The Girl from Montana - Page 78/133

"It's just fierce out, ma!" she exclaimed. "Grandma, ain't supper ready

yet? I never was so hungry in all my life. I could eat a house afire."

She stopped short at sight of Elizabeth. She had been chewing gum--Lizzie

was always chewing gum--but her jaws ceased action in sheer astonishment.

"This is your cousin Bessie, come all the way from Montana on horseback,

Lizzie. She's your aunt Bessie's child. Her folks is dead now, and she's

come to live with us. You must see ef you can't get her a place in the

ten-cent store 'long with you," said the grandmother.

Lizzie came airily forward, and grasped her cousin's hand in mid-air,

giving it a lateral shake that bewildered Elizabeth.

"Pleased to meet you," she chattered glibly, and set her jaws to work

again. One could not embarrass Lizzie long. But she kept her eyes on the

stranger, and let them wander disapprovingly over her apparel in a pointed

way as she took out the long hat-pins from the cumbersome hat she wore and

adjusted her ponderous pompadour.

"Lizzie'll have to help fix you up," said the aunt noting Lizzie's glance.

"You're all out of style. I suppose they get behind times out in Montana.

Lizzie, can't you show her how to fix her hair pompadour?"

Lizzie brightened. If there was a prospect of changing things, she was not

averse to a cousin of her own age; but she never could take such a

dowdy-looking girl into society, not the society of the ten-cent store.

"O, cert!" answered Lizzie affably. "I'll fix you fine. Don't you worry.

How'd you get so awful tanned? I s'pose riding. You look like you'd been

to the seashore, and lay out on the beach in the sun. But 'tain't the

right time o' year quite. It must be great to ride horseback!"

"I'll teach you how if you want to learn," said Elizabeth, endeavoring to

show a return of the kindly offer.

"Me? What would I ride? Have to ride a counter, I guess. I guess you won't

find much to ride here in the city, 'cept trolley-cars."

"Bessie's got a horse. He's out in the yard now," said the grandmother

with pride.

"A horse! All your own? Gee whiz! Won't the girls stare when I tell them?

Say, we can borrow a rig at the livery some night, and take a ride. Dan'll

go with us, and get the rig for us. Won't that be great?"

Elizabeth smiled. She felt the glow of at last contributing something to

the family pleasure. She did not wish her coming to be so entirely a wet

blanket as it had seemed at first; for, to tell the truth, she had seen

blank dismay on the face of each separate relative as her identity had

been made known. Her heart was lonely, and she hungered for some one who

"belonged" and loved her.