The classic childrens li.., p.49

  The Classic Children's Literature Collection: 39 Classic Novels, p.49

The Classic Children's Literature Collection: 39 Classic Novels
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  “Be glad in the Lord and rejoice, ye righteous, and shout for joy all ye that are upright in heart.”

  CHAPTER XXIII. AN ACCIDENT

  At Mrs. Snow’s request, Pollyanna went one day to Dr. Chilton’s office to get the name of a medicine which Mrs. Snow had forgotten. As it chanced, Pollyanna had never before seen the inside of Dr. Chilton’s office.

  “I’ve never been to your home before! This IS your home, isn’t it?” she said, looking interestedly about her.

  The doctor smiled a little sadly.

  “Yes—such as ‘tis,” he answered, as he wrote something on the pad of paper in his hand; “but it’s a pretty poor apology for a home, Pollyanna. They’re just rooms, that’s all—not a home.”

  Pollyanna nodded her head wisely. Her eyes glowed with sympathetic understanding.

  “I know. It takes a woman’s hand and heart, or a child’s presence to make a home,” she said.

  “Eh?” The doctor wheeled about abruptly.

  “Mr. Pendleton told me,” nodded Pollyanna, again; “about the woman’s hand and heart, or the child’s presence, you know. Why don’t you get a woman’s hand and heart, Dr. Chilton? Or maybe you’d take Jimmy Bean—if Mr. Pendleton doesn’t want him.”

  Dr. Chilton laughed a little constrainedly.

  “So Mr. Pendleton says it takes a woman’s hand and heart to make a home, does he?” he asked evasively.

  “Yes. He says his is just a house, too. Why don’t you, Dr. Chilton?”

  “Why don’t I—what?” The doctor had turned back to his desk.

  “Get a woman’s hand and heart. Oh—and I forgot.” Pollyanna’s face showed suddenly a painful color. “I suppose I ought to tell you. It wasn’t Aunt Polly that Mr. Pendleton loved long ago; and so we—we aren’t going there to live. You see, I told you it was—but I made a mistake. I hope YOU didn’t tell any one,” she finished anxiously.

  “No—I didn’t tell any one, Pollyanna,” replied the doctor, a little queerly.

  “Oh, that’s all right, then,” sighed Pollyanna in relief. “You see you’re the only one I told, and I thought Mr. Pendleton looked sort of funny when I said I’d told YOU.”

  “Did he?” The doctor’s lips twitched.

  “Yes. And of course he wouldn’t want many people to know it—when ‘twasn’t true. But why don’t you get a woman’s hand and heart, Dr. Chilton?”

  There was a moment’s silence; then very gravely the doctor said:

  “They’re not always to be had—for the asking, little girl.”

  Pollyanna frowned thoughtfully.

  “But I should think you could get ‘em,” she argued. The flattering emphasis was unmistakable.

  “Thank you,” laughed the doctor, with uplifted eyebrows. Then, gravely again: “I’m afraid some of your older sisters would not be quite so—confident. At least, they—they haven’t shown themselves to be so—obliging,” he observed.

  Pollyanna frowned again. Then her eyes widened in surprise.

  “Why, Dr. Chilton, you don’t mean—you didn’t try to get somebody’s hand and heart once, like Mr. Pendleton, and—and couldn’t, did you?”

  The doctor got to his feet a little abruptly.

  “There, there, Pollyanna, never mind about that now. Don’t let other people’s troubles worry your little head. Suppose you run back now to Mrs. Snow. I’ve written down the name of the medicine, and the directions how she is to take it. Was there anything else?”

  Pollyanna shook her head.

  “No, Sir; thank you, Sir,” she murmured soberly, as she turned toward the door. From the little hallway she called back, her face suddenly alight: “Anyhow, I’m glad ‘twasn’t my mother’s hand and heart that you wanted and couldn’t get, Dr. Chilton. Good-by!”

  It was on the last day of October that the accident occurred. Pollyanna, hurrying home from school, crossed the road at an apparently safe distance in front of a swiftly approaching motor car.

  Just what happened, no one could seem to tell afterward. Neither was there any one found who could tell why it happened or who was to blame that it did happen. Pollyanna, however, at five o’clock, was borne, limp and unconscious, into the little room that was so dear to her. There, by a white-faced Aunt Polly and a weeping Nancy she was undressed tenderly and put to bed, while from the village, hastily summoned by telephone, Dr. Warren was hurrying as fast as another motor car could bring him.

