[Illustration: Phronsie and the Children.
                                             (_See Page 21._)]




  PHRONSIE PEPPER

  _THE YOUNGEST OF THE “FIVE
  LITTLE PEPPERS”_

  BY
  MARGARET SIDNEY

  AUTHOR OF “FIVE LITTLE PEPPERS AND HOW THEY GREW,” “FIVE LITTLE
  PEPPERS MIDWAY,” “FIVE LITTLE PEPPERS GROWN-UP”
  “OLD CONCORD: HER HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS”
  “THE GOLDEN WEST”, ETC., ETC.

  ILLUSTRATED BY JESSIE McDERMOTT

  BOSTON:
  LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO.




  PEPPER

  TRADE-MARK

  Registered in U.S. Patent Office.


  COPYRIGHT, 1897,
  BY
  LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY.

  _All rights reserved._

  _Seventy-first Thousand._

  TYPOGRAPHY BY C. J. PETERS & SON, BOSTON.

  PRESSWORK BY BERWICK & SMITH.




_In Memoriam._

  TO MY HUSBAND,
  WHO INSPIRED WHATEVER IS
  OF WORTH IN THIS,
  AND IN ALL MY BOOKS.




PREFACE.


As Phronsie Pepper was the only one of the “Five Little Peppers” who
had not a chance to become “grown-up” in the three books that form
the Pepper Library, it seemed (to judge by the expressions of those
persons interested in this family) a little unfair not to give her that
opportunity.

The author has had so many letters from the elders, as well as the
children, presenting this view of the case, that she has been brought
over to that opinion herself. And as Phronsie appeared to have
something to say on her own account, that the public, ever kind and
attentive to the Peppers, desired to hear, it was thought best to let
her speak, to make her appearance as “grown-up,” and then to draw the
curtain over the “little brown house” and the “Five Little Peppers,”
never more to rise.

Nothing was farther from the mind of the author of the “Five Little
Peppers” than a series concerning them; for she did not naturally
incline to the extension of a book into other volumes. But the
portrayal of the lives of the Peppers seemed to be a necessity. They
were living, breathing realities to her; and when pressed by many
importunate readers to know “more and more” about “Mamsie and Polly,
Ben, Joel, David, and Phronsie,” it was only like telling the stories
in the twilight hour, of what was so real and vital to their author,
that it was as if she were not speaking, but only the scribe to jot it
all down as it fell from the lips and the lives of others.

And here let the author state, in answer to the question so often asked
her, “Did the Peppers _really_ live? and _was_ there any little brown
house?” that the whole story is imaginative, existing only in her mind;
although they always seemed so alive to her, that she let them talk and
move and act from beginning to end without let or hindrance; believing
that Margaret Sidney’s part was to simply set down what the Peppers did
and said, without trying to make them do or say anything in particular.

And now the closing volume, that shuts the door of the little brown
house forever, takes the whole scene back to dear old Badgertown; and
life begins over again in rollicking, merry, and home-y fashion; and
the “Five Little Peppers,” with their troops of friends old and young,
control the book, and say and do and live, just as they like, without
the meddlesome intervention of

                                                             THE AUTHOR.




CONTENTS.


  CHAPTER I.
                                                   PAGE

  THE LITTLE BROWN HOUSE                              9


  CHAPTER II.

  A BADGERTOWN EVENING                               28


  CHAPTER III.

  JOHNNY                                             50


  CHAPTER IV.

  CAN SHE GO TO MRS. KING’S RECEPTION?               66


  CHAPTER V.

  MRS. JASPER KING’S RECEPTION                       83


  CHAPTER VI.

  GRACE                                              97


  CHAPTER VII.

  POLLY MAKES MATTERS RIGHT                         114


  CHAPTER VIII.

  ALEXIA COLLECTS THE NEWS                          128


  CHAPTER IX.

  PHRONSIE SETTLES THE MATTER                       144


  CHAPTER X.

