<h2 id="c9">CHAPTER IX. <br/><span class="small">A HURRIED LUNCH</span></h2>
<p>Fourth Avenue having been reached, Miss
Wiggin darted into a corner delicatessen store.
“What will you have for your lunch?” she turned
to ask of her companion. “I’m going to get five
cents’ worth of hot macaroni and a dill pickle.”</p>
<p>“Double the order,” Bobs said, and then she added
to the man who stood behind the counter: “I’ll also
take two ham sandwiches and two chocolate eclairs.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Miss Dolittle, isn’t that too much for you
to spend at noon?” This anxiously from pale,
starved-looking little Miss Wiggin.</p>
<p>At the Vandergrift table there had always been
many courses with a butler to serve, and in her heedless,
thoughtless way, Bobs had supposed that everyone,
everywhere, had enough to eat.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_79">[79]</div>
<p>It was a queer little smile that she turned toward
her new friend as she replied: “This being our first
lunch together, let’s have a spread.” Then she paid
the entire bill, which came to forty cents. “No,”
she assured the protesting Nell Wiggin, “I won’t
offer to treat every day. After this we’ll go Dutch,
honest we will! Now lead the way.”</p>
<p>Again in the thronged street, little Miss Wiggin
turned with an apology: “Maybe I oughtn’t to’ve
asked you to come to my room. Probably you’re
used to something better.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you believe it!” Bobs replied cheerily. “I
live in the shabbiest kind of a dump.” She did not
add that she had not as yet resided on New York’s
East Side for more than twenty-four hours, at the
longest, and that prior to that her home on Long
Island had been palatial. She was eager to know
how girls who had never had a chance were forced
to live. Miss Wiggin was descending rather rickety
steps below the street level. “Is your room in the
basement?” Bobs asked, trying to keep from her
voice the shock that this revelation brought to her.
No wonder there were no roses in the wan cheeks
of little Miss Wiggin.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_80">[80]</div>
<p>“Yes,” was the reply, “the caretakers of the
buildings all live in the basements, you know, and
Mrs. O’Malley, the janitor of this one, is a widow
with two little boys. She had a room to rent cheap
and so I took it.”</p>
<p>Then she led the way through a long, narrow,
dark hall. Once Bobs touched the wall and she
drew back shuddering, for the stones were cold and
clammy.</p>
<p>The little room to which Bobs was admitted
opened only on an air shaft, but there was sunlight
entering its one small window; too, there were white
curtains and a geranium in bloom on the sill.</p>
<p>“It’s always pleasantest at noon, for that’s the
only time that the sun reaches my window,” the
little hostess said, as she hurriedly drew a sewing
table out from behind the small cot bed, unfolded it
and placed the lunch thereon. Bobs’ gaze wandered
about the room, which was so small that its three
pieces of furniture seemed to crowd it. In one
corner was a bamboo bookcase which held the real
treasure of Miss Wiggin. Row after row of books
in uniform dark red binding. They were all there—Oliver
Twist, David Copperfield, Old Curiosity Shop
and the rest of them.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_81">[81]</div>
<p>“Nights it would be sort of dismal sitting in here
alone if ’twasn’t for those books,” the little hostess
confessed. “That’s a real good kerosene lamp I have.
It makes a bright light. I curl up on the couch as
soon as my supper’s eaten, and then I forget where
I really am, for I go wherever the story takes me.
Come, everything is ready,” she added, “and since
fifteen minutes of our time is gone already, we’d
better eat without talking.”</p>
<p>This they did, and Gloria would have said that
they gulped their food, but what can one do with
but half an hour for nooning?</p>
<p>They didn’t even stop to put away the table. “I’ll
leave it ready for my supper tonight,” Miss Wiggin
said, as she fairly flew down the dark, damp basement
hall.</p>
<p>Five minutes later they were entering the alley
door of the antique shop which had so fine an entrance
on Fifth Avenue.</p>
<p>“May the Fates save us!” Bobs exclaimed. “I do
believe we are one minute late. Are we in for execution
or dismissal?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_82">[82]</div>
<p>But that one minute had evidently escaped the
watchful eye of Miss Peerwinkle, for, when Nell
Wiggin and Roberta entered the shop, they saw the
portly Mr. Queerwitz pacing up and down and in
tragic tones he was exclaiming: “Gone! Gone!
