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The Five Little Peppers and How They Grew
By Margaret Sidney
Chapter Eight: Joel's Turn
"But let patience have her perfect work,
that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing."
~ James 1:4 ~
ell" - Mrs. Pepper's tone was unusually
blithe as she stepped into the kitchen - "you've had a nice time, I suppose
- what in the world!" And she stopped at the bedroom door.
"Oh, mammy, if you'd been here!" said Joel, while Polly sat still, only
holding on to her eyes as if they were going to fly out. "There's been a big
woman here; she came right in - and she talked awfully! And Polly's been a - crying',
and her eyes ache dreadfully - and - "
"Been crying!" repeated Mrs. Pepper, coming up to poor Polly. "Polly
been crying!" she still repeated.
"Oh, mammy, I couldn't help it," said Polly. "She said" - and
in spite of all she could do, the rain of tears began again, which bade fair to be
as uncontrolled as before. But Mrs. Pepper took her up firmly in her arms as if she
were Phronsie and sat down in the old rocking chair and just patted her back.
"There, there," she whispered soothingly. "Don't think of it, Polly;
mother's got home."
"Oh, mammy," said Polly, crawling up to the comfortable neck for protection,
"I ought not to mind, but 'twas Miss Jerusha Henderson, and she said - "
"What did she say?" asked Mrs. Pepper, thinking perhaps it to be the wiser
thing to let Polly free her mind.
"Oh, she said that we ought to be doing something; and I ought to knit, and
- "
"Go on," said her mother.
"And then Joel got naughty; oh, mammy, he never did so before, and I couldn't
stop him," cried Polly, in great distress. "I really couldn't, mammy -
and he talked to her, and he told her she wasn't ever coming here again."
"Joel shouldn't have said that," said Mrs. Pepper, and under her breath
something was added that Polly even failed to hear. "But no more she isn't!"
"And, mammy," cried Polly, and she flung her arms around her mother's neck
and gave her a grasp that nearly choked Mrs. Pepper, "ain't I helpin' you some,
mammy? Oh! I wish I could do something big for you. Ain't you happy, mammy?"
"For the land's sakes!" cried Mrs. Pepper, straining Polly to her heart.
"Whatever has that woman - whatever could she have said to you? Such a girl
as you are, too!" cried Mrs. Pepper, hugging Polly and covering her with kisses
so tender that Polly, warmed and cuddled up to her heart's content, was comforted
to the full.
"Well," said Mrs. Pepper when at last she thought she had formed between
Polly and Joel about the right idea of the visit. "Well, now we won't think
of it ever anymore 'tisn't worth it, Polly, you know."
But poor Polly! And poor mother! They both were obliged to think of it. Nothing could
avert the suffering of the next few days caused by that long flow of burning tears.
"Nothing feels good on 'em, mammy," said Polly at last, twisting her hands
in the vain attempt to keep from rubbing the aching, inflamed eyes that drove her
nearly wild with their itching. "There isn't any use in trying anything."
"There will be use," energetically protested Mrs. Pepper, bringing another
cool bandage, "as long as you've got an eye in your head, Polly Pepper!"
Dr. Fisher's face, when he first saw the change that the fateful visit had wrought,
and heard the accounts, was very grave indeed. Everything had been so encouraging
on his last visit that he had come very near promising Polly speedy freedom from
the hateful bandage.
But the little Pepper household soon had something else to think of more important
even than Polly's eyes, for now the heartiest, the jolliest, of all the little group
was down - Joel. How he fell sick they scarcely knew, it all came so suddenly. The
poor, bewildered family had hardly time to think before delirium and perhaps death
stared them in the face.
When Polly first heard it, by Phronsie's pattering downstairs and screaming, "Oh,
Polly, Joey's dre - ad - ful sick, he is!" she jumped right up and tore off
the bandage.
"Now, I will help mother! I will, so there! and in another minute she would
have been up in the sickroom. But the first thing she knew, a gentle but firm hand
was laid upon hers, and she found herself back again in the old rocking chair, and
listening to the doctor's words, which were quite stern and decisive.
"Now, I tell you," he said, "you must not take off that bandage again.
Do you know the consequences? You will be blind! And then you will be a care to your
mother all your life!"
"I shall be blind anyway," said Polly despairingly, "so 'twon't make
any difference."
"No, your eyes will come out of it all right, only I did hope" - and the
good doctor's face fell - "that the other two boys would escape. But" -
and he brightened up at sight of Polly's forlorn visage - "see you do your part
by keeping still."
But there came a day soon when everything was still around the once happy little
brown house; when only whispers were heard from white lips, and thoughts were fearfully
left unuttered.
On the morning of one of these days, when Mrs. Pepper felt she could not exist an
hour longer without sleep, kind Mrs. Beebe came to stay until things were either
better or worse.
Still the cloud hovered, dark and forbidding. At last, one afternoon when Polly was
all alone, she could endure it no longer. She flung herself down by the side of the
old bed and buried her face in the gay patched bed quilt.
"Dear God," she said, "make me willing to have anything" - she
hesitated - "yes, anything happen; to be blind forever, and to have Joey sick,
only make me good."
How long she stayed there she never knew, for she fell asleep - the first sleep she
had had since Joey was taken sick. And little Mrs. Beebe coming in found her thus.
"Polly," the good woman said, leaning over her, "you poor, pretty
creeter, you. I'm goin' to tell you somethin' - there, there, just to think! Joel's
goin' to get well!"
"Oh, Mrs. Beebe!" cried Polly, tumbling over in a heap on the floor, her
face, as much as could be seen under the bandage, in a perfect glow. "Is he
really?"
"Yes, to be sure; the danger's all over now," said the little old lady,
inwardly thinking, "If I hadn't a - come!"
"Well, then, the Lord wants him to," cried Polly in rapture, "don't
he, Mrs. Beebe?"
"To be sure, to be sure," repeated the kind friend, only half understanding.
"Well, I don't care about my eyes, then," cried Polly, and to Mrs. Beebe's
intense astonishment and dismay, she spun round and round in the middle of the floor.
"Oh, Polly, Polly!" the little old lady cried, running up to her. "Do
stop! The doctor wouldn't let you! He wouldn't really, you know! It'll all go to
your eyes."
"I don't care," repeated Polly in the middle of a spin, but she stopped
obediently. "Seems as if I just as soon be blind as not, it's so beautiful Joey's
going to get well!"
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