<h2 id="c12">CHAPTER XII. <br/><span class="small">A YOUNG MAN ENTERS</span></h2>
<p>It was early Sunday morning. “Since we are to
have your little friend, Nell Wiggin, to dinner today,”
Gloria remarked as the three sat at breakfast,
“suppose we also invite Miss Selenski. It will be a
nice change for her.”</p>
<p>“Good!” Bobs agreed. “That’s a splendid suggestion.
Now what is the program for the day?”</p>
<p>“Lena May has consented to tell Bible stories to
the very little children each Sunday morning at the
Settlement House,” Gloria said, “and I have asked
a group of the older girls who are in one of my
clubs to come over here this afternoon for tea and
a quiet hour around the fireplace. I thought it would
be a pleasant change for them, and I want you girls
to become acquainted with them so when I mention
their names you will be able to picture them. They
really are such bright, attractive girls! The Settlement
House is giving them the only chance that life
has to offer them.” Then, smiling lovingly at the
youngest, Gloria concluded: “Lena May has consented
to pour, and you, Bobs, I shall expect to
provide much of the entertainment.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_98">[98]</div>
<p>Roberta laughed. “Me?” she asked. “What am
I to do?”</p>
<p>“O, just be natural.” Gloria rose and began to
clear the table as she added: “Now, Bobs, since you
have to go after your friend, Miss Wiggin, Lena
May and I will prepare the dinner. We have it
planned, but we’re going to surprise you with our
menu.”</p>
<p>It was nine o’clock when Roberta left the Pensinger
mansion. It was the first Sunday that the
girls had spent on the East Side, and what a different
sight met the eyes of Bobs when she started down
the nearly deserted street, on one side of which were
the wide docks.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_99">[99]</div>
<p>Derricks were silent and the men who lived on
the barges were dressed in whatever holiday attire
they possessed. They were seated, some on gunwales,
others on rolls of tarred rope, smoking and
talking, and save for an occasional steamer loaded
with folk from the city who were sailing away for
a day’s outing, peace reigned on the waterfront, for
even the noise of the factory was stilled.</p>
<p>Turning the corner at Seventy-eighth Street,
Roberta was surprised to find that the boys’ playground
was nearly deserted. She had supposed that
at this hour it would be thronged. Just as she was
puzzling about it, a lad with whom she had a speaking
acquaintance emerged from a doorway and she
hailed him:</p>
<p>“You’re all dressed up, Antovich, aren’t you?
Just like a regular little gentleman. Are you going
to Sunday school?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, ma’am; that is, I donno as ’tis. Mr.
Hardinian doesn’t go to call it that. He calls it a
boys’ club by Treasure Seekers. There’s a clubhouse
over to Seventy-fifth Street. I say, Miss
Bobs, I wish for you to come and see it. I sure
wish for you to.”</p>
<p>Roberta assured the eager lad that she might look
in a little later, then bidding him good-bye, she
turned in to the model tenement house to ask Miss
Selenski to a one o’clock dinner.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_100">[100]</div>
<p>“Oh, how lovely and sunny and sweet smelling
your little home is,” Bobs said three minutes later
when she had been admitted to the small apartment,
the front windows of which overlooked the glistening
blue river.</p>
<p>“I like it,” was the bright reply of the slender
dark-eyed girl who lived there.</p>
<p>Bobs continued: “How I wish the rich folk who
built this would influence others to do the same.
Take that rookery across the street, for instance. It
looks as though a clap of thunder would crash it to
the ground, and it surely is a fire trap.”</p>
<p>“It is indeed that,” Miss Selenski said, “and
though I have reported it time and again, the very
rich man who owns it finds it such excellent income
property that he manages to evade an injunction to
have the place torn down. Some day we’ll have a
terrible tragedy of some kind over there, and then
perhaps—” she paused and sighed. “But, since we
can’t help, let’s talk of pleasanter things.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_101">[101]</div>
<p>Bobs then informed Miss Selenski that she had
come to invite her to dinner that day, and the little
agent of the model apartments indeed was pleased,
and replied: “Some time soon I shall invite you girls
over here and give you just Hungarian dishes.”
Then Bobs departed, and as she walked down Fourth
Avenue she glanced with rather an amused expression
up at the windows of the Detective Agency of
which, for so brief a time, she had been an employee.
She wondered what that good-looking young man,
James Jewett, had thought of her, for, surely, her
recent employer would have at once telephoned that
as a detective she had been “no good.” Then she
decided that she probably never would learn, as she
most certainly would not again return to the agency.
But little do we know what fate holds in store for us.</p>
<p>Nell Wiggin was ready and waiting, and she
looked very sweet indeed, with her corn yellow hair
fluffed beneath her neat blue hat, her eyes eager, her
cheeks, usually pale, flushed with this unusual excitement.
