<h2 id="c8">CHAPTER VIII. <br/><span class="small">A NEW FRIEND</span></h2>
<p>At that early hour there were no customers in
the shop, but Roberta saw three young women of
widely varying ages who were dusting and putting
things in order for the business of the day. Mr.
Queerwitz went at once to a tall, spare woman of
about fifty whose light, reddish hair suggested that
the color had been applied from without.</p>
<p>“Miss Peerwinkle,” he said rather abruptly,
“here’s the new clerk I was telling you about. You’d
better show her the lay of things before it gets
busy.”</p>
<p>Miss Peerwinkle turned, and her washed-out blue
eyes seemed to look down at Roberta from the great
height where, at least, she believed that her position
as head saleslady at the Queerwitz antique shop had
placed her.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_69">[69]</div>
<p>“Your name, Miss?” she inquired when the proprietor
had departed toward a rear door labeled
“No admittance.”</p>
<p>Bobs had been so amused by all that she had seen
that she hardly heard the inquiry, and when at last
she did become conscious of it, for one wild moment
she couldn’t recall her new name, and so she actually
hesitated. Luckily just then one of the girls called
to Miss Peerwinkle to ask her about a tag, and in
that brief moment Bobs remembered.</p>
<p>When the haughty “head lady” turned her coldly
inquiring eyes again toward the new clerk, Roberta
was able to calmly reply, “Dora Dolittle.”</p>
<p>Miss Peerwinkle sniffed. Perhaps she was thinking
it a poor name for an efficient clerk to possess.
Bobs’ sense of humor almost made her exclaim: “I
ought to have chosen Dora Domuch.” Then she
laughingly assured herself that <i>that</i> wouldn’t have
done at all, as she did not believe that there <i>was</i> such
a name and surely she <i>had</i> heard of Dolittle.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_70">[70]</div>
<p>Bobs’ soliloquy was broken in upon by a strident
voice calling: “Miss Dolittle, you’re not paying
any attention to what I am saying. Right here and
now, let me tell you day-dreaming isn’t permitted in
this shop. I was telling you to go with Nell Wiggin
to the cloakroom, and don’t be gone more’n five
minutes. Mr. Queerwitz don’t pay salaries for
prinking.”</p>
<p>Bobs was desperately afraid that she wouldn’t be
able to get through the morning without laughing,
and yet there was something tragic about the
haughtiness of this poor Miss Peerwinkle.</p>
<p>Meekly she followed a thin, pale girl of perhaps
twenty-three. The two who were left in the shop
at once began to express their indignation because
a new clerk had been brought in for them to train.</p>
<p>“If ever anybody looked the greenhorn, it’s her,”
Miss Peerwinkle exclaimed disdainfully, and Miss
Harriet Dingley agreed.</p>
<p>They said no more, for the new clerk, returning,
said, “What am I to do first?” Unfortunately
Roberta asked this of the one nearest, who happened
to be Miss Harriet Dingley. That woman actually
looked frightened as she said, nodding toward her
companion, “Don’t ask me. I’m not head lady.
She is.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_71">[71]</div>
<p>Again Bobs found it hard not to laugh, for Miss
Peerwinkle perceptibly stiffened and her manner
seemed to say, “You evidently aren’t used to class
if you can’t tell which folks are head and which
aren’t.” But what she really said was: “Nell Wiggin
will show you around, and do be careful you
don’t knock anything over. If you do, your salary’s
docked.”</p>
<p>“I’ll be very careful, Miss Peerwinkle,” the new
clerk said, but she was thinking, “Docked! My salary
docked. I know what it is to dock a coal barge, for
I have one in front of my home, but——”</p>
<p>“Oh, Miss Dolittle, please do watch where you go.
You almost ran into that Venetian vase.” There
was real kindness and concern in the voice of the
pale, very weary-looking young girl at her side, and
in that moment Bobs knew that she was going to
like her. “Poor little thing,” Bobs thought. “She
looks as though some unkind Fate had put out the
light that ought to be shining in her heart. I wish
that I might find a way to rekindle it.”</p>
<p>Very patiently Miss Nell Wiggin explained the
different departments in the antique shop. Suddenly
she began to cough and sent a frightened glance
toward the closed door that bore the sign “No
Admittance,” then stifled the sound in her handkerchief.
Nothing was said, but Roberta understood.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_72">[72]</div>
<p>The old furniture greatly interested Bobs. In her
own home there were many beautiful antiques.
Casually she inquired, “How does Mr. Queerwitz
manage to obtain so much rare old furniture?”</p>
<p>To her surprise, Nell Wiggin looked quickly
around to be sure that no one was near, then she
said: “I’d ought not to tell you, but I will if you’ll
keep it dark.”</p>
<p>“Dark as the deepest dungeon,” Roberta replied,
much puzzled by her comrade’s mysterious manner.
The slight girl drew close. “He makes it behind
that door that nobody’s allowed to go through,” she
said in a low voice; then added, evidently wishing to
be fair, “but that’s nothing unusual. Lots of dealers
make their antiques and the public goes on buying
them knowing they may not be as old as the tags
say. Here, now, are the old books, and at least they
are honest.”</p>
<p>Bobs uttered a cry of joy. “Oh, how I do wish
I could have charge of this department,” she said.
