Pollyanna - Eleanor Hodgman Porter (e ink ebook reader txt) š
- Author: Eleanor Hodgman Porter
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His visitor looked distressed.
āN-no, sir.ā She hesitated, then went on with heightened color. āPlease, Mr. Pendleton, I didnāt mean to be rude the other day when I said Aunt Polly did NOT send the jelly.ā
There was no answer. John Pendleton was not smiling now. He was looking straight ahead of him with eyes that seemed to be gazing through and beyond the object before them. After a time he drew a long sigh and turned to Pollyanna. When he spoke his voice carried the old nervous fretfulness.
āWell, well, this will never do at all! I didnāt send for you to see me moping this time. Listen! Out in the libraryāthe big room where the telephone is, you knowāyou will find a carved box on the lower shelf of the big case with glass doors in the corner not far from the fireplace. That is, itāll be there if that confounded woman hasnāt āregulatedā it to somewhere else! You may bring it to me. It is heavy, but not too heavy for you to carry, I think.ā
āOh, Iām awfully strong,ā declared Pollyanna, cheerfully, as she sprang to her feet. In a minute she had returned with the box.
It was a wonderful half-hour that Pollyanna spent then. The box was full of treasuresācurios that John Pendleton had picked up in years of travelāand concerning each there was some entertaining story, whether it were a set of exquisitely carved chessmen from China, or a little jade idol from India.
It was after she had heard the story about the idol that Pollyanna murmured wistfully:
āWell, I suppose it WOULD be better to take a little boy in India to bring upāone that didnāt know any more than to think that God was in that doll-thingāthan it would be to take Jimmy Bean, a little boy who knows God is up in the sky. Still, I canāt help wishing they had wanted Jimmy Bean, too, besides the India boys.ā
John Pendleton did not seem to hear. Again his, eyes were staring straight before him, looking at nothing. But soon he had roused himself, and had picked up another curio to talk about.
The visit, certainly, was a delightful one, but before it was over, Pollyanna was realizing that they were talking about something besides the wonderful things in the beautiful carved box. They were talking of herself, of Nancy, of Aunt Polly, and of her daily life. They were talking, too, even of the life and home long ago in the far Western town.
Not until it was nearly time for her to go, did the man say, in a voice Pollyanna had never before heard from stern John Pendleton:
āLittle girl, I want you to come to see me often. Will you? Iām lonesome, and I need you. Thereās another reasonāand Iām going to tell you that, too. I thought, at first, after I found out who you were, the other day, that I didnāt want you to come any more. You reminded me ofāof something I have tried for long years to forget. So I said to myself that I never wanted to see you again; and every day, when the doctor asked if I wouldnāt let him bring you to me, I said no.
āBut after a time I found I was wanting to see you so much thatāthat the fact that I WASNāT seeing you was making me remember all the more vividly the thing I was so wanting to forget. So now I want you to come. Will youālittle girl?ā
āWhy, yes, Mr. Pendleton,ā breathed Pollyanna, her eyes luminous with sympathy for the sad-faced man lying back on the pillow before her. āIād love to come!ā
āThank you,ā said John Pendleton, gently.
After supper that evening, Pollyanna, sitting on the back porch, told Nancy all about Mr. John Pendletonās wonderful carved box, and the still more wonderful things it contained.
āAnd ter think,ā sighed Nancy, āthat he SHOWED ye all them things, and told ye about āem like thatāhim thatās so cross he never talks ter no oneāno one!ā
āOh, but he isnāt cross, Nancy, only outside,ā demurred Pollyanna, with quick loyalty. āI donāt see why everybody thinks heās so bad, either. They wouldnāt, if they knew him. But even Aunt Polly doesnāt like him very well. She wouldnāt send the jelly to him, you know, and she was so afraid heād think she did send it!ā
āProbably she didnāt call him no duty,ā shrugged Nancy. āBut what beats me is how he happened ter take ter you so, Miss Pollyannaāmeaninā no offence ter you, of courseābut he aināt the sort oā man what genārally takes ter kids; he aināt, he aināt.ā
Pollyanna smiled happily.
āBut he did, Nancy,ā she nodded, āonly I reckon even he didnāt want toāALL the time. Why, only to-day he owned up that one time he just felt he never wanted to see me again, because I reminded him of something he wanted to forget. But afterwardsāā
āWhatās that?ā interrupted Nancy, excitedly. āHe said you reminded him of something he wanted to forget?ā
āYes. But afterwardsāā
āWhat was it?ā Nancy was eagerly insistent.
āHe didnāt tell me. He just said it was something.ā
āTHE MYSTERY!ā breathed Nancy, in an awestruck voice. āThatās why he took to you in the first place. Oh, Miss Pollyanna! Why, thatās just like a bookāIāve read lots of āem; āLady Maudās Secret,ā and āThe Lost Heir,ā and āHidden for Yearsāāall of āem had mysteries and things just like this. My stars and stockings! Just think of havinā a book lived right under yer nose like this anā me not knowinā it all this time! Now tell me everythināāeverythinā he said, Miss Pollyanna, thereās a dear! No wonder he took ter you; no wonderāno wonder!ā
āBut he didnāt,ā cried Pollyanna, ānot till I talked to HIM, first. And he didnāt even know who I was till I took the calfās-foot jelly, and had to make him understand that Aunt Polly didnāt send it, andāā
Nancy sprang to her feet and clasped her hands together suddenly.
