Little women- volume one


A TELEGRAM

November is the most disagreeable month in the whole year,” said Margaret, standing at the window one dull afternoon, looking out at the frostbitten garden.
Thats the reason I was born in it,” observed Jo pensively, quite unconscious of the blot on her nose.
If something very pleasant should happen now, we should think it a delightful month,” said Beth, who took a hopeful view of everything, even November.
I dare say, but nothing pleasant ever does happen in this family,” said Meg, who was out of sorts. “We go grubbing along day after day, without a bit of change, and very little fun. We might as well be in a treadmill.”
My patience, how blue we are!” cried Jo. “I dont much wonder, poor dear, for you see other girls having splendid times, while you grind, grind, year in and year out. Oh, dont I wish I could manage things for you as I do for my heroines! Youre pretty enough and good enough already, so Id have some rich relation leave you a fortune unexpectedly. Then youd dash out as an heiress, scorn everyone who has slighted you, go abroad, and come home my Lady Something in a blaze of splendor and elegance.”
People dont have fortunes left them in that style nowadays, men have to work and women marry for money. Its a dreadfully unjust world,” said Meg bitterly.
Jo and I are going to make fortunes for you all. Just wait ten years, and see if we dont,” said Amy, who sat in a corner making mud pies, as Hannah called her little clay models of birds, fruit, and faces.
Cant wait, and Im afraid I havent much faith in ink and dirt, though Im grateful for your good intentions.”
Meg sighed, and turned to the frostbitten garden again. Jo groaned and leaned both elbows on the table in a despondent attitude, but Amy spatted away energetically, and Beth, who sat at the other window, said, smiling, “Two pleasant things are going to happen right away. Marmee is coming down the street, and Laurie is tramping through the garden as if he had something nice to tell.”
In they both came, Mrs. March with her usual question, “Any letter from Father, girls?” and Laurie to say in his persuasive way, “Wont some of you come for a drive? Ive been working away at mathematics till my head is in a muddle, and Im going to freshen my wits by a brisk turn. Its a dull day, but the air isnt bad, and Im going to take Brooke home, so it will be gay inside, if it isnt out. Come, Jo, you and Beth will go, wont you?”
Of course we will.”
Much obliged, but Im busy.” And Meg whisked out her workbasket, for she had agreed with her mother that it was best, for her at least, not to drive too often with the young gentleman.
We three will be ready in a minute,” cried Amy, running away to wash her hands.
Can I do anything for you, Madam Mother?” asked Laurie, leaning over Mrs. Marchs chair with the affectionate look and tone he always gave her.

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No, thank you, except call at the office, if youll be so kind, dear. Its our day for a letter, and the postman hasnt been. Father is as regular as the sun, but theres some delay on the way, perhaps.”
A sharp ring interrupted her, and a minute after Hannah came in with a letter.
Its one of them horrid telegraph things, mum,” she said, handling it as if she was afraid it would explode and do some damage.
At the wordtelegraph’, Mrs. March snatched it, read the two lines it contained, and dropped back into her chair as white as if the little paper had sent a bullet to her heart. Laurie dashed downstairs for water, while Meg and Hannah supported her, and Jo read aloud, in a frightened voice...
Mrs. March:
Your husband is very ill. Come at once.
S. HALE
Blank Hospital, Washington.

How still the room was as they listened breathlessly, how strangely the day darkened outside, and how suddenly the whole world seemed to change, as the girls gathered about their mother, feeling as if all the happiness and support of their lives was about to be taken from them.
Mrs. March was herself again directly, read the message over, and stretched out her arms to her daughters, saying, in a tone they never forgot, “I shall go at once, but it may be too late. Oh, children, children, help me to bear it!”
For several minutes there was nothing but the sound of sobbing in the room, mingled with broken words of comfort, tender assurances of help, and hopeful whispers that died away in tears. Poor Hannah was the first to recover, and with unconscious wisdom she set all the rest a good example, for with her, work was panacea for most afflictions.
The Lord keep the dear man! I wont waste no time a-cryin’, but git your things ready right away, mum,” she said heartily, as she wiped her face on her apron, gave her mistress a warm shake of the hand with her own hard one, and went away to work like three women in one.
Shes right, theres no time for tears now. Be calm, girls, and let me think.”
They tried to be calm, poor things, as their mother sat up, looking pale but steady, and put away her grief to think and plan for them.
Wheres Laurie?” she asked presently, when she had collected her thoughts and decided on the first duties to be done.
Here, maam. Oh, let me do something!” cried the boy, hurrying from the next room whither he had withdrawn, feeling that their first sorrow was too sacred for even his friendly eyes to see.
Send a telegram saying I will come at once. The next train goes early in the morning. Ill take that.”
What else? The horses are ready. I can go anywhere, do anything,” he said, looking ready to fly to the ends of the earth.
Leave a note at Aunt Marchs. Jo, give me that pen and paper.”
Tearing off the blank side of one of her newly copied pages, Jo drew the table before her mother, well knowing that money for the long, sad journey must be borrowed, and feeling as if she could do anything to add a little to the sum for her father.

