The Story of a Whim

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Authors: Grace Livingston Hill

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The Story of a Whim

by

Grace Livingston Hill

CHAPTER 1
Five Girls, an Organ, and the Whim

"How cold it is! Lets walk up and down the platform, girls. Why doesn't that train come?"

"I'm going in to see if the agent knows anything about it," said one with determined mouth and big brown eyes.

They waited shivering in a group until she returned, five girls just entering womanhood. They were part of a small house-party, spending Thanksgiving week at the old stone house on the hill above the station, and they had come down to meet another girl who was expected on the train.

"He says the train is half an hour late," said Hazel
Winship, the hostess, coming down the stone steps of the station.

"What shall we do? There is not time to make it worthwhile to go back to the house. Shall we go inside, or walk?"

"O, walk by all means," said Victoria Landis. "It is so stuffy and hot in there I feel as if I was a turkey half-roasted now from the little time we stayed there."

"Let us walk up this long platform to that freight-house and see the men unload that car," proposed Esther Wakefield.
And so it was agreed.

"
Tra la la!" hummed Victoria. "O girls, why didn't we stay and finish singing that glee? It was so pretty! Listen. Is this right?" and she hummed it over again.

"Yes, it was too bad to have to tear ourselves away from that dear piano," said Ruth Summers. "Say, Hazel, what are you going to do with your poor despised organ? Send it to a home missionary?"

"I'll send it somewhere, I suppose. I don't know anyone around here to give it to. I wish I could send it where it would give pleasure to someone."

"There are probably plenty of people who would be delighted with it if you only knew them. The owner of this forlorn furniture, for instance," said Victoria as they separated to thread their way between boxes and chairs that had been shoved out on the platform from a half-emptied
freight-car. "Girls, just look at that funny old stove and those uncomfortable chairs! How would you like to set up housekeeping with that?"

"The couch isn't so bad if it were covered," said Hazel, poking it in a gingerly way with her gloved finger. "It looks as though it might have been comfortable once."

"That’s Hazel all over!" said Esther. "If it were possible, she would just enjoy having that couch stay over a train or two while she recovered it with some bright denim, and made a pillow for it;" and dear girlish laughter rang out, while Hazel's cheeks grew pink as she joined in.

"Well, girls, wouldn't that be interesting? Just think how pleased the dear old lady who owns it would be when she found the new cover, and how entirely mystified."

"You might send her your organ," suggested Ruth Summers. "Perhaps she would like that just as well."

"What a lovely idea!" said Hazel, her eyes shining with
enthusiasm. “I’ll just do it. Come, lets look for the address."

"You romantic little goose!" exclaimed her friends. “Take her away!
The perfect idea! I just believe she would!"

"Of course I would," said Hazel; "why shouldn't I? Papa said I might do as I pleased with it. Here, there is a card behind here. Read it. 'Christie W. Bailey, Pine Ridge, Fla.' Girls, I shall do it. Who has a pencil? I want to write it down. Do all these things belong to the same person? Look on their cards. She must be very poor."

"Poor as a church mouse," said Victoria, "if this is all she has."

"I should like to inquire how you are so sure it is a 'she,'" said Emily Whitten; "'Christie' sounds as though it might belong to a man or a boy. Don't you think so, Victoria?"

"It’s an old colored mammy, I'm positive." said Victoria.

"I don't care," said Hazel of the firm mouth. "If they are black people they will enjoy it all the more. Black people are fond of music, and it will be a real help for the little children.
But I don't believe Christie is an old mammy at all. She is a girl about our own age. She has had to go to Florida on account of her health, and she is poor, too poor to board; so she will keep house in a room or two,"—waving her hand toward the unpretentious huddling of furniture about them,—"and perhaps she teaches school. She will put the organ in the schoolroom, or have a Sunday school in her own home, and I shall write her a note and send some music for the children to learn. She can do lots of nice things with that organ."

"Now, Hazel," protested five voices, but just then the shriek of a whistle brought them all about face and flying down the platform to reach the station before the train drew up. In the bustle of welcoming the
newcomer Hazel's scheme was forgotten, and not until when in the evening they were seated about the great open fire did it again come into the conversation. It was Victoria Landis who told the newcomer about it, beginning with: "O Marion, you can't think what Hazel's latest wild scheme of philanthropy is."

But
Marion, a girl after Hazel's own heart, listened with glowing eyes.

"Really, Hazel?"
she said when the tale was finished, looking at her hostess with sympathy. "Won't that be just lovely! You must send it in time for Christmas, you know; and why not pack a box to go with it? We could all help. It would be great fun, and give us something to do not entirely selfish while we are enjoying ourselves here."

