf.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I ought to have given it to you the first,
+I know that, but he&#8217;d have yelled constant if I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
+hadn&#8217;t tended him. It&#8217;s wonderful, I think,
+how he knows that bell!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wonderful!&#8221; echoed the Gray Gentleman,
+as he bowed and gravely broke a tiny portion
+from the small stale loaf.</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay was going to decline, but when
+she saw the Gray Gentleman&#8217;s action, she
+checked her &#8220;No, I thank you&#8221; unspoken and
+also accepted a crumbly crust. After which
+Mary Jane distributed several other bits among
+some clamorous charges and finally sat down
+with the last morsel to enjoy that herself in
+their presence.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think dinner never tastes so good as it
+does out-doors here, in our park,&#8221; she remarked
+with a sigh of satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dinner!&#8221; cried Bonny-Gay and looked into
+the Gray Gentleman&#8217;s face. But from something
+she saw there she was warned to say no
+more; and she made a brave effort to swallow
+her own crust without letting her entertainer
+see how distasteful a matter it was.</p>
+
+<p>After this the Gray Gentleman saw a cloud
+arising and though he did not fear a shower for
+himself he was anxious that Bonny-Gay should
+take no harm from her unusual outing. So he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
+called the coachman to bring up the carriage
+and had Mary Jane and the baby lifted in. Then
+Bonny-Gay sprang after them, and the master
+himself made his adieux to the teachers and followed,
+watched by the admiring, maybe envious,
+glances of many bright eyes.</p>
+
+<p>However, one carriage, no matter how
+capacious, cannot hold a whole kindergarten,
+and neither could it carry the pleasant &#8220;Playgrounds&#8221;
+away; so if there was any envy it
+did not last long. Which was a good thing,
+too, seeing what happened so soon afterward.</p>
+
+<p>The landau had not progressed far toward
+Dingy street and Mary Jane was still wearing
+the feather-trimmed hat, which her new friend
+had persuaded her to put on just to surprise
+Mrs. Bump, when there came a rush, a bark,
+a series of shrieks, and the high-spirited horses
+were off at a mad gallop; which grew wilder
+and wilder, and soon passed quite beyond control
+of coachman or even the Gray Gentleman,
+who had promptly seized the reins as they fell
+from the driver&#8217;s hands, but had been powerless
+to do more than retain them in his tightly
+clutched fingers.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed an age that the frantic beasts sped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
+onward, following their own will, before the
+crash came and they tore themselves free, leaving
+the hindering vehicle to go to ruin against
+the great post, where it struck. But it was, in
+reality, not more than half a moment, and when
+the reins were wrenched from his grasp the
+Gray Gentleman looked anxiously about him to
+learn if anyone was hurt.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane and the baby were on the floor
+of the carriage, safe and sound. The terrified
+footman was clinging to his seat behind; the
+coachman had either leaped or been thrown out,
+but had landed upon his feet; but where was
+Bonny-Gay?</p>
+
+<p>A white, motionless little figure lay face
+downward in the dust, a rod away, and over
+this bent a black, shaggy dog, whining and
+moaning in a way that was almost human.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Max! Max! Was it you, was it you!
+Oh! wretched animal, what have you done!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Max it was. But, at the sight of his silent
+playmate and the altered sound of a familiar
+voice, a cowed, unhappy Max; who crouched
+and slunk away as the Gray Gentleman lifted
+from the roadway the limp figure of his own
+beloved Bonny-Gay.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
+
+
+<small>MAX REAPPEARS</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">There</span> was neither drug store nor doctor&#8217;s
+office near, and the Gray Gentleman&#8217;s instant
+decision was to carry Bonny-Gay to Mrs.
+Bump&#8217;s house. Strong man though he was he
+felt almost faint with anxiety as he sprang from
+the carriage and without losing an instant of
+time lifted out Mary Jane and the baby. Then
+he dropped her crutches beside her and ran to
+the child in the roadway.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later, Bonny-Gay was lying on
+Mrs. Bump&#8217;s bed, and the Gray Gentleman had
+gone away in pursuit of aid, leaving a last injunction
+behind him as he disappeared:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do everything you can for her, I beg, but
+keep useless people out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was that, though curious faces peered
+in at the window, no person save Mrs. Stebbins
+crossed the threshold of their neighbor&#8217;s house,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
+and the two women were left unhindered to
+minister to the injured child as best they knew
+how. They were not able, indeed, to restore
+the little girl to consciousness; but they had
+cleared the soil of the street from her face and
+clothing and had placed the inert figure in an
+easy posture, long before there was heard the
+rattle and dash of another approaching vehicle,
+and a doctor&#8217;s phaeton drew up at the door.</p>
+
+<p>The surgeon&#8217;s examination showed that one
+of the child&#8217;s legs was broken but this did not
+trouble him half so much as her continued unconsciousness.
+But he worked diligently to restore
+her and to prepare the injured limb for
+removal to her own home.</p>
+
+<p>From a low seat in the corner and hugging
+the baby tight, to keep him quiet, Mary Jane
+watched the little sufferer upon her mother&#8217;s
+bed, with wide, dry eyes and heaving breast.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! if I could only take it for her!&#8221; she
+thought, helplessly. &#8220;It wouldn&#8217;t have mattered
+to anybody like me, &#8217;cause I&#8217;m all crooked anyhow;
+but her! She was that straight and beautiful&mdash;my
+sake! It mustn&#8217;t be&mdash;it mustn&#8217;t!
+And she didn&#8217;t mind. She let me wear her
+hat, me. Well, that didn&#8217;t get hurt, any way.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
+It just tumbled off all safe. I had to wear it
+home, else I couldn&#8217;t have dragged the baby,
+and I don&#8217;t know not a thing whatever became
+of his wagon. Never mind that, though. If
+she only would open her eyes, just once, just
+once!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But they had not opened even when, a half-hour
+later, another carriage paused before the
+Bumps&#8217; tenement, and a tall, pale lady descended,
+trembling so that she had almost to be
+carried by the Gray Gentleman who supported
+her.</p>
+
+<p>This was Mrs. McClure and she had just
+been stepping into her own vehicle for a morning&#8217;s
+shopping when he reached her door, bringing
+his unhappy message. So there was no
+time lost in securing a vehicle and the mother
+was soon at her child&#8217;s bedside. At any other
+hour she might have shrunk from entering so
+poor a place but at that moment she had, for
+once, forgotten her own high station and
+thought only of her darling.</p>
+
+<p>One glimpse of the lovely face, so still and
+unresponsive, banished the mother&#8217;s last vestige
+of strength and she would have fallen where
+she stood, had not Mrs. Bump slipped an arm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
+about her and motioned Mrs. Stebbins to bring
+the one sound chair the room could boast. The
+doctor held a glass of water to her lips and the
+faintness passed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Is&mdash;she&mdash;alive?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. She is still alive,&#8221; answered the physician,
+gravely, and Mrs. McClure turned faint
+again.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course, she&#8217;s alive, lady; and what&#8217;s
+more it won&#8217;t be long, I reckon, before she&#8217;ll be
+asking a lot of questions all about what&#8217;s happened
+her. Oh! yes indeed. I&#8217;ve seen &#8217;em a
+sight worst than she is, and up and around
+again as lively as crickets. Why, there&#8217;s my
+Mary Jane&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But the cripple held up a warning finger and
+Mrs. Bump ceased speaking. Though not her
+helpful ministrations; for with a whisk to the
+stove she had seized a coarse brown teapot and
+poured from it a hot draught into a cup that
+had no handle, indeed, yet could serve as well
+as another to refresh an exhausted creature.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Here, honey, just sip this. Strong, I know,
+and not the finest, but &#8217;twill set you up, quick.
+I know. There, there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Moved by the same instinct which had made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
+Bonny-Gay accept her crust dinner, Mrs. McClure
+drank the scalding liquid and did, indeed,
+revive under it. Then the doctor and the Gray
+Gentleman lifted the injured child and placed
+her gently upon the carriage seat.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing which, the mother hastily rose and
+followed, supported still, though unnoticed on
+her part, by the strong arms of the other mother
+whose sympathetic tears were now silently
+flowing; even while her cheery voice reiterated,
+much to the surgeon&#8217;s disgust:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Never you fear, dear lady. She&#8217;ll be as
+right as a trivet. Aye, indeed; she&#8217;ll be talking
+to you before you get to your own house. Yes,
+indeed. We poor folks see many an accident
+and mostly they don&#8217;t amount to much; even
+my Mary Jane&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But there was Mary Jane herself just as the
+carriage door was closing, thrusting something
+white and feather-trimmed into the pale lady&#8217;s
+lap.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Her hat, lady. Bonny-Gay&#8217;s best hat!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. McClure was as kind hearted as most,
+yet at that moment she was already unstrung,
+and the glimpse she caught of poor Mary Jane&#8217;s
+deformity shocked her afresh. Without intending<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
+it she did shrink away from contact
+with so &#8220;repulsive&#8221; a child and Mrs. Bump
+saw the movement. Her own face hardened
+and she withdrew her arm from supporting the
+stranger to clasp it about her own child.</p>
+
+<p>But Mary Jane saw nothing, save that Bonny-Gay
+was being carried away without her
+beautiful headgear, and again she thrust it
+eagerly forward.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Her hat! Her lovely hat! She mustn&#8217;t go
+without her Sunday hat!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was the sweetest, most sympathetic of
+voices and almost startling to the rich woman,
+coming as it did from such a source. It made
+her take a second look at the cripple and this
+time, fortunately, the glance rested upon the
+child&#8217;s fine, spiritual face. An instant regret
+for the repugnance she had first felt shot
+through Mrs. McClure&#8217;s mind and leaning from
+the carriage window she dropped the hat upon
+Mary Jane&#8217;s dark head.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Keep it, little girl, as a gift from Bonny-Gay.
+It will delight her that you should have
+it. Quick now, coachman. Swift and careful!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then they were all gone and Mary Jane, bedecked
+in her unusual finery, stood leaning upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
+her crutches, crying as if her heart would break.
+Her mother glanced at her hastily but thought
+it best to let &#8220;her have her cry out. She cries
+so seldom it ought to do her good,&#8221; she reflected.
+Besides, there was the baby rolling on
+the floor, in imminent danger from a wash-boiler
+full of steaming water; and a whole hour
+wasted from her own exacting labors.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, the hunchback felt something cold
+and wet touch her down-hanging hand and
+dashed the tears from her eyes to see what it
+might be. There sat a great black dog beside
+her, so close that he almost forced her crutch
+away. His eyes were fixed upon her face in a
+mute appeal for sympathy, and his whole bearing
+showed as much sorrow as her tears had
+done. Her first impulse was to shrink away
+from him, even to strike at him with the crutch,
+as she indignantly exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re the very dog did it! You jumped
+into the wagon and scared the horses. If it
+hadn&#8217;t been for you she wouldn&#8217;t have been
+hurt. Go &#8217;way! Go away off out of sight!
+You horrid, ugly, mean old dog!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane&#8217;s vehemence surprised even herself
+and she shook her head so vigorously<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
+that the feather-trimmed hat fell off into
+the dust.</p>
+
+<p>Then was a transformation. Max&mdash;it was,
+indeed he!&mdash;had already dropped flat upon his
+stomach and crouched thus, whining and moaning
+in a manner that betokened such suffering
+that it quickly conquered the cripple&#8217;s anger;
+and now, as the hat fell right before his nose,
+he began to smell of it and lick it with the most
+extravagant joy. A moment later he had sprung
+up, caught the hat in his teeth, and was gambolling
+all around and around Mary Jane,
+as if he were the very happiest dog in the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My sake! How you act! And oh&mdash;oh&mdash;oh!
+I know you, I know you! You must be
+that Max-dog that she told me about. That
+she&#8217;d known all her life and wouldn&#8217;t be let
+come any more to her park! I guess I can see
+the whole thing. I guess you run away from
+that man the gardener gave you to. Maybe
+you went right back to where &#8216;Father George&#8217;
+and the lion are; and maybe you saw Bonny-Gay
+and the Gray Gentleman come away; and
+maybe you followed them. Maybe it was because
+you were so glad, and not bad, that you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
+jumped into the carriage and scared the horses.
+Oh! you poor doggie, if that is how it is!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Which was, in fact, exactly what had happened;
+and it seemed that the intelligent animal,
+who had loved Bonny-Gay ever since she was
+first wheeled about the beautiful Place in her
+baby-carriage, had now a comprehension of the
+damage his delight at finding her again had
+done.</p>
+
+<p>So Mary Jane hopped back into the house
+and called Max by that name to follow her.
+He did so, readily, and sat down very near to
+the foot of the bed on which she carefully placed
+his little mistress&#8217; hat.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, daughter, this has been a morning,
+hasn&#8217;t it? Now, these handkerchiefs are ready
+to iron and I&#8217;ve fixed your high seat right close
+to my tub, so whilst I wash you can iron away
+and tell me the whole story and all about it.
+Here comes father, too, and it&#8217;ll pass the time
+for him to hear it. And, oh! William! you
+never could guess whatever has happened right
+here in this very kitchen, this very morning that
+ever was! But, I must work now, and Mary
+Jane&#8217;ll talk.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Talk she did and fast; and under her eloquence<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
+Bonny-Gay became quite the most
+wonderful child in the world:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The beautifullest, the kindest, the friendliest
+that ever lived. It didn&#8217;t &#8217;pear to make a
+mite of difference that she was all so fixed up in
+her clothes; she played games as lively as the
+next one. She hung on to the Maypole ropes
+near as long as I did, and if I&#8217;d known what
+was coming I&#8217;d have dropped off quick and let
+her win the count. And my! how she did enjoy
+her dinner off my loaf! To see her little white
+hands hold it up to her lips and see her just
+nibble, nibble&mdash;Why, mother Bump! &#8217;Twould
+have done your heart good!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Eat your dinner, did she? Wish to goodness
+it had choked her!&#8221; growled William
+Bump, from the doorstep.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, father! W-h-y!&#8221; gasped Mary
+Jane, amazed.</p>
+
+<p>The man replied only by whistling Max to
+him, and by stroking the dog&#8217;s head when the
+whistle had been obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>But when the cripple had reached that part of
+her story descriptive of the final accident, the
+father spoke again and this time with even a
+more vindictive earnestness than before.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>&#8220;Broke her leg, did it? Glad of it. Never
+was gladder of anything in all my life. Hope
+she&#8217;ll suffer a lot. Hope&mdash;What better is she,
+his little girl, than you, my Mary Jane? Glad
+there is something that evens matters up. I
+hope his heart&#8217;ll ache till it comes as near
+breakin&#8217; as mine&mdash;every time I look at your
+poor crooked shoulders, you poor miserable
+child! So I do!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Both Mrs. Bump and Mary Jane were aghast
+at the awfulness of this desire. Even the baby
+had paused open-mouthed and silent, as if he,
+too, could comprehend the dreadful words and
+be shocked by them. Only Max remained undisturbed,
+even nestled the closer to the blue-shirted
+man, who in some manner reminded
+him of his old master, Mr. Weems.</p>
+
+<p>Then Mrs. Bump found her voice, and
+though she was a loyal wife she did not hesitate
+in this emergency to give her husband a
+very indignant reproof. So indignant, in fact,
+that she forgot the caution of many years, and
+with her hand on William&#8217;s shoulder, demanded
+fiercely:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You say that, you? You! You dare to
+rejoice in the misfortunes of others when it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
+was by your own fault&mdash;your own fault, William
+Bump!&mdash;that our poor lass sits yonder a
+cripple for life. When I left her in your care
+that I might go and intercede for you to be
+given a fresh trial at the works, what was it
+but that you loved the drink better than the
+child? and left her on the high ledge while you
+slept&mdash;a human log! Yet you were sorry
+enough afterwards and you should take shame
+to yourself for your wickedness. It&#8217;s the drink
+again that&#8217;s in you, this day; and that has lost
+you another job and turned your once good
+heart into a cruel beast&#8217;s! So that is what I
+think of you, and my&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then she turned and there sat Mary Jane,
+listening, horror-struck and broken-hearted!</p>
+
+<p>Regret was useless. The secret, guarded so
+jealously for years, was now disclosed. Till
+then the hunchback had believed her affliction
+was hers from birth, and had never dreamed
+that it was the result of a terrible fall, due to
+her own father&#8217;s carelessness. He had always
+seemed to love her so, with a sort of remorseful
+tenderness quite different from the attention he
+gave to his other, healthier children. But if it
+had all been by his fault!</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>Poor Mary Jane! Alas, alas! Far worse
+for her was the anger and hatred that at that
+moment sprang to life in her tortured heart.
