At all events she
insisted upon carrying it alone, telling her companion that she
thought perhaps he had better not touch it as it was so very, very
brittle and might get broken, and consoling him by offering to
permit him to carry Petunia, which fragrant appellation, it
appeared, was the name of the doll.
"I named her Petunia after a flower," she explained. "I think she
looks like a flower, don't you?"
If she did it was a wilted one. However, Miss Armstrong did not
wait for comment on the part of her escort, but chatted straight
on. Jed learned that her mother's name was Mrs. Ruth Phillips
Armstrong. "It used to be Mrs. Seymour Armstrong, but it isn't
now, because Papa's name was Doctor Seymour Armstrong and he died,
you know." And they lived in a central Connecticut city, but
perhaps they weren't going to live there any more because Mamma had
sold the house and didn't know exactly WHAT to do. And they had
been in Orham ever since before the Fourth of July, and they liked
it EVER so much, it was so quaint and--and "franteek"--
Jed interrupted here. "So quaint and what?" he demanded.
"Franteek." Miss Barbara herself seemed a little doubtful of the
word. At any rate Mamma said it was something like that, and it
meant they liked it anyway. So Mr. Winslow was left to ponder
whether "antique" or "unique" was intended and to follow his train
of thought wherever it chanced to lead him, while the child
prattled on.
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