―Jean Grace,‖ answered the child.
When Pete returned to the front of the shop, he held a package in his hand. It was wrapped in pretty Christmas paper.
―There you are,‖ he said. ―Don't lose it on the way home.‖
She smiled happily at him as she ran out of the door. Through the window he watched her go. He felt more alone than ever.
Something about Jean Grace and her string of beads had made him feel once more the pain of his old grief. The child's hair was as yellow as the sunlight; her eyes were as blue as the sea. Once upon a time, Pete had loved a girl with hair of that same yellow and with eyes just as blue. And the necklace of blue stones had been meant for her.
But one rainy night, a car had gone off the road and struck the girl. After she died, Pete felt that he had nothing left in the world except his grief. The blue eyes of Jean Grace brought him out of that world of self-pity and made him remember again all that he had lost. The pain of remembering was so great that Pete wanted to run away from the happy Christmas shoppers who came to look at his beautiful old things during the next ten days.
When the last shopper had gone, late on Christmas Eve, the door opened and a young woman came in. Pete could not understand it, but he felt that he had seen her before. Her hair was sunlight yellow and her eyes were sea-blue. Without speaking, she put on the counter a package wrapped in pretty Christmas paper. When Pete opened the package, the string of blue beads lay again before him.
―Did this come from your shop?‖ she asked.
Pete looked at her with eyes no longer cold. ―Yes, it did,‖ he said. ―Are the stones real?‖
―Yes. They aren't the best turquoise(绿松石), but they are real.‖
―Can you remember to whom you sold them?‖
―She was a small girl. Her name was Jean. She wanted them for her sister's
Christmas present.‖
―How much were they?‖
―I can't tell you that,‖ he said. ―The seller never tells anyone else what a buyer
pays.‖
―But Jean has never had more than a few pennies. How could she pay for
them?‖
―
For a moment there was no sound in the little shop. Then somewhere in the city, church bells began to ring. It was midnight and the beginning of another Christmas Day.
―But why did you do it?‖ the girl asked.
Pete put the package into her hands.
―There is no one else to whom I can give a Christmas present,‖ he said. ―It is already Christmas morning. Will you let me take you to your home? I would like to wish you a Merry Christmas at your door.‖
And so, to the sound of many bells, Pete Richards and a girl whose name he