<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
<h4>A SHOPPING EXPEDITION</h4>
<p>Still, it appeared, even the matter of the out-of-date coat could not
put off the evil day forever. One Saturday night—the only night that
stores were open in Bancroft—Mr. Duval took Jeanne to the business
section of the town, where they entered the very store in which Old
Captain had made his purchases.</p>
<p>The month was September and the pink dress, washed many times by Jeanne
herself and dried in the full sunshine on the old dock, had faded to a
more becoming shade.</p>
<p>Unlike the Captain, L�on Duval behaved quite like an ordinary shopper.
He carried himself with dignity and seemed to know exactly what he
wanted. He said:</p>
<p>"Stockings for this little girl, if you please."</p>
<p>The clerk, after a hasty glance at the rather shabby garments of her
customers, laid some cheap, coarse stockings on the counter.</p>
<p>"Better ones," said Mr. Duval.</p>
<p>"Not good enough," said he, rejecting a second lot. "Something thinner
and finer. Yes, these are better. Four pairs, please.</p>
<p>"Now I shall want some underwear for her. Lisle-thread or balbriggan, I
think. Also two chemises, night-dresses, whatever petticoats are worn
now and a good, serviceable dress—a sailor suit, I think. And after
that shoes."</p>
<p>"Why, Daddy!" gasped Jeanne. "I thought you were going to buy <i>nails</i>.
You <i>said</i> nails."</p>
<p>"Nails, too, perhaps; but first these."</p>
<p>Jeanne regarded her father thoughtfully. He had always been very gentle
with her, but of late—yes, certainly—he had been very much kinder to
her. And now, all these clothes. Was he, perhaps, going to send her to a
real school—the big public school that stood so high that one could see
its distant roof from the wharf? A lack of proper clothing had
heretofore prevented her going—that, the distance, and her usefulness
at home. She was older now, she could manage the walk. Michael disliked
the task, but he <i>could</i> look after the younger children. But with
<i>clothes</i>, she could go to school. That would be splendid. Perhaps, in
another year, Michael could have clothes, too.</p>
<p>But how particular her father was about hers. The chemises must have a
little fine lace on them, he said. And the petticoats—the embroidery
must be finer. Yes, the blue serge dress with the fine black braid on
the sailor collar would do nicely. And next, a small, neat hat.</p>
<p>Jeannette gasped again. A hat! She had never worn a hat except when she
had gone "up town" and then it hadn't been any special hat—just
anybody's old cap. But, of course, if she went to school she'd need a
hat.</p>
<p>"Now, if you please," said Mr. Duval, "we'd like to see some gloves."</p>
<p>"Kid, or silk?"</p>
<p>"Whichever is the more suitable."</p>
<p>"It's getting late for silk. Maybe you'd better take kid."</p>
<p>Mr. Duval did take kid ones. The sales-woman, with many a curious glance
at her unusual customers, fitted a pair of tan gloves to Jeanne's
unaccustomed fingers. Her fingers <i>wouldn't</i> stay stiff. They doubled
and curled; but at last the gloves were on—and off again. Jeanne gave a
sigh of relief.</p>
<p>Then there were shoes. Jeanne was glad that the holes in her stockings
were quite small ones. Supposing it had been her other pair! <i>All</i>
holes! As it was, the man to whom the clerk had transferred her customer
seemed rather shocked to see <i>any</i> holes. Was it possible that there
were people—even entire families—with <i>no</i> holes in their stockings?
The fat boy that had tumbled off the wharf that morning and hadn't known
her afterwards in the new pink dress, probably that fortunate child had
whole stockings, because everything else about him seemed most
gloriously new and whole; but surely, the greater part of the
population went about in holes. Mollie, Mrs. Shannon, her father—even
Old Captain. She had seen <i>him</i> put great patches in his thick woolen
socks.</p>
<p>But what was the clerk putting on her feet! She had had shoes before.
