<h2 id="c21">CHAPTER XXI. <br/><span class="small">A NEW ARRIVAL</span></h2>
<p>When Roberta reached home that day, she began
to sniff, for the house seemed to be pervaded with
a most delicious aroma.</p>
<p>“Ohee, fried chicken, if I guess aright!” she
thought. The front room being vacant, she skipped
down the long, wide hall and pounced into the sunny
combination kitchen and dining-room. Lena May
smiled over her shoulder to greet the newcomer. She
was busy at the stove preparing the noon meal.
Gwendolyn, made comfortable on a pillowed reclining
chair, was lying in the sunshine near the
blossoming window-box. She also smiled, though
she was too weak and weary to speak. Bobs kissed
her tenderly and then inquired: “Say, Lena May,
why all this festiveness? It isn’t anyone’s birthday,
is it?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_171">[171]</div>
<p>“You know it isn’t,” their youngest replied as she
stopped to open the oven door, revealing a tin of
biscuits that were browning within. Then, rising,
she added: “But, nevertheless, we are celebrating.
You see, Nurse Kathryn ordered chicken broth for
Gwen and, having made that, I decided to fry the
remaining pieces because we are going to have company
for lunch.”</p>
<p>“Who, pray?” Bobs was removing her hat and
coat as she spoke. Just then Gloria came in from
the Settlement House and she inquired as she glanced
about: “Hasn’t the company come?”</p>
<p>“Not yet.” Lena May looked at the old grandfather
clock. “It lacks two minutes of being noon.
They will be here promptly at twelve.”</p>
<p>“I do believe that you are all trying to arouse my
curiosity,” Bobs said. “Well, the deed is done, so
fire ahead and tell me who is to be the victim?”</p>
<p>“Victim, indeed.” Lena May tossed her curly
head with pretended indignation. “I have nine minds
not to give you a single piece of this delicious fried
chicken because of that—that——”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_172">[172]</div>
<p>Bobs helped her out. “Slam on, your cooking is
what you really mean, but of course you can’t use
slang, not even in a pinch. But, I say, is our honored
guest fine or superfine?”</p>
<p>Gloria and Lena May exchanged amused glances.
It was the former who replied: “The guest of honor
is to be a young gentleman, and, as to his identity,
you may have three guesses.”</p>
<p>This had always been their method of telling each
other interesting news.</p>
<p>“Dick De Laney isn’t in town, is he?” Roberta
inquired in so matter-of-fact and little interested a
manner that again Gloria realized that her sister did
not greatly care for the lad who had loved her since
the pinafore days.</p>
<p>“Not that I’ve heard of,” Lena May said. “Now
you may guess again.” But before this could be
done, the heavy knocker on the front door was announcing
the arrival of someone, and Gloria went
to answer its summons.</p>
<p>Bobs skipped over to the stove as she said hurriedly,
“Tell me quickly who is coming, so that I may
be prepared.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_173">[173]</div>
<p>“Nell Wiggin and her brother Dean,” was the
whispered reply. “He came in on the eleven-ten
train. Nell went to meet him and I told her to bring
him over here to lunch. I thought it would be
pleasant for both of them.”</p>
<p>“You’re a trump,” Bobs began, but paused, for
Gloria was opening the door, saying, “Sisters, here
are Nell and her brother Dean.” Then to the tall,
pale lad with the dreamy eyes she added: “This sister
is Gwendolyn, who has been ill, and this is Lena
May, fork in hand, symbolizing the fact that she is
also our housekeeper. Roberta we call Bobs, for
every family has need of a boy and Bobsy has always
done her best to fill the requirements.”</p>
<p>The lad, unused to girls, acknowledged these introductions
rather shyly. Bobs, knowing that he
was conscious of his muscle-bound left arm, which
he could not move, said at once in her merry, nonsensical
manner: “If so many sisters won’t frighten
you, Dean, I’ll retire from the role of brother and
let you fill it.” Then she added, “I’m not going to
call you Mr Wiggin. It is too formal.”</p>
<p>The lad flushed in his effort to reply, but Lena
May saved him from further embarrassment by
saying, “Nell, you and your brother may sit on
either side of Gloria. Bobsy, will you serve the
chicken? Gwen had her broth at eleven, so she isn’t
hungry just now.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_174">[174]</div>
<p>Realizing that the lad who had lived only on remote
New England farms would rather listen than
talk, Bobs monopolized the conversation in her usual
breezy manner, and often when she glanced his way
she noted that the soft brown eyes of the lad were
smiling as though he were much amused. But after
lunch she spoke to him directly. “Dean,” she said,
“your sister tells me that you love books.”</p>
<p>“Indeed I do,” the boy replied, “but I have seen
very few and have owned only one.”</p>
<p>“My goodness!” Bobs exclaimed. “Come with
me and I will show you several hundred.”</p>
<p>“Several hundred books,” the lad gasped, quite
forgetting his self-consciousness in his astonishment
at this amazing remark.</p>
<p>Bobs nodded mysteriously as she led the way to
the room overhead, where in the dim light Dean
beheld old books in dusty piles everywhere about.</p>
<p>There was a sudden glow of pleasure in the eyes
of the boy which told Bobs that he was indeed a
booklover. “What a treat this will be,” he exclaimed,
“if I may browse up here when I wish.” Then he
added as a new thought presented itself: “But, Miss
Roberta, I must not spend my time in idle reading.
I want to find some way to earn money.” Eagerly,
anxiously, his eyes turned toward her. “Can you
suggest anything that I might be able to do?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_175">[175]</div>
<p>For one panicky moment Bobs’ thoughts groped
wildly for some profession that a one-armed lad
might follow, then she had what she believed was a
wonderful inspiration, and she said with her usual
head-long impulsiveness: “I do, indeed, know just
the very thing. You and I will start an old book
shop and you may be manager.”</p>
<p>The lad’s pale face flushed with pleasure. “Do
you really mean it, Miss Vandergrift?” he asked
eagerly. “How I would like that.”</p>
<p>In her characteristic manner Bobs wanted to settle
the matter at once, and so she tripped downstairs
with Dean following.</p>
<p>She found that Gwendolyn had gone back to bed
and that the kitchen having been tidied, the three
girls were sitting about the fireplace talking softly
together. When they heard Bobs’ inspiration, they
all thought it a splendid plan, and Nell said that there
was a vacant room adjoining the office of the model
tenement that she had been told she might use in
any way that she wished. As there was a door
opening upon the street, she believed it would be an
ideal place for an old book shop.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_176">[176]</div>
<p>Rising, Nell continued: “I will telephone Mrs.
Doran-Ashley at once to be sure that she is still willing
that I use the room as I desire.”</p>
<p>This was done, and that most kindly woman in
her beautiful home on Riverside Drive listened with
interest to the plan and gave the permission that
was requested. Moreover, upon leaving the telephone
she made a note in her engagement book: “At
the next board meeting suggest that a visit be made
to the old book shop in the model tenement.”</p>
<p>When Nell returned with the information that
they might do as they wished with the room, Bobs
and Dean went at once to a lumber yard near the
docks and ordered the shelves they would need. An
hour later Antovich and several of his boy companions
had carried the old books from the Pensinger
mansion and had heaped them upon the floor
of the pleasant vacant room, which opened directly
upon the sidewalk on Seventy-eighth Street.</p>
<p>When Bobs left, Dean was busy with hammer
and nails and happier, perhaps, than he had been in
the twenty years of his life.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_177">[177]</div>
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