  “And ye didn’t need ter more’n look at her aunt’s face,” Nancy was sobbing to Old Tom in the garden, after the doctor had arrived and was closeted in the hushed room; “ye didn’t need ter more’n look at her aunt’s face ter see that ‘twa’n’t no duty that was eatin’ her. Yer hands don’t shake, and yer eyes don’t look as if ye was tryin’ ter hold back the Angel o’ Death himself, when you’re jest doin’ yer DUTY, Mr. Tom they don’t, they don’t!”

  “Is she hurt—bad?” The old man’s voice shook.

  “There ain’t no tellin’,” sobbed Nancy. “She lay back that white an’ still she might easy be dead; but Miss Polly said she wa’n’t dead—an’ Miss Polly had oughter know, if any one would—she kept up such a listenin’ an’ a feelin’ for her heartbeats an’ her breath!”

  “Couldn’t ye tell anythin’ what it done to her?—that—that—” Old Tom’s face worked convulsively.

  Nancy’s lips relaxed a little.

  “I wish ye WOULD call it somethin’, Mr. Tom an’ somethin’ good an’ strong, too. Drat it! Ter think of its runnin’ down our little girl! I always hated the evil-smellin’ things, anyhow—I did, I did!”

  “But where is she hurt?”

  “I don’t know, I don’t know,” moaned Nancy. “There’s a little cut on her blessed head, but ‘tain’t bad—that ain’t—Miss Polly says. She says she’s afraid it’s infernally she’s hurt.”

  A faint flicker came into Old Tom’s eyes.

  “I guess you mean internally, Nancy,” he said dryly. “She’s hurt infernally, all right—plague take that autymobile!—but I don’t guess Miss Polly’d be usin’ that word, all the same.”

  “Eh? Well, I don’t know, I don’t know,” moaned Nancy, with a shake of her head as she turned away. “Seems as if I jest couldn’t stand it till that doctor gits out o’ there. I wish I had a washin’ ter do—the biggest washin’ I ever see, I do, I do!” she wailed, wringing her hands helplessly.

  Even after the doctor was gone, however, there seemed to be little that Nancy could tell Mr. Tom. There appeared to be no bones broken, and the cut was of slight consequence; but the doctor had looked very grave, had shaken his head slowly, and had said that time alone could tell. After he had gone, Miss Polly had shown a face even whiter and more drawn looking than before. The patient had not fully recovered consciousness, but at present she seemed to be resting as comfortably as could be expected. A trained nurse had been sent for, and would come that night. That was all. And Nancy turned sobbingly, and went back to her kitchen.

  It was sometime during the next forenoon that Pollyanna opened conscious eyes and realized where she was.

  “Why, Aunt Polly, what’s the matter? Isn’t it daytime? Why don’t I get up?” she cried. “Why, Aunt Polly, I can’t get up,” she moaned, falling back on the pillow, after an ineffectual attempt to lift herself.

  “No, dear, I wouldn’t try—just yet,” soothed her aunt quickly, but very quietly.

  “But what is the matter? Why can’t I get up?”

  Miss Polly’s eyes asked an agonized question of the white-capped young woman standing in the window, out of the range of Pollyanna’s eyes.

  The young woman nodded.

  “Tell her,” the lips said.

  Miss Polly cleared her throat, and tried to swallow the lump that would scarcely let her speak.

  “You were hurt, dear, by the automobile last night. But never mind that now. Auntie wants you to rest and go to sleep again.”

  “Hurt? Oh, yes; I—I ran.” Pollyanna’s eyes were dazed. She lifted her hand to her forehead. “Why, it’s—done up, and it—hurts!”

  “Yes, dear; but never mind. Just—just rest.”

  “But, Aunt Polly, I feel so funny, and so bad! My legs feel so—so queer—only they don’t FEEL—at all!”

  With an imploring look into the nurse’s face, Miss Polly struggled to her feet, and turned away. The nurse came forward quickly.

  “Suppose you let me talk to you now,” she began cheerily. “I’m sure I think it’s high time we were getting acquainted, and I’m going to introduce myself. I am Miss Hunt, and I’ve come to help your aunt take care of you. And the very first thing I’m going to do is to ask you to swallow these little white pills for me.”