+As in a picture she saw other little maids, her
+playmates, even this recent vision of Bonny-Gay,
+straight-limbed, strong, active, enjoying
+everything without aid of those hindering
+crutches or the heavy dragging limbs.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! father! you did it? you! And I ought
+to have been like them&mdash;I ought&mdash;I ought!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Nobody spoke after that. Mary Jane&#8217;s head
+sank down upon the high table where stood her
+little flatiron, fast cooling. Mrs. Bump felt a
+new and deadly faintness seize her own vigorous
+body and sat weakly down. How could she
+undo the mischief she had wrought? Until
+now there had been between the father and the
+child such a wonderful affection that it had been
+a matter of constant comment among all the
+neighbors, and the mother had been proud that
+this was so. Now&mdash;what had she done, what
+had she done!</p>
+
+<p>Presently, William Bump rose, put on his
+hat, whistled to Max, and walked out. At the
+door he paused, cast one miserable glance over
+the little room and his face was very white beneath<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
+its stains of toil and weather. His eyes
+seemed mutely to seek for one ray of pity, of
+forgiveness; but Mary Jane&#8217;s head was still
+upon the table and her mother&#8217;s face was hidden
+in her own labor-hardened palms.</p>
+
+<p>Only the baby began to coo and gurgle in
+a way which, under ordinary circumstances,
+would have elicited admiring exclamations, but
+which now secured no response. So, then he
+rolled over and closed his eyes; and not even
+he saw when the man and the dog passed clear
+out of sight, across the open lots, and toward
+the marshy places which led to the water and
+the unknown country beyond.</p>
+
+<p>By-and-by, the other children came home
+from the &#8220;Playgrounds,&#8221; full of chatter about
+the day&#8217;s delights and eager with questions concerning
+the wonderful happening of Mary
+Jane&#8217;s ride. Then the mother roused and kept
+them from troubling their sister, and dispatched
+them to examine the wrecked carriage, away
+down the street.</p>
+
+<p>By the time they returned Mary Jane&#8217;s eyes
+were no longer red and there was nothing out
+of common in her manner. Mrs. Bump was
+ironing away as if her life depended on it, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
+even humming the first strains of a hymn,
+&#8220;Lord, in the morning, Thou shalt, Thou shalt&mdash;Lord,
+in the morning Thou shalt hear.&#8221;
+This always denoted an extra cheerfulness on
+the singer&#8217;s part, and the children became boisterously
+happy in proportion.</p>
+
+<p>When supper time came they &#8220;set a place
+for father,&#8221; just as always; and though even
+by the end of the meal he had not appeared
+his unused plate was still left, as if he might
+come in at any moment.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was quite midnight when Mary Jane,
+for once unable to sleep, crept down to her
+mother&#8217;s room and called, softly:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Has he come, mother?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No dearie, not yet. But it&#8217;s not late, you
+know for&mdash;him!&#8221; replied the wife, so cheerfully,
+that even her quick-witted daughter did
+not suspect the heartache beneath the cheerfulness,
+nor the tear-stained face upon the pillow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When he does, I wish you&#8217;d call me. I
+must tell him it&#8217;s&mdash;it&#8217;s all just right.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, darling. Trust mother and go to sleep
+now. I&#8217;ll call you sure.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And neither guessed how long that call would
+be delayed.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
+
+
+<small>MARY JANE GOES VISITING</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">But</span> Mary Jane Bump was not the girl to be
+gloomy over anything for very long; least of
+all over anything so trifling as her own personal
+afflictions; and the morning saw her hopping
+about in her narrow home, as merry, as loving,
+and as helpful as ever. Even more helpful, it
+seemed to the conscience-stricken mother, than
+before she had felt the fierce anger of the previous
+day.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Appears like she&#8217;d try to make even me
+forget she ever heard what I said, poor lamb!
+Well, I still think, what I&#8217;ve so often thought,
+that the Lord did bring sweet out of that bitter,
+when He made her so beautiful inside, even if
+she is crooked without. And more&#8217;n that, to
+me she don&#8217;t seem so misshaped. I almost
+forget she ain&#8217;t just like the rest. Aye, honey?
+What&#8217;s that you say?&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>&#8220;If you can spare me, mother, after all the
+work is done, I&#8217;d like to go to Bonny-Gay&#8217;s
+house and find out about her. Oh! do you
+s&#8217;pose she will get well?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sure, child.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess she will, too. Can I, mother?
+When the work&#8217;s all done?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Bless you, my lass, and that will never be.
+So there&#8217;s no use tarrying for such a time. And
+I don&#8217;t blame you for wanting to go. I&#8217;d admire
+to hear myself. But I guess it&#8217;s a long
+step from here and I don&#8217;t know the way, even
+I don&#8217;t. You&#8217;d have to ride in a street car
+and that costs money&mdash;which is one of the
+things I can least spare.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At mention of the car, Mary Jane&#8217;s eyes
+sparkled.</p>
+
+<p>On rare occasions&mdash;once when she went to
+market with her mother, at holiday time, and
+once when the wash had been too large and the
+patron&#8217;s home too distant for even her nimble
+crutches&mdash;she had enjoyed the luxury of travel
+by electricity. In imagination, she could still
+feel the swift rush of air against her cheek,
+could see the houses hurrying past, and hear
+the delightful ting-a-ling of the bell, as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
+motorman stopped to let the passengers on or
+off. She had not dreamed that it would be
+necessary for her to ride, in order to pay the
+visit she desired; but if it were&mdash;Oh! felicity!</p>
+
+<p>The light in the eyes she loved decided the
+mother upon the indulgence. A car-ride meant
+a nickel, or part of one, at least, for even little
+Mary Jane; and a nickel would buy a loaf, and
+many loaves were needful where there were
+seven mouths to fill, and every mouth a hungry
+one. More than that, if William were out of
+work&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bump considered no further. Mary
+Jane should have the pleasure&mdash;no matter what
+happened afterward.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course, you&#8217;ll ride! Why not? Don&#8217;t
+suppose I&#8217;d let you start off a-foot for such a
+length, do you? I&#8217;ve a notion that this Mt.
+Vernon Place is away at the other end the city.
+Leastwise, it must be a good bit from Dingy
+street, &#8217;cause I never heard of it before, and
+I&#8217;ve been around the neighborhood considerable,
+with the wash, you know. Yes, you may go.
+Fly round right smart and get your clothes
+changed. What a fine thing it is that your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
+other frock is clean, and I must say I did have
+good luck ironing it, last week.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You always do have good luck, mother
+Bump! You&#8217;re the very loveliest ironer in the
+world!&#8221; and the wooden feet clicked across the
+room that their owner might hug this famous
+laundress.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And you&#8217;re a partial little girl, honey.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But, mother, dear, the work isn&#8217;t done&mdash;yet.
+There&#8217;s the steps to be scrubbed and that
+other pile of hank&#8217;chiefs, and&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I reckon we&#8217;ll live just as long if our
+steps ain&#8217;t done for one day in the year. Besides,
+I might let one the younger ones do them
+and see. They&#8217;re always teasing to, you know.
+Strange, how human nature loves to mess in a
+pail of soap and water.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who&#8217;ll mind the baby, if I go?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I will, Mary Jane Bump! Seem to think
+the precious youngster ain&#8217;t hardly safe in his
+own mother&#8217;s hands, do you? Run along, run
+along, girlie, and fix yourself fine.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Away up the narrow stair swung happy Mary
+Jane; and in a very few moments down she
+swung again. She had exchanged her blue
+gingham for her pink print, had dusted off the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
+shoes which, alas! were so useless that they
+rarely wore out! and had brushed her dark
+wavy hair till it floated about her sweet face,
+as fine and fleece-like as it was possible for hair
+to be. In her hands she carried two hats; her
+own little plain &#8220;sailor,&#8221; and the gift of Bonny-Gay.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I wouldn&#8217;t wear&mdash;&#8221; began Mrs. Bump,
+answering the question in Mary Jane&#8217;s eyes;
+then seeing the disappointment which crept into
+them, hastily altered her original judgment to
+fit the case. &#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t wear that old &#8216;sailor&#8217;
+if I was a little girl that owned feathers like
+those. Indeedy, that I wouldn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane&#8217;s face rippled with smiles and for
+almost the first time in her life she did a coquettish
+thing. Standing upon her crutches before
+the tiny looking-glass, hung at an angle above
+the mantel, she adjusted and readjusted the
+pretty leghorn, until she had placed it as nearly
+in the position it had occupied on Bonny-Gay&#8217;s
+yellow curls as she could. Then she wheeled
+about and asked:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Does it look right, mother? Just as right
+as she would like to have it, when she sees
+me?&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>&#8220;Perfect, honey! And though I maybe
+oughtn&#8217;t to say it before you, you&#8217;re the very
+sweetest little girl in Baltimore city!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah! but, mother Bump, you haven&#8217;t seen
+all the others!&#8221; laughed the child.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now, here&#8217;s your money. Two nickels,
+dear. I&#8217;ve just given them a bit of a polish in
+the suds while you were up-stairs. One is to
+go with, and one to come home. I&#8217;ve been
+puzzling it out, and the best thing is for you to
+go to the nearest car-line you find; then ask
+the conductor how nigh it will take you to the
+Place. He&#8217;ll be kind to you, I know. They&#8217;re
+always obliging, the conductors are, and when
+it&#8217;s anybody like you, why they just seem to
+tear themselves to pieces to be nice. You&#8217;ll
+have no trouble, honey, not a mite. And when
+you get there, don&#8217;t forget to make your manners,
+pretty, like I&#8217;ve taught you. Say everything
+to cheer the lady up, if she seems down-hearted
+a bit, and good-by, good-by. Bless you,
+Mary Jane!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bump stood at her doorway and Mrs.
+Stebbins at hers, to watch the little figure hop
+away, and when it turned at the corner and they
+caught a glimpse of the radiant face beneath<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
+the picture-hat, they smiled upon each other
+well satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No harm&#8217;ll happen to her!&#8221; said Mrs. Stebbins,
+confidently. &#8220;She&#8217;s one of the Lord&#8217;s
+own.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not fearing! though I&#8217;m going to miss
+her powerful,&#8221; answered the mother, and retired
+to her tub.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane&#8217;s heart beat so with excitement
+that she could hardly breathe. Here she was,
+going alone on an unknown journey, to ride
+in a car quite by herself, and to pay her own
+fare exactly as if she were a grown-up. She
+had to tightly clutch that corner of her little
+handkerchief wherein the nickles were tied, to
+make herself realize the delightful fact; and
+already, in her dutiful heart, she was planning
+how she could save, by not eating quite so much
+of her portion of food, and so, in time, make
+up to her mother for this unwonted extravagance.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, she thought so fast and deeply, that
+she stood on the corner and let the first car go
+by without signalling it. Then she brought her
+wits to the present and when the next one
+whizzed up she was ready for it, raising her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
+hand and motioning it to stop, as she had seen
+other people do.</p>
+
+<p>It did stop, of course, and to such a little
+passenger, also, of course, the conductor was
+quite as kind as Mrs. Bump had prophesied he
+would be. He lifted Mary Jane into the very
+front seat of all and he would have been glad
+not to take a fare from her. But this his duty
+compelled him to do, and when he had received
+it he paused a moment beside her to inquire:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Taking a ride, are you? Well, it&#8217;s a nice
+morning.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t it! Just beautiful. Yes, I&#8217;m going to
+Mt. Vernon Place.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Whew! you are? Well, this is the wrong
+car&mdash;Never mind. You can transfer. Mt.
+Vernon Place is a long way from here and quite
+the swellest part of the town; you know that,
+I suppose.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s where Bonny-Gay lives.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! indeed. Well, don&#8217;t you worry. I&#8217;ll
+look out for you and pass you along. Company
+allows only one transfer, now, but I&#8217;ll fix it.
+It&#8217;ll be all right. Don&#8217;t worry.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane had not the slightest intention of
+worrying. That was something she had never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
+done until the night before, and then about her
+missing father. But in this brilliant sunshine,
+with the world all her own, so to speak, even
+that anxiety had disappeared. He would be
+sure to return and very soon. He loved them
+all so dearly, and even for herself, if there were
+none others, he would come. He couldn&#8217;t live
+without her; he had often told her so. Therefore
+she merely hoped he was having as good
+a time, at that moment, as she was; and settled
+herself serenely in her place to enjoy everything.</p>
+
+<p>She never forgot the first part of that day&#8217;s
+ride. There were few passengers in the car
+and these were all men, quite able to look out
+for themselves; so the conductor remained near
+her and talked of the places they passed, pointing
+out this building and that, for Mary Jane&#8217;s
+enlightenment. She bestowed upon each an
+attention that was quite flattering to her entertainer,
+till the car turned another corner
+and he had to move away. People came more
+frequently now and at every block of their advance,
+the men and women seemed to Mary
+Jane to crowd and hurry more and more. They
+almost crushed her own small person, climbing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
+past her, but she still clung sturdily to the outer
+corner of her seat, as her friend, the conductor,
+had bidden her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No need for you to move up, little girl.
+You&#8217;ll be changing after a bit, and it&#8217;ll be easier
+for them than you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Right in the very business part of the city
+the car stopped and he came back to her, thrusting
+a pale green slip of paper into her hand,
+and hurriedly lifting her out.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s your transfer. Yonder&#8217;s your car.
+Give that paper to the other conductor. He&#8217;ll
+help you on. Say, Snyder!&#8221; he called to his
+co-laborer. &#8220;This kid&#8217;s for Vernon Place. Put
+her off at Charles street, will you? and pass her
+along. I&#8217;ll make it right with the company.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then he was gone and Mary Jane stood bewildered
+in the midst of a throng of vehicles,
+and street cars, and busy, rushing people. For
+an instant her head whirled, then she saw the
+impatient beckoning of conductor Snyder, and
+swung herself toward the waiting car. A man,
+into whose path she had hopped, caught her
+up and placed her on the platform, and again
+she was off.</p>
+
+<p>But this time she was merely one of a crowd<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
+and the ticket collecting kept Mr. Snyder too
+busy to bother with any single passenger. Indeed,
+some slight hindrance just as they reached
+Charles street put Mary Jane and her destination
+quite out of mind, and it was not until
+they had gone some blocks beyond and he had
+chanced to come near her again that she ventured
+to ask:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Are we almost there?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Where&#8217;s there?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He&mdash;he said&mdash;Charles street,&#8221; she answered
+abashed by his brusque manner.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Charles street! Why, that&#8217;s long back.
