Polly: A New-Fashioned Girl by L. T. Meade (rooftoppers .TXT) đ
- Author: L. T. Meade
Book online «Polly: A New-Fashioned Girl by L. T. Meade (rooftoppers .TXT) đ». Author L. T. Meade
There was a delicious pause, then the Doctor said, quietly:
âIn short, Maria, you have never come across such absolutely wicked children as the Maybrights and Dalrymples?â
âNo, Andrewânever! never!â
âIt is lucky they are not your children?â
âThank Heaven!â
âWould it not be well to leave them to me? I am accustomed to them.â
âYes; I wash my hands of you all; or noânot quite of you allâI heap coals of fire on your head, Andrew; I offer to relieve you of the charge of Daisy Rymple.â
âOf Flower?âbut she is one of the worst of us.â
Here Flower ran over, crouched down by the Doctor, and put one of her hands into his.
âBut I will be good with you,â she said with a half-sob.
âHear her,â said the Doctor. âShe says she will be good with me. Perhaps, after all, Maria, I can manage my own children better than any one else can.â
âDaisy is not your childâyou had better give her to me.â
âI canât part with Flower; she is an excellent reader. I am a blind man, but she scarcely allows me to miss my eyes.â
Flower gave a low ecstatic sob.
âAnd you will allow her to part with valuable gems like this?â
âThanks to you, Maria, she has recovered her diamond.â
âAndrew, I never met such an obstinate, such a misguided man! Are you really going to bring up these unfortunate children without a chaperon?â
âI think you must allow us to be good and naughty in our own way.â
âFather is looking very tired, Aunt Maria,â here whispered Polly.
âMy dear, I am never going to fatigue him more. Andrew, I wash my hands of your affairs. Daisy, take your diamond. At least, my little precious dog, I have recovered you. We return to Bath by the next train.â
âHelen, hereâs a letter.â
âYes. Who is it for?â
âI think itâs for us all. See: âthe Misses Maybright and Miss Dalrymple.ââ
âWell, whereâs Flower? We canât open it till Flower comes down. It must beâyes, it must be about father! You know it was yesterday his eyes were to be operated on.â
âAs if I didnât know it, Nell! I never closed my eyes last night. I felt nearly as bad as that awful day a year ago now. I wish I might tear open this envelope. Where is Flower? Need we wait for her?â
âIt would be unkind not to wait! No one feels about father as Flower does.â
âDavid, please call her this instant!â
David flew out of the room, and Polly began to finger the precious letter.
âItâs thick,â she said; âbut I donât think thereâs much writing inside. Yes,â she continued, âFlower is certainly very sensitive about father. Sheâs a dear girl. All the same, Iâm sometimes jealous of her.â
âOh, dear Polly! why?â
âFather thinks so much of her. Yes, I know itâs wrong, but I do feel a little sore now and then. Not often though, and never when I look into Flowerâs lovely eyes.â
âShe is very sweet with father,â said Helen. âIt seems to me that during this past year she has given up her very life to him. And did you ever hear any one read better?â
âNo, thatâs one of the reasons why Iâm devoured with jealousy. Donât talk to me about it, itâs an enemy I havenât yet learnt to overcome. Ah! here she comes.â
âAnd Fly, and the twins!â echoed Helen. âHereâs a letter from father, Flower. At least, we think so. Itâs directed to us and to you.â
A tall, very fair girl, with soft, shining eyes, and a wonderful mane of yellow hair came up and put her arm round Pollyâs neck. She did not smile, her face was grave, her voice shook a little.
âOpen the letter, Helen,â she exclaimed impatiently.
âDonât tremble so, Flower,â said Polly.[Pg 166]
But she herself only remained quiet by a great effort, as Helen unfastened the thick envelope, opened the sheet of paper, and held it up for many eager pairs of eyes to read:
âMy Children:âI see again, thank God.
âYour Father and loving Friend.â
âThere!â said Polly. âOh, I canât talk about it. Flower, you are silly to cry. Will no one dance a hornpipe with me? Iâll choke if I donât laugh. Youâre the one to dance, Fly. Why, you are crying, too. Ridiculous! Whereâs the letter? Letâs kiss it all round. Thatâll make us better. His own blessed writing! Isnât he a darling? Was there ever such a father?â
âOr such a friend?â exclaimed Flower. âI said long ago, and I say again now, that heâs the best man in the world, and I do really think that some day heâll turn me into a good girl.â
âWhy, youâre the nicest girl I know now,â said Polly.
And then they kissed each other.
THE END
1. Punctuation has been normalized to contemporary standards.
2. Frontispiece relocated to after title page.
3. Typographic errors corrected in original:
p. 7 aways to always (âalways did thinkâ)
p. 8 breat-and-butter to bread-and-butter
p. 102 nuseries to nurseries (âto the nurseriesâ)
p. 154 by to my (âjealous of my influenceâ)
p. 159 life to like (âlooked like artificial flowersâ)
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