Part 49 (1/2)

A reckless cabby, driving as only a French cabman can, came das.h.i.+ng down the boulevard directly in her path, while a heavily loaded omnibus going in the opposite direction was trying to get out of his way. Ever so many people screamed; and some one pulled Mr. King back as he started to pick her up. It was all done in an instant, and every person expected to see her killed, when a long, gaunt individual in a shabby coat dashed in among the plunging horses, knocked up the head of the one belonging to the reckless cabby, swung an arm at the other pair to divert their course, and before any one could quite tell how, he picked up Phronsie and bore her to the curbstone. Some one got Mr. King to the same point, too exhausted with fright to utter a word.

When he came out of his shock, the shabby man was standing by Phronsie, the crowd that saw nothing in the incident to promise further diversion, having melted away, and she was holding his hand, her little, mud-stained face radiant with happiness. ”Oh, Grandpapa,” she piped out, ”it's your poor man!”

”The d.i.c.kens it is!” exploded Mr. King. ”Well, I'm glad to find you.

Here, call a cab, will you? I must get this child home; that's the first thing to be done.”

The shabby man hailed a cab, but the cabman jeered at him and whirled by. So the old gentleman held up his hand; Phronsie all this time, strange to say, not mentioning her doll, and Mr. King, who wouldn't have cared if a hundred dolls had been left behind, not giving it a thought. Now she looked anxiously on all sides. ”Oh, where is she, Grandpapa dear?” she wailed, ”my child; where is she?”

”Never mind, Phronsie,” cried Mr. King, ”I'll get you another one to-morrow. There, get in the cab, child.”

”But I want her--I can't go home without my child!” And Phronsie's lip began to quiver. ”Oh, there she is, Grandpapa!” and she darted off a few steps, where somebody had set the poor thing on the pavement, propped up against a lamp-post.

”Oh, you can't carry her home,” said Mr. King, in dismay at the muddy object splashed from head to foot, with the smart pink cape that had been the cause of the disaster, now torn clear through the middle, by the hoof of a pa.s.sing horse. He shuddered at the sight of it. ”Do leave it, Phronsie, child.”

”But she's sick now and hurt; oh, Grandpapa, I can't leave my child,”

sobbed Phronsie, trying with all her might to keep the tears back. All this time the shabby man stood silently by, looking on.

A bright thought struck the old gentleman. ”I'll tell you, Phronsie,”

he said quickly. ”Give the doll to this man for one of his little children; they'll take care of it, and like it.”

”Oh, Grandpapa!” screamed Phronsie, skipping up and down and clapping her muddy little hands, then she picked up the doll and lifted it toward him. ”Give my child to your little girl, and tell her to take good care of it,” she said.

As Phronsie's French had long been one of Grandpapa's special responsibilities in the morning hours, she spoke it nearly as well as Polly herself, so the man grasped the doll as he had seized the money before.

”And now,” said Mr. King, ”you are not going to run away this time without telling me--oh, bless me!”

This last was brought out by an excited individual rus.h.i.+ng up over the curbstone to get out of the way of a pa.s.sing dray, and the walking-stick which he swung aloft as a protection, coming into collision with Mr. King's hat, knocked it over his eyes.

”A thousand pardons, Monsieur!” exclaimed the Frenchman, bowing and sc.r.a.ping.

”You may well beg a thousand pardons,” cried Mr. King, angrily, ”to go about in this rude fas.h.i.+on through the street.”

”A thousand pardons,” repeated the Frenchman, with more _empress.e.m.e.nt_ than before, and tripping airily on his way.

When old Mr. King had settled his hat, he turned back to the man. ”Now tell me--why--” The man was nowhere to be seen.

”It surely does look bad,” said the old gentleman to himself as he stepped into the cab with Phronsie; ”that man's children are a myth.

And I wanted to do something for them, for he saved Phronsie's life!”

This being the only idea he could possibly retain all the way home to the hotel, he held her closely within his arm, Phronsie chattering happily all the way, how the little girl she guessed was just receiving the doll, and wondering what name she would give it, and would she wash its face clean at once, and fix the torn and muddy clothes?

”Oh, yes, yes, I hope so,” answered Grandpapa, when she paused for an answer. Jasper came running out as the cab drove into the court. ”Oh!”

he exclaimed, at sight of Phronsie's face, then drove the words on his tongue back again, as he lifted her out.

”Give her to Polly to fix up a bit,” said his father. ”She's all right, Jasper, my boy, I can't talk of it now. Hurry and take her to Polly.”

And for the following days, Mr. King never let Phronsie out of his sight. A new and more splendid doll, if possible, was bought, and all sorts and styles of clothes for it, which Phronsie took the greatest delight in caring for, humming happily to herself at the pleasure the poor man's little girl was taking at the same time with her other child.

”Grandpapa,” she said, laying down the doll carefully on the sofa, and going over to the table where Mr. King had just put aside the newspaper, ”I do wish we could go and see that poor man and all his children--why didn't he tell us where he lived?”