Part 3 (1/2)
”This.”
”Oh, one of those ninety-seven cent dolls!” responded Julia. ”They _are_ handsome for the price. Sawdust bodies, to be sure; but what fine heads?--red cheeks, splendid eyes, and hair that will comb out as well as that of some costlier ones, I'll be bound.”
”Ninety-seven cents!” repeated Katy, with a sigh. It was an unattainable sum, as far as she was concerned. The salesgirl remarked the sigh.
”Say, Cash, why don't you buy it?” she urged. ”Your mother'll let you keep part of your wages for yourself Christmas week, won't she? And you wouldn't get such another bargain in a doll if you hunted a year and a day. You'd better speak for it quick, though; for when the rush of trade comes, there's no knowing how long the lot will last.”
Katy shook her head. ”I wouldn't want to buy a Christmas present for myself,” she answered. ”But I was wis.h.i.+ng--only there is really no use in wis.h.i.+ng; still, just supposing there was--I was thinking if I could only get that doll for Ellie, how happy she would be. You know she has to be alone so much, and she gets awful blue sometimes; though she won't let on, 'cause it would fret mother. But the doll would be great company for her. We've neither of us ever had one.”
She continued to gaze longingly at the rosy beauty, while the salesgirl meditatively dusted the show-case.
”Stop! I'll tell you how you can manage to get it,” Julia said, suddenly. ”It's the rule of this store that on Christmas Eve, after all the customers are gone, each employee may choose as a present from the firm some article worth a quarter of his or her wages for the week.
Let's see: you're paid three dollars, aren't you?”
Katy nodded.
”That would count for seventy-five cents on the doll; then all you would have to put to it would be twenty-two cents. Couldn't you do that somehow?”
”Yes!” cried Katy, delighted. ”Sometimes I run errands for a dressmaker who lives in the block below us, and she gives me pennies, or once in a while a nickel. And when my aunt's husband comes to see us--he's a widder man and sorter rich; he drives a truck,--well, when he comes 'casionally, he gives each of us children as much as ten cents; and I guess he'll be round about Christmas time. Oh, yes, I'm almost sure I can make up the twenty-two cents!”
”But, then, when the doll is yours, won't you hate to give it away?”
queried Julia; for Katy already began to a.s.sume an air of possession.
”Oh, not to Ellie! And, you know, she'll be sure to let me hold it sometimes” was the ingenuous reply.
The quick tears sprang to the salesgirl's eyes, and she turned abruptly away, to arrange some dolls upon the shelves behind her.
”After all, love is better than riches,” she reflected, as the picture of the crippled child in the humble home arose in her mind, and she gave a sidelong glance at Katy's thin face and shabby dress.
”You will be sure to save this very doll for me, won't you?” pleaded the child.
”I can't put it aside for you,” she explained, ”because the floor-walker would not allow that; but I'll arrange so you will have one of the lot, never fear.”
”But I want this one,” declared Katy.
”My goodness gracious, you foolish midget! They're all as much alike as rows of peas in a pod,” exclaimed her friend, a trifle impatiently.
”No,” insisted the little girl. ”All the others have red painted buckles on their shoes, but this doll has blue buckles; and I'm sure Ellie would prefer blue buckles, 'cause we've often talked about it when we played choosing what we'd like best.”
”Well, well!” laughed Julia. ”All right, Katy: I'll save it, if I can.”
Satisfied by this promise, the child ran away; for customers began to come in, and to loiter would be to lessen her chance of gaining the treasure which to herself she already called Ellie's.
McNaughton & Co. did a great business within the next two weeks; the employees were ”fearfully rushed,” as they expressed it. Katy had no opportunity for further conversation with the sociable attendant at the end of the stationery counter, now given over to toys, upon the subject oftenest in her thoughts. She had been transferred to another department; but every day she took occasion to go around and look at the doll, to make sure that it was still there; and the kindly salesgirl always found time to give her an encouraging nod and a smile.
One afternoon, however, a few days before Christmas, when Julia returned from her lunch she met Katy, who was crying bitterly. The cause of her distress was soon told. A new girl had been put at the counter that morning; she knew nothing about Katy's doll, and now, as luck would have it, was just in the act of selling it to a big, bluff-looking man, who said he wanted it for his little daughter.
Julia rushed to her post. The man was upon the point of paying for the doll, and had decided that he would take the parcel with him.
”Have you seen the brown-eyed dolls?” she interposed, pleasantly. The other girl scowled at the interference with 'her sale,' but she persisted. ”The brown-eyed ones are considered the most desirable.”