  Pollyanna’s eyes grew a bit wild.

  “But I don’t want to be taken care of—that is, not for long! I want to get up. You know I go to school. Can’t I go to school to-morrow?”

  From the window where Aunt Polly stood now there came a half-stifled cry.

  “To-morrow?” smiled the nurse, brightly.

  “Well, I may not let you out quite so soon as that, Miss Pollyanna. But just swallow these little pills for me, please, and we’ll see what THEY’LL do.”

  “All right,” agreed Pollyanna, somewhat doubtfully; “but I MUST go to school day after to-morrow—there are examinations then, you know.”

  She spoke again, a minute later. She spoke of school, and of the automobile, and of how her head ached; but very soon her voice trailed into silence under the blessed influence of the little white pills she had swallowed.

  CHAPTER XXIV. JOHN PENDLETON

  Pollyanna did not go to school “to-morrow,” nor the “day after to-morrow.” Pollyanna, however, did not realize this, except momentarily when a brief period of full consciousness sent insistent questions to her lips. Pollyanna did not realize anything, in fact, very clearly until a week had passed; then the fever subsided, the pain lessened somewhat, and her mind awoke to full consciousness. She had then to be told all over again what had occurred.

  “And so it’s hurt that I am, and not sick,” she sighed at last. “Well, I’m glad of that.”

  “G-glad, Pollyanna?” asked her aunt, who was sitting by the bed.

  “Yes. I’d so much rather have broken legs like Mr. Pendleton’s than life-long-invalids like Mrs. Snow, you know. Broken legs get well, and lifelong-invalids don’t.”

  Miss Polly—who had said nothing whatever about broken legs—got suddenly to her feet and walked to the little dressing table across the room. She was picking up one object after another now, and putting each down, in an aimless fashion quite unlike her usual decisiveness. Her face was not aimless-looking at all, however; it was white and drawn.

  On the bed Pollyanna lay blinking at the dancing band of colors on the ceiling, which came from one of the prisms in the window.

  “I’m glad it isn’t smallpox that ails me, too,” she murmured contentedly. “That would be worse than freckles. And I’m glad ‘tisn’t whooping cough—I’ve had that, and it’s horrid—and I’m glad ‘tisn’t appendicitis nor measles, ‘cause they’re catching—measles are, I mean—and they wouldn’t let you stay here.”

  “You seem to—to be glad for a good many things, my dear,” faltered Aunt Polly, putting her hand to her throat as if her collar bound.

  Pollyanna laughed softly.

  “I am. I’ve been thinking of ‘em—lots of ‘em—all the time I’ve been looking up at that rainbow. I love rainbows. I’m so glad Mr. Pendleton gave me those prisms! I’m glad of some things I haven’t said yet. I don’t know but I’m ‘most glad I was hurt.”

  “Pollyanna!”

  Pollyanna laughed softly again. She turned luminous eyes on her aunt. “Well, you see, since I have been hurt, you’ve called me ‘dear’ lots of times—and you didn’t before. I love to be called ‘dear’—by folks that belong to you, I mean. Some of the Ladies’ Aiders did call me that; and of course that was pretty nice, but not so nice as if they had belonged to me, like you do. Oh, Aunt Polly, I’m so glad you belong to me!”

  Aunt Polly did not answer. Her hand was at her throat again. Her eyes were full of tears. She had turned away and was hurrying from the room through the door by which the nurse had just entered.

  It was that afternoon that Nancy ran out to Old Tom, who was cleaning harnesses in the barn. Her eyes were wild.

  “Mr. Tom, Mr. Tom, guess what’s happened,” she panted. “You couldn’t guess in a thousand years—you couldn’t, you couldn’t!”

  “Then I cal’late I won’t try,” retorted the man, grimly, “specially as I hain’t got more’n TEN ter live, anyhow, probably. You’d better tell me first off, Nancy.”

  “Well, listen, then. Who do you s’pose is in the parlor now with the mistress? Who, I say?”

  Old Tom shook his head.

  “There’s no tellin’,” he declared.

  “Yes, there is. I’m tellin’. It’s—John Pendleton!”

  “Sho, now! You’re jokin’, girl.”

