The first direct effect of the club
was far from pleasant to Edna, for she forgot all
about studying a certain lesson, and did not remember
about it till she and Dorothy met at school on Monday
morning, and then she was overcome with fear lest
she should be called upon to recite something of which
she knew scarcely anything. However, by dint of
peeps at the book between whiles, after devoting to
it all the time she had before school was called to
order, she managed to get through the recitation,
yet not without many misgivings and a rapid beating
of the heart when Miss Ashurst called upon her.
Edna was always such a conscientious child about her
lessons that Miss Ashurst rather overlooked the fact
that upon this occasion she was not quite as glib as
usual, and she took her seat with a feeling of great
relief, determining that she would not forget her
lessons another Saturday.
There was more than one opportunity
that day to exercise the rule of the G. R. Club, and
the girls of the Neighborhood Club, as they called
theirs, were a little surprised at the appearance of
good-will shown by the others.
“Oh, I know just what they are
up to,” Clara Adams told her friends; “they
want to get in with us and are being extra sweet.
I know that is exactly their trick. Don’t
you girls pay any attention to them. Of course
we could let Jennie Ramsey in, because she lives on
our street, but the others, we couldn’t any
more than we could Betty Lowndes or Jessie Hill.”
“Well, it seems to me if they
are good enough for Jennie Ramsey to go with they
are good enough for us,” returned Nellie Haskell.
“No, I’m not going to
have them,” replied Clara, “and if you
choose to go over to them, Nellie Haskell, you can
just make up your mind that I’ll have no more
to do with you.” So Nellie succumbed although
she did smile upon Dorothy when the two met and was
most pleasant when Edna offered to show her about
one of the lessons.
Agnes advised that the girls make
no secret of their club. “It is nothing
to be ashamed of, I am sure,” she said, “and
if any of the girls want to join it I am sure they
are quite welcome to.” And indeed it did
appeal so strongly to some of the older girls that
before the week was out several new members were enrolled,
and it was decided to change the time of meeting to
Friday afternoon so that those in the city might have
their convenience considered while the girls living
in the country could easily stay in till a later hour.
The little girls felt themselves rather
overpowered by the coming into their ranks of so many
older members, but on the other hand they felt not
a little flattered at being important enough to belong
to the same club, so as the rule worked both ways
it made it all right, especially as Betty Lowndes
and others were admitted and were no older than themselves.
“They may have more in number,”
said Clara when she was told of how the club was increasing,
“but we are more exclusive, my mother says.”
This remark made its impression as
Clara intended it should, though Nellie looked wistfully
across at where half a dozen little girls were joyously
eating their lunch and discussing the good times the
elder girls were planning. “You know,”
Agnes had told them, “if you want to become
a junior branch of the same club it will be perfectly
easy for you to do it. At the end of a month
you can decide, though Helen Darby and Florence Gittings
agree with me that there is no reason why we shouldn’t
all hang together. It will be more convenient
for one thing and we can take turns in arranging the
entertainment part. I don’t see why we
all shouldn’t enjoy some of the same kind of
things.”
“Oh, we’d much rather
stay in,” replied Edna. “At least
I would.”
“I would! I would!” came from all
the others.
Although there is a high and marked
difference between fifteen and eight or nine, in most
matters, in this of the club there appeared to be
a harmony which put them all on the same footing.
The older sisters were more ready to help the younger
ones with their lessons while the younger ones were
more eager to run on errands or to wait on the older
ones, in consequence there was a benefit all around.
Of course Miss Ashurst and Mr. Horner
were by no means unaware of what was going on and
they smiled to see how pleasant an atmosphere prevailed
in the school all except in the unfortunate Neighborhood
Club which they would have gladly disbanded.
“It will probably die of its own discontent,”
said Miss Ashurst to the principal, “I give it
just three months to exist for the girls are dropping
out one by one.”
Mr. Homer smiled and nodded his head.
He was a man of few words yet very little escaped
his keen eyes.
The next meeting of the G. R.’s
was even more successful than the first. A number
of things were discussed and the little girls learned
many things that they had not known before.
“Suppose Clara Adams did want
to come into the club or wanted to be friends I suppose
we’d have to be kind to her,” said Dorothy,
a little regretfully.
