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Authors: Kirby Larson

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BOOK: The Friendship Doll
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“It’s time.” Mr. Reyburn cued the string quartet. The girls peeked out of the mayor’s office to watch the dignitaries file into the reception room. The screen had been set aside and there the dolls were, in full view of everyone. When the girls were given the signal to enter the reception room themselves, Bunny focused her gaze on the mayor, who was stepping up to the podium.

Would you smell of plums? Or vinegar?

Bunny glanced behind her. No one else seemed to hear anything. All eyes were intent on the mayor.

Bunny discreetly tapped at her left ear. Where was this voice coming from? And what did it mean? She saw the mayor gesture right to the special envoy and then left to the dolls. But nothing he said was penetrating through the strange words in her head.

The quartet launched into another piece. Bunny quietly cleared her throat, as if that would clear the puzzling thoughts.

Well? What will you choose?

Bunny tossed her head like an impatient horse.

“Stand still,” Mary Louise hissed. “What on earth is wrong with you?”

“Sorry.” Bunny gave her head one last stealthy shake.

There, that seemed to do the trick. Now the only thing she heard was the quartet playing the first notes of the American national anthem. Bunny relaxed. Smiled. Stood a little taller. When the music quavered to a close, Mr. Sekiya, the special envoy traveling with the dolls, stepped to the podium and began to speak.

Bunny’s hand slipped into her pocket, reaching for the smooth, cool marble. She glanced right. Belle was as pale as Mother’s best Irish linen. She looked as stricken as she had that day in the cloakroom.

As if she hadn’t a friend on this earth.

Bunny did want to be noticed. But not for smelling like vinegar. She unpocketed her hand and put it on Belle’s arm. This time, Belle did not shake it off.

“You’re going to be wonderful,” Bunny whispered.

Belle looked at her in surprise.

Bunny nodded so hard all eight ringlets bounced around her head. She heard Belle take a deep breath as Mr. Reyburn waved her forward. “And here to accept Miss Japan on behalf of the children of New York City is Miss Belle Wyatt Roosevelt.”

Belle hesitated for an instant.

“You’re a Roosevelt,” Bunny whispered again. “Charge!”

Belle stepped forward and gave her little speech. It wasn’t as clever as Bunny’s, but she said it nicely and only stumbled once. When she finished, she glanced Bunny’s way with a shy smile that softened her sharp face. She looked almost friendly. Bunny smiled back.

Then a trumpet sounded and the musicians launched into the Japanese national anthem. During the majestic march, Mr. Sekiya moved solemnly over to the tables where the Ambassadors of Friendship were on display. He bowed three times to the dolls and said something in Japanese. Then he gently and carefully lifted Miss Japan off the table. He turned and slowly made his way across the shiny marble floor to Belle. When he was in front of her, he bowed to her as well. She curtsied and reached out her arms for Miss Japan. He handed her the doll.

It must’ve been heavier than Belle expected, because
it wobbled in her arms. Then she wobbled. A sharp gasp came from the row of dignitaries. The mayor rose halfway to his feet.

In an instant, Bunny whisked to Belle’s side, helping to hold the doll until Belle could get a firm grasp. The room burst into applause as Bunny stepped back in line, ducking her head shyly. Bunny caught sight of Father, who gave her a little salute. She realized that the unpleasant poking sensation had disappeared. She felt light. Happy. And proud. As proud as if she’d given a speech herself.

After the ceremony, after all the compliments from the adults and the other Welcome Committee girls, Bunny made her way to the table where the remaining dolls stood. She stopped in front of Miss Kanagawa, staring into her eyes. This time, she heard nothing. Saw nothing.

How silly to expect anything different! She was only a doll, after all.

But still …

For ten days, all five dolls were on display at Lord & Taylor. They attracted crowds of admirers, of all ages, which pleased Mr. Reyburn no end because most of the visitors also purchased something from his store. Many came to call more than once. A ladies’ lunch group so enjoyed the dolls that they returned on the weekend with their families in tow. A local doll collectors’ association paid their respects no fewer than three times in order to fully appreciate not only the dolls but also the
accoutrement
that accompanied them. The association members
disagreed amiably among themselves about which were more charming—the painted silk parasols, the diminutive tea sets, or the lacquered kimono boxes.

None of the visitors, however, signed the guest book more often than one eleven-year-old girl who cajoled her nanny into taking her to call each day of the dolls’ short stay in the city. Once, Bunny bumped into Belle Roosevelt, also visiting the dolls. Bunny had heard from Mary Louise that her name had been removed from Belle’s spite book. But at the store, Belle only nodded at Bunny and went on her way.

Every afternoon, Bunny paid her respects to Miss Kanagawa while Nanny eased her bunions in the tearoom. And every afternoon, Bunny waited for another message from the doll. But nothing came, not even one whispered word.

On the last day of the dolls’ engagement at Lord & Taylor, Bunny was more like a snail than like her bouncy namesake. “I’ve never seen such a child!” exclaimed Nanny. “First you bustle me along the streets like there’s a fire, then you dawdle as if you’re headed for a spanking.” Nanny shook her head. “You are a puzzle.” She took off her gloves in the department store’s vestibule. “Shall I stand with you?”

“No!” Bunny’s answer came out more sharply than she intended. “No, thank you, Nanny. I’ll meet you in the tearoom when I’m done.”

Nanny glanced at her bodice watch. “Four o’clock?”

“Yes, ma’am.” Bunny nodded, then hurried off to the dolls’ display.

This crowd was the smallest yet. Most of the city’s residents had already been to gawk at these wonders of Japanese artistry. Bunny was glad, really, that it was a quieter day. Fewer visitors meant she could get closer to the dolls. Well, closer to Miss Kanagawa. Still, she had to hug the edges of the room for a good long while, waiting for the right moment, until there was no one around.

Bunny was good at speeches. But when it came to finding the words on this day, it was more difficult than sitting through one of Reverend Speers’ Sunday sermons. Silly, too, were the tears stinging the back of her eyes, threatening to pop out and roll down her cheeks in a childish display of emotion. She was much too old for this piffling business of dolls.

And yet. Here she was, tearing up at the thought of this good-bye. Ridiculous.

A newly installed placard explained that the dolls would be sent, in groups of six, to various parts of the country; the Friendship Doll Committee hadn’t yet decided where. Only Miss Japan’s traveling days were over. She was going to the National Museum in Washington, D.C., her new permanent home.

When Bunny finished reading all these details, she found herself alone in the room. Now was her chance.

She cleared her throat. “Do you remember when we first met?” She looked to see if Miss Kanagawa responded.
Those dark eyes stared straight ahead. “You seemed so haughty and standoffish.” Bunny grinned a wobbly grin. “Well, I don’t think I was so charming myself. But you did something to me that day. I don’t know how. I truly don’t. And maybe I made it all up, because you haven’t spoken to me since.” Bunny put her hands in her pockets. “Father said his buttons popped right off his vest when I came to the rescue, he was so proud. Mother can’t stop telling all her friends about it. And Winnifred has written my name back on the coming-out tea guest list.” Bunny rolled her eyes. “Not that that’s any great prize.”

Bunny thought that remark might get a tiny reaction from her quiet friend. But no.

“I couldn’t have done it without you. So I wanted to give you this.” Bunny pulled something from her right pocket, and then set it inside the doll-sized steamer trunk that rested at Miss Kanagawa’s feet.

“Good-bye.” Bunny bowed, three times, to the doll, as she had seen Mr. Sekiya do.

“Bunny! Oh, there you are!” Nanny bustled over. “I nearly had apoplexy. You were to meet me at four! And now it’s nearly a quarter past the hour.” Nanny’s wrinkled cheeks flared pink with worry.

“I’m so sorry, Nanny. I lost track of time.” Bunny hugged the old lady. “I’m ready now.” She twined her arm through Nanny’s and they made their way to the front of the store. Bunny didn’t glance back. She didn’t dare. It was the only way to keep from blubbering.

Lord & Taylor’s front doors closed promptly at five
p.m. Shortly after, a specially hired crew appeared to pack up Miss Japan and her six companions. Each accessory—from black lacquer fan case to tea tin—was carefully wrapped in cotton batting. After each doll’s possessions were cared for, then began the process of placing doll and belongings in the trunk, like fitting together a jigsaw puzzle.

“What’s this?” asked the frizzy-haired woman in charge of Miss Kanagawa.

“Looks like a marble,” said one of the other packing committee members.

“Shall I remove it?” asked Frizzy Hair.

“If it’s in the trunk, it must belong there,” said a third packer.

Miss Kanagawa felt herself lifted off the stand she’d rested on for ten long days. Gently, she was wrapped in muslin and placed in her trunk. The lid closed, locks setting with a double click. In the dark, Miss Kanagawa felt something resting under her graceful hand. It was round and smooth and polished.

As she lay there, a dull ache pulsed under the left side of her orange silk kimono, like a toothache.

Or a heartbeat.

Middles

In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity
.

—A
LBERT
E
INSTEIN

MUSEUM TO AUCTION ITEMS

Making room for a New and Exciting Focus, says Board President

CHICAGO, MAR. 30, 1933 (AP) — The Wrobel Museum of Illinois History has a new leader with a fresh vision.

“We’re very pleased that the museum and its exhibits will be returning to a focus on state history,” said Mrs. Marvin George, museum board president. She declined to
comment further, promising that more information would be made available next month.

In the meantime, in order to make room for new acquisitions and exhibits, the museum will be auctioning off surplus items. One of the objects headed for the auction block is a doll sent to the children of this country by Japanese schoolchildren in 1927.

MISS KANAGAWA

Not that I would ever grumble, but these Americans have strange ways of treating an honored guest. When we first arrived, my sisters and I were feted and celebrated. The parties! The crowds of admirers! The photographers and reporters!

After touring the country for a time, we went our separate ways, to museums. At first, so many people wanted to pay their respects that visitors were required to make appointments. Then, like the water in a late summer stream, the public’s interest waned. One day, no appointments were needed, and some time after that—I have no idea how long it was because time passes much differently for a doll than it does for a human—I was rudely removed from my display and once again closed up in my trunk with all my belongings.

Ah, well. It is restful in here, wrapped not only in muslin and cotton batt but in warm memories. I cannot help but think of the girl with eyes the color of rice fields in early spring. That little scamp.

I saw right through her, snip-snap, and those plans of hers to ruin the moment for the other girl. Why I bothered about such affairs, I have no idea. I was created for bigger things, after all. Miss Japan was the one always going on and on about opening one’s heart. Oddly, my elder sister could not see beyond that girl’s bright green eyes to the cloud of loneliness beneath. It was up to me to be of service, trusted emissary that I am. Thanks to me, that girl could not carry through her wicked deed.

What’s that noise? Could it be? Oh, yes! The lid of my trunk is now opening. The light! It will feel heavenly to see again after this long, dark rest.

Ooof!
That clumsy oaf needs to take more care in setting me on my feet. Doesn’t he realize I’ve been cooped up for ages?

My goodness. What a lot of dolls! None as attractive as me, of course.

A roly-poly baby doll greets me:
Another visitor from another land. Welcome
.

Master Tatsuhiko would have shuddered to see this doll—a toy, really—with a button on her stomach that a child could push to make the doll clap her hands. How unrefined!

Ah
, mon amie,
I completely agree with you
. A slim Bleuette doll in a black beret and red velvet cloak is standing to my right.
Some people have such odd ideas about dolls. They think us mere playthings
.

I remember this from my Waking Time before. There were children who had come to the museum to see me and were quite dismayed to learn they could not undress me or comb
my hair.
It is my job to accept strange customs
, I explain to the Bleuette doll, who lets me know her name is Brigitte and that she is from France.
I am an ambassador. An Ambassador of Friendship from Japan
.

Ooh-la-la. It is an honor, Madame. I am at your service
.

Now that my eyes are adjusting to the light, I can see I am in a vast room filled with dolls of every shape and variety. Some have been modeled after children, and some after animals, like that elephant and brown bear in the far corner. Some are elegant, like myself and my French friend, but others are nothing more than bits of yarn and muslin, like that raggedy brother-and-sister pair with the unruly red hair and striped stockings. And there are some dolls made simply from paper. It is amazing. Astonishing.

Brigitte, what is this place? There are so many of us
.

That I do not know. But
, alors,
here comes the bearded man. He is the one who has brought us all here
. Brigitte has alerted me to a portly figure, puffing into the room, carrying an armful of doll stands. He is speaking to a younger, slimmer man.

“I tell you,” he says, “even at ten cents a head, we’ll make a fortune with this exhibit. They say that over one million people will attend the fair. Think of it! One million.” The bearded man stops to pat his forehead with a dingy handkerchief.

“I sure hope so, Pop. With so many people out of work,
though …” The younger man’s voice is tinged with doubt.

“This Depression is all the more reason for people to come! You watch. They’re hungry for something bright, something shiny. And this Chicago World’s Fair is just the ticket.” The bearded man stuffs his handkerchief into his back pocket. “Come on, we’ve got another shipping crate to unload.” They bustle out of the room.

A World’s Fair! That sounds important, very important indeed. That’s why I was sent here. Greeting visitors from all the world over will be an enormous responsibility. I look around the room again. It is no wonder the bearded man enlisted my help. With such a ragtag collection, he is going to need it.

BOOK: The Friendship Doll
8.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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