+Did you want to get off there? Oh! I forgot.
+You&#8217;re the child&mdash;Well, such as you ought not
+to be traveling alone. Here. I&#8217;ll put you off
+now, you can walk back. Ask anybody you
+meet, and they&#8217;ll direct you. Wait. I&#8217;ll give
+you another transfer. It&#8217;s against rules, but
+the other fellow&#8217;s responsible.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This time it was a yellow slip Mary Jane
+received and again she was set down in the
+midst of a confusing crowd. She was in imminent
+danger of being run over, and saw that; so
+promptly retreated to the curbstone and from
+thence watched the unending procession of cars,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
+which followed one another without a moment&#8217;s
+break. For just there it happened that many
+railway lines used the same tracks and it would
+have puzzled a much more experienced person
+than Mary Jane to distinguish between them.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, she grew so tired and confused with
+the watching and the racket that she resolved
+to walk; and set out boldly in the direction from
+which she had come, scanning the street name-signs
+upon the corners. It seemed to her she
+would never come to that she sought, but she
+did, at last; and here a new difficulty presented.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Which way shall I go? this&mdash;or that? Oh!
+dear! The time is going so fast and I don&#8217;t
+get there. I&#8217;ll have to ask somebody the way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But though she made several shy little efforts
+to attract attention, not a passer-by paused to
+answer her low question. Almost all fancied
+her an unfortunate, petitioning alms; and some
+thought her a street merchant with something
+to sell. Many and many an one had gone by,
+till in the midst of all these men she saw a
+woman.</p>
+
+<p>Only a scrub-woman, to be sure, on her way
+to some office to her daily labor; but she paused
+when the cripple spoke to her and looked with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
+feminine curiosity at the plainly clothed child in
+her expensive hat.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mt. Vernon Place! Why, child alive, it&#8217;s
+miles from here! Away up yonder. This is
+Charles and it does run straight enough, that&#8217;s
+so, to where you want to go. But it&#8217;s so far,
+little girl. And you a cripple. You&#8217;d much
+best go back home and let some older person do
+your errand. Whatever was your ma thinkin&#8217;
+of, to send you such a bout?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She didn&#8217;t send me, I came because I
+wished. Can you tell me which car is right?
+and will this yellow ticket pay my way?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The woman examined the transfer-slip,
+glanced at a clock on a near-by building, and
+shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the car, all right, but that transfer&#8217;s
+no good. After fifteen minutes they won&#8217;t take
+&#8217;em, and it&#8217;s half an hour or more. No. You&#8217;ll
+have to pay a second fare. I&#8217;ll help you on, if
+you like. Where do you live?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ninety-seven, Dingy street.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The land! That&#8217;s almost the jumping off
+place of the city. Did they give you only
+money enough to ride twice.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My mother gave me ten cents,&#8221; answered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
+Mary Jane, proudly, yet somehow, the fortune
+which had seemed so big, a little while before,
+now appeared very small and inadequate.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Pshaw! If I had a cent I&#8217;d give it to you.
+I don&#8217;t know what you&#8217;d better do.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know. I&#8217;ll walk. And thank you for telling
+me the way. If I keep right on this street,
+and go up and up, will I surely, surely get
+there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sure. I know, &#8217;cause I used to clean up in
+that neighborhood. I hope you&#8217;ll have luck.
+Good-by.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good-by,&#8221; answered Mary Jane, smilingly.</p>
+
+<p>The momentary pause and conversation had
+rested her and she now felt wholly equal to any
+demands upon her strength. If she had merely
+to follow this one avenue till she came in sight
+of the monument and the lion, why! that was
+as easy as A, B, C! So she set out with fresh
+courage and full enjoyment of every novel sight
+or sound by the way; though, all the while,
+watchfully reading the street sign at every
+corner she reached.</p>
+
+<p>It was almost two hours later that she came
+in sight of the Place. She knew it in a moment,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
+even though she had had but the one brief description
+of it from Bonny-Gay&#8217;s lips, and she
+felt as if she had come into a new and wonderful
+world.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How big and still and&mdash;and&mdash;finished it
+looks! And, oh! how tired I am. My arms
+ache like they never did before, and I can hardly
+hold my crutches. I&#8217;ll get to that low stone
+round the monument&mdash;that&#8217;s where she sits
+with the Gray Gentleman&mdash;and I&#8217;ll get rested.
+Then I&#8217;ll look all around and pick out her house.
+I shall know it because she said it was all covered
+with vines and there was a big yard behind,
+with trees and things. Oh! how good it is to
+sit down.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>So good, indeed, that before she knew it the
+exhausted little maid had dropped her head
+upon the curbing and fallen fast asleep.</p>
+
+<p>There Mr. Weems discovered her and would
+have roused her to send her home. But a second
+glance at her convinced him that this was
+no child of that locality, and that she seemed
+a very weary little girl, indeed. So he simply
+folded his own jacket and placed it under her
+head and left her to recover herself.</p>
+
+<p>She awoke after a little time and sat up, confused<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
+and rather frightened. Till she suddenly
+remembered where she was and, seeing a gardener
+at work upon a grass-plot near, decided
+at once that he must be the owner of Max. She
+saw, too, the coat which had formed her pillow
+and knew that he must have placed it there.
+With a glad cry she caught up her crutches and
+swung herself toward the keeper:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! sir, I thank you. I was so tired and
+the coat was lovely soft. And I know you.
+You&#8217;re Mr. Weems, the gardener, and I&#8217;ve seen
+Max. He&#8217;s at our house, I mean he was&mdash;last
+night. And he will be again, &#8217;cause he&#8217;s with
+father, who&#8217;ll fetch him back. Father just
+loves dogs and animals. And say, please, which
+is Bonny-Gay&#8217;s house?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Bless my soul! You don&#8217;t say? Then you
+must belong around here, though I didn&#8217;t think
+it. You&#8217;ve seen Max, and you ask for our
+Bonny-Gay! Well, you&#8217;ve struck trouble both
+times. He&#8217;s in trouble enough, but she in worse.
+That&#8217;s her home, yonder, on the west corner.
+The green house I call it; with those doctors&#8217;
+carriages in front of it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is? Why, how funny. What&#8217;s all that
+straw for?&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>The gardener shook his head, sadly, and
+hastily flicked away at his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s to deaden all the noise. Bonny-Gay
+is a very, very sick little girl and there&#8217;s
+about one chance in a thousand, folks think,
+for her to get well. She was in an accident,
+yesterday. Got thrown out a carriage. The
+gentleman that took her driving is almost
+crazy with grief about it and&mdash;What&#8217;s that?
+What&#8217;s that you say? You was with her?
+You? And that&#8217;s her hat&mdash;Upon my word, it
+is. She showed it to me, the very first day
+she had it, while she was out here waiting to
+go driving with her folks. And she&#8217;s the only
+one they&#8217;ve got. I reckon her poor father
+would give all his millions of dollars and not
+stop a minute to think about it, if he could
+make her well by doing it. Poor man, I pity
+him!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was Max did it, you know. I&#8217;ve come
+to see her, and you mustn&#8217;t tell me she&#8217;s so sick
+as that. Why, she was that beautiful to me&mdash;I&mdash;I&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Waiting not an instant longer, and despite
+the gardener&#8217;s warning, Mary Jane clicked
+across the smooth path, over the street, and up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
+to the very front door of the mansion, wherein
+lay a precious little form, incessantly watched
+by a crowd of nurses and friends.</p>
+
+<p>The outer door was ajar, a footman standing
+just within, keeping guard and ready to answer
+in a whisper the constant string of inquiries
+which neighbors sent to make. Past him, while
+he was talking to another, slipped Mary Jane,
+her crutches making no sound upon the thick
+carpet. One thought possessed her, one only;
+and made her almost unconscious of the novel
+scenes about her. Bonny-Gay was ill. Bonny-Gay
+might die. Well, she would have one more
+glimpse of that beloved face, no matter who
+tried to stop her.</p>
+
+<p>Her brain worked fast. Sick people were
+generally up-stairs; up-stairs she sped. Sick
+folks had to be quiet. She paused an instant
+and peered down the dim corridor. She saw
+that as the people passing along this hall approached
+a distant door they moved even more
+gently and cautiously. In that room, then, lay
+her darling!</p>
+
+<p>It seemed like the passage of some bird, so
+swift she was and so unerring, for before even
+the most watchful of the nurses could intervene<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
+she had entered the darkened chamber and
+crossed to a white cot in the middle of it. By
+that time it was too late to stop her. Any noise,
+any excitement, however trivial, might prove
+fatal, the doctors thought.</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay lay, shorn of her beautiful curls,
+almost as white as her pillows. But the small
+head moved restlessly, incessantly, and the silence
+of the night had given place to a delirious,
+rambling talk. All her troubled fancies seemed
+to be of the last scenes she had witnessed: the
+&#8220;Playgrounds,&#8221; with the eager children crowding
+them. She was see-sawing with Jimmy
+O&#8217;Brien, and hoeing cabbages with the baby.
+She laughed at some inner picture of his absurd
+accidents, and finally, as some peril menaced
+him, raised her shoulders slightly and shrieked:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mary Jane! Oh! Mary Jane&mdash;come
+quick!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>All the watchers caught their breath&mdash;startled,
+fearful of the worst. Yet upon the
+silence that followed the cry, there rose the
+sweetest, the gladdest of voices:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, yes, Bonny-Gay! I&#8217;ve come!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
+
+
+<small>THE FLIGHT AND FRIGHT OF MARY JANE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Again</span> Mary Jane&#8217;s thoughts had been swift.
+She recalled the fact that &#8220;when Joe Stebbins
+had the fever and talked crazy-like, the doctor
+said we must answer just as if &#8217;twas the way
+he said. &#8217;Twould have made him worse to
+argue him different,&#8221; and with this reflection
+made her instant response.</p>
+
+<p>Now Bonny-Gay had either been less ill than
+they fancied, or the crisis had been reached;
+for at that cheerful reply she opened her blue
+eyes and looked into the eager face so near
+them. For a brief time she said no more, seeming
+to seek for some explanation of those
+troubled dreams from the steadfast smile of her
+new friend; then she stretched out her hand and
+Mary Jane caught it rapturously between her
+own palms.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&mdash;you look nice in my hat. But I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
+thought&mdash;I thought&mdash;I was at your park. Yet
+it&#8217;s home, isn&#8217;t it, after all. How dark it is, and
+how tired I am. I guess I&#8217;ll go to sleep a few
+minutes. Though I&#8217;m very pleased to see you,
+Mary Jane.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Through the hearts of all in the room shot
+a thrill of thankfulness, yet nobody moved as
+the injured child dropped at once into a quiet
+sleep which meant, the doctors knew, the saving
+of her life and reason.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. McClure had kept up bravely, till that
+moment, but now her strength was leaving her
+in the shock of her sudden relief and joy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell the girl not to move nor draw her
+hand away&mdash;till Bonny herself releases it;&#8221; she
+whispered, as an attendant led her noiselessly
+out of the chamber.</p>
+
+<p>She did not know how long and difficult a
+task she had set the unwelcome visitor; for
+while she herself sank into a much needed rest
+the sick child still slept that deep, refreshing
+slumber which was to restore her to health.</p>
+
+<p>The hours passed. The doctors went silently
+away. One nurse took up a watchful position
+near the bed and remained almost as motionless
+as the chair she occupied. A gray-haired man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
+appeared at the doorway, took one long, delighted
+look at the small figure on the cot,
+barely seeing the other child beside it, and went
+away again. This was the anxious father and
+he moved with the lightness of one from whom
+an intolerable burden has been removed.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, a second nurse took observation
+now and then of Mary Jane. The position into
+which the cripple had sprung, in her eager clasp
+of Bonny-Gay&#8217;s hand, was a trying one. Half-bent
+forward, with no support for any portion
+of her body save that sidewise seat upon the
+foot of the cot, it was inevitable that muscles
+should stiffen and limbs ache, even in a stronger
+frame than Mary Jane&#8217;s. Besides that, she was
+very hungry, almost faint. Her slight breakfast
+had been taken very early, and since then
+she had not tasted any food, though it was now
+midafternoon. Presently, she felt her head
+grow dizzy. Bonny-Gay&#8217;s face upon the pillow
+appeared to be strangely contorted and the clasp
+of the small hand within her own to become
+vise-like and icy in its grip. She began to
+suffer tortures, all over, everywhere. Even her
+useless legs were prickling and &#8220;going to
+sleep,&#8221; like any overtaxed limb. She feared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
+she would fall forward, in spite of all her will,
+and that might mean&mdash;death to Bonny-Gay!
+She knew, of her own intuition, that she must
+not move, even without the whispered command
+of Mrs. McClure, and in her heart she
+began to say a little prayer for strength to hold
+herself steady till her task was at an end.</p>
+
+<p>Then, all at once, she felt that the crutches
+resting against her side were being noiselessly
+lifted away. Somebody, who moved as if on
+air, was putting a rolled up pillow under her
+own tired chest; another at her side&mdash;her back;
+and beneath the heavy feet a great soft cushion
+that was like her own mother&#8217;s lap, for restfulness.</p>
+
+<p>She turned her head and looked up into the
+kind face of the trained nurse and smiled her
+most grateful smile, for she dared not speak.
+The white-capped woman smiled back and silently
+held forward a plate on which was some
+carefully cut up food. Then she forked a morsel
+and held it to Mary Jane&#8217;s lips, which opened
+and closed upon it with an eagerness that was
+almost greedy, so famished was she.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How queer it is!&#8221; thought the little girl,
+&#8220;that anybody should bother that way about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
+just me!&#8221; then swallowed another mouthful of
+the delicious chicken. A bit of roll followed
+the chicken, and after that a glass of milk.
+With every portion so administered, Mary
+Jane&#8217;s fatigue and dizziness disappeared till,
+by the time the nurse had fed her all that the
+plate contained, she felt so rested and refreshed
+she fancied that she could have sat on thus forever,
+if Bonny-Gay had so needed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! how good I feel!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay was awake at last, and, of her
+own accord, withdrew her hand from Mary
+Jane&#8217;s clasp.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why&mdash;why, is that you, Mary Jane? Why
+doesn&#8217;t somebody make it light in here? How
+came you&mdash;Oh! I remember. You came to see
+me and I went to sleep. I don&#8217;t know what
+made me do that. Wasn&#8217;t very polite, was it?
+Now, I&#8217;ll get up and be dressed and then we&#8217;ll
+play something.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But as she tried to rise she sank back in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s queer. There&#8217;s something the matter
+with me. One of my legs feels&mdash;it doesn&#8217;t
+feel at all. Seems as if it was a marble leg,
+like &#8216;Father George&#8217;s.&#8217; Whatever ails me?&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>Mary Jane&#8217;s answer was prompt enough,
+though the nurses would have suppressed it if
+they had had time.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess it&#8217;s broken. That&#8217;s all.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Broken! My leg? What do you
+mean?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I forgot. You haven&#8217;t been real awake
+since it happened. Max&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Child!&#8221; interposed the nurse who had fed
+her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! mustn&#8217;t I tell?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The two white-capped women exchanged
+glances. After all, their patient would have to
+learn about her own condition; and children
+had often ways of their own which proved
+wiser than grown folks thought.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ye-s, you may tell.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You were thrown out the carriage. Don&#8217;t
+you remember? Max had run away to find
+you, and when he did, he didn&#8217;t stop to think
+of anything else. He just jumped right into
+the carriage, where you and the Gray Gentleman
+and the baby and I were all riding splendid.
