<h2 id="c11">CHAPTER XI. <br/><span class="small">A QUEER GIFT</span></h2>
<p>True to her promise Roberta had gone on the
following afternoon to assist her new friends to
prepare for their voyage, but to her amazement she
found that they had departed, but the janitress living
in the basement was on the watch for the girl and
at once she ascended the stone stairs and inquired:
“Are you Miss Dolittle?”</p>
<p>Bobs replied that she was, and the large woman,
in a manner which plainly told that she had a message
of importance to convey, whispered mysteriously,
“Wait here!”</p>
<p>Down into the well of a stairway she disappeared,
soon to return with an envelope containing something
hard, which felt as though it might be a key.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_94">[94]</div>
<p>This it proved to be. The writing in the letter
had been painstakingly made, but the language was
not English, and Bobs looked at it with so frankly
puzzled an expression that the woman, who had been
standing near, watching curiously, asked: “Can I
read it for you?”</p>
<p>Strange things surely had happened since the Vandergrifts
had gone to the East Side to live, but this
was the strangest of all. It was hard for Roberta
to believe that she heard aright. The old man had
written that his entire stock was worth no more
than five hundred dollars, and since Roberta had
procured more than that sum for him, he was making
her a gift of the books that remained, and requested
that she remove them at once, as the rent on
the shop would expire the following day.</p>
<p>The janitress, with an eye to business, at once said
that her son, Jacob, was idle and could truck the
books for the young lady wherever she wished them
to go. It was two o’clock in the afternoon when this
conversation took place, and at five o’clock Gloria
and Lena May, returning from the Settlement
House, were amazed to see a skinny horse drawing
a two-wheeled ash cart stopping at the curb in front
of the Pensinger mansion. The driver was a
Hebrew lad, but at his side sat no less a personage
than Roberta, who beamed down upon her astonished
sisters.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_95">[95]</div>
<p>After a moment of explanation the three girls
assisted the boy Jacob to cart all the books to one
of the unoccupied upper rooms, and when he had
driven away Roberta sank down upon a kitchen
chair and laughed until she declared that she ached.
Lena May, busy setting the table for supper, merrily
declared: “Bobs, what a girl you are to have adventures.
Here Glow and I have been on the East Side
just as long as you have, and nothing unusual has
happened to us.”</p>
<p>“Give it time,” Roberta remarked as she rose to
wash her hands. “But now I seem to have had a
new profession thrust upon me. Glow, how would
it do to open an old book shop out on the front
lawn?”</p>
<p>“I’ll prophesy that these books will fill a good need
some day, perhaps, when we’re least expecting it,”
was Gloria’s reply.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_96">[96]</div>
<p>Then, as they sat eating their evening meal together
and watching the afterglow of the sunset on
the river, that was so near their front door, at last
Bobs said: “Do see those throngs of poor tired-out
women trooping from the factory. Now they will
go to the Settlement House and get their children, go
home and cook and wash and iron and darn and—”
she paused, then added, “How did we four girls ever
manage to live so near all this and know nothing
about it? I feel as though I had been the most
selfish, useless, good-for-nothing——”</p>
<p>“Here, here, young lady. I won’t allow you to
call my sister such hard names,” Glow said merrily
as she rose to replenish their cups of hot chocolate.
Then, more seriously, she added as she reseated herself:
“Losing our home seemed hard, but I do believe
that we three are glad that something happened
to make us of greater use in the world.”</p>
<p>“I am,” Lena May said, looking up brightly. She
was thinking of the sandpile at the Settlement House
over which she had presided that afternoon.</p>
<p>And Gloria concluded: “I know that I would be
more nearly happy than I have been since our mother
died, if only I knew where Gwendolyn is.”</p>
<p>And where was Gwendolyn, the proud, selfish girl
who had not tried to make the best of things? Gloria
would indeed have been troubled had she but known.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_97">[97]</div>
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