  “Not much I am—an’ me a-lettin’ him in myself—crutches an’ all! An’ the team he come in a-waitin’ this minute at the door for him, jest as if he wa’n’t the cranky old crosspatch he is, what never talks ter no one! jest think, Mr. Tom—HIM a-callin’ on HER!”

  “Well, why not?” demanded the old man, a little aggressively.

  Nancy gave him a scornful glance.

  “As if you didn’t know better’n me!” she derided.

  “Eh?”

  “Oh, you needn’t be so innercent,” she retorted with mock indignation; “—you what led me wildgoose chasin’ in the first place!”

  “What do ye mean?”

  Nancy glanced through the open barn door toward the house, and came a step nearer to the old man.

  “Listen! ‘Twas you that was tellin’ me Miss Polly had a lover in the first place, wa’n’t it? Well, one day I thinks I finds two and two, and I puts ‘em tergether an’ makes four. But it turns out ter be five—an’ no four at all, at all!”

  With a gesture of indifference Old Tom turned and fell to work.

  “If you’re goin’ ter talk ter me, you’ve got ter talk plain horse sense,” he declared testily. “I never was no hand for figgers.”

  Nancy laughed.

  “Well, it’s this,” she explained. “I heard somethin’ that made me think him an’ Miss Polly was lovers.”

  “MR. PENDLETON!” Old Tom straightened up.

  “Yes. Oh, I know now; he wasn’t. It was that blessed child’s mother he was in love with, and that’s why he wanted—but never mind that part,” she added hastily, remembering just in time her promise to Pollyanna not to tell that Mr. Pendleton had wished her to come and live with him. “Well, I’ve been askin’ folks about him some, since, and I’ve found out that him an’ Miss Polly hain’t been friends for years, an’ that she’s been hatin’ him like pizen owin’ ter the silly gossip that coupled their names tergether when she was eighteen or twenty.”

  “Yes, I remember,” nodded Old Tom. “It was three or four years after Miss Jennie give him the mitten and went off with the other chap. Miss Polly knew about it, of course, and was sorry for him. So she tried ter be nice to him. Maybe she overdid it a little—she hated that minister chap so who had took off her sister. At any rate, somebody begun ter make trouble. They said she was runnin’ after him.”

  “Runnin’ after any man—her!” interjected Nancy.

  “I know it; but they did,” declared Old Tom, “and of course no gal of any spunk’ll stand that. Then about that time come her own lover an’ the trouble with HIM. After that she shut up like an oyster an’ wouldn’t have nothin’ ter do with nobody fur a spell. Her heart jest seemed to turn bitter at the core.”

  “Yes, I know. I’ve heard about that now,” rejoined Nancy; “an’ that’s why you could ‘a’ knocked me down with a feather when I see HIM at the door—him, what she hain’t spoke to for years! But I let him in an’ went an’ told her.”

  “What did she say?” Old Tom held his breath suspended.

  “Nothin’—at first. She was so still I thought she hadn’t heard; and I was jest goin’ ter say it over when she speaks up quiet like: ‘Tell Mr. Pendleton I will be down at once.’ An’ I come an’ told him. Then I come out here an’ told you,” finished Nancy, casting another backward glance toward the house.

  “Humph!” grunted Old Tom; and fell to work again.

  In the ceremonious “parlor” of the Harrington homestead, Mr. John Pendleton did not have to wait long before a swift step warned him of Miss Polly’s coming. As he attempted to rise, she made a gesture of remonstrance. She did not offer her hand, however, and her face was coldly reserved.

  “I called to ask for—Pollyanna,” he began at once, a little brusquely.

  “Thank you. She is about the same,” said Miss Polly.

  “And that is—won’t you tell me HOW she is?” His voice was not quite steady this time.

  A quick spasm of pain crossed the woman’s face.

  “I can’t, I wish I could!”

  “You mean—you don’t know?”

  “Yes.”

  “But—the doctor?”

  “Dr. Warren himself seems—at sea. He is in correspondence now with a New York specialist. They have arranged for a consultation at once.”

  “But—but what WERE her injuries that you do know?”

  “A slight cut on the head, one or two bruises, and—and an injury to the spine which has seemed to cause—paralysis from the hips down.”

  A low cry came from the man. There was a brief silence; then, huskily, he asked:

  “And Pollyanna—how does she—take it?”

 
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