+That made the horses afraid and they
+acted bad. You got tumbled out and broke
+your leg. That&#8217;s all.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>&#8220;That&#8217;s&mdash;all! Why, Mary Jane! You say
+it as if&mdash;as if&mdash;you didn&#8217;t care!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay began to cry, softly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes I did say that&#8217;s all, because that
+isn&#8217;t much. It&#8217;s a good job it wasn&#8217;t your
+head. A broken leg gets well quick; quicker&#8217;n
+ever if it&#8217;s only a little leg like yours. If it
+was your mother&#8217;s now, or your father&#8217;s, you
+might worry. But, my sake! I wouldn&#8217;t
+mind a little thing like that if I were you.
+To lie in this heavenly room, with all the
+pictures and pretty things, and folks to wait
+on you every minute, why&mdash;I&#8217;d think I was
+the best off little girl in the world if I were
+you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I can&#8217;t walk on it, nobody knows when.
+Nor go out-doors, nor&mdash;nor&mdash;I think you&#8217;re a
+mean girl, Mary Jane Bump!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The cripple was too astonished to reply. She
+had pushed herself from her hard position upon
+the cot&#8217;s foot to a chair which the nurse had
+placed for her, and was leaning back in it with
+supreme content. In all her little life she had
+never sat upon anything so luxurious and restful.
+How could any child mind anything, who
+was as fortunate as the daughter of such a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
+home? Astonishment, also, at finding that her
+new friend was not wholly the &#8220;angel&#8221; she had
+hitherto supposed her to be, kept her silent. But
+she was rather glad to find this out. It made
+the other girl seem nearer to her own level of
+imperfection, and she speedily reflected that
+sick people were often cross, yet didn&#8217;t mean
+to be so.</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay herself swiftly repented her hard
+speech and looking around the room, inquired:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did I sleep very long?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, dear, a long time. We are all so glad
+of that,&#8221; answered the nurse, holding a spoon to
+the patient&#8217;s lips, just as she had done to
+Mary Jane&#8217;s, who laughed outright exclaiming:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That was the funniest thing! When I was
+holding your hand, Bonny-Gay, she fed me just
+that way, too! Me! Mary Jane Bump!
+Chicken, and biscuit and milk! &#8217;Twas prime,
+I tell you!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Fed you? Why?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Cause I was holding your hand and
+couldn&#8217;t feed myself. I s&#8217;pose she thought,
+maybe, I was hungry. I was, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>&#8220;Did you hold it all the time I was asleep,
+Mary Jane?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. Course. You wasn&#8217;t to be waked up
+till you did it yourself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A moment&#8217;s silence; then said Bonny-Gay:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am too ashamed of myself to look at you.
+What must you think of me, Mary Jane?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think I love you, dearly.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see how you can, but I&#8217;m glad of
+it. Where is my mother, nurse?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. McClure bent over the cot and kissed
+her daughter, murmuring tender words of love
+and delight; and for a space neither remembered
+Mary Jane.</p>
+
+<p>However, she had just remembered her own
+mother and the fact that she had been long from
+home. Also, that that home lay at the end of a
+long, strange and distracting journey, for one
+so ignorant of travel as she, and that through
+the window she could see that it was already
+twilight. She waited a bit, for a chance to
+bid good-night to Bonny-Gay and to say how
+glad she was that she was better, and to thank
+the nurse for being so kind to herself. But nobody
+seemed to have any thought for her just
+then.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>The gray-haired father had come into the
+room and bent beside his wife over the cot
+where lay their one darling child; and, seeing
+the parents thus occupied with their own feelings,
+both nurses had considerately turned their
+backs upon the scene and were busying themselves
+in arranging the chamber for the night&#8217;s
+watch.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I dare not wait a minute longer! I should
+be afraid, I think, to get in the car alone at
+night. I was hardly ever out after dark. I&#8217;d
+like to make my manners pretty, as mother
+said, but I can&#8217;t wait.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Moved by the same delicacy which had made
+the nurses turn their backs upon the group at
+the bedside, Mary Jane silently picked up her
+crutches and hopped away. Finding the way
+out was easier, even, than finding it in. The
+halls were now all lighted by wonderful lamps
+overhead and the same stately footman stood
+just within the outer entrance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;However did such a creature as this get
+in and I not see her?&#8221; he wondered, as the
+little hunchback came swiftly toward him.
+&#8220;Well, better out than in, that&#8217;s sure. No
+knowing what harm it would do the little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
+missy if she caught sight of an object like
+that!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Which shows how little the people who live
+in one house may understand of each other&#8217;s
+ideas; and explains the rapidity with which he
+showed Mary Jane through the door and closed
+it upon her.</p>
+
+<p>After the lighted hallway the outside world
+seemed darker than ever, even though the days
+were yet long and twilight lingered. But to-night
+the sky was clouded and a storm impending.
+Already in the west there were
+flashes of lightning, and though, in ordinary,
+Mary Jane delighted in an electric storm, just
+then it made her think the more longingly of
+home and its security.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Besides, if I should get my fresh clean dress
+all wet, that would make work for mother. I&#8217;m
+glad I forgot that hat, though. That&#8217;ll have to
+be dry, anyway, now; and maybe after all, when
+Bonny-Gay gets well she may want it herself.
+It was her mother gave it to me, not her. Now
+which way&mdash;I guess this. Oh! I know! I&#8217;ll
+find that gardener, Mr. Weems, and he&#8217;s so
+nice and kind he&#8217;ll show me the way to go.
+Maybe, after all, there is another car goes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
+nearer to Dingy street than that one I took first
+and&mdash;There&#8217;s a man. It might be him. I&#8217;ll
+run and see.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But when she had clicked across the path to
+where the man stood he had already begun to
+move away, and she saw that he was not at all
+like the gardener. So she paused, irresolute,
+trying to recall by which of the several avenues
+leading from it she had entered the Place.</p>
+
+<p>There were people hurrying homeward in
+each direction, and a few smart equipages were
+whirling past; but nobody paused to glance at
+her, save with that half-shudder of repugnance
+to which she was quite accustomed when she
+met strangers, and that had rarely wounded her
+feelings as it did just then and there.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I can&#8217;t help that. And I don&#8217;t mind
+it for myself, not now at all, since I know
+about poor father. He&#8217;s the one feels worst for
+it. And that I shall tell him the very minute
+I see him. So let them look and turn away, if
+they wish. Looks don&#8217;t hurt, really, and oh!
+dear! if I only could remember the street I
+ought to take. Charles, of course. I know that
+and there it is; but whether to go to that side or
+this&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>In the midst of her perplexity the electric current
+was turned on and the Place was suddenly
+and noiselessly flooded with a light as of day.
+Courage came back and after another hasty
+scrutiny of the streets, to discover some landmark
+that she could recall, she saw the monument
+and the lion, and ran toward them as if
+they had been old friends.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Bonny-Gay loves them, and so does the
+Gray Gentleman, and they do look as quiet and
+peaceful as can be. I stopped there, I know,
+and maybe I&#8217;ll think it out better there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Yet even in that reposeful place Mary Jane
+could gain no new ideas as to her course,
+nor was anybody near to whom she could apply.</p>
+
+<p>The gardener had long since gone home for
+the night, and in desperation, Mary Jane determined
+to appeal to the very first person who
+came by. This proved to be a young man, with
+a cane and eyeglasses; and he appeared to be
+extremely busy. The little girl thought he
+must also be one of the &#8220;aristocratics&#8221; of
+whom her father spoke so contemptuously, because
+when she had asked him to &#8220;please tell
+me the way to Dingy street?&#8221; he had scarcely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
+glanced at her but had haughtily replied:
+&#8220;Never heard of such a place.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hmm. Too bad. Father says they don&#8217;t
+any of them know very much, and I&#8217;m sorry.
+Don&#8217;t know where Dingy street is, indeed!
+when I know it myself, even a little girl like
+me and have lived there always. I mean ever
+since I was a baby and we left the country.
+That, mother says, was the mistake we made.
+In the country father didn&#8217;t drink and lose his
+work. Well, we&#8217;ll go again, some day, when I
+get big and strong, and can help more with the
+wash. We could earn a lot, mother and me
+together, if I was big.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She lost herself in her day dreams for a little
+and awoke from them with a start, to find the
+twilight altered to real night, while the electric
+gleams from the lamps overhead were brighter
+than ever and their shadows more like ink upon
+the pavement. Mary Jane had never seen such
+brilliancy as this, and again she forgot herself
+in studying her surroundings and enjoying the
+vivid green of the grass and shrubs.</p>
+
+<p>A certain clump of flowers, glowing in the
+radiance, attracted her especially and she felt
+that she must put her face down on them, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
+smell them, before she lost sight of them forever.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;For I don&#8217;t s&#8217;pose I&#8217;ll ever come this way
+again. I couldn&#8217;t expect it. Mother couldn&#8217;t
+spare the money even if she could me and&mdash;even
+if I ever get back to her again!&#8221; she concluded,
+with a frightened sigh. But the beautiful
+blossoms enticed her, and in her own down
+town park, which had been thrown open to
+whoever of the poor would enjoy them, there
+were few &#8220;Keep off&#8221; signs and the few quite
+disregarded. This she had explained to Bonny-Gay;
+and what was true of one park in the city
+should be true of all.</p>
+
+<p>So she hopped nimbly over the velvet lawn
+to where the flowers gleamed scarlet and white
+and wonderful, and bending above them thrust
+her face deep down into their loveliness. Oh!
+how sweet they were! and so crisp and almost
+caressing in their touch upon her cheek.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dear flowers! I wouldn&#8217;t hurt you, you
+know that, don&#8217;t you! I wouldn&#8217;t break a single
+one of you, no, not for anything. Seems
+like you&#8217;d feel it if your stems were broken,
+poor things. But I&#8217;ll not harm you. No, indeedy.
+Only I wish&mdash;I wish I could just take<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
+one tiny, tiny piece home to mother. But I
+wouldn&#8217;t break you, even for her!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I guess you&#8217;d better not! What are
+you doing here? How dare you come on this
+grass? Can&#8217;t you read the signs?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane looked up, and was immediately
+terrified. It was a policeman who held her
+arm, and all the wild stories she had heard of
+arrests and imprisonment flashed into her mind.</p>
+
+<p>In Dingy street there was, also, a policeman;
+but a friendly soul whom all the children loved,
+and whose own home was close to theirs. It
+was he who had saved many a baby&#8217;s life, from
+careless passing vehicles, when busy mothers
+had not the time to watch them as they should;
+and his blue uniform represented to Mary
+Jane&#8217;s mind an all-powerful guardian, to whom
+appeal was never made in vain.</p>
+
+<p>But this six-foot officer, with his glitter and
+dignity, his harsh voice and vise-like clutch&mdash;this
+was the majesty of law outraged.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! what have I done! I didn&#8217;t mean it&mdash;I
+didn&#8217;t&mdash;&#8221; gasped the frightened child, and
+wrenching herself loose swung away upon her
+crutches, faster even than the officer could have
+pursued her, even if he had been so minded.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>He did not even attempt to follow her, but
+watched her flight, with a chuckle of amusement.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Scared her well, that time, the little vagrant.
+Well, it&#8217;s right a lesson was given &#8217;em.
+If every child who wanted to smell the bushes
+was let, what would our parks look like!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Like bits of Paradise, as they should;&#8221;
+answered a voice behind him, so suddenly that
+the policeman wheeled about to find himself
+face to face with a resident of the Place himself.</p>
+
+<p>As for Mary Jane she neither saw whither
+she fled nor scarcely breathed before she had
+collided with a swiftly advancing figure, and
+found both herself and it thrown down. Captured
+after all! Her eyes closed with a snap,
+as there seemed to rise before them the vision
+of a station house, filled with frowning policemen,
+and herself in the midst, a helpless
+prisoner.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
+
+
+<small>ON THE WAY HOME</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;Well,</span> upon my word!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane opened her eyes. Then she rubbed
+them to see more clearly. Indeed, she rubbed
+them twice before she made out her mistake
+and was able to say:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I am so sorry! I&mdash;I didn&#8217;t mean&mdash;but
+I can&#8217;t be arrested! I can&#8217;t&mdash;my mother&mdash;I&mdash;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She scrambled up somehow, picked her
+crutches from the ground and set off again.
+She dared not look behind her but was quite
+sure that the hard-faced policeman was in full
+pursuit. Off she was, indeed, only to be
+brought to a sudden stop, while a shiver of
+fear ran through her. But she made no further
+outcry and rested quietly upon her wooden
+feet, to hear her doom.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, you poor little girl! You look
+scared. You haven&#8217;t done any harm, not a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
+bit. In fact, you&#8217;ve saved me quite a chase.
+I&#8217;m not so swift as you are, hard as I tried
+to catch you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane shivered and still said nothing,
+nor could she lift her eyes from the ground.
+Their gaze rested idly upon the man&#8217;s feet and
+she fancied that the gloss upon his shoes
+equalled the radiance of the electric light.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And now that I have caught you, I want
+to thank you, with all my heart, for your kindness
+to my precious child. I believe the good
+Lord sent you, just in the nick of time, with
+your ready answer and your readier sympathy.
+Yet to think that, after all this, you should run
+away, at night and alone. You poor, brave
+little child.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then she heard, through her puzzled understanding,
+another voice speaking in jesting surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Turn your back on an old friend, would
+you, Miss Bump! Well, we will have to see
+about that, indeed!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Those were tones to banish fear! and now, in
+truth, Mary Jane&#8217;s eyes were raised and she
+saw standing there and smiling down upon her
+none other than the Gray Gentleman.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>The revulsion of feeling was too much for
+her self-control, and dropping her face against
+his hand she began to cry, with all the abandon
+of those who seldom weep.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, little girl! What is it? Were you
+so badly frightened as all that? There, there.
+You&#8217;re with friends now, child, who love you
+and will take care of you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>With that she felt herself lifted in the Gray
+Gentleman&#8217;s arms, and her head forced gently
+down upon his shoulder, while her crutches fell
+noisily to the stones. However, they were
+promptly picked up again by the other gentleman,
+who was also gray&mdash;as to hair and beard&mdash;and
+who made almost as much noise as the
+crutches, because he kept blowing his nose so
+vigorously. Then she heard him softly slap
+her own Gray Gentleman&#8217;s free shoulder and
+exclaim, in a husky voice:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all right, neighbor! The Lord has
+been good to us. Bonny-Gay is almost herself
+again and was laughing&mdash;actually laughing&mdash;to
+see me, her dignified daddy, run out
+of her room to try a race with Miss Mary
+Jane here. Oh! it&#8217;s too good to be true!&#8221;
+and again there was a tremendous flourish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
+of handkerchief, and a sound like a small fog
+horn.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thank God!&#8221; murmured the Gray Gentleman,
+and Mary Jane felt him tremble. Instinctively
+she raised her head to comfort him
+and touched his thin cheek timidly with her
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>But there was no timidity in the kiss he returned
+her as he set her upon the ground, and
+with all his usual cheerfulness, demanded:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, little traveler, how do you propose
+to get home again?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know!&#8221; The tone was a happy
+one and seemed to mean: &#8220;And I don&#8217;t care!