  SUCCESS FOR POLLY                                 160


  CHAPTER XI.

  ON THE WAY TO THE BEEBES                          176


  CHAPTER XII.

  AT THE BEEBES                                     189


  CHAPTER XIII.

  FOUND                                             203


  CHAPTER XIV.

  HOME AGAIN                                        217


  CHAPTER XV.

  SOME HINGHAM CALLS                                229


  CHAPTER XVI.

  MR. MARLOWE HELPS MATTERS ALONG                   245


  CHAPTER XVII.

  ALEXIA HAS GRACE TO HERSELF                       257


  CHAPTER XVIII.

  GRANDPAPA DOES THE RIGHT THING                    270


  CHAPTER XIX.

  TRYING TO BE CHEERY                               282


  CHAPTER XX.

  FIRE!                                             296


  CHAPTER XXI.

  ARE THEY ALL SAFE?                                309


  CHAPTER XXII.

  THE SHADOW TURNS TO SUNSHINE                      322


  CHAPTER XXIII.

  THE REST OF THE PEPPERS ARE OFF                   340


  CHAPTER XXIV.

  ALL TOGETHER                                      353


  CHAPTER XXV.

  EVERYTHING DEPENDS ON POLLY                       367


  CHAPTER XXVI.

  DESTRUCTION THREATENS THE LITTLE BROWN HOUSE      383


  CHAPTER XXVII.

  PHRONSIE’S MARRIAGE BELLS!                        400


  CHAPTER XXVIII.

  HOME TO THE LITTLE BROWN HOUSE                    416




LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.


  Phronsie and the children                              _Frontispiece._

        PAGE

  “There! I got it all out alone by myself,” said Barby               15

  “Oh, goody! here comes Mr. Tisbett,” howled King                    26

  “Oh, what richness!” sighed Polly                                   29

  “Dance me up and down, daddy!” screamed Elyot                       32

  “We’ve come out to dinner, Polly,” said Alexia                      42

  “Somebody take off this!”                                           46

  Tying on her big garden hat, Phronsie went across the road          55

  “Johnny! open your eyes,” cried Dick                                60

  “Oh, he’s rolled off,” cried Polly, aghast                          63

  “The idea of a school-girl going to a reception,” said Aunt Fay     69

  Grace darted behind a tall fern, and hid her hot, distressed face   86

  “Are you ill, Miss Tupper--or--Strange?” and she laughed
    unpleasantly                                                      91

  “I shall get my Mamsie,” cried a small, determined voice           101

  Elyot perched at the foot, where he surveyed Grace at his leisure  106

  So Polly went off, her baby on her arm                             109

  “Dear child,” said Polly, “I know just how you feel”               116

  “Polly’s gone to town,” said Phronsie, cutting off some
    blossoms to add to the bundle in her hand                        131

  Phronsie led the little old white-haired woman to the
    vacated seat                                                     150

  The loving-cup was filled with pure cold water to the
    brim, “The only thing worthy of it,” said Polly                  168

  With her arms full, Phronsie entered the kitchen                   174

  Elyot gathered up his small soul with the best courage he could
    muster, and sat down on a big stone by the side of the road      181

  He propped Barby up against the upper step, and ran and
    peered into the little window strung with shoes                  193

  There was Barby in a little wooden chair, eating bread
    and butter with a very sticky face                               215

  “The ‘Scrannage Girls,’ as their neighbors called them”            221

  “There, now, it’s done, Grandpapa, dear,” said Phronsie,
    tucking the bit of paper under the old door                      241

  Phronsie leaned her head upon Mamsie’s old rocking-chair           247

  “Ar-goo!” said Algernon, finding it very pleasant to pull
    at the pillow-shams                                              262

  Barby hurried over to Grace. “I’m sorry, too,” she
    said: “and I’ll take the bears”                                  290

  “Now, Celestine,” said Mr. Bayley, rolling a fresh cigarette,
    “the Peppers are perfectly well able to take care
    of themselves.”                                                  297