“Of course you’d have
to be kind to her,” said Helen Darby, “but
you wouldn’t have to clasp her around the neck
and hang on her words, nor even visit her. One
can be kind without being intimate.”
This was putting it in rather a new
light and the little girls looked at one another.
They had not easily distinguished the difference before
this.
“The same way about Mr. Horner,”
Helen went on, “you don’t have to get
down and tie his shoes, but if you do have a chance
to do something to make things pleasanter for him,
why just trot along and do it.” And Helen
nodded her head emphatically.
“Dear oh, me,” sighed
Florence, “we are getting our standards way up.
I should probably fall all over myself if I attempted
to do anything for him. I am almost scared to
death at the mere thought.”
“He won’t bite you,”
replied Helen, “and you don’t have to get
close enough to him to comb his eyebrows. What
I mean is that we can ’be diligent and studious’
as the old copy-books used to have it, speak well
of his school, and not carry tales home that will make
our families think we are martyrs and that he is an
ogre, or someone to be feared constantly.”
“Helen Darby! I’d
like to know who has been giving you all these new
ideas,” said Florence.
“Why, I think Mrs. Conway started
them by the way she talked to Agnes, and I have a
modest claim to some brains of my own, so I thought
out the rest and talked it over with father who put
things very clearly before me, and showed me that
school-girls are half the time silly geese who seem
to think their teachers are created for the mere purpose
of making their lives miserable. Father said
that the shoe was usually on the other foot, and that
the girls were much more liable to make the teachers’
lives miserable. That set me a-thinking.
Let me remark in passing that father says he thinks
our club is great, and he wants to have a hand in
furnishing the entertaining some time.”
This announcement made quite a ripple
of excitement, for Mr. Darby did nothing by halves
and it was expected that there would be a good time
for the G. R.’s when they met at Helen’s
house.
Edna kept in mind what had been said
about Uncle Justus and before very long came an opportunity
to prove her powers of doing him a kindness. It
was just before Thanksgiving that Mrs. Conway came
in one Thursday afternoon to see Aunt Elizabeth and
of course her own two little daughters as well.
Edna sat very close to her mother on the sofa, her
hand stroking the smooth kid glove she wore.
It was a queer thing to have her mother
for company, but it was very delightful, too.
“I hope you and Uncle Justus
can come out to take Thanksgiving dinner with us,”
said Mrs. Conway to her aunt.
“Thank you, my dear, but I am
afraid it is impossible,” was the response.
“I long ago promised to go to sister Julia’s,
and hoped Justus would go, too, but he insists that
he cannot possibly take the time, for it is something
of a trip. He says he has some school papers
he must attend to, and moreover, has promised to address
a meeting in the afternoon, so that it will be impossible.”
“I am very sorry,” returned
Mrs. Conway, “for we had quite counted on you
both. Perhaps Uncle Justus can take the time to
come to us even if he cannot go so far as Aunt Julia’s.”
Mrs. Homer shook her head. “I
am afraid not, but you can ask him. Julia will
be greatly disappointed, but you know Justus is nothing
if not conscientious and if he has made up his mind
he ought not to go, nothing will alter his decision.”
“What time is his meeting?” asked Mrs.
Conway.
“At half past two, I believe.”
“Oh, dear, then I am afraid
it will be difficult for him to get to us, or rather
to get away. We are to have dinner at two rather
than in the evening, partly on account of the children
and partly on account of the maids, to whom I have
promised the time after they have finished the necessary
work. There is a train at two-forty-five, but
that would be too late, and it takes nearly an hour
by the trolley cars.”
“Then I am afraid he will have
to dine alone,” said Mrs. Horner, “I don’t
suppose he has ever done such a thing in his life as
that, but it cannot be helped. Julia has few
opportunities of seeing her family and he insists
that I must not think of disappointing her on his account.”
Edna listened very soberly to all
this, and when it was learned later that nothing could
alter Uncle Justus’s decision, she felt very
sorry for him. She took occasion to open up the
subject herself that afternoon. “Uncle
Justus,” she asked, “did you ever eat Thanksgiving
dinner alone?”
