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双语译林·小妇人 第十五章 电报 A TELEGRAM

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2022年04月12日

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第十五章 电报

“一年中十一月最讨厌的了。”一个阴沉的下午,美格站在窗口,望着窗外霜冻萧瑟的园子说。

“所以我是这个月生的。”乔闷闷不乐地说,连鼻子沾上了墨水都没注意到。

“要是现在有好事的话,我们还是觉得这个月不错的。”贝丝说。她对什么都充满希望,甚至对十一月也是如此。

“大概吧,但这个家从来都没有什么好事。”心情不好的美格说,“我们日复一日地苦干,没有一点起色,有趣的事情还是没有。跟驴子拉磨差不多嘛。”

“哎哟,我们真是忧郁啊!”乔喊道,“乖乖,我倒不怎么奇怪,因为你看到别的姑娘们风光快乐,自己却一年到头拉磨,苦干噢。但愿能为你安排命运,就像我为笔下的女主人公所做的那样!你长得美,而且已经学好了,我要安排某个阔亲戚出人意料地给你留下一笔财产,于是你成了富二代,出人头地,对曾经小看你的人嗤之以鼻,漂洋过海,最后成了贵夫人,衣锦还乡,轰轰烈烈的。”

“这种留遗产的办法,如今是不会再有的了。男人得工作得好,女人得嫁得好,才能有钱。这个可怕的世界真不公平。”美格愤世嫉俗地说。

“我和乔将要为大家赚大钱,等上十年吧,我们不发财才怪呢。”艾美说。她正坐在一角做泥饼——汉娜就这样称呼她那些小鸟、水果、脸谱等小陶件的。

“等不得了,恐怕我对笔墨和泥土也没什么信心,虽然我很领情的。”

美格叹了口气,又回头转向花木凋零的园子。乔抱怨着,沮丧地把双肘靠在桌子上。可艾美在一个劲地拍泥巴,贝丝坐在外边窗口,笑着说:“马上就双喜临门了。妈咪到街口了,劳里穿过园子了,好像他有什么好消息。”

他们俩一起进来了,马奇太太跟往常一样问道:“女儿们,有爸爸的信吗?”劳里则令人盛情难却地说:“有谁想去乘车兜风?一直做数学,头都昏掉了。我想去飙车一圈,清醒一下脑子。虽然是阴天,可空气不错。我要去接布鲁克回家,要是外边没劲,车厢里边会很快乐的。来吧,乔,你和贝丝会去,是吧?”

“我们当然去。”

“非常感谢,可我正忙着呢。”美格赶紧取出针线篮。她答应过母亲,最好别和这位年轻人三天两头出去乘车,至少她应该这样。

“我们三个马上就好。”艾美一边喊着,一边跑去洗手。

“我可以为您做点什么,母亲大人?”劳里问。他靠在马奇太太的椅背上,眼光和语气里都充满了深情,他对马奇太太一向如此。

“不用了,谢谢。不过,孩子,也许得麻烦你去趟邮局。今天应该有信,可邮递员还没来过。爸爸历来准时,可能是路上耽搁了。”

刺耳的铃声打断了她。过了片刻,汉娜拿着一封信走了进来。

“是一封可怕的电报,太太。”她说着递了过去,似乎怕它爆炸伤人。

一听是电报,马奇太太一把夺过去。读了仅有的几个字,她一下就瘫倒在椅子上,面容苍白,仿佛这张小纸片把一颗子弹射进了她的心脏。劳里冲下楼去取水,美格和汉娜立刻搀住她,乔胆战心惊地大声念道:

马奇太太:

你夫病重,速来。

华盛顿布兰克医院

S.黑尔

她们都屏住呼吸听着,屋子里静悄悄的。很奇怪,外面的天都暗了下来,整个世界好像发生了变故。姑娘们聚集在母亲身边,只觉得生活的一切幸福和支柱一下子都要被夺走。不久,马奇太太回过神来,重新把电报读了一遍,然后向女儿们伸出双臂说:“我马上就走,可能已经晚了。噢,孩子们,孩子们,要帮我一起挺住啊!”说话的口气令她们永生难忘。