Thick and heavy and always too large that they might last the longer.
Mollie had bought them, usually after the first snow had driven
barefooted Jeanne to cover. But never such shoes as these. Soft, smooth,
and only a tiny scrap longer than her slender foot. And oh, so softly
black! And then, a dreadful thought.</p>
<p>"Daddy," said Jeanne, "I just love these shoes for <i>myself</i>; but I'm
afraid they won't <i>do</i>. You see, Sammy gets them next. They aren't
<i>boys'</i> shoes."</p>
<p>"These are <i>your</i> shoes, not Sammy's," replied her father.</p>
<p>When Mr. Duval had paid for all the wonderful things, they were tied in
three big parcels. Jeanne carried one, her father carried two. It was
dark and quite late when they finally reached the wharf.</p>
<p>"We will say nothing about this at home," said Mr. Duval, when Jeanne
proposed stopping to show the things to Old Captain. "For the present,
we must hide them in the old trunk. I have no wish to talk about this
matter with anybody. It concerns nobody but us two. Can you keep the
secret—even from Old Captain?"</p>
<p>"Why, I <i>guess</i> so. Will it be <i>very</i> long? I'm afraid it will bubble
and bubble until somebody hears it. And oh! That darling hat!"</p>
<p>"Not long, I fear."</p>
<p>"I'll try," promised Jeanne.</p>
<p>"Give me that package. Now, run along to bed. I guess everybody else is
asleep."</p>
<p>It was a long time before excited Jeanne was able to sleep, however. One
by one she was recalling the new garments. She wished that she might
have had the new shoes under her pillow for just that one night.</p>
<p>Perhaps the only thing that saved the secret next day was the wonderful
tale that she told the children, after she had led them to the farthest
corner of the old wharf.</p>
<p>"The beautiful princess," said she, "wore a lovely white thing called a
chemise—the <i>prettiest</i> thing there ever was. It was trimmed with
lovely lace that had a blue ribbon run through it. There was a beautiful
white petticoat over that and on top of <i>that</i> a dress."</p>
<p>"What for," asked Sammy, the inquisitive, "did she cover up her pretty
chemise with all those things? Was she cold?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no. Only <i>grand</i>. A chemise is to wear <i>under</i>."</p>
<p>"I'm glad I'm not a princess," said Michael. "Botherin' all the time
with blue ribbons. Didn't she wear no crown?"</p>
<p>"<i>Any</i> crown. No, she had just a little dark blue hat the very color of
her dress, some brown gloves and oh! the <i>smoothest</i> shoes. They fitted
her feet just like skin and she had stockings—"</p>
<p>"Aw, cut out her clothes," said Michael. "What did she <i>eat</i>?"</p>
<p>School had started. Jeanne knew it because on her last trip to the
library she had met a long procession of boys and girls hurrying
homeward; chattering as only school children can chatter. But still Mr.
Duval had said nothing to Jeannette about <i>going</i> to school. The home
lessons went on as usual, and the wondering pupil hoped fervently that
she was not outgrowing that hidden wardrobe. <i>That</i> would be too
dreadful.</p>
<p>The following Saturday evening, Mr. Duval shopped again. This time, he
went alone; returning with more bundles. These, too, were concealed. The
wharf afforded many a convenient hiding place under its old planks; and
this time, even Jeanne failed to suspect that anything unusual had
happened during the evening. There were never any lessons Saturday
night; and this particular evening she had been glad of the extra time.
She was finishing the extra dress she had started for Annie, the red and
white striped calico. Mollie was in bed and asleep, Mrs. Shannon was
dozing over the stove, Jeanne sat close to the lamp, pushing her needle
through the stiff cloth.</p>
<p>"There!" breathed Jeanne, thankfully. "The last button's on. Tomorrow
I'll dress Annie up and take her to call on Old Captain. He'll like her
because she'll look so much like the American flag."</p>
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