Part 24 (1/2)
”Why?”
”Because! To ask me such a question as that. Aunt Candy's present!”
”Didn't you promise?”
”I did not promise to give my money any more than I usually give. I put a penny in every Sunday.”
”Then I don't see how you are going to help the Fund,” said Matilda. ”I don't see why you promised, either.”
”I promised, because I wanted to join the Band; and I am going to do everything I ought to do. I think I am just as good as you, Matilda.”
Matilda let the matter drop.
It did not appear what _she_ was going to do with her money. She always said she had not decided. Only, one day soon after the last meeting recorded, Matilda was seen in one of the small bookstores of Shadywalk.
There was not reading enough in the village to support a bookstore proper; so the books crept into one corner of the apothecaries' shops, with supplies of stationery to form a connecting link between them and the toilet articles on the opposite counter. To one of these modest retreats of literature, Matilda came this day and requested to look at Bibles. She chose one and paid for it; but she took a long time to make her choice; was excessively particular about the goodness of the binding and the clearness of the type; detecting an incipient loose leaf in one that was given her to examine; and finally going away perfectly satisfied. She said nothing about it at home; but of course Maria saw the new purchase immediately.
”So you have been to get a Bible!” she said. ”Did you get it with part of your twenty-five dollars?”
”Yes. I had no other money, Maria, to get it with.”
”I think you are very foolish. What do you want a Bible for?”
”I had none.”
”You could always read mine.”
”Not always. And Maria, you know, if we are to follow Jesus, we want to know very well, indeed, how He went and what He did and what He wants us to do; and we cannot know all that without a _great deal_ of study.”
”I have studying enough to do already, for my part,” said Maria.
”But you must study this.”
”I haven't a minute of time, Matilda--not a minute.”
”Then how will you know what to do?”
”Just as well as you will, perhaps. I've got my map of South America to do all over, from the beginning.”
”And all the rest of the cla.s.s?”
”Yes.”
”Then you are no worse off than the others. And Ailie Swan reads her Bible, I know.”
”I think I am just as good as Ailie Swan,” said Maria, with a toss of her head.
”But, Maria,” said Maria's little sister, leaning her elbows on the table and looking earnestly up at her.
”Well, what?”
”Is that the right way to talk?”