+You are to find the way for me!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t, eh? But I&#8217;m thinking that
+good mother of yours will be hungry for a
+sight of your face, and it&#8217;s time we remembered
+her. Mothers are queer bodies. They like to
+have their youngsters around them, be they
+never so bothersome. Yet, since she&#8217;s waited
+so long, I think it will do no harm for her to
+wait a while longer. I&#8217;d like to have you pay
+me a little visit, as well as Bonny-Gay, and
+I&#8217;ll invite you to my house to take supper with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
+a lonely old fellow who&#8217;ll entertain you as well
+as he can.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was hard to refuse, she would so much
+have liked to see the home of her friend, of the
+friend of all the children whom she knew. But
+the vision of her mother, waiting and anxious,
+was too much for her loyal heart, so she declined
+as prettily as she knew how, only requesting:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now, please, you are to tell me the quickest
+way home to Dingy street and I&#8217;ll go. You
+must know it, for you&#8217;ve been there so often.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I know it, and I&#8217;ll take you at once.
+I&#8217;ll do more. I&#8217;ll invite myself to supper with
+you after I get there, since you can&#8217;t stop with
+me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very well,&#8221; said Mary Jane, though not
+with much enthusiasm. She was afraid he
+would think her mother&#8217;s supper a poor one.
+However, he was quite welcome to what they
+had, and she added more cordially: &#8220;I know
+mother&#8217;d think it an honor, only I&#8217;d have to
+stop at the baker&#8217;s on the way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She didn&#8217;t quite understand why both gentlemen
+laughed so heartily. They now seemed in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
+a mood, each one of them, to laugh at any and
+everything which happened, and Bonny-Gay&#8217;s
+father teased the other a little about his great
+appetite, which required the contents of a bake-shop
+to satisfy. Then he added, with a manner
+that admitted of no denial:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But you&#8217;ll have to defer your visit, neighbor,
+till another time. I claim the privilege of
+conveying this young lady to her destination,
+and my man has already summoned a cab.
+Here it comes, now; for I&#8217;d rather trust a city
+cabby to find out odd places than my own
+coachman.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Here came the cab, indeed, and from the
+vine-clad mansion on the corner also came a
+liveried servant bearing a big basket tightly
+covered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;With the mistress&#8217; compliments, and Miss
+Bonny-Gay is sending this to the baby.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Good enough!&#8221; answered the happy
+father, and took Mary Jane from the Gray
+Gentleman&#8217;s arms; who handed her crutches in
+after her, and himself closed the door of the
+cab with a cheerful snap.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Some other time, then, Mary Jane, I&#8217;ll expect
+a visit from you. My regards to your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
+mother and I will be down your way before
+long. Good-by.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane&#8217;s head whirled with the strangeness
+of it all. What a day it had been! And
+how simple and kind was this gray-haired
+father, who didn&#8217;t look half so strong as her
+own absent one, but who talked so fast and
+asked so many questions that, before she at all
+realized what she was doing, the cripple had
+given him their whole family history. Save
+and excepting, of course, anything which related
+to her own affliction and its cause, or any
+possible fault of her beloved father.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He works&mdash;I mean, he did work&mdash;for the
+B. &amp; B. railroad folks. He&mdash;he&mdash;isn&#8217;t working
+just now. He went away, for a little while,
+but I guess he&#8217;s back again. Won&#8217;t he be surprised
+to hear all that&#8217;s happened to me? He&#8217;ll
+be glad, after all, that she didn&#8217;t&mdash;Oh! my
+sake! what am I saying!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At mention of the Company, the gentleman
+beside her had given a little start of surprise,
+but Mary Jane fancied that the jolting of the
+cab had moved him. She expressed her regret
+for the accident and added:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I like it. I never rode in a carriage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
+but once before. That was yesterday when
+Bonny-Gay was hurt. But she&#8217;ll soon be well,
+now, I think. Don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So I trust. So I trust and believe. But,
+tell me a little further of your father. What
+sort of work did he do? I happen to know
+something about that company and am interested
+in the details of all its concerns.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sometimes he was helping along the
+tracks; straightening them, changing the ties,
+and such things. Sometimes he was over at
+the great sheds they&#8217;re building&mdash;monstrous
+ones, they are, almost all of steel. You ought
+just to see them by daylight. Though I guess
+I can show them to you even to-night, &#8217;cause
+they&#8217;re not so very far from our house.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Indeed! Did you say what street it was?
+I heard my neighbor give some directions to
+the driver for us, but paid little attention.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dingy street, number 97.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Dingy street! You don&#8217;t say! Why, I
+know that locality well. Very well, indeed. A
+great many of&mdash;of the Company&#8217;s employees
+live around there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Most all of them do, I guess.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>&#8220;So your father&#8217;s out of work, just now?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. But he&#8217;ll soon be &#8216;on&#8217; again, I think.
+When he does work he gets real good wages.
+That is, if he isn&#8217;t &#8216;docked.&#8217; I reckon the Company
+is pretty strict. My mother says they
+don&#8217;t allow for anything. A man must do his
+task or leave it, and that&#8217;s the end.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But that is quite right and just, is it
+not?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&mdash;suppose&mdash;it is. Though poor men can&#8217;t
+always&mdash;I mean, they get discouraged sometimes.
+That makes them do and say things
+they wouldn&#8217;t else. It&#8217;s queer and unjust, my
+father says, for the Company to have so much
+money and their men so little. That&#8217;s what
+made him glad&mdash;I mean not so sorry&mdash;when&mdash;when&mdash;things
+happen.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane paused, confused. Twice she had
+nearly told this other father that her own father
+had been glad when Bonny-Gay had been hurt.
+She knew William Bump would not have said
+anything so cruel if he had not been drinking;
+she was sure of that, for he was generally so
+kind of heart. But even yet she did not imagine
+that her companion was himself the president<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
+and head of that Company whose wages
+her father gladly accepted even when he talked
+against it most fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>However, Mr. McClure greatly enjoyed listening
+to this frank story of the underworkings
+of his vast enterprises. He was not only
+a very wealthy and powerful man, he was also
+a wise and just one. He felt the responsibilities
+of his position, and made it his business
+to know all employees by name and character,
+so far as that was possible. Over this particular
+portion of his affairs, right in his own city,
+he had an almost daily supervision, and he
+knew William Bump, in some respects, much
+better than this loyal little daughter did. His
+opinion of the father was very poor, and he had
+himself given orders, on the previous day, that
+the said William was never again to be taken
+on by his managers, &#8220;not in any capacity whatsoever.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>For some distance the gentleman made no
+response to Mary Jane&#8217;s last remark, and the
+silence was broken only by the roll of their own
+wheels, the ordinary sounds of the streets
+through which they passed, and the increasing
+rumble of the thunder. The storm was drawing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
+nearer and he wished to escape it, if possible.
+He signalled the driver, after a while,
+and seeming to rouse himself from some deep
+thought, to: &#8220;Make haste!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The cabman lashed his horses into a gallop,
+and remembering the accident of her one other
+ride, Mary Jane began to grow afraid. She
+was afraid now, also, of this silent gentleman
+beside her and longed for her journey to end.
+To pass the time she tried to count the lamps
+on the street corners as they flew past her in
+the gloom, and to watch for the illuminating
+flashes of lightning, which came faster and
+faster.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, into this silence, Mr. McClure
+hurled a stern question, that compelled a truthful
+reply, whether she liked to give it or no.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mary Jane, of what was your father glad
+when that accident occurred?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She caught her breath in alarm; then answered,
+frankly:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He was glad because&mdash;because Bonny-Gay
+was hurt.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I don&#8217;t know. I mean&mdash;I guess he
+was so sorry about me&mdash;being like I am&mdash;and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
+he thought it wasn&#8217;t fair. She was as beautiful
+and perfect as I was&mdash;was ugly; and her
+father had all the money and he had none. But
+it wasn&#8217;t right and it wasn&#8217;t him. Indeed, indeed,
+it wasn&#8217;t. He didn&#8217;t know you, of course,
+and he didn&#8217;t dream that you could love her
+same as he loves me. But he&#8217;d be the first&mdash;the
+very first&mdash;to be sorry, after he came to himself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hmm. No man, rich or poor, has a right
+ever to be other than himself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose not. But things haven&#8217;t gone
+right with father since we came from the country.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Humph!&#8221; was the contemptuous comment,
+and the little girl said no more.</p>
+
+<p>Oh! if they would only ever get to 97 Dingy
+street! Twice, now, she had been allowed the
+luxury of a carriage ride and each time how
+wretched she had been. At first she had liked
+Bonny-Gay&#8217;s father almost as much as she had
+the Gray Gentleman, when she first knew that
+good friend. She had chattered away to him
+almost as freely; yet after awhile he had allowed
+her to keep up the chatter rather for his
+own information than because he had seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
+interested in her affairs. He was now become
+so stern and indifferent that she realized she
+had deeply offended him. To her relief, the
+cab turned sharply around the next corner and
+there she was, at last, in dear, familiar Dingy
+street, with its tiny houses that were yet homes;
+in one of which was mother Bump, her four
+sisters, and the wonderful baby! Possibly,
+also, her father; though of him she thought
+less, just then, than of the motherly face
+which was, to her, the comeliest in all the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>The cab stopped with a jerk. The cabman
+leaped down and opened the door. Then he
+lifted out the covered basket, and afterward
+swung Mary Jane to the ground and supported
+her till the gentleman who remained inside the
+vehicle handed out her crutches.</p>
+
+<p>The house door flew open, also, at the sound
+of wheels, and Mrs. Bump peered out into the
+night.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What is it?&#8221; she called, her voice trembling
+with anxiety. That a carriage should stop
+before her humble home foreboded harm to
+some of her loved ones, and her first thought
+was of her crippled daughter.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>&#8220;Here am I, Mother! Home at last;&#8221; answered
+that daughter&#8217;s voice, cheerily.</p>
+
+<p>Then she turned to thank Mr. McClure for
+his kindness to her, but he did not hear her,
+apparently. The cab was already being whirled
+around, and the driver lashing his horses. A
+brilliant gleam of lightning, followed instantly
+by a terrific clap of thunder, startled them into
+a thought of shelter only. Mrs. Bump saw
+through the cab window that the gentleman
+raised his hat, then she seized the basket from
+the ground, and hurried Mary Jane indoors,
+just as the first great drops of a heavy shower
+came dashing down.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! mother Bump! I never saw such a
+lovely place as this dear old home! How glad
+I am to be here. Has father come yet?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not yet, dearie. But he will soon, no
+doubt.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hope he isn&#8217;t anywhere out in this storm;
+poor father.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Bless you, child! The man has sense,
+hasn&#8217;t he? Even dumb creatures know enough
+to go in when it rains. But tell me fast, darling,
+all that&#8217;s happened to you since you went
+away. My heart! this has been the longest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
+day I ever knew! have you had anything to eat?
+What made you so late? How came you to be
+riding home in such grand style? and where
+got you this basket?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the baby&#8217;s, mother. Bonny-Gay sent
+it to him;&#8221; cried the happy girl, running to
+seize that crowing infant from his trundle-bed
+and to cover his face with kisses. Then she
+dropped her crutches and herself upon the floor,
+drew the baby to her lap, and from that lowly
+position began a swift, but rather mixed history
+of events since she had said good-by and
+hopped away in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>The mother listened, losing never a word,
+and deftly simplifying matters now and then by
+a leading question, while at the same time she
+explored the big basket. It had evidently been
+filled in haste, and by the direction of Bonny-Gay,
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This is for the <i>baby</i>, is it?&#8221; laughingly
+demanded Mrs. Bump, lifting out a great loaf
+of rich cake, carefully wrapped in waxed paper.
+&#8220;Fine food for a year-old, that is. And this?
+and this? My heart, but whoever filled this
+basket had a generous streak!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A fine roasted chicken, mate to that of which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
+Mary Jane had already partaken, it might be,
+followed the cake. Then came a picture-book,
+a jumble of toys, a box of candy, and an odd
+mixture of the things nearest at hand, and of
+which the sick child could think.</p>
+
+<p>But crowning all these gifts, and the only
+one packed with any attempt at care, was the
+beautiful leghorn hat, with its nodding ostrich
+plumes and its general air of elegance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The darling, the darling! She did mean
+me to keep it, then!&#8221; cried Mary Jane, so delightedly
+that the baby immediately pat-a-caked
+with noisy vigor.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, even though they had long since
+enjoyed their ordinary supper, the watchful
+children were not to be put off without at least
+a taste of the baby&#8217;s good things; so the mother
+cut and divided with exact equality; and after
+a feast so hilarious that it brought Joe Stebbins
+in from next door to see what was the matter,
+everybody was sent to bed; even the tired Mary
+Jane, whose heart seemed brim full of both joy
+and anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>She had explained to her mother how she
+had chattered to Mr. McClure, hiding nothing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
+even her unwise statement of William Bump&#8217;s
+animosity toward the other, happier father.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bump had listened quietly, and she had
+pooh-poohed the little girl&#8217;s regrets! but her
+heart sank. Mr. McClure was the name of the
+head of the Company. She knew that, though
+Mary Jane did not; and she realized that her
+husband&#8217;s last chance of reinstatement in the
+Company&#8217;s employ had been ruined by the very
+one who would have sacrificed her very self to
+do him good.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Poor little daughter! But she must never
+know. Never. It would break her loving
+heart! And it matters little now whether William
+comes home or not!&#8221; sighed the troubled
+wife and mother, as she laid her own weary
+head on her pillow for the night.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
+
+
+<small>CONFIDENCES</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;Oh!</span> I am so tired! If I could only just
+get up once!&#8221; sighed Bonny-Gay.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sick folks always have to stay in bed.
+How&#8217;d they look, sitting up, I&#8217;d like to know?&#8221;
+answered Mary Jane.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;m not sick. I&#8217;m not sick one bit.
+I&#8217;m just as well as&mdash;as that parrot, yonder.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell the truth, tell the truth, tell the truth!&#8221;
+shrieked Polly.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane laid down the thirteenth doll and
+clapped her hands to her sides. &#8220;That bird is
+the absurdest thing. He makes me laugh till
+I ache.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a story, that&#8217;s a story!&#8221; corrected
+Poll.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, it isn&#8217;t! No, it isn&#8217;t! No, it isn&#8217;t!&#8221;
+mocked Mary Jane, gaily.</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay laughed, too, and cried out:</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>&#8220;Mary Jane, you&#8217;re the very nicest girl I
+know!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thank you. That&#8217;s a dear thing for you
+to say. But you&#8217;re partial, like mother. Besides,
+there isn&#8217;t any other girl here, just now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I mean it. There isn&#8217;t another girl in
+the world would come here and be shut up in
+the house, day after day, just to amuse me,
+&#8217;cause my leg&#8217;s broken, except you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, there is,&#8221; said Mary Jane, confidently.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! you funny child!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wouldn&#8217;t you? If you and I were each
+other&mdash;I mean changed places and I was the
+sick one, wouldn&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Maybe. I don&#8217;t know. I never did like
+indoors and would never stay in if I could help
+it. Do you s&#8217;pose it will be very long now?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I guess not. Not if you&#8217;re good and
+lie still. Wait. I&#8217;ll bring all the playthings
+around to that other side the bed and that
+will rest you. You&#8217;ve been looking out this
+way a good while now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>So Mary Jane industriously hopped around
+and transported the thirteen dolls, the bird<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
+cages, and the parrot stand to a new position,
+and leaning on her crutches gently helped the
+sick child to turn about as far as she was permitted
+to do. A trained nurse was still always
+in the room, and Mrs. McClure herself passed
+in and out very frequently; but it was Mary
+Jane who did most for her friend; Bonny-Gay
+declaring that, &#8220;Next to Mamma&#8221; there was
+nobody who understood her whims and desires
+without being told them, as the little cripple
+did.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s because we&#8217;re just an age, I guess.
