How Janice Day Won Part 16
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"Huh! I wonder?" questioned Marty. "Guess Nelse Haley won't lay _his_ trouble to liquor drinking."
"No? I wonder----"
"Here's the library building, Janice," interrupted the boy. "Want me to go any further with you?"
"No, dear," she said, taking the bag from him. "Tell Aunt 'Mira I'll be home in the morning in time enough to dress for church."
"Aw-right."
"And, Marty!"
"Yep?" returned he, turning back.
"I see there's a light in the bas.e.m.e.nt of the library building. What's going on?"
"We fellers are holding a meeting," said Marty, importantly. "I called it this afternoon. I don't mind telling you, Janice, that we're going to pa.s.s resolutions backing up Mr. Haley--pa.s.s him a vote of confidence. That's what they do in lodges and other societies. And if any of the fellers renege tonight on this, I'll--I'll--Well, I'll show 'em somethin'!" finished Marty, very red in the face and threatening as he dived down the bas.e.m.e.nt steps.
"Oh, well," thought Janice, encouraged after all. "Nelson has some loyal friends."
She came to the store on the side street without further incident. She looked across timidly at Nelson's windows. A lamp burned dimly there, so she knew he was at home.
Indeed, where would he go--to whom turn in his trouble? Aside from an old maiden aunt who had lent him enough of her savings to enable him to finish his college course, Nelson had no relatives alive. He had no close friend, either young or old, but herself, Janice knew.
"Oh, if daddy were only home from Mexico!" was her unspoken thought, as she lifted the latch of the store door.
There were no customers at this hour; but it was Hopewell Drugg's custom to keep the store open until nine o'clock every evening, and Sat.u.r.day night until a much later hour. Every neighborhood store must do this to keep trade.
"I'm so glad to see you, Janice," 'Rill proclaimed, without coming from behind the counter. "You'll stay?"
"Surely. Don't you see my bag?" returned Janice gaily. "Is Mr. Drugg going to be away all night?"
"He--he could not be sure. It's another dance," 'Rill said, rather apologetically. "He feels he must play when he can. Every five dollars counts, you know, and Hopewell is sure that Lottie will have to go back to the school."
"Where is the dance?" asked Janice gravely. "Down at the Inn?"
"Yes," replied the wife, quite as seriously, and dropping her gaze.
"Oh! I hear my Janice! I hear my Janice Day!" cried Lottie's sweet, shrill voice from the rear apartment and she came running out into the store to meet the visitor.
"Have a care! have a care, dear!" warned 'Rill. "Look where you run."
Janice, seeing more clearly from where she stood in front of the counter, was aware that the child ran toward her with her hands outstretched, and with her eyes tightly closed--just as she used to do before her eyes were treated and she had been to the famous Boston physician.
"Oh, Lottie dear!" she exclaimed, taking the little one into her arms.
"You will run into something. You will hurt yourself. Why don't you look where you are going?"
"I _do_ look," Lottie responded pouting. Then she wriggled all her ten fingers before Janice's face. "Don't you see my lookers? I can see--oh! so nicely!--with my fingers. You know I always could, Janice Day."
'Rill shook her head and sighed. It was plain the bride was a very lenient stepmother indeed--perhaps too lenient. She loved Hopewell Drugg's child so dearly that she could not bear to correct her. Lottie had always had her own way with her father; and matters had not changed, Janice could see.
"Mamma 'Rill," Lottie coaxed, patting her step-mother's pink cheek, "you'll let me sit up longer, 'cause Janice is here--won't you?"
Of course 'Rill could not refuse her. So the child sat there, blinking at the store lights like a little owl, until finally she sank down in the old cus.h.i.+oned armchair behind the stove and fell fast asleep.
Occasionally customers came in; but between whiles Janice and the storekeeper's wife could talk.
The racking "clump, clump, clump," of a big-footed farm horse sounded without and a woman's nasal voice called a sharp:
"Whoa! Whoa, there! Now, Emmy, you git aout and hitch him to that there post. Ain't no ring to it? Wal! I don't see what Hope Drugg's thinkin' of--havin' no rings to his. .h.i.tchin' posts. He ain't had none to that one long's I kin remember."
"Here comes Mrs. Si Leggett," said 'Rill to Janice. "She's a particular woman and I am sorry Hopewell isn't here himself. Usually she comes in the afternoon. She is late with her Sat.u.r.day's shopping this time."
"Take this basket of eggs--easy, now, Emmy!" shrilled the woman's voice. "Handle 'em careful--handle 'em like they _was_ eggs!"
A heavy step, and a lighter step, on the porch, and then the store door opened. The woman was tall and raw-boned. She wore a sunbonnet of fine green and white stripes. Emmy was a lanky child of fourteen or so, with slack, flaxen hair and a perfectly colorless face.
"Haow-do, Miz' Drugg," said the newcomer, putting a large basket of eggs carefully on the counter. "What's Hopewell givin' for eggs to-day?"
"Just what everybody else is, Mrs. Leggett. Twenty-two cents. That's the market price."
"Wal--seems ter me I was hearin' that Mr. Sprague daowntown was a-givin' twenty-three," said the customer slowly.
"Perhaps he is, Mrs. Leggett. But Mr. Drugg cannot afford to give even a penny above the market price. Of course, either cash or trade--just as you please."
"Wal, I want some things an' I wasn't kalkerlatin' to go 'way daowntown ter-night--it's so late," said Mrs. Leggett.
'Rill smiled and waited.
"Twenty-two's the best you kin do?" queried the lanky woman querulously.
"That is the market price."
"Wal! lemme see some cheap gingham. It don't matter abeout the pattern. It's only for Emmy here, and it don't matter what 'tis that covers her bones' long's it does cover 'em. Will this fade?"
"I don't think so," Mrs. Drugg said, opening the bolt of goods so that the customer could get at it better.
Janice watched, much amused. The woman pulled at the piece one way, and then another, wetting it meantime and rubbing it with her fingers to ascertain if the colors were fast. She was apparently unable to satisfy herself regarding it.
Finally she produced a small pair of scissors and snipped off a tiny piece and handed it to Emmy. "Here, Emmy," she said, "you spit aout that there gum an' chew on this here awhile ter see if it fades any."
Janice dodged behind the post to hide the expression of amus.e.m.e.nt that she could not control. She wondered how 'Rill could remain so placid and unruffled.
Emmy took the piece of goods, clapped it into her mouth with the most serious expression imaginable, and went to work. Her mother said:
"Ye might's well count the eggs, Miz' Drugg. I make 'em eight dozen and ten. I waited late for the rest of the critters ter lay; but they done fooled me ter-day--for a fac'!"
Emmy having chewed on the gingham to her mother's complete satisfaction, Mrs. Leggett finished making her purchases and they departed. Then 'Rill and her guest could talk again. Naturally the conversation almost at the beginning turned upon Nelson Haley's trouble.
"It is terrible!" 'Rill said. "Mr. Moore and those others never could have thought what they were doing when they accused Mr. Haley of stealing."
How Janice Day Won Part 16
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How Janice Day Won Part 16 summary
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