好几分钟,房间里只能听到哭泣声,夹杂着断断续续的安慰声和轻轻的劝解声,但亲切的展望往往以泣不成声告终。可怜的汉娜最先从痛苦中挣扎出来,不经意间,她的见识为大家树立了榜样。在她看来,工作就是治疗各种痛苦的良药。

“愿上帝保佑好人!不能只顾着哭,我要马上把你的东西收拾好,太太。”她真诚地说,一边用围裙擦脸,一边用她那粗糙的手与女主人热情地握了一下,走开了,接着以一个顶仨的干劲投入了工作。

“汉娜说得对,现在没工夫哭。静下来,孩子们,让我想一下。”

可怜的姑娘们勉强镇定下来。这时母亲坐起来,脸色惨白,但显得很冷静,她强压着内心的痛苦,考虑着她们该怎么办。

“劳里在哪里?”她问。她理清了思绪,决定了首先要做的几件事。

“在,太太。哦,让我做点什么吧!”男孩大声应答。他觉得最初的悲伤太神圣了,连他友好的眼睛也看不得,所以刚才退到了隔壁房间,现在又急匆匆地过来。

“去发封电报,说我马上就来。下一班火车凌晨开,就乘那班车。”

“还有吗?马都备好了,我哪儿都能去,干什么都行。”他说。看来他已经准备飞到天边了。

“给马奇姑婆家送封信。乔,给我纸笔。”

乔从自己新抄好的稿纸上撕下一张反面空白的,把桌子拉到母亲跟前。她心里很清楚,为了这次伤心的长途旅行,还得去求借。只要能为爸爸筹钱,哪怕只是一点点,她做什么都心甘情愿。

“现在就去,乖乖。别拼命赶,伤了自己,犯不着的。”

显然,马奇太太的告诫被抛到了脑后。五分钟后,劳里骑快马逃命似的从窗前飞奔而过。

“乔,快到收容所去一趟,告诉金太太我不去了。顺路把这些东西买来,我马上写下来,到时候会有用的。去之前,我先得做好护理的准备。医院的商店有时并不好。贝丝,去跟劳伦斯先生要两瓶陈年葡萄酒。为了爸爸,我只能求人,面子也顾不得了,他该喝最好的东西。艾美,让汉娜把黑箱子拿下来。美格,来帮我找东西,我脑子都昏了。

既要写,又要思考,还要指挥一切,一下把这位可怜的太太搅得头昏脑涨。美格恳求她在房间里静静地坐上片刻,一切工作由她们来做。大家奔东跑西,就像被一阵风吹散了的树叶。这封电报就像一道恶咒,一下子把宁静幸福的家庭搅得支离破碎。

劳伦斯先生跟着贝丝匆匆赶回来,热心的老先生把能想到的让病人享福的东西都带来了。他还客气地答应,在母亲不在的时候照看姑娘们,这使马奇太太备感安慰。他把一切都拿出来了,包括自己的罩衣,甚至提出要亲自护送她去。不过后者是不可能的。马奇太太不愿让老先生长途奔波劳累。然而,当他提及此事时,马奇太太欣慰的神情跃然脸上,毕竟心急如焚地出门是不妥当的。劳伦斯先生注意到她脸上的神情,紧皱浓眉,搓搓手,突然起身离开,说马上就回来。大家没有时间去想他了。这时美格跑进门来,一只手拎着一双胶鞋,另一只手端着一杯茶,却正好碰见布鲁克先生。

“马奇小姐,听到消息我很难过。”他平和善意地说,使她不安的心感到十分温暖,“我是来护送你妈妈的。劳伦斯先生派我去华盛顿办点事,我真的很高兴能去帮忙。”

美格伸出手,胶鞋一下子掉到了地上,茶也差一点倒了,她脸上充满了感激之情。这使布鲁克先生觉得,做出再大的牺牲都值得,何况这次只需稍微花点时间照顾马奇太太。

“你们真是太好了!妈妈会愿意的,我敢肯定。有人照顾她,我们也就放心了。真的感激不尽!”

美格说得很真挚,进入了忘我的境界。直到一双棕色眼睛的放射出一种光芒,才使她想起茶快凉了。她赶忙带头走进客厅,说是去告诉妈妈。

等到劳里回来的时候,一切都已安排妥当。他带回来马奇姑婆的一封短信,还有急需的钱,信里寥寥数行,重复了她的老生常谈——她老是跟他们说,马奇先生去参军真是荒唐,早料到这不会有好结果,希望下次他们会听话。马奇太太把纸条扔进炉火,把钱塞进钱包。她紧咬双唇,继续做准备工作。要是乔在场的话,她能领会其中的道理。

短暂的下午一晃就过去了,其他需要奔走的一切都办妥了,美格和母亲正在忙着做一些必要的针线活,贝丝和艾美在弄茶,汉娜噼里啪啦地烫好衣服,只有乔还没回来。大家开始担心起来,劳里出去找她了,因为没人知道乔脑子里会有什么古怪的念头。他没找到乔,可她倒回来了,古怪的神色里夹杂着几分滑稽和担心,满意和遗憾,大家见了都感到疑惑不解。她把一卷钱放在母亲面前说:“这是我给爸爸的,希望他过得舒服点,早点回来!”声音里带着几分哽咽。

“乖乖,哪来的?二十五元!乔,你没干傻事吧?”

“没有,这是我光明正大所得的。没讨、没借、没偷。我挣的。我想你不会骂我的,我只是把自己的东西卖了。”

说着,乔摘下帽子,大家都惊叫一声,她满头长发剪短了。

“你的头发!漂亮的头发!”“噢,乔,怎么能这样?这可是你的一个亮点。”“我的宝贝,用不着这样的。”“她不像我的乔了,可我会深爱她的!”

在大家的喊声中,贝丝把剪成平头的脑袋深情地搂在怀里。乔装出一副满不在乎的神态,却一点也骗不过大家。她抚弄一下褐色的短发,尽力表示自己喜欢这种发式,说:“又不会影响国家的命运,别这么号啕大哭了,贝丝。这正好可以治治我的虚荣心,我对秀发越来越自鸣得意了。现在除掉这头乱发,可以健脑益智,我的脑袋变得又轻便又冷静。理发师说,短发很快就可以卷曲起来,这样就像男孩子,好看,又容易梳理。我很满意,收起钞票,开饭吧。”

“把事情经过告诉我,乔。我并不是十分满意,但不能责怪你,我知道你是心甘情愿为自己的爱牺牲你所谓的虚荣心。不过,乖乖,没必要这样,我怕你过两天反悔呢。”马奇太太说。

“不会的!”乔坚定地回答。这次胡闹没有遭到严厉谴责,她心里轻松多了。

“是什么促使你这样做的?”艾美问。对于她来说,剪掉一头秀发还不如砍掉她的脑袋呢。

“嗯,我拼命想为爸爸做点事。”乔回答。这时,大家已经围在桌边,年轻人身体健康,即便心里烦恼也照样能吃。“我像妈妈一样讨厌借钱,我知道马奇姑婆又要叽里咕噜了,她向来就是这样,只要你向她借上九便士硬币。美格把季度的薪水全交了房租,我的却只用来买了衣服,我觉得自己很坏,决心无论如何要筹点钱,哪怕是卖掉自己脸上的鼻子。”

“不必觉得自己很坏,孩子。你没有冬衣,用自己辛苦赚来的钱,买了几件最朴素不过的衣服而已。”马奇太太说着看了乔一眼,一股暖流淌进女儿的心田。

“开始我一点儿也没想到要卖头发,后来我边走边盘算自己能做点什么,真想蹿进富丽堂皇的商店里随便拿。我看到理发店的橱窗摆了几个发辫,都标了价,一个黑色发辫,还不及我的粗,标价四十元。我突然想到,有一样东西可以换钱,于是我顾不上多想便走了进去,问他们要不要头发,我的头发他们给多少钱。”

“我不明白你怎么这样勇敢。”贝丝肃然起敬。

“哦。老板是个小个子,看他的样子,似乎活着就是为了给他的头发上油。他一开始有点目瞪口呆,看来不习惯女孩子闯进店子里叫他买头发。他说对我的头发不喜欢,颜色并不时髦,况且原本就不会出多少价的。头发要经过加工才值钱,等等。天色已晚,我担心如果不马上做成这桩买卖,那就根本做不成了,你们也知道我做事不喜欢半途而废。于是我求他把头发买下,并告诉他为何这样着急。这样做当然很傻,但他听后改变了主意,因为我当时很激动,话说得颠三倒四。他妻子听到了,善意地说:‘买下吧,托马斯,成全这位小姐吧,如果我有一把值钱的头发,我也会为我们的吉米这样做的。'”

“吉米是谁?”逢事喜欢让人解释的艾美问道。

“她的儿子,她说也在军队里头。这种事情使陌生人一见如故,可不是吗?那男人帮我剪发时,她一路跟我拉话儿,分散我的注意力。”

“一刀剪下去的时候你有没有觉得不寒而栗?”美格打了个寒战问。

“趁那男人操家伙的当儿,我看了自己的头发最后一眼,仅此而已。我从不为这种小事哭鼻子。不过我承认,看到自己的宝贝头发摆在桌上,摸摸脑袋只剩下又短又粗的发茬时,心里怪怪的。这种滋味简直有点像掉胳膊断腿。那女人看到我盯着头发,便捡起一绺长发给我保存。现在把它交给您,妈咪,以此纪念昔日的光彩,短发舒服极了,我想以后再也不会留长发了。”

马奇太太把波浪形的栗色鬈发绺折起来,和一绺灰白色的短发一起放在她的桌子里头,只说了一句:“难为你了,宝贝。”但她脸上的神色使姑娘们换了个话题。她们强打精神,谈论布鲁克先生是怎样一个好人,又说明天一定天气晴朗,爸爸回来养病的时候,大家就可以共享天伦之乐了。

十点了,大家都毫无睡意,马奇太太把最后完工的活计搁在一边说:“来吧,姑娘们。”贝丝走到钢琴前,弹了一曲父亲最喜欢的赞美诗,大家都鼓足勇气唱了起来,然后个个悲伤得难以为继,最后只有贝丝还在满怀深情地唱,因为对她来说,悦耳的音乐总能抚平心灵的创伤。

“去睡吧,别再讲话了。我们明天还要起早,可还是要睡足。晚安,宝贝们。”马奇太太说。这时圣歌结束了,没人再想唱一首。

她们默默地吻别母亲,然后悄悄地上床睡觉,仿佛病重的父亲就躺在隔壁。尽管遭此大难,艾美和贝丝还是很快就入睡了。美格睡不着,幼小的心灵第一次作严肃的思考。乔一动不动地躺着,姐姐以为她早已入睡,却听到了憋着的哽咽声,还摸到了湿润的脸颊,她惊叫一声:

“乔,乖乖,怎么了?你在为爸爸伤心吗?”

“不,现在不是。”

“那你干吗哭呢?”

“为我——我的头发!”可怜的乔终于放声哭出来了,她本来想用枕头遮掩感情的流露,可没用。

美格听了一点都不觉得好笑,她柔情似海地亲吻着、抚摸着这位受伤的英雄。

“我不后悔。”乔哽咽了一下,辩解道,“要是可能,明天还会这么做的。只是内心虚荣、自私的一面,才会这么傻哭。不要跟别人说,现在没事了。我还以为你睡着了,只想为我的亮点哭两声,并不想让人知道。你怎么也没睡?”

“睡不着,心里很焦急。”美格说。

“想想愉快的事情,就会很快睡着了。”

“试过了,但反而更清醒。”

“你在想什么?”

“英俊的脸孔——特别是眼睛。”美格答道,黑暗中自个微笑起来。

“你最喜欢什么颜色?”

“棕色——有时候喜欢,不过蓝色也很漂亮。”

乔笑了,美格严令她不许再说,接着又笑着答应替她把头发烫弯,随后便酣然入睡,梦里住进她的空中楼阁去了。

午夜的钟声敲响了,房间里一片寂静。只有一个身影悄悄地从一张床走到另一张床,把这边的被单拉直,把那边的枕头塞好,又久久站立,满怀深情地注视着每一张熟睡的脸,轻轻地吻她们,用母亲独有的热情为她们默默祈祷。她撩起窗帘,望着外面沉闷的黑夜,只见月亮突然破云而出,宛如一张明亮和蔼的脸照着她,它在寂静中好像悄悄地在说:“别急,乖乖!乌云是遮不住光明的。”

CHAPTER 15 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.