+Queer, wasn&#8217;t it? That you, up in this big
+house, and me down in my dear little one,
+should both be sent to our folks the very same
+day that ever was? &#8216;Sunday bairns&#8217; should
+be the best ones in the world, my mother says.
+Only, I wasn&#8217;t in my Dingy street house when
+I came. I was in the country;&#8221; and for some
+unexplained reason Mary Jane&#8217;s sunny face
+clouded suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>For weeks now, and because Bonny-Gay had
+&#8220;taken such an extreme fancy to her&#8221;&mdash;as
+Mrs. McClure had herself explained to Mrs.
+Bump, when she herself went to ask the favor
+of Mary Jane&#8217;s attendance in the sick room&mdash;the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
+helpful child had spent the greater portion
+of each day there. It had become quite a matter
+of habit in Dingy street that a carriage
+should roll up to the door of 97 and that Mary
+Jane should go away in it; to be returned at
+six o&#8217;clock precisely, of the same afternoon.
+Dingy street felt itself proud of this state of
+things, and every householder held her head
+a bit higher because of it. Who&#8217;d ever have
+dreamed that their own small hunchback would
+get to be &#8220;carriage folks?&#8221; Well, there was
+no telling when such glory might not fall to
+their own lot, and she&#8217;d do them all credit
+wherever she went, she had such pretty, loving
+ways with her. That she had.</p>
+
+<p>Now, it was sometimes an inconvenience to
+the McClure household that this trip must be
+made twice a day; and that very morning Mrs.
+McClure entered the chamber to speak with
+Mary Jane about it. She had now overcome
+her first repugnance at sight of the deformed
+little body and saw only the sweet face and
+helpfulness. She had, also, offered Mrs. Bump
+some compensation for her daughter&#8217;s &#8220;services;
+just the same as any other nurse&#8217;s;&#8221; but
+the poorer mother gently declined.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>&#8220;If the dear Lord has given her a chance to
+do something for your girl, whom she so loves,
+I guess He means it as a sort of compensation
+to her for her own afflictions. No, indeed, Mrs.
+McClure, I wouldn&#8217;t like to taint the sympathy
+between those two by any thought of money.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>To this there could be no answer, and so the
+matter rested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mary Jane, we begin to feel almost as if
+you belonged with us, you have been so kind
+and good to Bonny-Gay; and what do you say
+to staying up here at night, now? At least for
+a few nights together, with then one at home?&#8221;
+asked the lady, as she sat down beside the cot
+and watched the undressing of the china seventh
+doll, preparatory to its bath.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane looked up quickly, with a sort of
+fear coming into her telltale face.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I shouldn&#8217;t like that. I mean&mdash;of
+course, you&#8217;re very kind&mdash;but I&#8217;d have to go
+home. I would, indeed.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not kindness on my part, especially.
+I thought it might save trouble to both sides;
+but, never mind. We&#8217;ll go on as usual, for the
+present; though I wish you would speak to
+your mother about it, when you see her, this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
+evening. Now, Bonny-Gay, I have to go out.
+Is there anything you fancy, that I can bring
+you? I shall be at market and do some shopping.
+Think and see, darling.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay&#8217;s eyes had rested searchingly
+upon Mary Jane&#8217;s face. She would have been
+delighted herself if her playmate could have
+remained all the time in the Place, but she saw
+the sudden fear and was puzzled by it. Yet
+she did not urge the matter, and the only request
+she made of her indulgent mother was:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Just bring something new for the baby.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Again Mary Jane&#8217;s face was troubled and
+she exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Please, Bonny-Gay don&#8217;t! He has too
+many things already, that you have sent him.
+I&#8217;d rather not, please.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very well,&#8221; said Mrs. McClure, as she
+kissed her little girl and went away. But she
+was considerably annoyed. She felt that she
+did not exactly &#8220;know how to deal with that
+class of people,&#8221; to which Mary Jane belonged.
+She wished that Bonny-Gay had not taken this
+absurd fancy of hers. She wished that the
+Gray Gentleman had never done that unwise
+thing of carrying her daughter into the region<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
+and knowledge of Dingy street. It was all
+very well for him to devote his time still, as
+he had all his life and fortune, toward making
+the lives of poor children brighter. Everybody
+must have a hobby, and that was his, she supposed.
+Of course, he was a noble man, and
+his name was known far and wide as that of a
+philanthropist. Still&mdash;Hmm. It would soon
+end, anyway. Bonny-Gay was improving rapidly,
+and was so perfectly healthy that there
+was nothing to fear. And if she needed her
+own carriage that evening, and Mary Jane remained
+still obstinate, she must be sent home
+in a cab. That was all.</p>
+
+<p>With these thoughts she departed, but she
+had in some way left an altered atmosphere behind
+her. Her difficulty in understanding &#8220;that
+class of people&#8221; arose from the simple fact
+that she had, as yet, no real sympathy with
+them. It seemed to her that they were altogether
+different from herself; that they were
+duller, less capable of any true nobility. But
+she was, in reality, kind and good at heart, with
+many social cares to tax her nerves, and she
+was one day to have her present ignorance enlightened.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>In the silence that followed her exit, Bonny-Gay&#8217;s
+hand stole softly out and touched Mary
+Jane&#8217;s cheek, down which a tear was rolling.
+And in the child&#8217;s touch was that perfect sympathy
+which the mother&#8217;s tone had lacked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t cry, Mary Jane. He&#8217;ll come back.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane&#8217;s head lifted instantly and her
+face brightened.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How&#8217;d you know &#8217;twas that I was thinking
+about?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I knew. After a minute. Not just
+at first. Mother didn&#8217;t understand. I don&#8217;t
+s&#8217;pose she&#8217;s heard yet that he was gone. Move
+up nearer. Fix yourself comf&#8217;table. Let&#8217;s
+talk, instead of play dolls, now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane pushed her low chair to the
+side of the cot, so close now that she could
+rest her head against Bonny-Gay&#8217;s own pillow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell the truth, tell the truth, tell the truth!&#8221;
+admonished Polly, and in their laughter at his
+opportune command they failed to hear that
+somebody had entered the room and sat down
+quite near them. This was Bonny-Gay&#8217;s father,
+and he liked sometimes to surprise her by an unexpected
+visit of this sort, as well as to listen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
+to the innocent chatter of this pair of &#8220;Sunday
+bairns.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;How long is it, Mary Jane?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was the very day you were hurt. Two
+whole weeks.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well. That&#8217;s all right. Max is with him,
+isn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. He went away with him.
+They both felt bad, I guess. That made them
+like to be together. Father&#8217;s powerful fond of
+dogs, any way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And of the country, you said, too. I s&#8217;pose
+he&#8217;s in the country somewheres.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But where! I do want to see him so much.
+There is something I must tell him. Something
+he thinks is wrong, something that made
+him feel bad but should not. Something&mdash;Oh!
+I&#8217;ve seen all through things so clear, since he
+went. Every time he saw me I s&#8217;pose he was
+reminded that&mdash;My sake! What am I saying.
+But I&#8217;m so sorry about your mother not liking
+to send for me. I must have bothered her no
+end. I wouldn&#8217;t have come only&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You wouldn&#8217;t have come? Why, it was I
+who wanted you, who must have you. Don&#8217;t
+you know, you are my &#8216;twin sister?&#8217; It&#8217;s all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
+right. Mother would give me anything to have
+me pleased. Don&#8217;t think a thing about that.
+Let&#8217;s talk about the rest. Say, Mary Jane,
+say!&#8221; Excitedly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There you are. Off you go! Have a
+care!&#8221; warned Polly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! keep still, you bird. Listen, Mary
+Jane. You know I&#8217;m going to the country,
+don&#8217;t you? We all are, just as soon as I get
+well.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes. I think it will be just lovely for you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;For you, too, you go with me and&mdash;find
+him!&#8221; almost shouted Bonny-Gay.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! you darling! Might I?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Course. Why shouldn&#8217;t you? My father
+owns a lot of country. Ever and ever so much.
+He has so much he says it&#8217;s a sin and shame it
+isn&#8217;t doing anybody any good. But he&#8217;s too
+busy to tend to it himself and he can&#8217;t trust
+many folks. They would waste his money,
+dreadful. There&#8217;s our big house and park, and
+all the gardens and things; and then there are
+fields and fields and fields. Miles of them, I
+guess. Just as like as not he&#8217;s gone around
+there some place. Just supposing! If he has,
+why, pooh! You could find him in a minute.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
+Oh! you must go with me and look. It won&#8217;t
+be so long, maybe. If this old leg would only
+get itself well. I love the country. It&#8217;s all out-doors
+there.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane said nothing, but her face was
+rapturous with anticipation. Finally, Bonny-Gay
+announced:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess that&#8217;s all settled, then. There&#8217;s
+nothing to do about it only ask our folks.
+Let&#8217;s make believe things. Let&#8217;s pretend we
+had all the money in the world and could
+do just what we wanted to with it; what
+would you do, first?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, I wouldn&#8217;t dare think. &#8217;Cause it
+couldn&#8217;t ever come true, you know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Supposing it couldn&#8217;t? The things that
+don&#8217;t come true are the sweetest things there
+are, I think. You begin.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane drew a deep breath. Under the
+inspiration of this other more imaginative child,
+she was fast forgetting the hard, dry facts of
+life; and whether this were best or no, it was,
+at least, delightful.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;d go to your father and I&#8217;d pay him
+money, and I&#8217;d get all those miles and miles of
+country to do with exactly as I pleased. Then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
+I&#8217;d take some more of the money and I&#8217;d get
+the men that build houses to make a house,
+right in the very prettiest spot there ever was.
+Where there was water if I could, &#8217;cause my
+father, he&#8217;s so fond of fishing. He&#8217;s quit work,
+lots of times, to go fishing down the bay. I&#8217;d
+buy him a fish-pole and lines and hooks. I&#8217;d
+buy him and mother a cow and a horse and a
+market-wagon. They had a market-wagon
+once, but a man came along and told him he
+could make more money in the city; and he sold
+their things and lost the little farm and came.
+He&#8217;d be all right if he was back in that country,
+I guess. I&#8217;d like to see it, myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The eager speaker stopped short. Again she
+had almost revealed what no loyal daughter
+should,&mdash;a parent&#8217;s fault. But Bonny-Gay was
+so interested, she seemed so to know beforehand
+what was in a body&#8217;s mind that words
+slipped out of themselves.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Have a care. Tell the truth!&#8221; adjured
+Polly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course I will,&#8221; answered the cripple.
+&#8220;Now, Bonny-Gay, it&#8217;s your turn. What
+would you do if you had all the money and
+could?&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>The unseen father leaned forward a little.
+He was profoundly interested in any possible
+desires his darling might express, and, for the
+matter of that, she rarely did ask for anything.
+Maybe, because almost all desirable things came
+to her without the asking.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hardly know. Yes, I do, too. I&#8217;d buy
+all the parks in this city and in every other one.
+I&#8217;d hunt up all the little children in the cities.
+I&#8217;d make free &#8216;Playgrounds&#8217; for them, every
+one. Even the little girls should have their
+little cunning &#8216;farms,&#8217; just the same. I guess
+they&#8217;d want to plant flowers, though, wouldn&#8217;t
+they? instead of cabbages and limas. Then I&#8217;d
+take all the grown-ups who wanted to go into
+the country and couldn&#8217;t, and I&#8217;d send them.
+And I&#8217;d let them stay a whole week, I guess.
+If I could. If there was room enough. And
+when Christmas came I&#8217;d have everybody that
+was poor come to my house, just like the Gray
+Gentleman does to the halls he hires, and I&#8217;d
+make them as happy as&mdash;I am. I wouldn&#8217;t let
+anybody in the whole wide world be sick nor
+sorry; I wouldn&#8217;t let anybody hurt nice dogs
+or turn them out of their own parks; and&mdash;Oh!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
+Mary Jane, do you s&#8217;pose we&#8217;ll ever see dear
+old Max again?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, Bonny-Gay? Didn&#8217;t you just make
+me feel &#8217;t he was right with father? Course,
+then, when father comes he&#8217;ll come; and if you
+aren&#8217;t well by that time I&#8217;ll coax father to lead
+him up here to see you. If he&#8217;ll be coaxed;&#8221;
+she added gravely.</p>
+
+<p>The child on the cot glanced through the
+window. &#8220;There goes the Gray Gentleman, to
+see &#8216;Father George&#8217; and the lion. I wish he&#8217;d
+come to see me; but he&#8217;s afraid my mother
+blames him for taking me that day, I think,
+though nobody ever said so.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll go ask him!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Before she could be stopped, Mary Jane
+hopped across the room and down to the door.
+Mr. McClure rose with considerable noise and
+approached the cot. He had been deeply
+touched by the fact that neither of the two innocently
+dreaming &#8220;Sunday bairns&#8221; had planned
+anything for her own especial gratification.
+The witness of such unselfishness was refreshing
+in a world such as that wherein most of his
+waking hours were passed.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>&#8220;Well, little woman, how goes it? Getting
+well, fast?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay held up her arms to be loved.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Fine, father dear. It won&#8217;t be long before
+I&#8217;m out in the park again, watching for
+you to come home from business.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They found so much to say to each other
+that they quite forgot Mary Jane; who had, indeed,
+swung across the square to intercept the
+path of her friend. She had something of her
+own to say to the Gray Gentleman besides delivering
+her playmate&#8217;s message. She was in
+trouble and knew that he would help her in
+some way too wise for her to think of.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, upon my word! If here isn&#8217;t Mary
+Jane! I thought I heard a cheerful little
+clicke-e-ty-click, such as only one small energetic
+body could make. What&#8217;s it now, Miss
+Bump?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d like to talk to you, please.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t doubt I need it. Yet if the &#8216;talking
+to&#8217; is to be very severe, I&#8217;d like to have the support
+of the lion. Let&#8217;s rest against him. That&#8217;s
+comfortable. Now, my child&mdash;talk!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;First off, Bonny-Gay wants you to come
+and see her.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>&#8220;Shall be delighted, I&#8217;m sure. Please make
+my regards to Miss McClure and I will wait
+upon her at any hour she designates.&#8221; Which
+dignified yet whimsical remark set Mary Jane to
+smiling.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad that&#8217;s fixed before I forgot. Because
+I&#8217;m in dreadful trouble, myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You look it!&#8221; he exclaimed, smiling into
+her confiding face; then dropped his playful
+manner as he saw that she was really in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon she promptly told him about
+Mrs. McClure and why, in anticipation of her
+father&#8217;s possible return, she must, she must go
+home every night. &#8220;And how can I? I mustn&#8217;t
+put them out&mdash;they are so good to me. I
+mustn&#8217;t stay away, if Bonny-Gay needs me.