  “Bless the Lord, Phronsie,” he lifted his sea-cap reverently,
    “we’re almost there.”                                            305

  “The sailor roared out, ‘The ship’s on fire!’ and was
    plunging on”                                                     312

  “I must go to Grandpapa,” cried Phronsie, “save her;”
    and dashed off by herself                                        316

  And I say, “Boo, grandmamma!” laughed Barby confidentially         324

  Polly threw herself on her knees by Mamsie’s big four-poster       327

  “Of course,” cried Polly, with kindling eyes, “splendid
    old Joel would do just that very thing, Davie”                   333

  “She’s gone; and I don’t never ’xpect to live to see her
    again, nor him, nor those pretty creeters,” went on Grandma      350

  “There,” said Joel, marching across the room, “I’m as
    good as new, made over, and patched up, and warranted.”          356

  Oh, when Polly found herself in the dear arms, and felt
    the dear eyes upon her                                           365

  Old Mr. King stood in front of Polly waiting for her to proceed    374

  “O my bressed Chilluns!” mourned Candace                           391

  Johnny whirled around to see the heap of papers and shavings on
    the floor in the merriest little blaze imaginable                397

  “We might as well all be dead, as to have the little
    brown house burnt up,” said Alexia                               403

  “An’ I want to hev the priv’lege to drive yer par up
    too,” said Mr. Tisbett                                           421

  The little children from the Dunraven Home marched around
    Phronsie and her husband, each giving her a white rose
    as they passed                                                   433




PHRONSIE PEPPER.




CHAPTER I.

THE LITTLE BROWN HOUSE.


“O children!” said Phronsie softly, “what are you doing?”

“They’re pulling all the hair out of my mamsie’s cushion,” shouted
King-Fisher, in a tone of anger; and, struggling with the two
delinquents on the floor, he bestowed several smart pulls on the chubby
shoulders bent over their task.

“Oh, oh!” cried Phronsie, dropping needle and scissors, and the little
sheer lawn bit destined to adorn Mamsie’s head, the lace trailing off
by itself across the old kitchen floor, as she sprang to her feet. “How
can you, King?”

“Stop pulling all the hair out of my Mamsie’s cushion, Barby,” screamed
King-Fisher, very red in the face. “Look at that, now! I’ll bite you,
if you don’t stop!”

“O King!” Phronsie seized his arm, as he began to set his white teeth
on the little fat arm.

Barby sat still in the middle of the floor, both hands grasped tightly
around the old calico cushion, which she huddled close to her small
bosom. “Go ’way!” she commanded, her blue eyes flashing at him from her
tangle of brown hair. “Go right ’way, bad, naughty boy!”

“I’ll take care of him. There, now, see if you come biting round here,
Mister King!” The other figure deserted the old hair cushion pulled out
of the rocking-chair, and, throwing itself on the unsuspecting King,
rolled over and over, pommelling and puffing furiously.

“O children, children!” cried Phronsie in great dismay. Just then the
door opened, and in walked old Mr. King, bending his handsome white
head to clear the doorway.

“Well--well--well! this is beautiful upon my word!” Then he burst out
laughing.

“O Grandpapa!” exclaimed Phronsie, clasping her hands in distress,
“this is so very dreadful! Do make them stop!”

“Nonsense! Let them alone,” said the old gentleman, in the midst of
his laugh. “I don’t doubt King-Fisher has been putting on airs, and
Polly’s boy is aching to take it out of him. That’s right, Elyot, give
it to him! I dare say he deserves it all, every bit.”

“Grandpapa,” begged Phronsie, hurrying up to clasp his arm
entreatingly, “do please make them stop. They’re in the little brown
house, Grandpapa; only just think, the little brown house. _Please_
make them stop!”

“To be sure,” said old Mr. King, pulling himself out of his amusement,
and wiping his face, “that is a consideration. Come, now, boys, hold up
there; you must finish all this out-of-doors, if you’ve got to.”