Uncle Justus looked at her over his
spectacles. “Well, no, I cannot say that
I ever did.”
“Shall you like to do it?”
“No, I do not believe I shall
particularly enjoy it, but duty must come before pleasure,
you know.”
“I wish you were going to have dinner with us.”
“That would be very agreeable
to me, but I fear I cannot think of it upon this occasion.”
Edna sighed. She had hoped he
might reconsider it. When he had left the room
she went out into the kitchen to see Ellen of whom
she was very fond. “Ellen,” she said
“are you going to stay in and cook Uncle Justus’s
Thanksgiving dinner for him?”
“I am thot. It’ll
not be much of a job I’ll be havin’ ayther.”
“Why! Isn’t he going to have a real
Thanksgiving dinner?”
“She was tellin’ me this
mornin’ thot it would be aisy, and I cud
have me afthernoon the same as usual, for he’d
not be in. Says she, ’a bit av
a chicken will do and ye can make a pumpkin pie the
day before, so what with a few pertaties and a taste
of stewed tomats he’ll do bravely.”
“Oh dear!” Edna sighed
again as she thought of all that would be served at
her own home table. Her little face wore a very
serious and troubled look every time she looked at
Uncle Justus that evening and the next day at recess
she unburdened her heart to Dorothy and Jennie.
These three always ate their lunch together and they
took this opportunity for many a confidence.
“Girls,” Edna began smoothing
down her frock and folding her hands. “I
have a chance to do Uncle Justus a kindness and I can’t
make up my mind to do it. I’m afraid I’m
awfully selfish.”
Dorothy laughed. “I’d
like to see anybody who’s less so, wouldn’t
you, Jennie?”
“I certainly would. Edna, tell us about
it.”
“Well, you see Uncle Justus
has things to do so he can’t go with Aunt Elizabeth
to her sister’s and he hasn’t even time
to come to us for Thanksgiving, and he will have to
eat his dinner all alone, unless unless
I stay and keep him company.”
“Oh Edna, and you couldn’t
be with your family last year because you were here.”
Dorothy’s tones were almost awe-stricken.
“I know, and of course I am
dying to be at home, and that’s where the being
selfish comes in, I keep thinking how I should hate
to eat my dinner alone and every time I look at Uncle
Justus I feel so sorry for him I can hardly stand
it, then when I think of not going home I feel so
sorry for myself I can scarcely stand that.”
Both girls were silent. They
saw the opportunity for heroic sacrifice as well as
Edna did, but they could not advise her either way;
it was too weighty a question, though Jennie ventured,
“If he is going to be busy all the time you
would be all by yourself except at dinner.”
“Yes,” Edna nodded, “and
Ellen is going out after she gets the dishes done,
but I suppose I could go home after that. She
could put me on the trolley and I’d get home
in an hour. I thought about that.”
“So, then it wouldn’t
be like staying all day, would it?” said Dorothy,
brightening a little as she saw this much light upon
the matter.
“Yes, of course that would make
a great difference,” returned Edna.
“Or,” Jennie had a sudden
brilliant thought. “Oh, Edna, I wonder if
you couldn’t come to my house and stay all night
with me. I should be so delighted to have you
and I know mother would, too. We aren’t
to have our Thanksgiving dinner till six, so you could
have two.”
Edna looked quite happy as this plan
was suggested. What girl of nine does not delight
in such an experience as spending the night with a
friend? The thought of two Thanksgiving dinners,
though one might be rather a frugal one, had its charm,
too. “I think that would be perfectly lovely,”
she said, then after a moment’s thought, “but
you must ask your mother first and I’ll ask
mine.”
“I’ll ask her as soon
as I go home and will tell you at the club meeting
this afternoon, and then you can ask your mother when
you get home and let me know on Monday. I just
know what mother will say before I ask her.”
Then the bell rang and recess was
over, but Edna returned to her lessons very happy
at this solution of what had been a matter of deep
thought. It turned out just as Jennie had prophesied,
for she brought a veritable invitation to Edna that
afternoon in the shape of a little note, and she further
said that Mrs. Ramsey meant to make sure by writing
a formal request to Mrs. Conway, therefore Edna considered
the matter as good as settled.