"Do you mean it?" said Victoria. "We
ll, I will not be outdone. I will give a covering for that old couch, and Ruth shall make a most bewildering sofa pillow for it, the like of which was never seen in any house in Florida. What color shall it be, blue or red? And will denim be fine enough, or do you prefer tapestry or brocatelle? Speak out, Hazel; we're with you hand and heart, no matter how wildly you soar this time."

And so
amid laughter and jokes the plan grew.

"I have a lot of singing-books, if you think there is really a chance of a Sunday school," said Esther.

"There must be something pretty for the house, a good picture perhaps," mused Ruth Summers; and Hazel's eyes grew bright with joy as she looked from one face to another and saw that they really meant what they said.

Six pairs of hands can do much in four days; and, when the guests left for their various homes or schools, there stood on the back porch of the old stone house on the hill a well-packed box marked and
labeled, an organ securely boxed, and a large roll, all bearing the magic sentence, "Christie W. Bailey, Pine Ridge, Fla."

There had been much discussion and argument on the part of Mrs.
Winship and her husband. They were inclined to think Hazel had outdone herself in romance this time, though they were well used to such unprecedented escapades from her babyhood; but she had finally won them all over, had explained how the goods had been put off at that particular freight-station from up the branch road, to be put on the through freight at the Junction, had enlarged upon the desolateness of the life of that young girl who was moving to Florida alone, until every member of the party became infected with pity for her, and vied with the others to make that Christmas box the nicest ever sent to a girl.

They began to believe in "Christie," and to wonder whether her name was Christine or Christiana, or simply Christie after some family name; and
gradually all thought of her being other than a young girl faded from their minds.

Mother
Winship had so far forgotten her doubts as to contribute a good Smyrna rug no more in use in the stone house, after the party had gone down to the freight-house and watched the goods repacked in another freight-car for the Junction, and come back with the report that there was not a sign of a carpet in the lot. They also told how they had peeked through the crack of a box of books and distinctly seen the worn cover of an arithmetic, which proved the "school-ma'am theory," while an old blue-checked apron, visible through another crack, settled the sex of Christie irrevocably.

Hazel
Winship had written a long letter in her delicate tracery on her finest paper, and sealed it with a prayer, and had gone back to her college duties a hundred miles away, and Christmas was fast coming on as the three freight pieces started on their way.

On the edge of a clearing, where the tall pines thinned against the sky, and tossed their garlands of gray moss from bough to bough, there stood a little cabin built of logs. It was set up on stilts out of the hot white sand, and,
underneath, a few chickens wandered aimlessly, as unaware of the home over their heads as mortals are of the heaven above them. Some sickly orange-trees, apparently just set out, gave the excuse for the clearing, and beyond the distance stretched away into desolateness and black-jack oaks.

A touch of whitewash here and there and a bit of grass—which in that part of the world is so scarce that it is usually used for a path instead of being setting for that path—would have done wonders for the place, but the
re was nothing but the white neglected, "mushy" sand, discouraging alike to wheel and foot.

Inside the
cabin there was a rusty cook-stove, with a sulky teakettle at the back and the remains of a meal in a greasy frying-pan still over the dead fire. An old table was drawn out with one leaf up and piled with unwashed dishes, boxes of crackers, and papers of various eatables. The couch in the corner was evidently the only bed, and the red and gray blankets still lay in the heap where they had been tossed when the occupant arose that morning. From some nails in the corner hung several articles of clothing and a hat. The corner by the door was given over to tools and a few garden implements which were considered too good to leave out-of-doors. Every chair but one was occupied by books or papers or clothing.

Outside the back door a
dry-goods box by the pump with a tin basin and a cake of soap did duty as a wash-stand. On the whole, it was not an attractive home, even though sky and air were more than perfect.

The occupant of this residence was driving dully along the sand road at the will of a stubborn little Florida pony, which wriggled his whole body with a motion intended to convey to his driver the idea that he was trotting as fast as any reasonable being could expect a horse to go, while in reality the monotonous sand and scrub-oaks were moving past as slowly as was possible.

It was the day before Christmas, but the driver did not care. What was Christmas to one whose friends were all gone, and who never gave or received a Christmas gift?

The pony, like all slow things, got there at last, and came trotting up to the post-office in good style. The driver got out of the
shackly wagon, and went into the post-office, which served also as general store.

"Hello, Chris!" called a sickly looking man from the group on the counter. "Bin a-
wonderin' when you was comin'. Got some more freight fer you over to the station."

The newcomer turned his broad shoulders about, and faced the speaker.

"I haven't any more freight coming," he said. "It’s all come three weeks ago."

"Well, but it’s over there
," insisted the other, "three pieces. Your name marked plain same like the other."

"Somebody sent you a Christmas gift, Chris," said a tall young fellow, slapping him on the shoulder; "better go and get it."

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