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Authors: Louisa May Alcott

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“Just wait till I finish my chapter, and then I’ll come,” said pitiful Polly.

“All right,” returned the perjured boy, who had discovered that a broken head was sometimes more useful than a whole one,
and exulting in his base stratagem, he roved about the room, till Fan’s bureau arrested him. It was covered with all sorts
of finery, for she had dressed in a hurry, and left everything topsy-turvy. A well-conducted boy would have let things alone,
or a moral brother would have put things to rights; being neither, Tom rummaged to his heart’s content, till Fan’s drawers
looked as if someone had been making hay in them. He tried the effect of earrings, ribbons, and collars; wound up the watch,
though it wasn’t time; burnt his inquisitive nose with smelling salts; deluged his grimy handkerchief with Fan’s best cologne;
anointed his curly crop with her hair-oil; powdered his face with her violet-powder; and finished off by pinning on a bunch
of false ringlets, which Fanny tried to keep a profound secret. The ravages committed by this bad boy are beyond the power
of language to describe, as he revelled in the interesting drawers, boxes, and cases, which held his sister’s treasures.

When the curls had been put on, with much pricking of fingers, and a blue ribbon added,
à la
Fan, he surveyed himself with satisfaction, and considered the effect so fine, that he was inspired to try a still greater
metamorphosis. The dress Fan had taken off lay on a chair, and into it got Tom, chuckling with suppressed laughter, for Polly
was absorbed, and the bed-curtains hid his iniquity. Fan’s best velvet jacket and hat, ermine muff, and a sofa-pillow for
pannier
, finished off the costume, and tripping along with elbows out, Tom appeared before the amazed Polly just as the chapter ended.
She enjoyed the joke so heartily, that Tom forgot consequences, and proposed going down into the parlor to surprise the girls.

“Goodness, no! Fanny never would forgive us if you showed her curls and things to those people. There are gentlemen among
them, and it wouldn’t be proper,” said Polly, alarmed at the idea.

“All the more fun. Fan hasn’t treated you well, and it will serve her right if you introduce me as your dear friend, Miss
Shaw. Come on, it will be a jolly lark.”

“I wouldn’t for the world; it would be so mean. Take ’em off, Tom, and I’ll play anything else you like.”

“I ain’t going to dress up for nothing; I look so lovely, someone must admire me. Take me down, Polly, and see if they don’t
call me ’a sweet creature.’”

Tom looked so unutterably ridiculous as he tossed his curls and pranced, that Polly went off into another gale of merriment;
but even while she laughed, she resolved not to let him mortify his sister.

“Now, then, get out of the way if you won’t come; I’m going down,” said Tom.

“No, you’re not.”

“How will you help it, Miss Prim?”

“So.” And Polly locked the door, put the key in her pocket, and nodded at him defiantly.

Tom was a pepper-pot as to temper, and anything like opposition always had a bad effect. Forgetting his costume, he strode
up to Polly, saying, with a threatening wag of the head, “None of that. I won’t stand it.”

“Promise not to plague Fan, and I’ll let you out.”

“Won’t promise anything. Give me that key, or I’ll make you.”

“Now, Tom, don’t be savage. I only want to keep you out of a scrape, for Fan will be raging if you go. Take off her things,
and I’ll give up.”

Tom vouchsafed no reply, but marched to the other door, which was fast, as Polly knew, looked out of the three-story window,
and finding no escape possible, came back with a wrathful face. “Will you give me that key?”

“No, I won’t,” said Polly, valiantly.

“I’m stronger than you are; so you’d better hand over.”

“I know you are; but it’s cowardly for a great boy like you to rob a girl.”

“I don’t want to hurt you; but, by George! I won’t stand this!”

Tom paused as Polly spoke, evidently ashamed of himself; but his temper was up, and he wouldn’t give in. If Polly had cried
a little just here, he would have yielded; unfortunately she giggled, for Tom’s fierce attitude was such a funny contrast
to his dress that she couldn’t help it. That settled the matter. No girl that ever lived should giggle at him, much less lock
him up like a small child. Without a word, he made a grab at Polly’s arm, for the hand holding the key was still in her pocket.
With her other hand she clutched her frock, and for a minute held on stoutly. But Tom’s strong fingers were irresistible;
rip went the pocket, out came the hand, and with a cry of pain from Polly, the key fell on the floor.

