“Well, from my remembrance of your aunt, Miss Pollyanna, I must say I think it would take something more than a few prisms in the sunlight to—to make her bang many doors—for gladness. But come, now, really, what do you mean?”
Pollyanna stared slightly; then she drew a long breath.
“Oh, I forgot. You don't know about the game. I remember now.”
“Suppose you tell me, then.”
And this time Pollyanna told him. She told him the whole thing from the very first—from the crutches that should have been a doll. As she talked, she did not look at his face. Her rapt eyes were still on the dancing flecks of color from the prism pendants swaying in the sunlit window.
“And that's all,” she sighed, when she had finished. “And now you know why I said the sun was trying to play it—that game.”
For a moment there was silence. Then a low voice from the bed said unsteadily:
“Perhaps; but I'm thinking that the very finest prism of them all is yourself, Pollyanna.”
“Oh, but I don't show beautiful red and green and purple when the sun shines through me, Mr. Pendleton!”
“Don't you?” smiled the man. And Pollyanna, looking into his face, wondered why there were tears in his eyes.