"What"s visiting?"
"Oh, a little journey. But be quiet now, and give your mother time to think."
"What"s a journey?" demanded Elvira, without the least hesitation.
"Oh, going away on the cars."
"Are Matthew and Mark goin"?" asked Elvira, with a long breath, and very big eyes.
"Yes. Well, Mrs. Hansell, what do you say?"
"I don"t know."
"I"m goin"; I"m goin"," announced Elvira, capering away.
"Be quiet, child, your mother hasn"t decided," said the minister.
"I"m goin"; I"m goin"," Elvira kept on, shouting and dancing away as hard as she could, which presently brought the other two girls up to their mother"s chair with a clamor to know what it was all about.
When it was explained, the trouble was so great the minister had more than two minds to flee the scene and let the little widow get out of it as best she might. At last a happy thought struck him.
"Mrs. Hansell, you might let them draw," he said; "strips of paper, you know. Now that"s the very idea!" He clapped his hands like a boy. "Now, Matthew, get the pieces."
"It"s the littlest, ain"t it?" said Matthew, hurrying, as fast as the dignity of the great coat and tippet would allow, to obey the minister.
"No, no, the longest," said the minister, laughing. "Now, girls, you must stand in a row--there--and toe that crack. That"s it," as they scuttled into place on the old kitchen floor. "Now then, my boy, hurry up." He was as excited as the children themselves, and found it as difficult to wait.
"Now shut your eyes," and he turned his eyes on the line of girls, while Matthew handed him the little strips.
"Tilly"s peekin"," announced Luke.
"I ain"t," said Matilda, twisting her eyelids tightly together; "not a single squint, so there, Luke Hansell."
"Well, all ready!" The minister whirled around, the little strips neatly placed, and all presenting the same appearance, between his two hands.
"Matilda, you"re the oldest; you may draw first."
"O dear! I don"t know which one," said Matilda, putting out her brown hand, then drawing it back with a jerk.
"Of course not," said Matthew, bursting into a laugh; "if you did that would be peekin"."
"Well, you must hurry, and give your sisters a chance," said the minister.
"I don"t want to; I want to go myself," said Matilda, hanging back.
"Then you don"t want to draw," said the young man, severely. "Very well, you give up your chance. Elvira, it"s your turn."
"Oh, I will, I will," cried Matilda, terribly alarmed, and, making a lunge, she twitched out the middle piece, so very tiny it was scarcely worth being there at all.
"Hoh, hoh!" snickered Mark. And Luke gave a little crow. Badly as he should miss Elvira, he wouldn"t for the world want her to lose the chance of going.
"Now, Elvira."
"Oh, I"m goin"," she said, confidently, laying hold of the outside piece.
Luke trembled; that couldn"t be the one. Out it came,--there was a second"s lull,--and a strip so long it had to be doubled up in the middle was flying from her hand.
"I told you I was goin"," she said.
XVI
WHO WILL HELP?
The Van Ruypen butler came down the rose-tinted room, known as madam"s boudoir, with his usual soft, catlike tread, and stood by her very chair for a moment without being seen. She appeared lost in thought, her head bent on her hand, and her right foot tapping impatiently on the carpet.
"If you please, madam," said the serving-man, with a little apologetic cough to announce his presence, "I--"
"Well," interrupted his mistress, sharply, and lifting her head with an impatient gesture, "what is it, Hooper?" Then, without waiting for an answer, she got out of her chair, and went quickly across the apartment to her writing-desk. "I want you to take a note to Mr. King"s, to little Miss Pepper," and she began to write hastily, and as if no very good humor inspired her thought.
"If you please, madam," said Hooper, obsequiously, "little Master Pepper is downstairs now."
"Hey? What is that you are saying?" demanded the old lady, throwing down her pen to turn away from the writing-table.
"He"s downstairs," repeated Hooper, "the little Pepper lad."
"Which one?" cried madam, quickly.
"_The_ one, madam," said the butler; "I don"t know his name."
"Then it must be Joel," said the old lady, and a smile of great satisfaction began to run over her strongly marked face. "Show him up at once, Hooper; at once," she added, with an imperious wave of her hand that set all the heirlooms of rings to shining at a great rate.
"Yes, madam," said Hooper, getting out on his errand as expeditiously as possible.
"To think that Joel has really come!" she exclaimed to herself joyfully.
She deserted her writing-table now and began to walk up and down the apartment, her long fingers nervously playing with the silken cord of her elaborate morning gown. "Oh, Joel," as her restless feet brought her near the door, "there you are, my boy."
"Yes"m," said Joel, wholly miserable, and leaning against the casing, with his black eyes fastened on the staircase, as if the way to Paradise lay there.
"Well, come in. Don"t stand there any longer. Pray come in." She waved her hand authoritatively toward the centre of the apartment, then followed him, as he crept dismally in. "Now sit down," she said, in her most sociable way.
So Joel sat down and fastened his eyes on the beautiful red velvet carpet.
"So you"ve come to see me this time, instead of my going to call on you," said Madam Van Ruypen, to set him at his ease.
"Yes"m," said Joel, "Mamsie made me come."