+There&#8217;s all the dolls to be dressed, you see; and
+the canaries must be fed, or they&#8217;d die; and
+Polly is about as much care as the baby. She&#8217;s
+always dropping things and squawking till she
+gets them picked up for her&mdash;though she throws
+them right straight down again. I don&#8217;t see
+how Bonny-Gay can be so patient with that
+bird, do you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure I shouldn&#8217;t be.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So, I couldn&#8217;t not come, course. And what<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
+I want you to tell me, please, is there a shorter
+way I could come? So I could walk here?
+&#8217;Cause I couldn&#8217;t ride in the car. We couldn&#8217;t
+afford that.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you would ride in the car I know, without
+asking, that Mrs. McClure would be more
+than glad to bear the expense.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But father wouldn&#8217;t like that. He never
+likes me to have rich folks do things for me.
+He&mdash;he seems to about hate them. He
+wouldn&#8217;t let me go to the Empty Stocking
+Trees, &#8217;cause he does. You&#8217;re the only one he
+doesn&#8217;t mind. And he likes the &#8216;Playgrounds&#8217;
+&#8217;cause they&#8217;re not charity. They belong to the
+city and we do, same&#8217;s the rich ones. They
+teach the children to work and learn farming,
+too. He likes that. But I couldn&#8217;t take the
+money from her. I wouldn&#8217;t so displease him,
+even if I had to stay away.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Gray Gentleman pondered deeply. He
+would not offend the confiding child by offering
+himself to pay her car fare. He too greatly
+respected her honest pride and her loyalty to
+her father to do that. But, after a moment, he
+looked up.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Miss Mary Jane Bump, once before I invited<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
+you to call at my house and you declined.
+Now, I invite you again. I think I have something
+there that will solve your difficulties&mdash;and
+my own. May I have the pleasure? I&#8217;ll
+detain you from the Poll parrot but a few moments.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I&#8217;d love it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was a very cheerful click the crutches gave
+now. The mere telling of her perplexities had
+half-banished them, and Mary Jane had implicit
+faith in the wisdom of this simple, true-hearted
+gentleman, who was, as Mrs. McClure had reflected,
+&#8220;the friend of all poor children everywhere.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Gray Gentleman&#8217;s big, empty, plainly
+furnished house, seemed very lonely to the little
+girl, whose own small home was so crowded;
+and she wondered at the slowness of the one
+colored &#8220;boy&#8221;&mdash;as gray as his master&mdash;who
+answered that master&#8217;s ring.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Boy, go up-stairs, please, to my bedroom.
+Open the top drawer of the chiffonier and bring
+me all the socks you find there. You&#8217;d better
+use a basket&mdash;they are many in number.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The &#8220;Boy&#8221; half fancied that his master had
+lost his common sense, then leaped to the conclusion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
+that this was probably one of their many
+pensioners upon whom the articles demanded
+were to be bestowed. He obeyed without comment,
+however, save by a respectful bow; and
+soon returned. Meanwhile Mary Jane had
+been shown the few pictures upon the walls and
+told their stories, and the place had begun to
+seem more cheerful to her.</p>
+
+<p>The &#8220;Boy&#8221; was dismissed; the basket
+heaped with fine hosiery placed on the table
+beside the visitor, and herself bidden to look
+the contents over.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do you think of them, Mary Jane?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I never knew one person have so many
+stockings; and, my sake, there isn&#8217;t a single
+pair but has a hole in it&mdash;not one single sock,
+even. I know. I guess you want me to mend
+them for you, don&#8217;t you? I often help mother
+with the darning. She thinks I can do it quite
+well.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure you can, and that is just what I
+do want. I cannot put on a ragged garment,
+poor old fellow though I am. They always
+come from the laundry, broken somewhere,
+and I am always buying new. That&#8217;s how I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
+have so many. If you want to save my money
+for me you can do it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d love to! I&#8217;ll take them home and fix
+them nights, after Bonny-Gay is through with
+me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s be business like, Miss Bump. What
+would be your charges, per pair?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My&mdash;charges? Nothing. I&#8217;d be so <i>glad</i>
+to do something for you, who have always been
+doing things for me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve known you a few weeks, little girl,
+and I&#8217;ve done very little. Will five cents a pair
+be satisfactory?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t take so much. I couldn&#8217;t take
+anything.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That or nothing. I&#8217;m business. That
+would make you quite independent of all help
+except your own, and be a great benefit to me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course, then. And oh! thank you!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now, pack up your work, little bread-winner,
+and let&#8217;s back to Bonny-Gay.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
+
+
+<small>BY THE STRENGTH OF LOVE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> days sped by. The summer heat deepened
+and there were thankful hearts in the vine-covered
+mansion in Mt. Vernon Place. For
+Bonny-Gay was well again; able to run about
+her beloved park, and to play in the shadow
+of the lion with the few children left still in
+that part of the city.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly all the big houses were now closed,
+however, and their owners departed to seashore
+or mountain. The McClures themselves were
+making preparations for their own summer
+flitting to the great country house of which the
+little girls had talked. They would have still
+enjoyed being together, but that could no
+longer be.</p>
+
+<p>A very few days after Mary Jane had made
+her business contract with the Gray Gentleman,
+and he had himself spoken to the conductors of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
+the cars upon which she would have to take
+her daily ride&mdash;so that everything was
+made easy and safe for her&mdash;those rides had
+ceased. William Bump returned as suddenly
+as he had departed, and, with all his old enmity
+against more fortunate folk, had immediately
+forbidden them.</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Bump had herself gone to Mrs.
+McClure and explained enough of matters to
+prove that Mary Jane was neither ungrateful
+nor forgetful; and Mrs. McClure had accepted
+the explanation with great cheerfulness. It was
+a much easier way out of a difficult position
+than she had anticipated; because Bonny-Gay
+still talked about inviting Mary Jane with
+them to the country, and this her mother did
+not at all desire.</p>
+
+<p>However, a compromise was effected. Mary
+Jane was to be asked to care for the thirteen
+dolls, the two canaries, the aquarium, and
+Polly; only the pony being allowed to accompany
+his little mistress on her summer outing.
+So, one morning, the carriage came around
+again and all these creatures were stowed in
+it, along with Bonny-Gay and a maid. They
+had been taken straight to Dingy street, where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
+they were left with many injunctions and much
+sage advice, as to their proper care. Then the
+two little &#8220;Sunday bairns&#8221; had kissed each
+other many times, and had torn themselves
+weeping from each other&#8217;s embrace, while the
+dignified maid looked coldly on, urging:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If you please, Miss McClure, you would
+much better be going. The train goes at two
+o&#8217;clock and there&#8217;s much to pack, still.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very well, Hawkins. I&#8217;m coming. Good-bye,
+Mary Jane, dear, dear Mary Jane! I&#8217;ll
+write you as soon as I get there and maybe,
+maybe, your father and my mother will let
+you come out to our house and make me a beautiful
+long visit. I&#8217;d teach you to ride on the
+pony just the same as if your legs were good,
+or in the goat cart or&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come, come, Miss Bonny-Gay!&#8221; called
+Hawkins.</p>
+
+<p>The coachman cracked his whip, there was a
+last glimpse of a bare sunny head thrust from
+the carriage window, the tossing of ecstatic
+kisses, and Bonny-Gay had passed out of Mary
+Jane&#8217;s life, probably forever. That is, if the
+intentions of her parents could be carried out.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
+When they returned, in the autumn, a man
+could be dispatched for the dolls and things, if
+their owner still desired them. If not, they
+might remain the property of the small Bumps,
+and so well rid of them. The parrot had been
+misbehaving of late, and using expressions not
+wholly suited to the proprieties of Mt. Vernon
+Place. Originally owned and trained by a man
+of the &#8220;slums,&#8221; she was returning to the rude
+speech of earlier years.</p>
+
+<p>But she was well received in the Bump household,
+save by William, its head. He had
+frowned upon the coming into it of Bonny-Gay&#8217;s
+treasures and only consented to the arrangement
+because of Mary Jane&#8217;s disappointment.
+For ever since his return the father and
+daughter had been always together and each
+seemed doubly anxious to do nothing that
+would give the other pain. And after a time,
+even he became interested in the queer bird and
+joined his children in inciting it to talk; though
+his interest was not fully won until there
+sounded along the street a familiar cry, to
+which nobody paid much heed except Polly.</p>
+
+<p>She was suddenly transformed. She fluttered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
+her feathers, stretched her neck, cocked
+her head on one side, and in a tone that was
+almost human in its mimicry burst forth:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Crab-crab-crab-crab&mdash;crab-crab-crab! Devil-devilled-devil-devilled-crabs!
+Heah&#8217;s-de-crab-man! Is yo&#8217; hongry? Crab-man-goin&#8217;-to-baid-now!
+Dis yo&#8217; las&#8217; chance for yo&#8217; nice-fried-hot-fried-devil-devilled-crabs!
+C-R-A-B-S!
+OU-OU-OUCH!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>After which remarkable exploit mistress
+Polly became the idol of Dingy street and even
+of William Bump.</p>
+
+<p>The disposition of her new charges, so that
+they should not take up too much space in her
+little home, and the careful packing away in the
+top-cupboard of the food Bonny-Gay had provided
+for her pets, kept Mary Jane busy all
+morning; and her mother had dinner on the
+table before she observed how the time had
+flown. But when she heard the cheerful summons:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come, father. Come children!&#8221; and
+smelled the freshly cooked fish, she realized
+that she had given more attention than she
+meant to her new cares.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! mother, I didn&#8217;t think I was so long!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
+And I wanted to get my part of the ironing done;
+because I promised Bonny-Gay that I&#8217;d go to
+the park, if you could spare me, and watch her
+train go by. It&#8217;s that fast express, that whizzes
+so; but she&#8217;s to sit on the park side the parlor
+car, she called it, and she&#8217;s to watch for me and
+I for her. She&#8217;ll wave and I&#8217;ll wave and that
+will be our really last good-by. Till she comes
+home again.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That would be how-de-do? Wouldn&#8217;t it,
+child? And the ironing&#8217;s all right. I&#8217;ve done
+that so, if father wants to go watch the men
+this afternoon, you can go with him. Now eat
+your dinner and be thankful for all your blessings.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Everybody was always hungry at that table
+and the dinner was soon over. Then William
+Bump arose, put on his hat, whistled to a big
+black dog who lay on the doorstep and started
+off for his afternoon of loafing.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane watched the pair with a pitying
+love.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Those two seem just alike, some ways,
+don&#8217;t they mother? Father lost his home and
+his work and so did Max. Dearly as Bonny-Gay
+loves that dog, ever since he got her hurt,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
+he doesn&#8217;t want to be with her like he used.
+Didn&#8217;t you notice, this morning? When she
+hugged him and bade him good-by, he was
+just a little pleased; yet he kept one eye on
+father and soon&#8217;s he could walked back and
+lay down beside him. Father is dreadful good
+to Max, isn&#8217;t he? He often says he&#8217;d never
+have come back if it hadn&#8217;t been for&mdash;for us&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;For you, daughter. Mostly for you, it
+was, dear.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, Max helped. He staid right close
+and coaxing like. Oh! I do wish the Company
+would give father another try.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It won&#8217;t. But I&#8217;m in hopes, after awhile,
+he&#8217;ll find something else to do. Meanwhile
+you stay close to him. Don&#8217;t give him a chance
+to get down-hearted again and&mdash;you know.
+Didn&#8217;t you say your Gray Gentleman was coming
+to the park to look at the &#8216;farms&#8217; this
+very day? Why, maybe, child, maybe he&#8217;d
+know of a job somewhere. You might ask
+him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I might. I will. What&#8217;s father going
+to do now? he&#8217;s taken to the track.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He says that, though he has no work there,
+there isn&#8217;t any law forbids him sitting round,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
+watching his old friends who have. He likes
+to talk with men, you know; and if you&#8217;re
+handy by he&#8217;s quite satisfied. Father doesn&#8217;t
+like to go wrong any better than we like to
+have him. He trusts you to watch out for him,
+honey. So, if I were you, instead of taking
+the baby and going along the street to the
+gate I&#8217;d go to the park by the railroad.
+You can climb up the embankment at an
+easy place, and stay near father. Then you&#8217;d
+be able to see everything. The children in
+the &#8216;Playgrounds,&#8217; and the Gray Gentleman
+if he goes to them, and Bonny-Gay&#8217;s train
+when it comes, and all. Only&mdash;only, Mary
+Jane&mdash;take care to give the cars plenty of
+room.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Course I will. &#8216;Look out for the cars
+when the bell rings!&#8217;&#8221; laughingly quoted the
+child. &#8220;And you look out for the parrot when
+the crab-man comes! I guess you&#8217;re right. I&#8217;d
+better not take the baby. If I climb up the bank
+I might let him slip. Good-by. I&#8217;ll make
+father all right and happy, don&#8217;t you fear.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The mother watched her darling out of sight,
+thinking how sunshiny and helpful she was,
+then settled the baby safely among his new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
+playthings and resumed her endless toil. But
+she was wholly happy and contented now. They
+were poor, indeed, but they were not suffering,
+and her hopeful heart was sure that in some
+way a task would be found for her husband
+which would keep him out of idleness and
+evil company. She began her one hymn of
+cheerfulness: &#8220;Lord, in the morning Thou
+shalt, Thou shalt, Lord, in the morning Thou
+shalt hear, my voice ascending high.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, Mary Jane had hopped along the
+road till she came to a part of the railway embankment
+which she could climb, then scrambled
+to its top. Just before her the rails were laid
+over a long trestle above the deep bed of a
+stream, now almost dry. A little water still
+ran among the stones below but Mary Jane
+did not look down upon that. She made her
+way swiftly, yet cautiously, beside the track,
+pushed rapidly along the trestle, and reached her
+father&#8217;s side, at the further end of it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Here am I, father. I&#8217;m going to watch
+for the train from here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;All right, daughter.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A fellow workman looked up and remonstrated:</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>&#8220;You oughtn&#8217;t to let that girl walk that
+trestle, Bump. If her crutches slipped it&mdash;the
+bottom&#8217;s rough and deep down.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I&#8217;m not afraid. I don&#8217;t often, either,
+though I&#8217;ve played about this railroad ever
+since I was born. All the Dingy street children
+play there. How pretty the park looks, down
+yonder;&#8221; interrupted Mary Jane, anxious that
+her father should not be blamed, especially for
+what was not his doing.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right. You oughtn&#8217;t, daughter,&#8221;
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t again, then, father, if you don&#8217;t
+like. But I was safe enough. What&#8217;s that
+team for, that&#8217;s coming?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re going to haul off that pile of ties
+that have been taken up. Company gives &#8217;em for
+the hauling. Only things it ever does give, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They ought to work faster. See. They
+keep dropping them on the track. If a train
+should come by it would get thrown off. Don&#8217;t
+they know that?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, they know it all right, but they&#8217;ll be
+in time. They&#8217;re used to it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was in this very hardihood of custom that
+the danger lay. A beginner at such a task<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
+would have watched constantly for the approach
+of a train, but this &#8220;gang&#8221; did not. For the
+greater ease of handling they rolled the heap
+of heavy ties over upon the track, as the anxious
+girl had observed, and two men lifting leisurely
+placed the weighty, worn out timber upon the
+wagon. The mule team before the wagon stood
+half-over the edge of the embankment, heads
+dropped, themselves enjoying the rest regardless
+of position.</p>
+
+<p>The men laughed and talked. William Bump
+joined in the chatter and forgot Mary Jane.