“O Grandpapa!” interposed Phronsie, “please tell them not to finish at
all. Make them stop always.”

“Well, at any rate, you must stop now, this minute; do you hear?” He
stamped his shapely foot, and the combatants ceased instantly, King, in
the sudden pause, finding himself at last on top.

“I could have beaten him all to nothing,” he declared, puffing
violently; “but he jumped whack on me, and my arm got twisted under,
and--and”--

“Never mind the rest of it,” said Grandpapa coolly; “of course you’d
have beaten if you could. Well, Elyot, you did pretty good for a boy of
five.”

“He was biting my sister,” declared Elyot, squaring up, with flushed
cheeks, and clinching his small fists.

“Oh--oh!” cried Barby, who had held her breath in delighted silence
while the encounter was in progress; and running up, her brown hair
flying away from her face, she presented a fat arm for the old
gentleman’s inspection.

“I don’t see any bite,” he said, after a grave scrutiny of it all over.

“Not yet,” said Barby, shaking her brown head wisely; “but it was
coming--it truly was, Grandpapa.”

“Don’t worry till your miseries do come, little woman;” he swung her up
over his white head, then put her on his shoulder.

“There Phronsie used to perch,” he said, smiling over at the young girl.

“O Grandpapa, she’s too big--why, she’s Aunt Phronsie, and she’s most
dreadful old,” said Barby, leaning over to look at him.

“Well, she used to sit just where you are, Miss,” repeated the old
gentleman. “Now, you be sure you’re always number two.” He pinched her
toes, making her squirm and squeal.

“What’s numtwo?” she asked at length, all out of breath from play.

“Lucky you don’t know,” said the old gentleman, his mouth close to her
ear; “well, it’s just always after number one, and never gets in front.
There, now, jump down, and help Phronsie patch it up with the boys.” He
put her on the floor, and went over to the corner, to sit down and view
operations.

Phronsie, meanwhile, had a boy each side of her, both trying to get
into her lap at once.

“It would just kill Mamsie,” she said mournfully, “to think of you two
boys behaving so, and she’s only gone a week!”

There was an awful pause. The old gentleman over in the corner kept
perfectly still; and Barby, finding all obstructions removed, placidly
engaged in completing the destruction of Mother Fisher’s cushion.

“And you promised her, King, you’d be a good boy, and be nice to the
children.”

“I--forgot,” blurted out King, winking very fast, and not looking at
Elyot. “I--I--did. Don’t look so, Phronsie,” he mumbled; and instantly
after his head went over in his sister’s lap, and he sobbed in her
dress, “Don’t write her, Phronsie--don’t!”

“And to think,” said Phronsie, gravely regarding Elyot, “that you
should fly at him, when he only wanted to protect Mamsie’s dear old
cushion. O Elyot! I am so surprised at you for pulling it to pieces.”

“I only wanted to see inside it; you said Mamsie and Uncle Ben made a
Santa Claus wig of it once; I was going to put it right back,” said
Elyot stoutly. Yet he looked at the ceiling diagonally, not trusting
himself a glance into Phronsie’s brown eyes. “Say, you don’t suppose
Grandmamsie will know?” he asked suddenly.

“I suppose I must tell Mamsie everything,” said Phronsie soberly. “I
promised to, you know. And, besides, we always have.”

Elyot shivered all over his small frame, while King howled, and
burrowed deeper than ever in Phronsie’s lap.

“But I can tell her how sorry you two boys are,” Phronsie went on, “and
that you never, never will do such a naughty thing again; that is, if
you never will, boys.”

[Illustration: “There! I got it all out alone by myself,” said Barby.]

“Oh, we never will!” they both protested over and over; and King came
up out of his shelter, and wiped his eyes, and the two put their arms
around each other, and made up splendidly; then turned to hear Barby
say, “There, I got it all out alone by myself;” and there was the hair
out of Mamsie’s cushion all sprawled over the floor.

