John Pendleton greeted Pollyanna to-day with a smile.
"Well, Miss Pollyanna, I'm thinking you must be a very forgiving
little person, else you wouldn't have come to see me again
to-day."
"Why, Mr. Pendleton, I was real glad to come, and I'm sure I
don't see why I shouldn't be, either."
"Oh, well, you know, I was pretty cross with you, I'm afraid,
both the other day when you so kindly brought me the jelly, and
that time when you found me with the broken leg at first. By the
way, too, I don't think I've ever thanked you for that. Now I'm
sure that even you would admit that you were very forgiving to
come and see me, after such ungrateful treatment as that!"
"I understand. Your tongue does get away with you once in a
while, doesn't it, Miss Pollyanna? I do thank you, however; and I
consider you a very brave little girl to do what you did that
day. I thank you for the jelly, too," he added in a lighter
voice.
"N-no, sir." She hesitated, then went on with heightened color.
"Please, Mr. Pendleton, I didn't mean to be rude the other day
when I said Aunt Polly did not send the jelly."
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.
"Well, well, this will never do at all! I didn't send for you to
see me moping this time. Listen! Out in the library--the big room
where the telephone is, you know--you 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, it'll be there if that
confounded woman hasn't 'regulated' it to somewhere else! You may
bring it to me. It is heavy, but not too heavy for you to carry,
I think."
"Oh, I'm awfully strong," 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 treasures--curios that John Pendleton had picked up
in years of travel--and 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:
"Well, I suppose it would be better to take a little boy in India
to bring up--one that didn't know any more than to think that God
was in that doll-thing--than it would be to take Jimmy Bean, a
little boy who knows God is up in the sky. Still, I can't help
wishing they had wanted Jimmy Bean, too, besides the India boys."
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:
"Little girl, I want you to come to see me often. Will you? I'm
lonesome, and I need you. There's another reason--and I'm going
to tell you that, too. I thought, at first, after I found out who
you were, the other day, that I didn't want you to come any more.
You reminded me of--of 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 wouldn't let him bring
you to me, I said no.
"But after a time I found I was wanting to see you so much
that--that the fact that I wasn't 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 you--little girl?"
"Why, yes, Mr. Pendleton," breathed Pollyanna, her eyes luminous
with sympathy for the sad-faced man lying back on the pillow
before her. "I'd love to come!"
After supper that evening, Pollyanna, sitting on the back porch,
told Nancy all about Mr. John Pendleton's wonderful carved box,
and the still more wonderful things it contained.
"And ter think," sighed Nancy, "that he showed ye all them
things, and told ye about 'em like that--him that's so cross he
never talks ter no one--no one!"
"Oh, but he isn't cross, Nancy, only outside," demurred
Pollyanna, with quick loyalty. "I don't see why everybody thinks
he's so bad, either. They wouldn't, if they knew him. But even
Aunt Polly doesn't like him very well. She wouldn't send the
jelly to him, you know, and she was so afraid he'd think she did
send it!"
"Probably she didn't call him no duty," shrugged Nancy. "But what
beats me is how he happened ter take ter you so, Miss
Pollyanna--meanin' no offence ter you, of course--but he ain't
the sort o' man what gen'rally takes ter kids; he ain't, he
ain't."
"But he did, Nancy," she nodded, "only I reckon even he didn't
want to--all 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 afterwards--"
"What's that?" interrupted Nancy, excitedly. "He said you
reminded him of something he wanted to forget?"
"He didn't tell me. He just said it was something."
"The mystery!" breathed Nancy, in an awestruck voice. "That's why
he took to you in the first place. Oh, Miss Pollyanna! Why,
that's just like a book--I've read lots of 'em; 'Lady Maud's
Secret,' and 'The Lost Heir,' and 'Hidden for Years'--all of 'em
had mysteries and things just like this. My stars and stockings!
Just think of havin' a book lived right under yer nose like this
an' me not knowin' it all this time! Now tell me
everythin'--everythin' he said, Miss Pollyanna, there's a dear!
No wonder he took ter you; no wonder--no wonder!"
"But he didn't," cried Pollyanna, "not till I talked to him,
first. And he didn't even know who I was till I took the
calf's-foot jelly, and had to make him understand that Aunt Polly
didn't send it, and--"
Nancy sprang to her feet and clasped her hands together suddenly.
"Oh, Miss Pollyanna, I know, I know--I know I know!" she exulted
rapturously. The next minute she was down at Pollyanna's side
again. "Tell me--now think, and answer straight and true," she
urged excitedly. "It was after he found out you was Miss Polly's
niece that he said he didn't ever want ter see ye again, wa'n't
it?"
"Oh, yes. I told him that the last time I saw him, and he told me
this to-day."
"I thought as much," triumphed Nancy. "And Miss Polly wouldn't
send the jelly herself, would she?"
"Then I've got it, sure! Now listen. Mr. John Pendleton was Miss
Polly Harrington's lover!" she announced impressively, but with a
furtive glance over her shoulder.
"Why, Nancy, he couldn't be! She doesn't like him," objected
Pollyanna.
Pollyanna still looked incredulous, and with another long breath
Nancy happily settled herself to tell the story.
"It's like this. Just before you come, Mr. Tom told me Miss Polly
had had a lover once. I didn't believe it. I couldn't--her and a
lover! But Mr. Tom said she had, and that he was livin' now right
in this town. And now I know, of course. It's John Pendleton.
Hain't he got a mystery in his life? Don't he shut himself up in
that grand house alone, and never speak ter no one? Didn't he act
queer when he found out you was Miss Polly's niece? And now
hain't he owned up that you remind him of somethin' he wants ter
forget? Just as if anybody couldn't see 'twas Miss Polly!--an'
her sayin' she wouldn't send him no jelly, too. Why, Miss
Pollyanna, it's as plain as the nose on yer face; it is, it is!"
"Oh-h!" breathed Pollyanna, in wide-eyed amazement. "But, Nancy,
I should think if they loved each other they'd make up some time.
Both of 'em all alone, so, all these years. I should think they'd
be glad to make up!"
"I guess maybe you don't know much about lovers, Miss Pollyanna.
You ain't big enough yet, anyhow. But if there is a set o' folks
in the world that wouldn't have no use for that 'ere 'glad game'
o' your'n, it'd be a pair o' quarrellin' lovers; and that's what
they be. Ain't he cross as sticks, most gen'rally?--and ain't
she--"
Nancy stopped abruptly, remembering just in time to whom, and
about whom, she was speaking. Suddenly, however, she chuckled.
"I ain't sayin', though, Miss Pollyanna, but what it would be a
pretty slick piece of business if you could get 'em ter playin'
it--so they would be glad ter make up. But, my land! wouldn't
folks stare some--Miss Polly and him! I guess, though, there
ain't much chance, much chance!"
Pollyanna said nothing; but when she went into the house a little
later, her face was very thoughtful.