+The talk grew more interesting, to the speakers,
+and became a torture to the listening girl,
+though she paid no attention to the words. She
+realized, merely, that they were growing more
+and more indolent; the pile of ties upon the
+rails lessened very, very slowly. It was already
+long past noon, she knew that. She was
+familiar enough with the running of trains to
+know, also, that the through express was the
+next one due. It was upon this through express
+that Bonny-Gay would travel. She began
+to feel cold with her anxiety. She must
+speak to those men, even if it should displease
+her father, who hated interference of that sort.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>So she moved forward a little way and
+touched the arm of the foreman.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Will you tell me the time, please?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ten minutes to two, little girl. Pretty hot
+up here, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; he answered, good naturedly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mary Jane, don&#8217;t meddle. Children should
+be seen not heard.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, father. Only ten minutes! Why,
+you&#8217;ve been ever and ever so long taking off less
+than half the ties. Can you finish in ten minutes?
+Can you?&#8221; she demanded, eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, kid, what&#8217;s the hurry? Got another
+job for us, eh?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The hurry? The train. The two o&#8217;clock
+express. It&#8217;s almost due.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The foreman&#8217;s face paled a trifle. Then he
+whistled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Whew, sis, you&#8217;re right! Jim, lead that
+team off the bank. We&#8217;ll just roll the rest
+down to the bottom and drive round there to
+load up. Now, with a will! there ain&#8217;t no time
+to spare! here she goes!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The mules were led away by one man while
+the others exerted themselves to clear the tracks
+in any and every manner possible. There was
+no longer any talking. There were no false<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
+movements. They knew that there was no way
+of signalling the express, just there, even if
+there should be need. But there must be no
+need, the tracks must be cleared. Must be!</p>
+
+<p>William Bump moved down upon the bank
+and watching from an apparently safe place
+called upon Mary Jane to follow him.</p>
+
+<p>She did not hear him. She stood, resting
+upon her crutches, anxiously watching the toilers,
+straining forward, as if in that attitude she
+could help them, and listening&mdash;listening&mdash;with
+every nerve at tension. She did not see the
+Gray Gentleman, who had come into the park
+awhile before and having caught sight of his
+favorite&#8217;s pink frock, crossed the level space
+from the &#8220;Playgrounds&#8221; to the embankment to
+see what so interested her. As he reached the
+spot below the end of the trestle he, also, began
+to comprehend what was passing in Mary Jane&#8217;s
+mind and his own cheek whitened.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hark! It&#8217;s coming&mdash;it&#8217;s coming!&#8221; cried
+the girl. &#8220;Work&mdash;work!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They did work with a will. There was no
+need for anybody to urge them. They, also,
+heard the low rumble of wheels along the distant
+track, the shiver and tremble of the rails.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
+The heavy ties rolled down&mdash;fast and faster.
+The way was almost clear. There was only one
+tie left and that&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>A man turned to look over his shoulder.
+&#8220;The train! The train! It&#8217;s on us!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The whole gang leaped to safety and waited.
+The one big timber still lay crosswise above the
+trestle. It meant destruction. They knew it,
+Mary Jane knew it. They could not move; but
+she could. That menacing log should not destroy!</p>
+
+<p>Ah! but those long, strong, useful arms of
+hers stood her in good stead just then. All the
+strength of her body was in them. The
+crutches went, she knew not where. She was
+lying flat, forcing, pushing, compelling that
+last tie down, over the edge. The train was almost
+there. She knew that, also, but she felt no
+fear. She must do her task&mdash;she must&mdash;she
+could!</p>
+
+<p>The men on the bank watched breathless, but
+not one went to her aid. Even William Bump
+seemed stricken to stone.</p>
+
+<p>There came a crash. The log was over&mdash;the
+track was clear!</p>
+
+<p>But where was Mary Jane?</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>As he rounded the curve just before the
+trestle the engineer had seen the child upon the
+track, but though he instantly reversed his engine
+the train could not be brought to a stand-still
+till it had quite crossed the openwork space,
+and he stepped down from it with horror in his
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>A horror which quickly changed to a shout of
+joy, though the peril was yet not over.</p>
+
+<p>Again these long, strong arms had done their
+owner good service. As the train came upon
+the trestle she slipped down and dropped between
+the ties, clinging to one for her life. She
+scarcely heard now that rumble and roar above
+her; all her consciousness was fixed in the clutch
+of her fingers upon that cross-beam.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was the Gray Gentleman who first reached
+the spot and prostrating himself upon the roadbed
+reached down to clasp her arms and draw
+her up to safety.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You precious child! You heroine!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She opened her eyes at that, gave him one
+radiant smile, and promptly fainted away.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
+Which, she afterward declared, was a very foolish
+thing for a sensible girl to do.</p>
+
+<p>She as promptly revived, however, and there
+was Bonny-Gay hugging and thanking her, but
+not saying good-by, at all! And there was
+Mrs. McClure, that proud and dignified lady,
+snatching the crooked little figure from the
+Gray Gentleman&#8217;s arms, to enfold it in her own
+and to weep and cry over it in the most astonishing
+fashion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! you darling, darling child! You&#8217;ve
+saved our lives, saved Bonny-Gay, who&#8217;s more
+than life to us. Little did I guess how noble
+you are. Nobler, Mary Jane, than anybody I
+ever knew.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was like a dream. The people, all the
+passengers and trainmen, crowding round to
+thank and bless the little hunchback, who now
+rested in her own father&#8217;s arms, while he
+beamed upon her, proud and happy, but with
+soul-cleansing tears streaming down his softened
+face. And there was Mr. McClure, laying
+his hand kindly upon William Bump&#8217;s
+shoulder and begging:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;For any injustice I&#8217;ve done you, for any
+injustice you&#8217;ve done me, let this hour make<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
+amends. As man to man&mdash;trust me, William
+Bump.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Aye, Boss. I will, I will and the poor
+man looked into the face of the rich man and
+behold! it was as that of a brother.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s all this to-do?&#8221; cried Mrs. Stebbins,
+to Mrs. Bump. &#8220;The express has stopped
+and there&#8217;s a crowd of people coming this way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know, I&#8217;m sure. I just heard the
+train go by. I hope nothing&#8217;s wrong.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not wrong, sure. The men are tossing
+their hats and cheering and the women&mdash;they&#8217;re
+laughing and talking like they&#8217;d struck a gold
+mine. They&#8217;re headed this way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Bump was too busy to look. She
+had a lot of clear-starching to do and she was
+engaged in a new, therefore interesting, task;
+she was teaching Polly to sing a hymn!</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, you smart bird. If you can talk crab-man&#8217;s
+talk, that always sounds sort of wicked,
+though, of course, it isn&#8217;t, you can learn better
+things just as easy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So I can, so I can. Tell the truth, tell the
+truth, tell the truth,&#8221; answered Polly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I&#8217;m telling it, never fear. Learn it
+you shall. Now begin&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>But the lesson was interrupted. The voices
+of the crowd were near at hand; were at the
+door; were in the very room! What did it
+mean? William was placing Mary Jane in her
+mother&#8217;s arms, as if she had been the baby himself&mdash;helpful
+Mary Jane! And Mrs. McClure
+was clasping Mrs. Bump&#8217;s neck, and sobbing
+and laughing on her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody was talking at once, but suddenly
+somebody cleared a space and placed a chair
+behind the startled mistress of the house. She
+sank into it gratefully, her knees now trembling
+too much to support her. But the facts had
+penetrated to her consciousness, at last, and with
+a cry that hushed all speech of others, she held
+her precious &#8220;Sunday bairn&#8221; to her heart with
+a thankfulness beyond words.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, upon this sacred silence, there fell
+a voice which seemed neither bird nor human,
+yet strangely reverent and opportune:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="verse">&#8220;Lord, in the morning Thou shalt, Thou shalt,</div>
+<div class="verse">Lord, in the morning Thou shalt hear</div>
+<div class="verse">My voice ascending high.&#8221;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>At this interruption there were some who
+wept&mdash;but none who smiled.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CONCLUSION<br />
+
+
+<small>AFTERWARD</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Of</span> course there was an afterward. There
+always is.</p>
+
+<p>The fallow fields of the McClure estate no
+longer lie idle under the blue sky, a reproach
+to their owner. The property was not quite of
+the &#8220;miles and miles&#8221; in extent which Bonny-Gay
+had imagined, but it was still sufficient
+to set apart a goodly number of acres as a
+home for Mary Jane, who had never known
+how beautiful the country was until she was
+driven one day, along a smooth road, under
+over-hanging trees, and over bridges crossing
+here and there the prettiest trout stream in the
+world. The drive was interrupted, &#8220;to let the
+horses rest,&#8221; where there was a fine view of a
+cottage, freshly painted in cream and white,
+and with the most inviting of piazzas extending
+from its sides.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>Mary Jane had been allowed to make a little
+visit at the home of Bonny-Gay, and had been
+absent from Dingy street for one whole week.
+This day her absence was to end, even with this
+day; and she thought it a little odd that Bonny-Gay
+should seem so extravagantly happy,
+as if she were glad that the visit were over.
+Though, of course, the guest knew better than
+that. There was not the slightest doubt in the
+heart of either &#8220;Sunday bairn&#8221; concerning
+their mutual love.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! what a pretty house! We haven&#8217;t
+come this way before, have we? Is it on the
+road to the station, Bonny-Gay? How happy
+the folks must be who live there. But I&#8217;m
+happy, too. Dingy street will seem perfectly
+lovely to me when I get there. Do you suppose
+the baby has grown much? I wonder if
+Polly has learned any new things. Mother&#8217;s
+a master hand to teach, mother is. She taught
+me my letters while she was working round.
+She thinks I can, maybe, be spared to go to
+school&mdash;sometime. How I want to see her.
+Seems as if I could hardly wait.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh! I&#8217;m so glad, so glad!&#8221; laughed Bonny-Gay,
+and even the old coachman&#8217;s face<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
+beamed with smiles, though in ordinary he felt
+that it was his business, when on duty, to conduct
+himself like an automaton.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I s&#8217;pose you&#8217;ll write to me, won&#8217;t you?
+You promised, that other time, before you
+started, you know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No. I shall do no such thing.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Bonny-Gay!&#8221; There was a volume of reproach
+in the tones.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No. Not a line.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Whose house is this, do you suppose?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t &#8216;suppose&#8217; when I know things.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Whose, then?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s go ask.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why Beulah Standish McClure! What
+would your mother say? If there&#8217;s anything
+she wants you to be it&#8217;s a lady. So I&#8217;ve heard
+her say, time and again.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;So have I. I&#8217;m tired of hearing it. I mean,
+I&#8217;m trying to be one. She wouldn&#8217;t care. She&#8217;d
+do it herself, if she were here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Never! She never, never would be so rude.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay made a funny little grimace, then
+leaned sidewise and hugged her friend.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do the Dingy street folks know better how
+to behave than the Place folks, missy?&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>&#8220;Yes, Bonny-Gay, I think they do&#8221;; answered
+Mary Jane with dignity. For she had
+now been associated with the McClure household
+long enough to get a fair idea of the proprieties;
+and she was sure that driving up to
+the doors of strange houses and inquiring their
+owners&#8217; names, was not one. However, she
+could do nothing further, for it was Bonny-Gay&#8217;s
+carriage and not hers.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Drive in, please.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>So the phaeton turned into the pretty driveway,
+bordered with shrubs, and around the lawn
+by a freshly prepared curve to the very front
+door itself. Mary Jane had turned her head
+away and utterly refused to look. She was
+amazed at Bonny-Gay, her hitherto model, but
+she&#8217;d be a party to no such impertinence; not
+she.</p>
+
+<p>Then her head was suddenly seized by her
+mate&#8217;s hands and her face forced about toward
+that unknown doorway.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Look, Mary Jane Bump! You shall look!
+You shall. If you don&#8217;t, you&#8217;ll break my heart.
+Look quick!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane&#8217;s lids flew open. Then she nearly
+tumbled off the seat. The Gray Gentleman was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
+coming down the steps, smiling and holding out
+his hand. Smiling and calling, too:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ve come, Mrs. Bump! They&#8217;ve
+come!&#8221; Mary Jane, in her newly acquired
+ideas of etiquette, wondered to hear such a
+quiet person speak so loudly or jest upon such
+themes. She had instantly decided that this
+was some friend&#8217;s country house, where he,
+too, was visiting. Odd that his hostess&#8217; name
+should be like her own.</p>
+
+<p>But all her primness vanished when out from
+that charming cottage flew a woman with a
+baby in her arms. A woman in a print gown,
+clear-starched as only one laundress could do
+it, and a baby so big and round and rosy he had
+to be spelled with a capital letter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mother! My mother and the Baby!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Welcome home, my child! Welcome
+home!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And the Baby cooed and gurgled something
+that sounded very like &#8220;Ome,&#8221; without an
+H.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Has everybody gone crazy?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not quite!&#8221; answered William Bump, appearing
+from another corner. He was as
+washed and starched as his wife, and had done<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
+for himself even something more, in honor of
+this great occasion&mdash;he was smoothly shaved.
+He looked years younger than his child had
+ever seen him and oh! how much happier and
+more self-respectful. He had found his right
+place again. He was once more a tiller of the
+soil; and there is nothing so conducive to true
+manliness as finding one&#8217;s congenial task and
+feeling the ability to accomplish it.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Jane&#8217;s head buzzed with the strangeness
+and wonder and delight of it all. Yet the
+explanation was very simple and sensible.</p>
+
+<p>It was impossible but that the McClures
+should do something to evince their gratitude to
+the little saver of their child&#8217;s and their own
+lives and they did that which they knew would
+be most acceptable to her; they gave her this
+home in the country.</p>
+
+<p>For the house, with its deed was made to
+Mary Jane Bump, herself; but over the wide
+fields surrounding it her father was made overseer
+and farmer, for his old &#8220;Boss,&#8221; at good
+but not extravagant wages. The house had
+long stood empty, ever since the railroad magnate
+had dropped his former scheme of agriculture
+on a big scale, but it was in good repair<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
+and quite large enough to accommodate even
+the household of Bump. A coat of paint made
+it like new and during the cripple&#8217;s absence from
+Dingy street the flitting was accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>Bonny-Gay&#8217;s own summer home was near
+at hand, though she had driven Mary Jane to
+the cottage by such a roundabout way; and her
+delight had lain in her knowledge of the happiness
+that was coming to her friend.</p>
+
+<p>This was a year ago. As yet no cloud has
+marred the perfect sunshine of Mary Jane&#8217;s new
+life. She now rides to school in a smart little
+cart, drawn by the sedatest of piebald ponies.
+She is apt and ambitious and is learning fast.
+Indeed, she is confidently looking forward to a
+day in the future when, being both old and wise
+enough, she shall be matriculated at a certain
+famous woman&#8217;s college; to don the cap and
+gown whose ample folds shall hide, at last, her
+physical deformity. God speed you, Mary
+Jane! and all your happy sisterhood!</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">THE END</p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
+<div class="transnote">
+
+<p class="ph2">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
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