“It’s your own fault if you’re hurt. I didn’t mean to,” muttered Tom, as he hastily departed, leaving Polly to groan over
her sprained wrist. He went down, but not into the parlor, for somehow the joke seemed to have lost its relish; so he made
the girls in the kitchen laugh, and then crept up the back way, hoping to make it all right with Polly. But she had gone to
grandma’s room, for, though the old lady was out, it seemed a refuge. He had just time to get things in order, when Fanny
came up, crosser than ever; for Trix had been telling her of all sorts of fun in which she might have had a share, if Polly
had held her tongue.

“Where is she?” asked Fan, wishing to vent her vexation on her friend.

“Moping in her room, I suppose,” replied Tom, who was discovered reading studiously.

Now, while this had been happening, Maud had been getting into hot water also; for when her maid left her, to see a friend
below, Miss Maud paraded into Polly’s room, and solaced herself with mischief. In an evil hour Polly had let her play boat
in her big trunk, which stood empty. Since then Polly had stored some of her most private treasures in the upper tray, so
that she might feel sure they were safe from all eyes. She had forgotten to lock the trunk, and when Maud raised the lid to
begin her voyage, several objects of interest met her eyes. She was deep in her researches when Fan came in and looked over
her shoulder, feeling too cross with Polly to chide Maud.

As Polly had no money for presents, she had exerted her ingenuity to devise all sorts of gifts, hoping by quantity to atone
for any shortcomings in quality. Some of her attempts were successful, others were failures; but she kept them all, fine or
funny, knowing the children at home would enjoy anything new. Some of Maud’s cast-off toys had been neatly mended for Kitty;
some of Fan’s old ribbons and laces were converted into dolls’ finery; and Tom’s little figures, whittled out of wood in idle
minutes, were laid away to show Will what could be done with a knife.

“What rubbish!” said Fanny.

“Queer girl, isn’t she?” added Tom, who had followed to see what was going on.

“Don’t you laugh at Polly’s things. She makes nicer dolls than you, Fan; and she can wite and dwar ever so much better than
Tom,” cried Maud.

“How do you know? I never saw her draw,” said Tom.

“Here’s a book with lots of pictures in it. I can’t wead the witing; but the pictures are so funny.”

Eager to display her friend’s accomplishments, Maud pulled out a fat little book, marked “Polly’s Journal,” and spread it
in her lap.

“Only the pictures; no harm in taking a look at ’em,” said Tom.

“Just one peep,” answered Fanny; and the next minute both were laughing at a droll sketch of Tom in the gutter, with the big
dog howling over him, and the velocipede running away. Very rough and faulty, but so funny, that it was evident Polly’s sense
of humor was strong. A few pages farther back came Fanny and Mr. Frank, caricatured; then grandma, carefully done; Tom reciting
his battle-piece; Mr. Shaw and Polly in the park; Maud being borne away by Katy; and all the schoolgirls turned into ridicule
with an unsparing hand.

“Sly little puss, to make fun of us behind our backs,” said Fan, rather nettled by Polly’s quiet retaliation for many slights
from herself and friends.

“She does draw well,” said Tom, looking critically at the sketch of a boy with a pleasant face, round whom Polly had drawn
rays like the sun, and under which was written, “My dear Jimmy.”

“You wouldn’t admire her, if you knew what she wrote here about you,” said Fanny, whose eyes had strayed to the written page
opposite, and lingered there long enough to read something that excited her curiosity.

“What is it?” asked Tom, forgetting his honorable resolves for a minute.

“She says, ‘I try to like Tom, and when he is pleasant we do very well; but he don’t stay so long. He gets cross and rough,
and disrespectful to his father and mother, and plagues us girls, and is so horrid I almost hate him. It’s very wrong, but
I can’t help it.’ How do you like that?” asked Fanny.

“Go ahead, and see how she comes down on you, ma’am,” retorted Tom, who had read on a bit.

“Does she?” And Fanny continued, rapidly: “As for Fan, I don’t think we can be friends any more; for she told her father a
lie, and won’t forgive me for not doing so too. I used to think her a very fine girl; but I don’t now. If she would be as
she was when I first knew her, I should love her just the same; but she isn’t kind to me; and though she is always talking
about politeness, I don’t think it
is
polite to treat company as she does me. She thinks I am odd and countrified, and I dare say I am; but I shouldn’t laugh at
a girl’s clothes because she was poor, or keep her out of the way because she didn’t do just as other girls do here. I see
her make fun of me, and I can’t feel as I did; and I’d go home, only it would seem ungrateful to Mr. Shaw and grandma, and
I do love them dearly.”