I should have locked it up, but I didn’t think anyone
else knew the value of it.” Then, wheeling around,
he demanded of Bobs: “What good are you, anyway,
in the book department? One of the rarest
books I possess was stolen this morning right beneath
your very eyes, and——”</p>
<p>Little Nell Wiggin, usually so timid, stepped forward
and said: “It must have happened while we
were out at lunch. It couldn’t have been while we
were here, for nobody at all went down to the
books.”</p>
<p>Mr. Queerwitz paid no more attention to the
words of little Miss Wiggin than he would at that
moment to the buzzing of a fly.</p>
<p>“Dolittle, well-named, I should say,” he remarked
scathingly. How Roberta wished that she had
chosen a busier sounding name, but the deed was
done. One couldn’t be changing one’s name every
few hours, but——</p>
<p>Her revery was interrupted by: “What have you
to say for yourself?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_83">[83]</div>
<p>“Nothing,” was the honest reply.</p>
<p>“You are discharged,” came the ultimatum.</p>
<p>Bobs was almost glad. “Very well, Mr. Queerwitz,”
she replied, and turning, she walked briskly
toward the cloakroom.</p>
<p>When Bobs returned from the cloakroom, having
donned her hat and jacket, she was informed that
Mr. Queerwitz had just driven away, but that he
hadn’t said where he was going. Bobs believed that
he was going to report her uselessness as a detective
to her employer, James Jewett. Ah, well, let him
go. Perhaps after all she had made a mistake in
her choice of a profession. As she was passing she
heard the older women talking.</p>
<p>Miss Harriet Dingley was saying, “Now I come
to think of it, just after the girls went out to lunch,
I did see a man come in, but I thought he was looking
at china.”</p>
<p>The head lady shot a none too pleasant glance at
the other clerk as she said coldly, “Well, you aren’t
giving me any information. Didn’t I watch every
move he made like a cat watches a mouse hole? Just
tell me that!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_84">[84]</div>
<p>“Oh, yes, Miss Peerwinkle. I’m not criticizing
anything you did. But you remember when a boy
ran by shouting fire, we did go to the door to see
where the fire was and a minute later the man went
out and——”</p>
<p>“He went empty-handed,” the head-woman said
self-defendingly.</p>
<p>“I know he did. Now please don’t think I’m
criticizing you, but when he went out I noticed that
he was a hunch-back, and I’m certain that he didn’t
have a hump when he came in.”</p>
<p>“We’ll not discuss the matter further,” was said
in a tone of finality as Miss Peerwinkle walked away
with an air of offended dignity.</p>
<p>Bobs looked about for Nell, to whom she wished
to say good-bye. She was glad that the youngest
clerk was beyond the book shelves as Roberta was
curious to know which book had been taken. A gap
on the top shelf told the story. It was a rare old
book for which one thousand dollars had been offered
if its mate could be found.</p>
<p>“Whoever has taken the book has the other
volume. I’m detective enough to know that,” Roberta
declared. Then she turned to find little Miss Wiggin
standing at her side looking as sad as though something
very precious was being taken away from her.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_85">[85]</div>
<p>Impulsively Bobs held out both hands.</p>
<p>“Don’t forget, Nell Wiggin, that you and I are to
be friends, and what’s more, next Sunday morning
at ten o’clock sharp I’m coming down to get you and
take you to my home for dinner. How would you
like that?”</p>
<p>“Like it?” The dark eyes in the pale, wan face
were like stars. “O, Miss Dolittle, what it will mean
to me!”</p>
<p>Miss Harriet Dingley did nod when she heard
Bobs singing out “Good-bye,” but Miss Peerwinkle
seemed to be as deaf as a statue.</p>
<p>“I could laugh,” Bobs said to herself as she joined
the throng on Fifth Avenue, “if my heart wasn’t so
full of tears. I don’t know as I can stand much
more of seeing how the other half lives without
having a good cry over it. Dickens, the only friend
and comforter of that frail little mite of humanity!”</p>
<p>Then, as she turned again toward Avenue A, she
suddenly remembered the package of detective stories
for which she had promised to call at the shop where
there was a spray of lilacs and a much-loved invalid
woman.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_86">[86]</div>
<p>“I guess I’ll give up the detective game,” she
thought, as she hurried along, “but I’ll enjoy reading
the stories just the same.”</p>
<p>Half an hour later she had changed her mind and
had decided that she really was a very fine detective
indeed.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_87">[87]</div>
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