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Penelope’s Party Waist
by
“Doris Hunter, you are a veritable little witch! Do you mean to tell me that you conjured that perfectly lovely thing for me out of the lining of Grandmother Hunter’s quilt?”
So Penelope went to Blanche’s party and her dress was the admiration of every girl there. Mrs. Fairweather, who was visiting Mrs. Anderson, looked closely at it also. She was a very sweet old lady, with silver hair, which she wore in delightful, old-fashioned puffs, and she had very bright, dark eyes. Penelope thought her altogether charming.
“She looks as if she had just stepped out of the frame of some lovely old picture,” she said to herself. “I wish she belonged to me. I’d just love to have a grandmother like her. And I do wonder who it is I’ve seen who looks so much like her.”
A little later on the knowledge came to her suddenly, and she thought with inward surprise: Why, it is Doris, of course. If my sister Doris lives to be seventy years old and wears her hair in pretty white puffs, she will look exactly as Mrs. Fairweather does now.
Mrs. Fairweather asked to have Penelope introduced to her, and when they found themselves alone together she said gently, “My dear, I am going to ask a very impertinent question. Will you tell me where you got the silk of which your waist is made?”
Poor Penelope’s pretty young face turned crimson. She was not troubled with false pride by any means, but she simply could not bring herself to tell Mrs. Fairweather that her waist was made out of the lining of an old heirloom quilt.
“My Aunt Adella gave me–gave us–the material,” she stammered. “And my elder sister Doris made the waist for me. I think the silk once belonged to my Grandmother Hunter.”
“What was your grandmother’s maiden name?” asked Mrs. Fairweather eagerly.
“Penelope Saverne. I am named after her.”
Mrs. Fairweather suddenly put her arm about Penelope and drew the young girl to her, her lovely old face aglow with delight and tenderness.
“Then you are my grandniece,” she said. “Your grandmother was my half-sister. When I saw your dress, I felt sure you were related to her. I should recognize that rosebud silk if I came across it in Thibet. Penelope Saverne was the daughter of my mother by her first husband. Penelope was four years older than I was, but we were devoted to each other. Oddly enough, our birthdays fell on the same day, and when Penelope was twenty and I sixteen, my father gave us each a silk dress of this very material. I have mine yet.
“Soon after this our mother died and our household was broken up. Penelope went to live with her aunt and I went West with Father. This was long ago, you know, when travelling and correspondence were not the easy, matter-of-course things they are now. After a few years I lost touch with my half-sister. I married out West and have lived there all my life. I never knew what had become of Penelope. But tonight, when I saw you come in in that waist made of the rosebud silk, the whole past rose before me and I felt like a girl again. My dear, I am a very lonely old woman, with nobody belonging to me. You don’t know how delighted I am to find that I have two grandnieces.”
Penelope had listened silently, like a girl in a dream. Now she patted Mrs. Fairweather’s soft old hand affectionately.
“It sounds like a storybook,” she said gaily. “You must come and see Doris. She is such a darling sister. I wouldn’t have had this waist if it hadn’t been for her. I will tell you the whole truth–I don’t mind it now. Doris made my party waist for me out of the lining of an old silk quilt of Grandmother Hunter’s that Aunt Adella sent us.”
Mrs. Fairweather did go to see Doris the very next day, and quite wonderful things came to pass from that interview. Doris and Penelope found their lives and plans changed in the twinkling of an eye. They were both to go and live with Aunt Esther–as Mrs. Fairweather had said they must call her. Penelope was to have, at last, her longed-for musical education and Doris was to be the home girl.
“You must take the place of my own dear little granddaughter,” said Aunt Esther. “She died six years ago, and I have been so lonely since.”
When Mrs. Fairweather had gone, Doris and Penelope looked at each other.
“Pinch me, please,” said Penelope. “I’m half afraid I’ll wake up and find I have been dreaming. Isn’t it all wonderful, Doris Hunter?”
Doris nodded radiantly.
“Oh, Penelope, think of it! Music for you–somebody to pet and fuss over for me–and such a dear, sweet aunty for us both!”
“And no more contriving party waists out of old silk linings,” laughed Penelope. “But it was very fortunate that you did it for once, sister mine. And no more poverty puckers,” she concluded.