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Then she answered triumphantly, "Playing with dolls--for one thing!"
"Dolls!" echoed Cornelius, laughing "Ho, ho! Dolls!"
"Well, I don't care, they are! Ain't they, Miss Lucy?"
"What is it, Elsie?" smiled the nurse across from her desk. "I was n't noticing."
"Dolls--ain't dolls more fun that playing ball?"
"That depends," answered Miss Lucy. "Cornelius or Moses would no doubt enjoy a game of ball better than the prettiest doll that ever was made; but you and Leonora and Corinne, for instance, would be unusual little girls if you did n't like dolls best."
Elsie and Cornelius faced each other with good-natured laughter.
"But I hain't got any doll," lamented Leonora.
"Nary a ball!" declared Cornelius, striking his reast dramatically. "So we're even!"
"My doll's 'most worn out," mourned Elsie. "Guess it will be quite by the time I get home, with Rosie and Esther bangin' it round."
"I want my dolly! I want my dolly!" piped up little Isabel.
"Where's my dolly?"
"Oh! May I get her the doll, Miss Lucy?" cried Elsie, running over to the chest of drawers where the ward's few playthings were kept.
Isabel trotted after, her face s.h.i.+ning with expectation.
Barely waiting for the desired permission, Elsie dived down into the lower drawer, and, after a brief search among torn picture-books and odds and ends of broken toy, brought forth a little battered rubber doll, which had lost most of its coloring and all of its cry.
But Baby Isabel hugged it to her heart, and at once dropped to the floor, crooning over her new treasure.
While the ward was thus discussing dolls, Mrs. Jocelyn and Polly, downstairs, in the little lady's room, were conversing on the same subject.
It was Polly's first visit since the night she had sung to Burton Leonard, and they had talked of that any many other things.
"It is too bad for you to be shut up in a hospital all this beautiful summer," lamented Mrs. Jocelyn. "If I were only well, I'd carry you off home with me this very day, and we'd go driving out in the country, and have woodsy picnics, and all sorts of delightful things."
"I went to ride yesterday with Dr. Dudley," said Polly contentedly.
"Yes, that's all right as far as it goes; but your pleasures are too serious ones for the most part. You ought to be playing with dolls--without a care beyond them. By the way, I never have seen you with a doll yet."
"No, I have n't any," replied Polly sadly.
"But you have them up in the ward, don't you?"
"There's a little old rubber doll that somebody left because it had n't any squeak--that's all."
"For pity's sake!" exclaimed the little lady. "The idea!--not a single doll that can be called a doll! I never heard anything like it! What do yo play with? Or don't you play at all?"
"Oh, yes!" laughed Polly. "We play games, and Dr. Dudley has given me two story-books, and there are some toy soldiers--but they're 'most all broken now. Then there's a big book with pictures pasted in it--that's nice! There was Noah's Ark; but a little boy threw Noah and nearly all the animals out of the window, and before we found them the rain spoiled some of them, and the rest were lost."
"I declare, it's pitiful!" sorrowed the little lady.
"Oh, we have a nice time!" smiled Polly.
"I believe you'd find something to enjoy on a desert, without a soul within fifty miles!" laughed Mrs. Jocelyn.
"Guess I'd be lonesome!" chuckled Polly. "But I always thought the sand would be lovely to play in."
"There, I told you so! Oh, you'd have a good time! But, child, have n't you any doll of your own--at home, I mean?"
"No, not now--I did have"--and pain crept into the sweet little face. "Mamma gave me a pretty doll the last Christmas-- oh, I loved it so! But after I went to live with Aunt Jane I helped her 'most all the time I was out of school, and I did n't have much time to play with Phebe--she was named for mamma.
Phebe was mamma's name. So finally Aunt Jane said that Maude might just as well have my doll. I felt as if I could n't give her up, but I had to--" Polly's lip quivered, and she swallowed hard.
"Poor little girl!" Mrs. Jocelyn put out a hand and gently stroked the bright curls. "How could anybody be so cruel!"
"I would n't have cared--much, if Maude had loved Phebe; but she did n't. She'd swing her round by one leg, and pull her hair when she got mad, or--anything. It seemed as if I could n't stant it!"
"Bless you! I don't see how you could!" sympathized her listener.
"Why, I had to!" replied Polly simply. "But one day--I never told anybody this, even Miss Lucy--one day Aunt Jane took the children to a circus, and I stayed home all alone. After they'd been gone about half an hour I went and dug as deep a hole as I could right in the middle of the clothes-yard--the woman upstairs was gone, too, so she could n't see me--and I wrapped Phebe up in a clean piece of paper, after I'd kissed her and bid her good-bye--and then I buried her! It 'most killed me to do it; but I could n't see any other way. Do you think it was dreadfully wicked?"
Polly looked up with wet, appealing eyes, and, to her amazement, saw that tears were running down the little lady's cheeks.
"Wicked!" Mrs. Jocelyn e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed. "If n.o.body ever did anything more wicked than that it would be a blessed sort of world! NO, dearest; I'm glad you were brave enough to do it--as glad as can be! But what did they say when the came home? Did n't they miss the doll?"
"Not that night; they were so excited about the circus. They never said a word till some time the next morning; then Maude wondered where Phebe was. I was dreadfully afraid they'd ask me if I knew; but Maude only looked for her a little while--she did n't love her a bit. Aunt Jane told her she was probably kicking round somewhere, and it served her right for not taking better of her. I guess they forgot all about her pretty soon; but I did n't--I never shall forget Phebe!"
Mrs. Jocelyn put her arm around Polly, and held her close, murmuring sympathetic words, which were very comforting to the bereft little mother.
"How did Phebe look?" asked Mrs. Jocelyn, at last. "Do you want to tell me?"
"Oh, yes! She had light curly hair, just like mine, and such pretty blue eyes and red cheeks! She was about _so_ tall,"
measuring a foot or more with her hands. "She had on a little white muslin dress, with blue sprigs on it--the other dresses Maude spoiled. She was just as sweet as she could be!" Polly's eyes almost brimmed over, and the lady gently led her thoughts to other things.
Soon Dr. Dudley came in, and then the little girl said good-bye.
On the stairs she heard her name called and looking back she saw Miss Hortensia Price, a bunch of sweet peas in her hand.
"I was bringing these to you," the nurse smiled. "How do you do, my dear? Are you feeling quite well again?"
"Oh, yes, thank you!" cried Polly, her little nose among the flowers. "Doctor would n't let me get up day before yesterday, and now I'm so rested I don't feel as if I'd ever get tired."
"I am very glad. I meant to come up to see you sooner, but I did n't wish to disturb you that first day, and yesterday I was extremely busy."
"Burton is not worse, is he?" asked Polly quickly.
"Oh, no! his is doing even better than we antic.i.p.ated. And at last he has decided to keep still--did Dr. Dudley tell you?"
"Yes," beamed Polly, "and I'm so glad!"