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Amarilly of Clothes-line Alley

Page 52

"I wonder," meditated Gus, "where the surplus will land next?"

"It has been most everywhere except to the police court," said Bobby.

"'Spect 'twill land there next!"

His prophecy was fulfilled. Mrs. Jenkins washed the lucrative garment

late one afternoon and left it on the line all night. The next morning,

to the great consternation of the family and the wild distress of

Amarilly, the beloved surplice, that friend of friends in time of need,

had vanished. Other clotheslines in the vicinity had also been deprived

of their burdens, and a concerted complaint was made to the police, who

promptly located the offender and brought him summarily to trial. Mrs.

Jenkins was subpoenaed as a witness, which caused quite a ripple of

excitement in the family. Divided between dread of appearing in public

and pride at the importance with which she was regarded by her little

flock, Mrs. Jenkins was quite upset by the occasion. She hadn't attended

a function for so long that her costuming therefor was of more concern

than had been Amarilly's church raiment.

Mrs. Hudgers loaned her mourning bonnet and veil, which was adjusted at

half mast. They appeared in direct contradiction to the skirt of bilious

green she wore, but the Jenkinses were as unconventional in attire as

they were in other things.

The family attended the trial _en masse_, and were greatly elated at the

prominence their mother had attained. The culprit was convicted and the

surplice duly restored. The misfortune was not without profit. Mrs.

Jenkins received thirty-five cents as a witness fee.

They had managed to pay their household expenses through the summer, but

when the rent for August was due there was not quite enough cash on hand

to meet this important item of expenditure. Noting the troubled brows of

Mrs. Jenkins and Amarilly at breakfast time, the Boarder insisted on

knowing the cause.

"We're broke, and the rent's overdue," tersely explained Amarilly.

"I'm broke, too," sighed the Boarder, "except what I've got in the

savin's bank towards--"

"Lily Rose," suggested Amarilly softly.

"Yes," he admitted, with a beaming look. "But when I go broke, all other

things failin', I allers tackle a pawnbroker."

"We ain't got nothin' to pawn," sighed Amarilly.

She recalled the lace waist, but that, like the Lily Rose fund, was

sacred. There was always, to-day, yesterday, and forever, the surplice,

and her scruples regarding that article had of necessity become case-

hardened; still, Amarilly hesitated. A pawnshop seemed lower than a

police court.

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