“That's 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 don't much wonder, poor dear, for you see other girls having splendid times, while you grind, grind, year in and year out. Oh, don't I wish I could manage things for you as I do for my heroines! You're pretty enough and good enough already, so I'd have some rich relation leave you a fortune unexpectedly. Then you'd 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 don't have fortunes left them in that style nowadays, men have to work and women marry for money. It's 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 don't, ” said Amy, who sat in a corner making mud pies, as Hannah called her little clay models of birds, fruit, and faces.

“Can't wait, and I'm afraid I haven't much faith in ink and dirt, though I'm 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, “Won't some of you come for a drive? I've been working away at mathematics till my head is in a muddle, and I'm going to freshen my wits by a brisk turn. It's a dull day, but the air isn't bad, and I'm going to take Brooke home, so it will be gay inside, if it isn't out. Come, Jo, you and Beth will go, won't you? ”

“Of course we will.”

“Much obliged, but I'm 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. March's chair with the affectionate look and tone he always gave her.

“No, thank you, except call at the office, if you'll be so kind, dear. It's our day for a letter, and the postman hasn't been. Father is as regular as the sun, but there's some delay on the way, perhaps.”

A sharp ring interrupted her, and a minute after Hannah came in with a letter.

“It's 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 word “telegraph”, 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 won't 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.

“She's right, there's 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.

“Where's Laurie? ” she asked presently, when she had collected her thoughts and decided on the first duties to be done.

“Here, ma'am. 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. I'll 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 March's. 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.

“Now go, dear, but don't kill yourself driving at a desperate pace. there is no need of that.”

Mrs. March's 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 can't come. On the way get these things. I'll put them down, they'll 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. I'm 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 I'm 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 mother's absence, which comforted her very much. There was nothing he didn't offer, from his own dressing gown to himself as escort. But the last was impossible. Mrs. March would not hear of the old gentleman's 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 he'd 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.

“I'm 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, I'm 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 “a slap 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, “That's my contribution toward making Father comfortable and bringing him home! ”

“My dear, where did you get it? Twenty-five dollars! Jo, I hope you haven't done anything rash? ”

“No, it's mine honestly. I didn't beg, borrow, or steal it. I earned it, and I don't think you'll blame me, for I only sold what was my own.”

As she spoke, Jo took off her bonnet, and a general outcry arose, for all her abundant hair was cut short.

“Your hair! Your beautiful hair! ” “Oh, Jo, how could you? Your one beauty.” “My dear girl, there was no need of this.” “She doesn't look like my Jo any more, but I love her dearly for it! ”

As everyone exclaimed, and Beth hugged the cropped head tenderly, Jo assumed an indifferent air, which did not deceive anyone a particle, and said, rumpling up the brown bush and trying to look as if she liked it, “It doesn't affect the fate of the nation, so don't wail, Beth. It will be good for my vanity, I was getting too proud of my wig. It will do my brains good to have that mop taken off. My head feels deliciously light and cool, and the barber said I could soon have a curly crop, which will be boyish, becoming, and easy to keep in order. I'm satisfied, so please take the money and let's have supper.”

“Tell me all about it, Jo. I am not quite satisfied, but I can't blame you, for I know how willingly you sacrificed your vanity, as you call it, to your love. But, my dear, it was not necessary, and I'm afraid you will regret it one of these days, ” said Mrs. March.

“No, I won't! ” returned Jo stoutly, feeling much relieved that her prank was not entirely condemned.

“What made you do it? ” asked Amy, who would as soon have thought of cutting off her head as her pretty hair.

“Well, I was wild to do something for Father, ” replied Jo, as they gathered about the table, for healthy young people can eat even in the midst of trouble. “I hate to borrow as much as Mother does, and I knew Aunt March would croak; she always does, if you ask for a ninepence. Meg gave all her quarterly salary toward the rent, and I only got some clothes with mine, so I felt wicked, and was bound to have some money, if I sold the nose off my face to get it.”

“You needn't feel wicked, my child: you had no winter things and got the simplest with your own hard earnings, ” said Mrs. March with a look that warmed Jo's heart.

“I hadn't the least idea of selling my hair at first, but as I went along I kept thinking what I could do, and feeling as if I'd like to dive into some of the rich stores and help myself. In a barber's window I saw tails of hair with the prices marked, and one black tail, not so thick as mine, was forty dollars. It came to me all of a sudden that I had one thing to make money out of, and without stopping to think, I walked in, asked if they bought hair, and what they would give for mine.”