“I adore old books.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_73">[73]</div>
<p>There was a light in the pale face of little Miss
Wiggin. “I do, too,” she said. “That is, I love
Dickens; I never read much else.” Then, almost
wistfully, she added: “I didn’t have much chance
to go to school, but once, where I went to live, I
found an old set of Dickens’ books that someone
had left, and I’ve just read them over and over.
I never go out nights and the people living in those
books are such a lot of company for me.”</p>
<p>Again Bobs felt a yearning tenderness for this
frail girl, who was saying, “They’re all the friends
I’ve ever had, I guess.”</p>
<p>Impulsively the new clerk exclaimed, “I’ll be your
friend, if you’ll let me.” Just then a strident voice
called, “Miss Wiggin, forward!”</p>
<p>“You stay with the books,” Nell said softly, “and
I’ll do the china.”</p>
<p>Bobs watched the slight figure that was hurrying
toward the front, and she sighed, with tears close
to the hazel eyes, and in her heart was a prayer,
“May I be forgiven for the selfish, heedless years
I have lived. But perhaps now I can make up for
it. Surely I shall try.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_74">[74]</div>
<p>Roberta had been told by Mr. Jewett that she
must not reveal to anyone her real reason for being
at the antique shop, and, as Mr. Queerwitz had no
faith in the girl’s ability to waylay a pilferer, he did
not care to have Miss Nell Wiggin devote more time
to teaching her the business of selling antiques. This
information was conveyed by Miss Peerwinkle to
Nell, who was told to stay away from the new clerk,
with the added remark: “If she didn’t get on to the
ropes with one hour’s showing, she’s too stupid for
this business, anyhow.”</p>
<p>Why the head lady had taken such a very evident
dislike to her, Bobs could not understand, for surely
she was willing to do whatever she was told. Ah,
well, she wasn’t going to worry. “Worrying is what
makes one old,” she thought, as she mounted a small
step-ladder on casters that one could push along the
shelves. From the top of it she examined the books
that were highest. Suddenly she uttered an exclamation
of delight, then looked about quickly to be
sure that she had not been heard. Customers in the
front part of the store occupied the attention of
the three clerks, so Roberta reached for a volume
that had attracted her attention. It was indeed rare
and old, so very old that she wondered that the covers
did not crumble, and it had illumined letters. “Perhaps
they were made by early monks,” Bobs was
thinking. She sat down on the ladder and began
turning the fascinating pages that were yellow with
age. Suddenly she was conscious that someone stood
near her. She looked up to find the accusing gaze
of the head clerk fixed upon her.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_75">[75]</div>
<p>Bobs was startled into exclaiming: “Say, Miss
Peerwinkle, a cat has nothing on you when it comes
to walking softly, has it?”</p>
<p>The reply was frigidly given: “Miss Do-little,”
with emphasis, “you are supposed to dust the books,
not read them; and what’s more, that particular book
is the rarest one in the whole collection. There’s a
mate to it somewhere, and when Mr. Queerwitz finds
it, he can sell the two of them to Mr. Leonel Van
Loon for one thousand dollars in cool cash.”</p>
<p>Roberta was properly impressed, and replaced the
book; then, taking a duster, she proceeded to tidy
her department.</p>
<p>At eleven o’clock Bobs wondered if she ought to
wander about the shop and watch the occasional
customer. This she did, and was soon in the
neighborhood of Miss Wiggin. “You’re to go out
to eat when I do,” Nell told her.</p>
<p>“I’m glad to hear it,” was the reply.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_76">[76]</div>
<p>Promptly at noon Miss Wiggin beckoned and
said: “Come, Miss Dolittle, be as quick as you can.
We only have half an hour nooning, and every
minute counts. I go around to my room. You
might buy something, then come with me and eat it.”</p>
<p>Roberta could hardly believe what she had heard.
“Only half an hour to wash, go somewhere, eat your
lunch and get back?</p>
<p>“Why the mad rush?” she exclaimed. “Doesn’t
Mr. Queerwitz know there’s all eternity ahead
of us?”</p>
<p>A wan smile was the only answer. Miss Nell
Wiggin was not wasting time. She led the way to
the cloakroom, donned her outdoor garments, and
then, taking her new friend by the hand, she said:
“Hold fast to me. We’ll take a short cut through
the back stockroom. It’s black as soot in there when
it isn’t lit up. Mr. Queerwitz won’t let us burn
lights except for business reasons.”</p>
<p>Bobs found herself being led through a room so
dark that she could barely see the two walls of boxes
that were piled high on either side, with a narrow
path between.</p>
<p>They soon emerged upon a back alley, where huge
cans of refuse stood, and where trucks were continually
passing up and down or standing at the
back entrances of stores loading and unloading.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_77">[77]</div>
<p>“Now walk as fast as you can,” little Miss Wiggin
said, as away she went toward Fourth Avenue,
with Roberta close behind her. If Bobs had known
what was going to happen that noon, she would not
have left the shop.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_78">[78]</div>
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