Her suit was neat and trim, though made of
cheap material.</p>
<p>“You’re right on time to the very minute, aren’t
you, Miss Dolittle?” she said happily, as she opened
the door to admit her new friend.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_102">[102]</div>
<p>“I sure am,” was the bright reply. “I’m the original
on the dot man, or young lady, I should say.”
But while Bobs was speaking there was misgivings
in her heart. She had forgotten to ask Gloria what
she ought to do about her name. Should they all
be Dolittles or Vandergrifts? She decided to take
Nell into her confidence and tell her the story of the
assumed name.</p>
<p>The listener did not seem at all surprised. “Lots
of girls who go out to work change their names,”
she said. “It’s just as honest as writing stories
under a different name, I should think.”</p>
<p>“That’s so,” Roberta agreed, much relieved. “A
nom-de-plume isn’t much different.”</p>
<p>“And so you are a detective?” Nell looked at her
friend with a little more awe, perhaps.</p>
<p>“Heavens no! Not now!” Bobs was quick to
protest. “I merely tried it, and failed.”</p>
<p>“Well, as it turned out, a detective wasn’t needed
on that particular case.” Nell was giving Bob the
very information she was eager to receive, but for
which she did not wish to ask. “The next day the
stolen book came back by mail.” Roberta knew that
she ought to register astonishment, but instead, she
laughed. “What did Mr. Queerwitz say?” she inquired.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_103">[103]</div>
<p>“Oh, they all put it down to conscience. That
does happen, you know. You read about conscience
money being returned every now and then in the
newspapers, but the strangest part was, that that
very afternoon Mr. Van Loon came in and said
that he had been able to obtain the first volume and
wished to purchase the second. Mr. Queerwitz was
out at the time, and so Miss Peerwinkle sold it to
him for five hundred dollars.”</p>
<p>Bobs wanted to laugh again. It amused her to
think that she had driven the better bargain, but she
thought it unwise to appear too interested in the
transaction, and so she changed the subject, and
together they walked up Third Avenue.</p>
<p>“How different it all is on Sunday,” Nell Wiggin
smiled happily at her new friend. She had indeed
spoken truly. The vendors’ carts were conspicuous
by their absence and the stores, if they were open,
seemed to be more for the social gathering of foreign
folk dressed in their gay best, than for active
business. Even the elevated trains thundered overhead
with much longer intervals in between, and
sometimes, for as long as fifteen minutes, the peace
of Sunday seemed to pervade that unlovely East
Side.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_104">[104]</div>
<p>Bobs, noting a Seventy-fifth Street sign, stopped
and gazed down toward the river, and sure enough
she saw a long, low building labeled Boys’ Club
House.</p>
<p>“Let’s go through this way to Second,” Bobs
suggested. In front of the clubhouse there was a
group of boys with faces so clean that they shone,
and one of these, leaving the others, raced up to the
girls, and taking his friend by the hand, he said:
“Oh, Miss Bobs, you did for to come, didn’t you?
Please stop in by the clubhouse. It will to please
Mr. Hardinian.”</p>
<p>Roberta’s smile seemed to convey consent, and she
found herself being rapidly led toward a wide-open
door. Nell willingly followed. The sound of band
practice came from within, but, when the lad appeared
with the smiling guest, a young man, who
had been playing upon a flute, arose and at once
advanced toward them. What dark, beautiful eyes
he had! “Why,” Roberta exclaimed in surprise.
“We saw Mr. Hardinian the very first day we came
in this neighborhood to live. He was helping a
poor sick woman who had fallen, and—” But she
could say no more, for the small boy was eagerly
telling the clubmaster that this was his “lady friend”
and that her name was Miss Bobs. The young man
smiled and said that he was always glad to have
visitors. “What a musical voice!” was Bobs’ thought.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_105">[105]</div>
<p>Then, turning to the girl who had remained by
the open door, she held out a hand. “This is my
friend, Nell Wiggin. I am sure that we will both
be interested in knowing of your work, Mr. Hardinian,
if you have time to spare.”</p>
<p>“Indeed I have, always, for those who are interested.”
Then the young man told them of his many
clubs for boys.</p>
<p>Roberta looked about with interest. “Why are
there so many wide shelves all around the walls, Mr.
Hardinian?” she asked at last.</p>
<p>The young man smiled. “If you will come some
night at ten o’clock you will find a little street urchin,
some homeless little fellow, tucked up in blankets
asleep on each of those shelves, as you call their
bunks. Maybe you do not know, but even in the
bitterest winter weather many small boys sleep out
in the streets or creep into doorways and huddle
together to keep warm. That is, they used to before
I came. Now they are all welcome in here.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_106">[106]</div>
<p>Roberta wished she might ask this wonderful
young man where he came from, but that would not
do on so slight an acquaintance, and so thanking
him and bidding him good morning, with Nell and
Antovich, she again started for home.</p>
<p>Though Roberta little dreamed it, the wonderful
young man had come into the drama of their lives,
and was to play a very important part.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_107">[107]</div>
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