“I say, Fan, you’ve got it now. Shut the book and come away,” cried Tom, enjoying this broadside immensely, but feeling guilty,
as well he might.

“Just one bit more,” whispered Fanny, turning on a page or two, and stopping at a leaf that was blurred here and there, as
if tears had dropped on it.

“Sunday morning, early. Nobody is up to spoil my quiet time, and I must write my journal, for I’ve been so bad lately, I couldn’t
bear to do it. I’m glad my visit is most done, for things worry me here, and there isn’t anyone to help me get right when
I get wrong. I used to envy Fanny; but I don’t now, for her father and mother don’t take care of her as mine do of me. She
is afraid of her father, and makes her mother do as she likes. I’m glad I came though, for I see money don’t give people everything;
but I’d like a little all the same, for it is
so
comfortable to buy nice things. I read over my journal just now, and I’m afraid it’s not a good one; for I have said all
sorts of things about the people here, and it isn’t kind. I should tear it out, only I promised to keep my diary, and I want
to talk over things that puzzle me with mother. I see now that it is my fault a good deal; for I haven’t been half as patient
and pleasant as I ought to be. I will truly try for the rest of the time, and be as good and grateful as I can; for I want
them to like me, though I’m only ‘an old-fashioned country girl.’”

That last sentence made Fanny shut the book, with a face full of self-reproach; for she had said those words herself, in a
fit of petulance, and Polly had made no answer, though her eyes filled and her cheeks burned. Fan opened her lips to say something;
but not a sound followed, for there stood Polly looking at them with an expression they had never seen before.

“What are you doing with my things?” she demanded, in a low tone, while her eyes kindled and her color changed.

“Maud showed us a book she found, and we were just looking at the pictures,” began Fanny, dropping it as if it burnt her fingers.

“And reading my journal, and laughing at my presents, and then putting the blame on Maud. It’s the meanest thing I ever saw;
and I’ll never forgive you as long as I live!”

Polly said this all in one indignant breath, and then as if afraid of saying too much, ran out of the room with such a look
of mingled contempt, grief, and anger, that the three culprits stood dumb with shame. Tom hadn’t even a whistle at his command;
Maud was so scared at gentle Polly’s outbreak, that she sat as still as a mouse; while Fanny, conscience-stricken, laid back
the poor little presents with a respectful hand, for somehow the thought of Polly’s poverty came over her as it never had
done before; and these odds and ends, so carefully treasured up for those at home, touched Fanny, and grew beautiful in her
eyes. As she laid by the little book, the confessions in it reproached her more sharply than any words Polly could have spoken;
for she
had
laughed at her friend,
had
slighted her sometimes, and been unforgiving for an innocent offence. The last page, where Polly took the blame on herself,
and promised to “truly try” to be more kind and patient, went to Fanny’s heart, melting all the coldness away, and she could
only lay her head on the trunk, sobbing, “It wasn’t Polly’s fault; it was all mine.”

Tom, still red with shame at being caught in such a scrape, left Fanny to her tears, and went manfully away to find the injured
Polly, and confess his manifold transgressions. But Polly couldn’t be found. He searched high and low in every room, yet no
sign of the girl appeared, and Tom began to get anxious. “She can’t have run away home, can she?” he said to himself, as he
paused before the hat-tree. There was the little round hat, and Tom gave it a remorseful smooth, remembering how many times
he had tweaked it half off, or poked it over poor Polly’s eyes. “Maybe she’s gone down to the office, to tell pa. ’Tisn’t
a bit like her, though. Anyway, I’ll take a look round the corner.”

Eager to get his boots, Tom pulled open the door of a dark closet under the stairs, and nearly tumbled over backward with
surprise; for there, on the floor, with her head pillowed on a pair of rubbers, lay Polly in an attitude of despair. This
mournful spectacle sent Tom’s penitent speech straight out of his head, and with an astonished “Hullo!” he stood and stared
in impressive silence. Polly wasn’t crying, and lay so still, that Tom began to think she might be in a fit or a faint, and
bent anxiously down to inspect the pathetic bunch. A glimpse of wet eyelashes, a round cheek redder than usual, and lips parted
by quick breathing, relieved his mind upon that point; so, taking courage, he sat down on the bootjack, and begged pardon
like a man.

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