She was full of the subject that afternoon
when she reached home. It was quite dark although
she and the others had taken the train which brought
them more quickly. The club meetings were so interesting
that it was hard to get away in time, but Mrs. Conway
was on the watch as the girls came in the gate.
Of course Edna had told Celia about all this, and
indeed it had been talked over at the club, all the
girls agreeing that it was a perfectly lovely thing
for Edna to do, so she came in quite exalted by all
the approval.
However, when she told her tale and
her mother saw that it was a case of genuine desire
to do a good deed, and that in the beginning it had
appeared in the light of a heavier sacrifice than could
be made easily, she felt that she could allow the
child to do as she wished, being sure that it was
not in a spirit of self-righteousness. And so,
on the evening before Thanksgiving after Uncle Justus
had returned from seeing Mrs. Horner safely on her
journey to her sister’s, he saw a little figure
watching for him at the window.
“Well, well, well, little girl,”
he said, “how is this? I thought you would
have been at home before now.”
“I’m not going till Friday,”
replied Edna smiling up at him. “I’m
going to stay and have Thanksgiving dinner with you.”
“What? What? What?”
Uncle Justus frowned and shook his head, but he took
off his spectacles and wiped them very vigorously.
“Yes, I am.” Edna
was very decided. “Mother said I might,
and oh, Uncle Justus, she knew Aunt Elizabeth would
be away and she thought maybe you and I would like
some of our Thanksgiving, so she has sent some of her
goodies, and we’re going to have a lovely time.
I am going to help Ellen set the table and wipe the
dishes.”
“But, my child, I cannot allow it. No,
no, no.”
“Oh, but, please.”
The more Uncle Justus denied, the more anxious was
Edna.
“But, my child, it would be
selfish and inconsiderate of me in the extreme to
take you away from your family on a holiday. I
know what it means to little people to have such treats,
and to an old fellow like me it will not make such
a difference.”
“But you told me you had never
had a Thanksgiving dinner alone.”
“That is quite true, but it
is no reason why I should call upon a little girl
like you to give up the holiday to me.”
“Don’t you want me to
stay?” asked Edna wistfully, and feeling a little
hurt lest after all, her sacrifice was not really needed.
Then Uncle Justus did a rare thing.
He sat down, put his arm around her and kissed her
on the cheek. “My dear little girl,”
he replied, “if that is the way you feel, I
can only say that I am delighted beyond measure that
you want to stay, and you will give me a greater cause
for thanksgiving than I have expected or deserved,”
and he drew her to his knee.
Edna smiled as she wondered what Florence
Gittings, or any of the other girls, for that matter,
would say if they could see her then so extremely
near the fierce eyebrows.
“But what will you do in the
afternoon?” asked Uncle Justus after a moment.
“I must go out early, you see.”
“I know that. At first
I thought I would get Ellen to put me on the cars
to go home. It would be quite safe, for I have
gone so many times, but Jennie Ramsey and her mother
have invited me to come there to stay all night.
I’ll come back here on Friday, if you would like
me to, Uncle Justus. I could stay till Aunt Elizabeth
comes home.”
Uncle Justus was silent for a moment.
He smoothed her hair thoughtfully and then he said
gently. “Your mother very kindly has asked
me to spend the week end with you all, so suppose
we go out together on Friday afternoon. I can
take my papers with me and do my necessary work on
Saturday there as well as here. Your little club
meets on Friday afternoon, doesn’t it?
I will meet you and Celia at the station in time for
the four-thirty train, which is the one you usually
take, isn’t it?”
Edna was surprised that Uncle Justus
should know all this about the club and the time of
their going home, but she didn’t say so.
“I think that will be a very nice plan,”
she told him. “I’ll come back here
on Friday morning and have dinner with you, and then
I can go to the club meeting. It is to be at
Helen Darby’s this time, and that is very near,
you know.” The twilight gathered about
the two and in the dim light Uncle Justus did not
appear in the least a person to stand in awe of, for
when Ellen came to call them to supper she was surprised
to see the little girl still sitting on the old man’s
knee, his arm around her and her head on his shoulder.