While the children were picking this up, and crowding it back into the
big calico cover, Phronsie making Elyot do the best part of the work,
as he was older, and had helped Barby along, King working vigorously,
as penance, old Mr. King called, “Now, Phronsie, I want you, as those
youngsters seem to be straightened out;” and she had gone and sat on
his knee, her usual place in a conference.

“Well, I’ve just done such a good stroke of work, child,” he said
complacently, pulling softly the golden waves of hair that lay over her
cheek.

“What, Grandpapa?” she asked, as he seemed to wait her reply.

“Yes, such a good piece of work,” he ran on. Then he chuckled,
well pleased. “You must know, Phronsie,” for he was determined to
tell it in a way to suit himself, “that I was sitting on the back
veranda--Polly’s gone to town to-day, you know.”

“Yes, Grandpapa.”

“Well, and the house was quiet, thanks to you and the little brown
house, and I had a chance to read the morning paper in peace.” This
he said, unconscious of the fact that every one knew quite well he
courted the presence of the children on any and every occasion. “Well,
I had considerable to read; the news, strange to say, is very good,
really very good to-day, so it took me quite a long time.” He forgot
to mention that he had lost himself a half-hour or so in a nap; these
occurrences were never to be commented on in the family. “And I was
turning the paper--it’s abominable that editors mix things up so; it’s
eternally turning and returning the sheet, to find what you want. It’s
very hard, Phronsie, when we pay such prices for articles, that we
cannot have them to suit us, child.”

“Yes, Grandpapa,” said Phronsie patiently.

“Well, don’t look at those youngsters, Phronsie; they’re all right now.
They won’t fight any more to-day.”

“O Grandpapa!”

“I mean it, child. Well, I was turning that contemptible paper
for about the fiftieth time,--I wanted to read Brinkerhoff’s
editorial,--when I caught sight of a figure making around the lawn to
the front veranda. Thinks I, ‘that looks wonderfully like Roslyn May.’”

The pink glow in Phronsie’s round cheek went suddenly out.

“And so it was, as sure as you’re here on my knee.” He had her hand in
both of his, and was affectionately pressing it. “Yes, Phronsie, there
was that fellow. So I jumped up, and told Johnson to send him around to
me; and he came.”

Old Mr. King drew a long breath of pleased reminiscence. Phronsie sat
quite still, the afternoon sunlight that streamed through the western
window glinting her yellow hair. Her hands lay in Grandpapa’s, and her
eyes never wavered from his face. But she said nothing.

“You don’t ask me anything, Phronsie,” said the old gentleman at last.
“Hey, child?” pinching her ear.

“No, Grandpapa, because you will tell me yourself.”

“And so I will; you are a good girl not to badger me with questions.
Well, he came about the same thing, Phronsie,--wanted to see you, and
all that. But I couldn’t allow it, of course; for, if I did, the next
thing, you would be worried to death by his teasing. And that’s all out
of the question. Besides being decidedly unpleasant for you, it would
kill me.”

“Would it, Grandpapa?” Phronsie leaned forward suddenly, and held him
with her brown eyes.

“Not a shadow of doubt,” he answered promptly; “I shouldn’t live a
month if you went off and got married, Phronsie.”

“I wouldn’t go off and get married, Grandpapa!” exclaimed Phronsie. “I
could stay with you then; didn’t Roslyn say we could, and you would
always go with us if we went away? O Grandpapa, you didn’t think I
would ever leave you!” She threw her arms around his neck, and clung to
him convulsively.

“Yes, yes, that’s right,” said the old gentleman, immensely pleased,
and patting her on the back as if she were a child of three; “but you
see this is nothing to the point, Phronsie, nothing at all.” Then he
went on testily, “You’d belong to somebody else besides me, and that
would be the same as being a thousand miles away. And as long as I’m
sure you don’t love him, Phronsie,”--which he had found out by taking
care not to ask her,--“why, I’ve done just the very best thing for you,
to send him away about his business.”