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Now go, dear, but dont kill yourself driving at a desperate pace. There is no need of that.”
Mrs. Marchs warning was evidently thrown away, for five minutes later Laurie tore by the window on his own fleet horse, riding as if for his life.
Jo, run to the rooms, and tell Mrs. King that I cant come. On the way get these things. Ill put them down, theyll be needed and I must go prepared for nursing. Hospital stores are not always good. Beth, go and ask Mr. Laurence for a couple of bottles of old wine. Im not too proud to beg for Father. He shall have the best of everything. Amy, tell Hannah to get down the black trunk, and Meg, come and help me find my things, for Im half bewildered.”
Writing, thinking, and directing all at once might well bewilder the poor lady, and Meg begged her to sit quietly in her room for a little while, and let them work. Everyone scattered like leaves before a gust of wind, and the quiet, happy household was broken up as suddenly as if the paper had been an evil spell.
Mr. Laurence came hurrying back with Beth, bringing every comfort the kind old gentleman could think of for the invalid, and friendliest promises of protection for the girls during the mothers absence, which comforted her very much. There was nothing he didnt offer, from his own dressing gown to himself as escort. But the last was impossible. Mrs. March would not hear of the old gentlemans undertaking the long journey, yet an expression of relief was visible when he spoke of it, for anxiety ill fits one for traveling. He saw the look, knit his heavy eyebrows, rubbed his hands, and marched abruptly away, saying hed be back directly. No one had time to think of him again till, as Meg ran through the entry, with a pair of rubbers in one hand and a cup of tea in the other, she came suddenly upon Mr. Brooke.
Im very sorry to hear of this, Miss March,” he said, in the kind, quiet tone which sounded very pleasantly to her perturbed spirit. “I came to offer myself as escort to your mother. Mr. Laurence has commissions for me in Washington, and it will give me real satisfaction to be of service to her there.”
Down dropped the rubbers, and the tea was very near following, as Meg put out her hand, with a face so full of gratitude that Mr. Brooke would have felt repaid for a much greater sacrifice than the trifling one of time and comfort which he was about to take.
How kind you all are! Mother will accept, Im sure, and it will be such a relief to know that she has someone to take care of her. Thank you very, very much!”
Meg spoke earnestly, and forgot herself entirely till something in the brown eyes looking down at her made her remember the cooling tea, and lead the way into the parlor, saying she would call her mother.
Everything was arranged by the time Laurie returned with a note from Aunt March, enclosing the desired sum, and a few lines repeating what she had often said before, that she had always told them it was absurd for March to go into the army, always predicted that no good would come of it, and she hoped they would take her advice the next time. Mrs. March put the note in the fire, the money in her purse, and went on with her preparations, with her lips folded tightly in a way which Jo would have understood if she had been there.
The short afternoon wore away. All other errands were done, and Meg and her mother busy at some necessary needlework, while Beth and Amy got tea, and Hannah finished her ironing with what she called aslap and a bang’, but still Jo did not come. They began to get anxious, and Laurie went off to find her, for no one knew what freak Jo might take into her head. He missed her, however, and she came walking in with a very queer expression of countenance, for there was a mixture of fun and fear, satisfaction and regret in it, which puzzled the family as much as did the roll of bills she laid before her mother, saying with a little choke in her voice, “Thats my contribution toward making Father comfortable and bringing him home!”

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