Part 5 (1/2)
”Jim, don't, please! Do you suppose I got over here on the West Side to open a boarding-house? I guess not--yet!”
”But what shall we do?”
”Oh, we'll get along somehow. Don't worry!”
”Perhaps if you'd worry a little more, I wouldn't worry so much,”
sighed the man deeply.
”Well, mercy me, I must be going,” interposed the little dressmaker, springing to her feet with a nervous glance at her brother and his wife. ”I'm forgetting it ain't so near as it used to be. Good-night!”
”Good-night, good-night! Come again,” called the three on the veranda.
Then the door closed behind them, as they entered the house.
Meanwhile, walking across the common, Benny was entertaining Mr. Smith.
”Yep, they'll take ye, I bet ye--Aunt Jane an' Uncle Frank will!”
”Well, that's good, I'm sure.”
”Yep. An' it'll be easy, too. Why, Aunt Jane'll just tumble over herself ter get ye, if ye just mention first what yer'll PAY. She'll begin ter reckon up right away then what she'll save. An' in a minute she'll say, 'Yes, I'll take ye.'”
”Indeed!”
The uncertainty in Mr. Smith's voice was palpable even to eight-year-old Benny.
”Oh, you don't need ter worry,” he hastened to explain. ”She won't starve ye; only she won't let ye waste anythin'. You'll have ter eat all the crusts to yer pie, and finish 'taters before you can get any puddin', an' all that, ye know. Ye see, she's great on savin'--Aunt Jane is. She says waste is a sinful extravagance before the Lord.”
”Indeed!” Mr. Smith laughed outright this time. ”But are you sure, my boy, that you ought to talk--just like this, about your aunt?”
Benny's eyes widened.
”Why, that's all right, Mr. Smith. Ev'rybody in town knows Aunt Jane.
Why, Ma says folks say she'd save ter-day for ter-morrer, if she could.
But she couldn't do that, could she? So that's just silly talk. But you wait till you see Aunt Jane.”
”All right. I'll wait, Benny.”
”Well, ye won't have ter wait long, Mr. Smith, 'cause here's her house.
She lives over the groc'ry store, ter save rent, ye know. It's Uncle Frank's store. An' here we are,” he finished, banging open a door and leading the way up a flight of ill-lighted stairs.
CHAPTER III
THE SMALL BOY AT THE KEYHOLE
At the top of the stairs Benny tried to open the door, but as it did not give at his pressure, he knocked l.u.s.tily, and called ”Aunt Jane, Aunt Jane!”