"Very well, I think I"ll buy that rag doll, though I"m sure I don"t know what I"ll ever do with it. No self-respecting child would accept it as a gift."
"Well, buy something," said Patty, as they went in.
The opening of the door caused a big bell to jingle, and this apparently called an old woman in from the back room. She was not very tidy, but she was a good-natured body, and smiled pleasantly at the two girls.
"What is it, young ladies?" she asked, "can I sell you anything to-day?"
"Yes," said Elise, gravely, "I was pa.s.sing your window, and I noticed a doll there,--that one with the blue gingham dress. How much is it, please?"
"That one," said the old lady, "is fifty cents. Seems sorter high, I know, but that "ere doll was made by a blind girl, that lives a piece up the road; and though the sewin" ain"t very good, it"s a nine-days" wonder that she can do it at all. And them dolls is her only support, and land knows she don"t sell hardly any!"
"I"ll give you a dollar for it," said Elise, impulsively, for her generous heart was touched. "Have you any more of them?"
"No," said the woman, in some amazement. "Malviny, she don"t make many, "cause they don"t sell very rapid. But be you goin" her way? She might have one to home, purty nigh finished."
"I don"t know," said Elise, "where does she live?"
"Straight along, on the main road. You can"t miss it, an old yaller house, with the back burnt off."
It was Patty"s turn now, and she said she would buy the peppermint candies that were in the window.
"All of "em?" asked the storekeeper, in surprise.
"Yes," said Patty, "all of them," and as the old woman lifted the plate in from the window, Patty added, "And if you care to part with it, I"ll buy the plate too."
"Land, Miss, that "ere old plate ain"t no good; it"s got a crack in it, but if so be"s you admire that pattern, I"ve got another in the keeping-room that"s just like it, only "tain"t cracked. "Tain"t even chipped."
"Would you care to part with them both?" asked Patty, remembering that this phrase was the preferred formula of all china hunters.
"Laws, yes, Miss, if you care to pay for "em. Of course, I can"t sell "em for nothin", for there"s sometimes ladies as comes here, as has a fancy to them old things. But these two plates is so humbly, that I didn"t have the face to show "em to anybody as was lookin" for anteeks."
Patty"s sense of honesty would not allow her to ignore the old woman"s mistake.
"They may seem homely to you," she said, "but I think it only right to tell you that these plates are probably the most valuable of any you have ever owned."
"Well, for the land o" goodness, ef you ain"t honest! "Tain"t many as would speak up like that! Jest come in the back room, and look at the other plate."
The girls followed the old woman as she raised a calico curtain of a flowered pattern, and let them through into the "keeping-room."
"There," she said with some pride as she took down a plate from the high mantel. "There, you can see for yourself, there ain"t no chip or crack into it."
Sure enough, Patty held in her hand a perfect specimen of the Millennium plate, so highly prized by collectors, and there was also the one she had seen in the window, which though slightly cracked, was still in fair condition.
"How much do you want for them?" asked Patty.
The old woman hesitated. It was not difficult to see that, although she wanted to get as high a price as possible for her plates, yet she did not want to ask so much that Patty would refuse to take them.
"You tell me," she said, insinuatingly, ""bout what you think them plates is worth."
"No," said Patty, firmly, "I never buy things that way. You tell me your price, and then I will buy them or not as I choose."
"Well," said the old woman, slowly, "the last lady that I sold plates to, she give me fifty cents apiece for three of "em, and though I think they was purtier than these here, yet you tell me these is more vallyble, and so," here the old woman made a great show of firmness, "and so my price for these plates is a dollar apiece."
As soon as she had said it, she looked at Patty in alarm, greatly fearing that she would not pay so much.
But Patty replied, "I will give you five dollars for the two,--because I know that is nearer their value than the price you set."
"Bless your good heart, and your purty face, Miss," said the old woman, as the tears came into her eyes. "I"m that obliged to you! I"ll send the money straight to my son John. He"s in the hospital, poor chap, and he needs it sore."
Elise had rarely been brought in contact with poverty and want, and her generous heart was touched at once. She emptied her little purse out upon the table, and was rejoiced to discover that it contained something over ten dollars.
"Please accept that," she cried, "to buy things for your son, or for yourself, as you choose."
[Ill.u.s.tration: ""There, you can see for yourself, there ain"t no chip or crack into it""]
The old woman was quite overcome at this kindness, and was endeavouring brokenly to express her thanks, when the bell on the shop door jangled loudly.
Patty being nearest to the calico curtain drew it aside, to find Roger in the little shop, looking very breathless and worried.
"Well, of all things," he exclaimed. "You girls have given us a scare.
We"ve hunted high and low through the whole of this metropolis. And if it hadn"t been that a little girl said she saw you come in here, I suppose we"d now be dragging the brook. Come along, quick, we"re all ready to start."
"How could you get that belt mended so quickly?" asked Elise.
"Never mind that," said Roger, "just come along."
"Wait a minute," said Patty, hastily gathering up her precious plates, while the old woman provided some newspaper wrapping.
Roger hurried the two girls back to the motor-car, saying as they went, "We"re not in any hurry to start, but Mother thinks you"re drowned, and I want to prove to her that she is mistaken."
The sight of the car caused Patty to go off into peals of laughter.
In front of the beautiful machine was an old farm wagon, and in front of that were four horses. On the seat of the wagon sat a nonchalant-looking farmer who seemed to take little interest in the proceedings.
"I wouldn"t ask what"s the matter for anything," said Patty, looking at Roger, demurely, "but I suppose I am safe in a.s.suming that you have those horses there merely because you think they look well."
"That"s it," said Roger. "Nothing adds to the good effect of a motor-car like having a few fine horses attached to it. Jump in, girls."
The girls jumped in, and the caravan started. It was at a decidedly different rate of speed from the way they had travelled before. But Patty soon learned that Roger had found it impossible to fix the belt without going to a repair shop, and there was none nearer than Hartford. With some difficulty, and at considerable expense, he had persuaded the gruff old farmer to tow them over the intervening ten miles.
Patty would have supposed that this would greatly humiliate the proud and sensitive boy, but, to her surprise, Roger treated the affair as a good joke. He leaned back in his seat, apparently pleased with his enforced idleness, and chatted merrily as they slowly crawled along. Occasionally he would plead with the old farmer to urge his horses a trifle faster, and even hint at certain rewards if they should reach Hartford in a given time. But the grumpy old man was proof against coaxing or even bribing, and they jogged along, almost at a snail"s pace.
Perceiving that there was no way of improving the situation, Roger gave up trying, and turning partly around in his seat, proceeded to entertain the girls to the best of his ability.
Patty hadn"t known before what a jolly, good-natured boy Elise"s brother was, and she came to the conclusion that he had a good sense of proportion, to be able to take things so easily, and to keep his temper under such trying circ.u.mstances.
Only once did the surly old farmer address himself to his employers.
Turning around to face the occupants of the motor-car he bawled out: