Mrs. Bentley. âDonât you believe me?â
âI donât know,â said Jane. âNo.â
âBut how ridiculous! Itâs perfectly obvious. Everyone was young once!â
âNot you,â whispered Jane, eyes down, almost to herself. Her empty ice stick had fallen in a vanilla puddle on the porch floor.
âBut of course I was eight, nine, ten years old, like all of you.â
The two girls gave a short, quickly-sealed-up laugh.
Mrs. Bentleyâs eyes glittered. âWell, I canât waste a morning arguing with ten-year-olds. Needless to say, I was ten myself once and just as silly.â
The two girls laughed. Tom looked uneasy.
âYouâre joking with us,â giggled Jane. âYou werenât really ten ever, were you, Mrs. Bentley?â
âYou run on home!â the woman cried suddenly, for she could not stand their eyes. âI wonât have you laughing.â
âAnd your nameâs not really Helen?â
âOf course itâs Helen!â
âGood-bye,â said the two girls, giggling away across the lawn under the seas of shade, Tom followed them slowly. âThanks for the ice cream!â
âOnce I played hopscotch !â Mrs. Bentley cried after them, but they were gone.
Mrs. Bentley spent the rest of the day slamming teakettles about, loudly preparing a meager lunch, and from time to time going to the front door, hoping to catch those insolent fiends on their laughing excursions through the late day. But if they had appeared, what could she say to them, why should she worry about them?
âThe idea!â said Mrs. Bentley to her dainty, rose-clustered teacup. âNo one ever doubted I was a girl before. What a silly, horrible thing to do. I donât mind being oldânot reallyâbut I do resent having my childhood taken away from me.â
She could see the children racing off under the cavernous trees with her youth in their frosty fingers, invisible as air.
After supper, for no reason at all, with a senseless certainty of motion, she watched her own hands, like a pair of ghostly gloves at a séance, gather together certain items in a perfumed kerchief. Then she went to her front porch and stood there stiffly for half an hour.
As suddenly as night birds the children flew by, and Mrs. Bentleyâs voice brought them to a fluttering rest.
âYes, Mrs. Bentley?â
âCome up on this porch!â she commanded them, and the girls climbed the steps, Tom trailing after.
âYes, Mrs. Bentley?â They thumped the âMrs.â like a bass piano chord, extra heavily, as if that were her first name.
âIâve some treasures to show you.â She opened the perfumed kerchief and peered into it as if she herself might be surprised. She drew forth a hair comb, very small and delicate, its rim twinkling with rhinestones.
âI wore this when I was nine,â she said.
Jane turned it in her hand and said, âHow nice.â
âLetâs see!â cried Alice.
âAnd here is a tiny ring I wore when I was eight,â said Mrs. Bentley. âIt doesnât fit my finger now. You look through it and see the Tower of Pisa ready to fall.â
âLetâs see it lean!â The girls passed it back and forth between them until Jane fitted it to her hand. âWhy, itâs just my size!â she exclaimed.
âAnd the comb fits my head!â gasped Alice.
Mrs. Bentley produced some jackstones. âHere,â she said. âI once played with these.â
She threw them. They made a constellation on the porch.
âAnd here!â In triumph she flashed her trump card, a postal picture of herself when she was seven years old, in a dress like a yellow butterfly, with her golden curls and blown blue-glass eyes and angelic pouting lips.
âWhoâs this little girl?â asked Jane.
âItâs me !â
The two girls held onto it.
âBut it
Mark Twain, Sir Thomas Malory, Lord Alfred Tennyson, Maude Radford Warren, Sir James Knowles, Maplewood Books