Abbott, Jane - Keineth

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by Keineth(Lit)


  "And you love music?"

  "Oh--most of anything in the world. Sometimes Daddy would take me to

  the big opera house to hear music and it seemed, when I heard it, as

  though I was floating right away. Then we'd go home and I'd make up

  more music and tell them a story on the piano and sometimes Daddy could

  guess the story almost. Tante used to shake her head and Daddy would

  say, 'Leave her alone--she knows more than we do.' I don't know what he

  meant, but some day I shall study hard and try to be a great musician.

  Daddy said-I should-only he said I must wait until my body grew as

  strong as my spirit."

  "Keineth, my dear, do you know what a precious trust has been given

  you? God gives to some of His children great gifts--they are in trust

  for Him! You must care for it and guard it and keep it and see that it

  is bestowed generously upon many! Music is one of the most precious

  things in this world--and to create it is a great power!"

  Keineth, with puzzled eyes, tried to understand. Mrs. Lee patted her

  hand.

  "How your mother would have loved to hear what these fingers can do!

  She had a nature that was like a song in its sweetness. But your father

  is right; before all else you must build up this little body of yours!"

  "What did he mean, Aunt Nellie?"

  "He wants you to run and play games and grow strong. And you must not

  be discouraged and unhappy if you can't keep up just yet with Peggy and

  Billy and the others. Remember, while they've been racing their legs

  off you've been doing other things. If Peggy _can_ beat you at tennis,

  you just ask her to play one of her pieces for you! Poor Peg, her

  fingers are all thumbs! Everything evens up in this funny world,

  child."

  "You're so wonderful, Aunt Nellie! I did fed as if Peggy didn't like me

  because I couldn't do things as well as she can, but if she'll help me

  learn to swim real well and beat Billy just once at tennis, I'll help

  her with her music!"

  "A fine idea, Keineth! And then sometimes, when Peggy perhaps wants to

  do something that you don't care about, I will help you write down the

  music you play. Some day we will surprise them all--you and I will have

  a secret!"

  Keineth clapped her hands eagerly. "Oh, I have wished I could! It'll be

  such fun! I'll send it to my father! You _are_ wonderful, Aunt Nellie."

  The child threw her arms about Mrs. Lee's neck in a burst of joy.

  "Remember, now! No discouraged heart because you can't get a ball over

  the net or stand on your head in the water!"

  That evening an east wind blowing up with a fine, driving rain, gave an

  excuse for a fire in the big fireplace. And as they sat around it;

  Alice on the arm of her mother's chair, Barbara close to her father, a

  little silent, because Carol Day _had_ beaten her; Peggy and Keineth on

  the floor side by side, and Billy and his dog sprawled near the door,

  Mrs. Lee told the children the story of the little boy who went each

  day to his attic room to play on the old piano there; how one day, the

  sound of the music reaching the ears of people below, they crept one by

  one to the dark stairway to listen. Then in wonder they brought others

  and even more. These foolish folk thought it was a spirit who came to

  the attic room and made the music, but finally one of them crept closer

  and opened the door and found the little boy!

  "I know, Mother," cried Barbara, "it was Mozart!"

  "Yes, it was Mozart, who, when he grew older, made music that will last

  as long as this world. Keineth, will you play for us, dear?"

  Keineth, with a very red face, walked bravely to the piano. But her

  heart was happy and her fingers tingled with the music she felt. With

  the firelight dancing across the darkened room it seemed like the old

  library at home and as if Daddy must be sitting close to her with

  Madame Henri nodding in her chair near the window!

  They were silent when she had finished. Barbara sighed-as though the

  music had made her sad; Billy said something under his breath that

  sounded like "Gee!" and Mrs. Lee patted Peggy's hand. She had found

  time for a little talk with Peggy about Keineth.

  "Oh, I think you're wonderful!" Peggy cried now to Keineth, running to

  her and linking her hand in Keineth's arm. "I wish I could play one bit

  as well as that----"

  After the children had gone to bed Mr. and Mrs. Lee sat for a long time

  in the room lighted only by the flames of the fire. Somehow the music

  seemed to linger about them.

  "Isn't this world funny, William--" Mrs. Lee stared into the blaze. "If

  that child had not lived that funny, lonely life in that big house with

  no one but the queer governess, that gift of hers might never have

  developed! I wonder what the future may have in store for her?"

  "Above all--let us hope--health and happiness!"

  CHAPTER VII

  ALICE RUNS AWAY

  "I've got something to show you all," Billy announced at the luncheon

  table. He wore the satisfied air of one who has accomplished something

  long desired.

  "What've you got?" Peggy answered promptly.

  "Guess!" Billy fixed his attention upon his plate in a tantalizing way.

  "Oh, I know--it's a new sending set! I guessed first!"

  "You didn't guess, either! I'll bet you saw Joe Gary bring it!"

  "What is a sending set?" asked Keineth.

  "I'll show you afterwards," Billy answered, with a kindness meant to

  crush Peggy.

  Mr. Lee broke in: "But I thought you had to save three dollars more

  before you could buy one--"

  Billy flushed. "Well, this ain't exactly mine--yet, Dad! Joe Gary made

  it and he's going to make another and he says I can use this one until

  I want to buy it or at least for a while. I have that dollar I was

  saving and my onions and radishes."

  "Good gracious!" Barbara laughed, "I suppose we'll live on onions and

  radishes three times a day."

  Mr. Lee turned to Billy. "Don't you think, son, it might be better to

  wait until you have the money to pay Joe? And a little more practice?"

  "Billy's always spending money on all those foolish things," Barbara

  put in. "He doesn't seem to want to save and help you!"

  "Well, say, don't you think those things are foolish! You read all

  sorts of things how wireless messages save people--"

  "On sinking ships, yes!"

  "Well, lots of other ways, too!" Billy's face blazed with wrath. "I'll

  just show you some time!"

  "Molly Sawyer's brother knows a boy who is a wireless operator in the

  Canadian Army and sends messages from trees!"

  "And if I have a little more practice I can try the troop exams next

  winter and get a certificate!"

  "Billy," broke in his mother, "run over to Mrs. Clark's and tell Alice

  to come home at once. Nora rang the bell for her but she did not hear."

  "Why, Mother," said Peggy, suddenly alarmed, "Janet Clark was with us

  this morning!"

  Janet Clark was Alice's closest playmate. The two families lived in

  adjoining houses. Mrs. Lee had returned to the house at noon and Nora

  had told her that sh
e had last seen Alice running through the gate

  between the two gardens.

  It was only a worried moment before Billy came home to say that Alice

  had not been there that morning! It was not like Alice to be long away

  from home. Mrs. Lee, hiding her concern, directed the children to scour

  the neighborhood.

  Not until they had come back from the club and beach and neighboring

  houses and reported no sign of her did the mother and father openly

  express alarm. The children saw a look come into their mother's face

  that it had never worn before! Like a shock its agony pierced into each

  child's heart! Very white, Billy rushed off to enlist the services of

  his boy friends for a thorough search of the beach. Barbara, with her

  father, started in the motor for Middletown. "I will stay here near the

  telephone," Mrs. Lee had said in answer to her husband's quick,

  concerned look.

  Peggy came running down the stairs.

  "Her bathing suit is gone, Mammy, and her pink apron--"

  "And her penny bank is broken!" Keineth held out in her hands the

  pieces of the china pig which had held Alice's collection of pennies.

  "It's all broken!" and, miserably, Keineth looked down at the

  fragments.

  "We will find her," said Mrs. Lee, bravely, putting an arm about each

  child. "You girlies must stay with me and help me."

  From Middletown Mr. Lee telephoned that they had found a clue. A child

  answering Alice's description had stopped at a small candy store and

  had purchased a selection of lolly-pops. She had paid for them in

  pennies. Someone in the store had seen her climb upon a trolley car

  bound for the city. Mr. Lee and Barbara were going on to the city.

  But at dusk they returned with no further news. In the crowd at the

  city station no one had seen the child! And Billy and his boy friends

  had found no trace upon the beach!

  "The police are working," the children heard their father say. Then

  Mrs. Lee suddenly sank limp against his arm and he led her away.

  "Courage--courage!" they heard him whispering.

  Nora laid a tempting meal upon the table and carried it away, for no

  one could eat a mouthful. Peggy had run to her room, where Keineth

  found her-her face buried deep in her pillow.

  "Oh," she sobbed, "I've been so mean to Allie lots of times and maybe

  she's dead somewhere and I can't ever tell her--"

  Keineth could offer small comfort, but the two locked their arms tight

  about one another and listened as though in the gathering darkness they

  might hear Alice's dear voice.

  Mr. Lee had rushed off again to the city after a whispered word to

  Barbara to stay close to her mother. Billy, his heart breaking, his

  eyes burning with the tears which his boyish pride would not allow him

  to show, and feeling the bitterness of his youth and his uselessness,

  slowly mounted the stairs to the corner of the attic which was his own

  particular den. The nickel of his beloved wireless apparatus gleamed at

  him through the darkness. Like a flash a hope sprang into his heart!

  Snatching up the phone he placed it upon his head, then ticked off his

  message, with call after call, in every direction!

