Chicken Soup for the Little Souls: 3 Colorful Stories to Warm the Hearts of Children

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Chicken Soup for the Little Souls: 3 Colorful Stories to Warm the Hearts of Children Page 2

by Jack Canfield


  “I’ve just made cookies,” she said. “Will you help me eat a few?”

  Miss Maggie was the best sitter I’d ever had, and I’d had a lot. Mom called her my adopted grandmother, but I didn’t know you could adopt a person so old.

  “Tell me a story from when you were little,” I begged Miss Maggie for the gazillionth time.

  “Wonderful idea! What should the story be about today?” she asked between sips of hot cocoa.

  I tried to think up a new story-starter. Miss Maggie’s stories were the best. “I know!” I said. “Tell me about your favorite toy.”

  Miss Maggie thought for a moment, then frowned. “I should warn you: This one isn’t a happy story.”

  “It’s okay. Tell me,” I said.

  “On my eighth birthday, I opened a present that I will never forget. She was the most beautiful doll I had ever seen. Her big blue eyes opened and closed on a real china face. She wore a fancy white dress with lace trim, and her long brown hair was tied back with a pink satin ribbon. Owning a doll like that was a dream come true for a poor farm girl like me. I knew my parents couldn’t afford fine things. How much they must have loved me to have spent their hard-earned money on such a luxury!”

  Miss Maggie got a misty look in her eyes. “Dolls back then were very fragile—their faces were made of the most delicate china. I still remember how magical it felt just to hold her. My mother lit the candles on my birthday cake and called me to the kitchen.

  “I laid her down gently on the hallway table. But as I went to join my family for my birthday song, we heard the crash. I knew without looking that it was my precious doll! Her lacy dress had hung from the table just enough for my baby sister to reach up and pull on it. When I ran to the hall, there was my doll, her face smashed to pieces. My mother tried to glue her up, but it couldn’t be done. She was gone forever.”

  I had never seen a look like that on Miss Maggie’s face. I wrapped my arms around her neck and hugged her tight. The rest of the day we practiced my spelling words and played games, but I couldn’t stop thinking about how unhappy Miss Maggie had looked remembering her broken doll.

  Later that night, Mom said, “Saturday is Miss Maggie’s birthday. Why don’t you and I bake her a cake and bring it over there?”

  “Oh, Mom, that’s perfect!” I said. “Miss Maggie was sad today, and that’s just the thing to cheer her up!”

  The next day after school, I found an even better thing. I was walking to Miss Maggie’s, just like always, when I saw a doll in the window of Mulligan’s Collectibles. She looked really old and she had on a white lacy dress. Her hair was blond, not brown, and there was no pink satin ribbon, but I thought Miss Maggie might like her anyway.

  I went in and asked Mr. Mulligan, “The doll in the window—do her eyes open and close?”

  Mr. Mulligan said, “Yes, they do. But that’s not a doll for little girls like you. That’s an antique. Grown-ups collect them.”

  “Oh, it’s not for me. I want to buy that doll for my friend, Miss Maggie,” I explained.

  “That’s an awfully expensive present. Maybe Miss Maggie would like one of these embroidered hankies instead.” Mr. Mulligan held up a dumb white handkerchief with flowers on it.

  “How much for the doll?” I asked him in my most grown-up voice.

  “Well, she’s not in the best shape. I suppose I could let you have her for thirty-five dollars.”

  My eyes bugged out about a mile. Where would I ever get thirty-five dollars?

  That night, I tried Mom. “May I have thirty-five dollars to buy Miss Maggie a birthday present?” I asked, real casual.

  Mom laughed. “It’s sweet that you want to buy a gift for your friend. But I’m sure the birthday cake we’re making will be enough.”

  I begged and pleaded, but the best I could get out of Mom was: “If you really want to give Miss Maggie a gift that badly, we’ll go shopping on Saturday morning. But we can’t afford to spend thirty-five dollars. I’m sorry, darling, but we just can’t.”

  I knew no other gift would do, so I emptied my elephant bank and counted my money. I had exactly eight dollars and forty-nine cents.

  It was already Thursday. There was no time to save up any more. I put the eight dollars and forty-nine cents in a sock and folded it up. I had a plan, but I wasn’t sure it would work.

  On Friday after school, I went to see Mr. Mulligan.

  “I really need that doll, Mr. Mulligan,” I said. “I have eight dollars and forty-nine cents to pay you right now, and I will help out in your store every weekend until I have paid the rest of the money, which will probably be forever.”

  Mr. Mulligan scratched his head. “After you asked about that doll yesterday, I went to take another look at her. And it’s the darndest thing—she’s more damaged than I thought. One of my workers must have laid her head on some wet wood stain. The back of her hair is just ruined. I don’t know who’s going to pay much for her now. I reckon if you need her that badly, I can consider eight dollars and forty-nine cents a fair price.”

  “You’ve got a deal!” I shouted.

  When Mr. Mulligan took down the doll, and showed me her “ruined” hair, I got the best idea ever!

  The time passed slowly at Miss Maggie’s that afternoon. When she asked me what was in the bag, I told her it was a secret and she mustn’t look inside.

  “Aren’t you mysterious today?” she teased.

  When I got home, I raced to my room and unwrapped the doll. I took out my brown magic marker. I laid the doll down and spread out her hair on a piece of construction paper.

  Then, very, very carefully, I colored all of her blond hair brown. The stained part disappeared and she was even more like the doll Miss Maggie remembered!

  There was only one thing missing. I took my favorite and only party dress out of my closet and laid it on my bed. There, right at the neck, was a pink satin ribbon.

  I cut it off with my safety scissors, being careful to cut just the threads that held it on, and not the dress. I tied it in the doll’s new brown hair. She was perfect! But what would Mom say when she found out about my dress?

  On Saturday, we went to see Miss Maggie.

  “Ellie, what a surprise!” she said. For once, I think she meant it.

  Mom and I marched in, singing, “Happy birthday to you . . .” I could hardly wait till the song was over to give Miss Maggie her present!

  Miss Maggie carefully pulled back the tissue paper. When she finally saw the doll, her eyes filled up with tears.

  “Ellie,” she whispered, “where on Earth . . . ”

  “Is she like the doll that got broken?” I asked.

  “She is exactly like my doll,” Miss Maggie said, without once taking her eyes off the present. “But where did you ever find her and how did you ever afford her?”

  Mom was looking at me like she wanted to know the same thing, so I told them both the whole story. When I got to the part about my dress, I asked Mom, “Are you mad?”

  Mom squeezed my hand and her voice cracked when she told me, “No, sugar, I’m not mad.”

  A tear ran down Miss Maggie’s face and she said, “Now I know how it is possible that this doll looks just like the one I held in my arms exactly eighty years ago today. Both dolls were gotten from pure love. And love, wherever it comes from, always looks the same.”

  The cake was delicious, and Miss Maggie said it was her favorite birthday yet.

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  copyright © 2012 Chicken Soup for
the Soul Publishing, LLC, Lisa McCourt, Pat Grant Porter, Bert Dodson, and Mary O’Keefe Young

  ISBN: 978-1-4532-8029-4 (ePub)

  Cover design by Andrea C. Uva

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