“Did he ask to see me?” Phronsie sat up quite straight now, and waited
quietly for the answer.

“Why, of course he did; but I knew it would only trouble you to see
him.”

“O Grandpapa--just one little minute--I wouldn’t have let him stay
long. Couldn’t you have sent him over here just for one minute?”

“Nonsense! You’re so tender of his feelings, it would only have been
hard for you. No, I thank my stars, Phronsie, I saved you from all
this trouble. What you would do, child, if it were not for your old
Granddaddy, I’m sure I don’t know. Well, he’s gone, and I told him
never to come back again with that errand in view; and I only hope to
goodness it’s the last time I shall be so worried by him.”

“There, we’ve got the hair all in,” announced King triumphantly,
rushing up, followed by the other two, Barby wiping her grimy little
hands in great satisfaction over her white apron. “Now please say we’ve
been good boys, and”--

“And a good girl,” chimed in Barby, flying after with red cheeks.

“And sew up the old cushion,” begged Elyot. This would be almost as
good fun as the pulling it open had been, to see Phronsie sewing it
tight, and she could tell them stories meanwhile.

“Let the cushion wait,” began Mr. King.

“But, Grandpapa, the hair may get spilled out again,” said Phronsie
gently, and getting off from his knee. “I really think I ought to do it
now, Grandpapa dear.”

“Yes--yes,” cried all the children, hopping up and down; “do it now--do
it now, Phronsie.”

So Phronsie found her thimble and scissors once more, and got out the
coarse brown thread from her little sewing-bag, and sewed the big seam
in the old calico cushion fast again, the children taking turns in
poking the wisps of hair in the crevice.

“Now tell all what you used to do when you lived here--just here,”
demanded Elyot, patting the old floor with his hand, “every single
thing, Phronsie;” for the children, except on rare occasions, never
called her “Aunt.” “Don’t leave out anything you did in the little
brown house. Now begin.”

“O Elyot,” said Phronsie, “I couldn’t tell it all if I tried ever so
hard.”

“Polly tells the best stories,” said King, pushing and picking the hair
into place in the last corner.

“So she does,” said Phronsie; “there now, King-Fisher, that’s all you
can do. Look out; my needle is coming up there,” as King with a final
pull settled the last little wisp into place.

“Let me--let me,” begged Barby, thrusting her little hand in. “I want
to do it last. Let me, King.”

“No,” said King stoutly, hanging to the corner. “I shall; it’s my
mother’s cushion.”

“O King,” began Phronsie gently, “Mamsie would like it better if you
let Barby do it. She’s so little.”

“She’s always pushing, just the same,” said King stoutly, “as if she
was big folks.”

“Well, if you want to please Mamsie, you’ll let her do it,” went on
Phronsie, pausing with needle in mid-air. “Hurry, now, children; I
can’t wait any longer.”

“You may, Barby,” declared King, relinquishing with a mighty effort
the pinched-up corner. “There, go ahead,” and he winked fast at her
great satisfaction while she pushed and poked the wisps in with her fat
little finger, humming contentedly meanwhile.

Phronsie flashed a smile over at King. “Now, children,” she said, “you
must know we were very poor in those days, and”--

“What is poor?” asked Barby, stopping singing.

“I know,” said Elyot; “it’s wearing rags like the ashman. Oh, I wish I
could!”

“Oh, no!” cried Phronsie in horror; “that isn’t poor; that’s shiftless,
Mamsie always used to say. Oh, we were just as nice! Well, you can’t
think, children, how spick and span everything was!”

“What’s spick ’n’ span?” demanded Barby.

“Make her stop,” cried Elyot crossly; “we shall never hear all about it
if she keeps asking questions every minute. Now go on, Phronsie.”

“Well,” said Phronsie, “now that corner’s all done beautifully, Barby;
take care, or I shall prick your finger. Why, Polly would scrub and
scrub the floor and the table, till I used to try to see my face in
them, they were so bright.”

