Comfort Pease and her Gold Ring Part 5
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"Well," said her mother, "if you're going a sleigh-ride you'd better take some yarn stockings to pull over your shoes, and wear my fur tippet. It's most too cold to go sleigh-riding, anyway."
Directly after dinner Comfort went over to Matilda Stebbins's, with her mother's stone-marten tippet around her neck and the blue yarn stockings to wear in the sleigh under her arm.
But when she got to the Stebbins's house, Matilda met her at the door with a crestfallen air. "Only think," said she; "ain't it too bad?
Uncle Jared had to go to Ware to buy the horse, and we can't go to Bolton."
Comfort looked at her piteously.
"Guess I'd better go home," said she.
But Matilda was gazing at her doubtfully. "Look here," said she.
"What?" said Comfort.
"It ain't mor'n three miles to Bolton. Mother's walked there, and so has Imogen--"
"Do you s'pose--we could?"
"I don't b'lieve it would hurt us one mite. Say, I tell you what we can do: I'll take my sled, and I'll drag you a spell and then you can drag me, and that will be riding half the way for both of us, anyhow."
"So it will," said Comfort.
But Matilda looked doubtful again. "There's only one thing," she said. "Mother ain't at home--she and Rosy went over to grandma's to spend the day this morning--and I can't ask her. I don't see how I can go without asking her, exactly."
Comfort thought miserably, "What would Matilda Stebbins say if she knew I took that ring when my mother told me not to?"
"Well," said Matilda, brightening, "I don't know but it will do just as well if I ask Imogen. Mother told me once that if there was anything very important came up when she was away that I could ask Imogen."
Imogen was Matilda's eldest sister. She was almost eighteen, and she was going to a party that night, and was hurrying to finish a beautiful crimson tibet dress to wear.
"Now don't you talk to me and hinder me one moment. I've everything I can do to finish this dress to wear to the party," she said, when Matilda and Comfort went into the sitting-room.
"Can't I go to Bolton with Comfort Pease, Imogen?" asked Matilda.
"I thought you were going with Uncle Jared--didn't mother say you might? Now don't talk to me, Matilda."
"Uncle Jared's got to go to Ware to buy the horse, and he can't take us."
"Oh, I forgot. Well, how can you go, then? You and Comfort had better sit down and play checkers, and be contented."
"We _could_ walk," ventured Matilda.
"Walk to Bolton? You couldn't."
"It's only three miles, and we'd drag each other on my sled."
Imogen frowned over a wrong pucker in the crimson tibet, and did not appreciate the absurdity of the last. "I do wish you wouldn't bother me, Matilda," said she. "If I don't get this dress done I can't go to the party to-night. I don't know what mother would say to your going to Bolton any such way."
"It wouldn't hurt us a mite. Do let us go, Imogen."
"Well, I'll tell you what you can do," said Imogen. "You can walk over there--I guess it won't hurt you to walk one way--and then you can ride home in the stage-coach; it comes over about half-past four.
I'll give you some money."
"Oh, that's beautiful! Thank you, Imogen," cried Matilda, gratefully.
"Well, run along and don't say another word to me," said Imogen, scowling over the crimson tibet. "Wrap up warm."
When they started, Matilda insisted upon dragging Comfort first in the sled. "I'll drag you as far as Dr. Hutchins's," said she. "Then you get off and drag me as far as the meeting-house. I guess that's about even."
It was arduous, and it is probable that the little girls were much longer reaching Bolton than they would have been had they traveled on their two sets of feet all the way; but they persuaded themselves otherwise.
"We can't be--a mite--tired," panted Matilda, as she tugged Comfort over the last stretch, "for we each of us rode half the way, and a mile and a half ain't anything. You walk that every day to school and back."
"Yes, I do," a.s.sented Comfort. She could not believe that she was tired, either, although every muscle in her body ached.
Bolton was a large town, and the people from all the neighboring villages went there to do their trading and shopping. There was a wide main street, with stores on each side; and that day it was full of sleighs and pungs and wood-sleds, and there were so many people that Comfort felt frightened. She had never been to Bolton without her father or mother. "Just look at all the folks," said she. And she had an uncomfortable feeling that they all stared at her suspiciously, although she did not see how they could know about the ring. But Matilda was bolder. "It's such a pleasant day that they're all out trading," said she. "Guess it'll storm to-morrow. Now we want to go to Gerrish's. I went there once with mother and Imogen to buy a silver spoon for Cousin Hannah Green when she got married."
Comfort, trailing the sled behind her, started timidly after Matilda.
Gerrish's was a small store, but there was a large window full of watches and chains and clocks, and a man with spectacles sat behind it mending watches.
The two little girls went in and stood at the counter, and a thin man with gray whiskers, who was Mr. Gerrish himself, came forward to wait upon them. Matilda nudged Comfort.
"You ask him--it's your ring," she whispered.
But Comfort shook her head. She was almost ready to cry. "You'd ought to when I'm giving you the dollar," whispered Matilda, with another nudge. Mr. Gerrish stood waiting, and he frowned a little; he was a nervous man. "Ask him," whispered Matilda, fiercely.
Suddenly Comfort Pease turned herself about and ran out of Gerrish's, with a great wail of inarticulate words about not wanting any ring.
The door banged violently after her. Matilda Stebbins looked after her in a bewildered way; then she looked up at Mr. Gerrish, who was frowning harder. "If you girls don't want anything, you'd better stay out of doors with your sled," said he. And Matilda trembled and gathered up the sled-rope, and the door banged after her. Then Mr.
Gerrish said something to the man mending watches in the window, and went back to his desk in the rear of the store.
Matilda could just see Comfort running down the street toward home, and she ran after her. She could run faster than Comfort. As she got nearer she could see people turning and looking curiously after Comfort, and when she came up to her she saw she was crying. "Why, you great baby, Comfort Pease," said she, "going along the road crying!"
Comfort sobbed harder, and people stared more and more curiously.
Finally one stout woman in a black velvet bonnet stopped. "I hope you haven't done anything to hurt this other little girl?" she said, suspiciously, to Matilda.
"No, ma'am, I ain't," replied Matilda.
"What's the matter, child?" said the woman in the black velvet bonnet to Comfort. And Comfort choked out something about losing her ring.
"Where did you lose it?" asked the woman.
"I don't k--n--o--w," sobbed Comfort.
"Well, you'd better go right home and tell your mother about it,"
said the stout woman, and went her way with many backward glances.
Matilda dragged her sled to Comfort's side and eyed her dubiously.
Comfort Pease and her Gold Ring Part 5
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Comfort Pease and her Gold Ring Part 5 summary
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