“I’m proper sorry I hain’t found that letter yit,” he mourned. “Jane she’s been kind o’ upset ’n’ cranky lately, or I should ’a’ asked her about it before. I guess I shall speak about it to-night, yis, I guess I shall,” he assured Polly and himself.
“Oh, don’t hurry to do it right away!” Polly responded understandingly. “I can wait to know about my relatives. If Aunt Jane isn’t feeling—quite well, it wouldn’t be a good time.”
“No, ’twouldn’t,” he agreed in a relieved tone. “But I’ll have it for yer soon’s I see my way to it. Sometime when Jane’s feelin’ real good, I’ll broach the subjec’, I certain will.”
Home with her ribbon and then over to the hospital sped Polly. She found her friend impatiently striding up and down the limited space of his room.
“I’d about given you up,” he told her in an aggrieved tone. “I concluded you were tired of coming to be eyes for a poor old blind fellow like me, and so had stayed after school to play.”
Polly looked at him keenly. Sometimes she did not quite know whether to take him in fun or in earnest. Now his face was serious; but she felt almost sure there was a twinkle behind that tantalizing bandage.
“You know I couldn’t be tired of coming to see you,” she said simply, “and I never stay to play after school. I went on an errand for mother, and then I met Mr. Bean, and he stopped to apologize for not finding a letter that is—lost, a letter about my May relatives.”
“What!” His tone startled Polly. “Are you related to the Mays? how? Tell me!” He was waiting with eager, parted lips.
“Why,” she hesitated, vaguely abashed all at once, “I’m Polly May, you know—or was. I guess I haven’t told you.” Polly never talked of her adoption, instinctively guarding as a precious secret what was naturally well known throughout the city.