āOh, Miss Pollyanna, I know, I knowāI KNOW I know!ā she exulted rapturously. The next minute she was down at Pollyannaās side again. āTell meānow think, and answer straight and true,ā she urged excitedly. āIt was after he found out you was Miss Pollyās niece that he said he didnāt ever want ter see ye again, waānāt it?ā
āOh, yes. I told him that the last time I saw him, and he told me this to-day.ā
āI thought as much,ā triumphed Nancy. āAnd Miss Polly wouldnāt send the jelly herself, would she?ā
āNo.ā
āAnd you told him she didnāt send it?ā
āWhy, yes; Iāā
āAnd he began ter act queer and cry out sudden after he found out you was her niece. He did that, didnāt he?ā
āWhy, y-yes; he did act a little queerāover that jelly,ā admitted Pollyanna, with a thoughtful frown.
Nancy drew a long sigh.
āThen Iāve got it, sure! Now listen. MR. JOHN PENDLETON WAS MISS POLLY HARRINGTONāS LOVER!ā she announced impressively, but with a furtive glance over her shoulder.
āWhy, Nancy, he couldnāt be! She doesnāt like him,ā objected Pollyanna.
Nancy gave her a scornful glance.
āOf course she donāt! THATāS the quarrel!
Pollyanna still looked incredulous, and with another long breath Nancy happily settled herself to tell the story.
āItās like this. Just before you come, Mr. Tom told me Miss Polly had had a lover once. I didnāt believe it. I couldnātāher and a lover! But Mr. Tom said she had, and that he was livinā now right in this town. And NOW I know, of course. Itās John Pendleton. Haināt he got a mystery in his life? Donāt he shut himself up in that grand house alone, and never speak ter no one? Didnāt he act queer when he found out you was Miss Pollyās niece? And now haināt he owned up that you remind him of somethinā he wants ter forget? Just as if ANYBODY couldnāt see ātwas Miss Polly!āanā her sayinā she wouldnāt send him no jelly, too. Why, Miss Pollyanna, itās as plain as the nose on yer face; it is, it is!ā
āOh-h!ā breathed Pollyanna, in wide-eyed amazement. āBut, Nancy, I should think if they loved each other theyād make up some time. Both of āem all alone, so, all these years. I should think theyād be glad to make up!ā
Nancy sniffed disdainfully.
āI guess maybe you donāt know much about lovers, Miss Pollyanna. You aināt big enough yet, anyhow. But if there IS a set oā folks in the world that wouldnāt have no use for that āere āglad gameā oā yourān, itād be a pair oā quarrellinā lovers; and thatās what they be. Aināt he cross as sticks, most genārally?āand aināt sheāā
Nancy stopped abruptly, remembering just in time to whom, and about whom, she was speaking. Suddenly, however, she chuckled.
āI aināt sayinā, though, Miss Pollyanna, but what it would be a pretty slick piece of business if you could GET āem ter playinā itāso they WOULD be glad ter make up. But, my land! wouldnāt folks stare someāMiss Polly and him! I guess, though, there aināt much chance, much chance!ā
Pollyanna said nothing; but when she went into the house a little later, her face was very thoughtful.
CHAPTER XVIII. PRISMS
As the warm August days passed, Pollyanna went very frequently to the great house on Pendleton Hill. She did not feel, however, that her visits were really a success. Not but that the man seemed to want her thereāhe sent for her, indeed, frequently; but that when she was there, he seemed scarcely any the happier for her presenceāat least, so Pollyanna thought.
He talked to her, it was true, and be showed her many strange and beautiful thingsābooks, pictures, and curios. But he still fretted audibly over his own helplessness, and he chafed visibly under the rules and āregulatingsā of the unwelcome members of his household. He did, indeed, seem to like to hear Pollyanna talk, however, and Pollyanna talked, Pollyanna liked to talkābut she was never sure that she would not look up and find him lying back on his pillow with that white, hurt look that always pained her; and she was never sure whichāif anyāof her words had brought it there. As for telling him the āglad game,ā and trying to get him to play itāPollyanna had never seen the time yet when she thought he would care to hear about it. She had twice tried to tell him; but neither time had she got beyond the beginning of what her father had saidāJohn Pendleton had on each occasion turned the conversation abruptly to another subject.
Pollyanna never doubted now that John Pendleton was her Aunt Pollyās one-time lover; and with all the strength of her loving, loyal heart, she wished she could in some way bring happiness into their to her mindāmiserably lonely lives.
Just how she was to do this, however, she could not see. She talked to Mr. Pendleton about her aunt; and he listened, sometimes politely, sometimes irritably, frequently with a quizzical smile on his usually stern lips. She talked to her aunt about Mr. Pendletonāor rather, she tried to talk to her about him. As a general thing, however, Miss Polly would not listenālong. She always found something else to talk about. She frequently did that, however, when Pollyanna was talking of othersāof Dr. Chilton, for instance. Pollyanna laid this, though, to the fact that it had been Dr. Chilton who had seen her in the sun parlor with the rose in her hair and the lace shawl draped about her shoulders. Aunt Polly, indeed, seemed
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