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Nelly grew very red. She did not like to hear Mr. Kleesman so spoken of. She opened her mouth to speak: then bit her lips, and remained quiet.
"What is it, Nelly?" said her father.
"Nothing, sir," replied Nelly: "only I don't think Mr. Kleesman is like that. He is very kind."
"Oh, yes, he's kind enough," said Mr. Scholfield: "he's a good-natured fellow. But it's all moons.h.i.+ne about his being the only one who can make a.s.says. There's a plenty of mines working here to-day that haven't ever had any a.s.say made except by the blow-pipe.
There's no use in paying a fellow three or four or five dollars for doing what you can do yourself."
"But that man said--" began Rob.
"Be quiet now, Rob," said Mr. March. "We won't talk any more about it now."
After Mr. Scholfield had gone away, Mr. March called Nelly out of the room.
"Come walk up and down in the lane with me, Nell," he said, "and tell me all about what happened at Mr. Kleesman's."
Then Nelly told her father all about it, from beginning to end.
"Upon my word, Nell," he said, "you seem to have studied the thing carefully. I should think you could almost make an a.s.say yourself."
"I guess I could if I had the cups and things," said Nelly: "I recollect every thing he did. But, papa, won't you let him take some ore from our mine, and let him see if it is good by his way? He won't ask us any thing: he said he was doing it every day, and he could put in one more cup as well as not. Oh, do, papa!"
"I'll think about it," said Mr. March.
That night he talked it over with Mrs. March, and she was as anxious as Nelly that he should let Mr. Kleesman make the a.s.say. This decided Mr. March; and the next morning he said to Nelly:--
"Well, Nelly, you shall have your way,--you and mamma. I will take some of the ore to your old friend. I shall go up with you to-morrow myself, and carry it. I do not like to send it by you."
"Oh, good! good!" cried Nelly, and jumped up and down, and ran away to find Rob and tell him that their father would walk into town with them the next day.
When Nelly walked into Mr. Kleesman's room, holding her father by the hand, she felt very proud. She had always thought her father handsomer and nicer to look at than any other man in the world; and, when she said to Mr. Kleesman, "Here is my father, sir," this pride was so evident in her face that it made Mr. Kleesman laugh. It did not make him love Nelly any less, however. It only made him think sadly of the little girl way off in Germany, who would have just as much pride in his face as Nelly did in her father's. Mr. Kleesman's love for Nelly made him treat Mr. March like an old friend.
"I am glad to see you here," he said. "I haf for your little girl von great friends.h.i.+p: she iss so goot. I say often to myself, she haf goot father, goot mother. She iss not like American childs I haf seen."
Mr. March was glad to have Nelly liked; but he did not wish to have her praised in this open way. So he said, very quickly:--
"Yes, Nelly is a good girl. I have come to talk to you, Mr.
Kleesman, about our mine: perhaps you have heard of it,--'The Good Luck.'"
"Yes: I hear it is goot mine, very goot," replied Mr. Kleesman. "I ask the child to bring me ore. I a.s.say it for you. It vill be pleasure to me."
"That is what I was going to ask you to do," said Mr. March. "I would like to know the exact truth about it before I go any farther.
Scholfield is pressing me to put in machinery; but I do not like to spend money on it till I am sure."
"Dat iss right," said Mr. Kleesman. "Vait! vait! It is always safe to vait. Haf you brought with you the ore?"
"Yes, I have it here," replied Mr. March, and took a small bag of it from his pocket. Mr. Kleesman examined it very carefully. His face did not look cheerful. He took piece after piece out of the bag, and, after examining them, tossed them on the table with a dissatisfied air.
"Is it all as dis?" he said.
"Yes, about like that," replied Mr. March.
Nelly watched Mr. Kleesman's face breathlessly.
"I know he don't think it is good," she whispered to Rob.
"I cannot tell till I make a.s.say," said Mr. Kleesman. "But I t'ink it not so very good. To-morrow I vill know. To-day I cannot do. I send you vord."
"Oh, no, you need not take that trouble," said Mr. March. "The children will be in day after to-morrow. They can call."
"No, I send you vord," repeated Mr. Kleesman. "I send you vord. Dere are plenty vays. I send you vord to-morrow night. Alvays men go past my door down to valley. I send you vord."
"What do you suppose is the reason he did not want us to call for it?" said Rob, as they walked down street.
"I know," said Nelly.
"What?" said Rob, sulkily. His pride was a little touched at Mr.
Kleesman's having so evidently preferred to send the message by some one else rather than by them.
"Because," said Nelly, "he is so kind he doesn't want to tell us to our face the mine isn't good."
"Oh, Nell!" exclaimed Rob, in a tone of distress, "do you think it's that?"
"I know it's that," said Nelly, calmly. "It couldn't be any thing else: you'll see. He doesn't believe that ore's good for any thing.
I know by his face he doesn't. I've seen him look so at ore before now."
"Oh, Nell!" cried Rob, "what'll we do if it turns out not to be good for any thing?"
"Do!" said Nelly; "why, we shall do just what we did before. But I'm awful sorry I ever told papa about the old thing. It's too mean!"
"We haven't spent any money on it: that's one good thing," said Rob.
"Yes," said Nelly; "and it's lucky we happened in at Mr. Kleesman's just when we did: there was some good luck in that, if there isn't any in the mine."
"But I don't see why you're so sure, Nell," cried Rob: "Mr. Kleesman said he couldn't tell till he tried it."
"Well, I _am_ sure," said Nelly; "just as sure's any thing. I know Mr. Kleesman thinks it isn't good for any thing; and if he thinks so just by looking at the stone, won't he think so a great deal more when he has burnt all the bad stuff away?"
"Well, anyhow, I shan't give up till he send 'vord,' as he calls it," said Rob. "I guess it'll be good for a little if it isn't for much. Everybody says Mr. Scholfield knows all about mines."
"You'll see!" was all Nelly replied; and she trudged along with a very grave and set look on her face. Mr. March was to stay in town later, to see some farmers who were coming in from the country: so the children had a lonely walk home. They stopped only a moment at Ulrica's and at Lucinda's; and both Ulrica and Lucinda saw that something was wrong. But Nelly had cautioned Rob to say nothing about the ore, and she herself said nothing about it; and so the two faithful hearts that loved them could only wonder what had happened to cloud the usually bright little faces.
When it drew near to sunset, the time at which the farmers who had been up into Rosita usually returned into the valley, Rob and Nelly went down the lane to the gate, to watch for the messenger from Mr.
Kleesman. The sun set, and the twilight deepened into dusk, and no messenger came. Several farm wagons pa.s.sed; and, as each one approached, the children's hearts began to beat quicker, thinking that the wagon would stop, and the man would hand out a letter; but wagon after wagon pa.s.sed,--and no letter. At last Nelly said:--
"It is so dark we really must go in, Rob. I don't believe it's coming to-night."
"Perhaps his furnace is broken again, and he couldn't do it to-day,"
said Rob.