“I don't see how you dared to do it, ” said Beth in a tone of awe.

“Oh, he was a little man who looked as if he merely lived to oil his hair. He rather stared at first, as if he wasn't used to having girls bounce into his shop and ask him to buy their hair. He said he didn't care about mine, it wasn't the fashionable color, and he never paid much for it in the first place. The work put into it made it dear, and so on. It was getting late, and I was afraid if it wasn't done right away that I shouldn't have it done at all, and you know when I start to do a thing, I hate to give it up. So I begged him to take it, and told him why I was in such a hurry. It was silly, I dare say, but it changed his mind, for I got rather excited, and told the story in my topsy-turvy way, and his wife heard, and said so kindly, ‘Take it, Thomas, and oblige the young lady; I'd do as much for our Jimmy any day if I had a spire of hair worth selling.'”

“Who was Jimmy? ” asked Amy, who liked to have things explained as they went along.

“Her son, she said, who was in the army. How friendly such things make strangers feel, don't they? She talked away all the time the man clipped, and diverted my mind nicely.”

“Didn't you feel dreadfully when the first cut came? ” asked Meg, with a shiver.

“I took a last look at my hair while the man got his things, and that was the end of it. I never snivel over trifles like that. I will confess, though, I felt queer when I saw the dear old hair laid out on the table, and felt only the short rough ends of my head. It almost seemed as if I'd an arm or leg off. The woman saw me look at it, and picked out a long lock for me to keep. I'll give it to you, Marmee, just to remember past glories by, for a crop is so comfortable I don't think I shall ever have a mane again.”

Mrs. March folded the wavy chestnut lock, and laid it away with a short gray one in her desk. She only said, “Thank you, deary, ” but something in her face made the girls change the subject, and talk as cheerfully as they could about Mr. Brooke's kindness, the prospect of a fine day tomorrow, and the happy times they would have when Father came home to be nursed.

No one wanted to go to bed when at ten o'clock Mrs. March put by the last finished job, and said, “Come girls.” Beth went to the piano and played the father's favorite hymn. All began bravely, but broke down one by one till Beth was left alone, singing with all her heart, for to her music was always a sweet consoler.

“Go to bed and don't talk, for we must be up early and shall need all the sleep we can get. Good night, my darlings, ” said Mrs. March, as the hymn ended, for no one cared to try another.

They kissed her quietly, and went to bed as silently as if the dear invalid lay in the next room. Beth and Amy soon fell asleep in spite of the great trouble, but Meg lay awake, thinking the most serious thoughts she had ever known in her short life. Jo lay motionless, and her sister fancied that she was asleep, till a stifled sob made her exclaim, as she touched a wet cheek—

“Jo, dear, what is it? Are you crying about father? ”

“No, not now.”

“What then? ”

“My—My hair! ” burst out poor Jo, trying vainly to smother her emotion in the pillow.

It did not seem at all comical to Meg, who kissed and caressed the afflicted heroine in the tenderest manner.

“I'm not sorry, ” protested Jo, with a choke. “I'd do it again tomorrow, if I could. It's only the vain part of me that goes and cries in this silly way. Don't tell anyone, it's all over now. I thought you were asleep, so I just made a little private moan for my one beauty. How came you to be awake? ”

“I can't sleep, I'm so anxious, ” said Meg.

“Think about something pleasant, and you'll soon drop off.”

“I tried it, but felt wider awake than ever.”

“What did you think of? ”

“Handsome faces—eyes particularly, ” answered Meg, smiling to herself in the dark.

“What color do you like best? ”

“Brown—that is, sometimes. Blue are lovely.”

Jo laughed, and Meg sharply ordered her not to talk, then amiably promised to make her hair curl, and fell asleep to dream of living in her castle in the air.

The clocks were striking midnight and the rooms were very still as a figure glided quietly from bed to bed, smoothing a coverlet here, settling a pillow there, and pausing to look long and tenderly at each unconscious face, to kiss each with lips that mutely blessed, and to pray the fervent prayers which only mothers utter. As she lifted the curtain to look out into the dreary night, the moon broke suddenly from behind the clouds and shone upon her like a bright, benignant face, which seemed to whisper in the silence, “Be comforted, dear soul! There is always light behind the clouds.”

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