  Now and then someone picked up his words--an unsatisfactory answer

  would come back. However, finding relief in doing something, Billy

  repeated his calls; listening intently for any answer.

  Just as to his mind vividly came the picture of Alice's hurt face,

  when, that very morning, he had roughly taken from her his old stamp

  book, his own call came through the air. Every nerve in his body

  tingled a response! It was Freddie Murdock--they had often talked back

  and forth across the lake from where, on the Canadian shore, Freddie

  Murdock's father had a cottage. And the words that Freddie was sending

  to him by the waves of the air were: "Sister found--all right!"

  Shouting the good news Billy rushed three steps at a time down the

  stairs straight into his mother's arms! She clung to him, burying the

  boy's face, down which the tears were streaming, close to her heart.

  And while they clung together, crying and half laughing, Barbara

  reached her father on the telephone to tell him how Alice had been

  found!

  Two hours later Genevieve brought the little truant home. Mrs. Lee

  carried her off for a warm bath and bed, while Nora, her eyes very red

  with weeping, fixed her a bowl of hot milk toast.

  "I coaxed the story from her," Mr. Lee told his wife and Barbara later;

  "that child wanted to see Midway Beach! Do you remember how hard she

  begged to go with the Clarks when they went over and how unreasonable

  she thought we were in refusing? Well, she just made up her mind to go

  alone. She took her bathing suit and her pennies. She walked from here

  to Middletown, took the trolley there for the city. On the trolley she

  saw a party of picnickers headed for Midway Beach and she just walked

  along with them. It was very simple. She watched the merry-go-rounds

  and spent all her pennies! When it began to grow dark she laid down on

  the beach and fell asleep. They found her there, later, after young

  Murdock had given the alarm of a child lost! She didn't seem to be

  frightened until they handed her over to a policeman to take her back

  to the city; then the seriousness of her runaway must have come to her.

  I do not think you will have to worry that she will do it again."

  Up in her cot Alice lay wide awake. Beside her Peggy and Keineth,

  exhausted by their anxiety, were breathing heavily. Below Alice could

  hear voices that she knew were her father's and mother's. She wished

  awfully that her mother would come to her! With a child's instinct she

  had read on her mother's face the suffering she had caused. Suddenly

  she felt terribly alone--perhaps none of them would love her now or

  want her back. She had been so very, very naughty. She clutched the

  blanket with frightened fingers.

  The voices ceased below and in a moment Alice saw her mother's face

  bending over her. With a little cry she threw her arms about the dear

  neck.

  "Oh, Mammy, Mammy," she cried, in a passion of sobs, "say you love

  me--say you want me back! I don't ever, ever, ever want to go away

  alone! I thought it would be fun--I didn't think I was so naughty. Hold

  me close, Mammy----" exhausted, she hid her face.

  "Oh, my dear--my baby," the mother breathed in comfort and forgiveness,

  and the loving arms did not relax their hold until the child was fast

  asleep.

  "I think, Billy," said Mr. Lee, the next morning, "the family will

  present to you with their compliments the finest sending set we can

  find!"

  "And aren't they useful?" Billy cried in just triumph.

  CHAPTER VIII

  A PAGE FROM HISTORY

  For several days a peaceful quiet reigned at Overlook. Little Alice

  dogged her mother's footsteps, as though she could not bear one

  moment's separation; Barbara spent the greater part of her time at the

  golf club, coming home each day glowing with enthusiasm over the game

  and fired with a hope of winning the women's champions
hip title. Billy

  had no thought for anything but the new sending set which his father

  had ordered for him and which Joe Gary was helping him to install.

  Keineth, under Peggy's tutorage, was faithfully practicing at tennis,

  spending much time volleying balls back and forth across the net and

  trying to understand the technic of the game. Then each afternoon came

  a delicious dip into the lake, when Mrs. Lee would patiently instruct

  Keineth in swimming. They were gloriously happy days--seeming very

  care-free after the hours of agonizing concern over Alice; days that

  brought new color into the young faces and an added glow into the

  bright eyes.

  "Does Keineth know how we spend the Fourth of July?" Billy asked one

  evening.

  "I hate firecrackers!" Keineth shuddered. "We always went away over the

  Fourth to a little place out on Long Island."

  "We just have balloons and Roman candles in the evening because they

  are not dangerous," Peggy explained.

  "And then on the Fourth we always make our visit to Grandma Sparks."

  "Who is she?" asked Keineth. She had never heard them speak of Grandma

  Sparks.

  "Father calls her a page out of history."

  "Every man that had ever lived in her family has served his country--"

  "She isn't really our grandmother. Just a dear friend."

  Barbara explained further: "She has the most interesting little old

 

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