“They’re bright now,” declared both the boys, jumping off to
investigate. Barby pushed her hair back from her round cheeks, and
leaned over. “I don’t see my face, Phronsie,” she exclaimed.

“No, and I couldn’t see mine; but I always tried to, for Polly kept
them so bright, and one day I remember I was scrubbing Seraphina, and”--

“Who’s Seraphina?” burst in Barby, coming back to crouch at Phronsie’s
feet.

“Ow! Be still!” cried Elyot, with a small pinch.

“Seraphina was my very first doll, the only child I ever had until
Grandpapa gave me all the rest,” Phronsie sent a smile over to the
old gentleman in the corner, “and she’s in Mamsie’s big bureau in the
bedroom now.”

“I’m going to see,” declared all three children at once, hopping up.

“Oh, no! you mustn’t,” said Phronsie; “not till this cushion is done.
Then, if you’re very good, I’ll show her to you.”

“We’ll be just as good,” they all cried, “as we can be,” and running
back to sit down on the floor again at her feet. “Do go on,” said Elyot.

“You see, I wanted Seraphina to be just as nice as Polly kept things;
and so I was scrubbing her with soap and water one day, when Polly
called out, ‘O Phronsie! the big dog’s out here that scared the naughty
organ-man; and the boy;’ and before she could wipe my hands and my
face, for you see I’d got the soap all over me too, I ran to see them,
and Jasper kissed me, and got the soft soap all in his mouth.”

“Ugh!” cried King, with a grimace.

“Yes, that’s just the way Japser looked, and that’s what he said too!”
said Phronsie, going on with the recital.

“Who was Japser?” demanded Barby.

“Why, he was our Popsie,” said Elyot, who had heard the story many
times. “Now do stop talking, Barby. Well, go on,” he begged, turning
back to Phronsie.

“And I couldn’t say Jasper,” said Phronsie, “and then sometimes we
called him Jappy.”

[Illustration: “Oh, goody! here comes Mr. Tisbett,” howled King.]

“How funny!” laughed all three. “Oh, goody! here comes Mr. Tisbett,”
howled King in a sudden rapture, lifting his head to see the top of the
old stage through the window. “Why, he’s stopping here! He’s stopping
here!” and, tumbling over the other two, King found his feet, and
pranced off over the big flat doorstone, and down the path, Elyot and
Barby flying after, to see Mr. Tisbett open the stage-door with a,
“Here you be, ma’am, and the boy too.”

“Grandpapa,” cried Phronsie, taking one look out of the window, “it’s
Mrs. Fargo and Johnny!”

“The mercy it is!” exclaimed the old gentleman ruefully. “Well,
good-by, Phronsie, to any sort of peace, now that boy’s come!”




CHAPTER II.

A BADGERTOWN EVENING.


“Books! I’ve a fine packet for you to-night, Polly.” Jasper’s eyes
glowed. Polly ran up to meet him.

“O Mamsie! let me take the books--let me!” Elyot thrust in his small
figure between them, and tugged at the parcel.

“You take yourself off, young man,” said his father. “Now, Polly, hold
out your arms.”

“Oh, what richness!” sighed Polly ecstatically, “as Alexia would
say;” and, clasping her parcel closely, she sank into a big chair,
and examined her treasure. “O Jasper!” she cried, “isn’t it just
magnificent to be a publisher’s wife!”

Jasper laughed, and swung his boy up to his broad shoulder.

“I thought you’d like them, Polly,” he said with great satisfaction,
looking at her.

“Like them!” repeated Polly in a glow. Then she sprang to her feet,
tossed the whole pile into the easy-chair, and ran up to her husband,
putting her hand within his arm. “But where is the bag, Jasper?” she
asked suddenly.

[Illustration: “Oh, what richness!” sighed Polly.]

“Well, the fact of it is, Polly,” said Jasper slowly, “I left the bag
at the office. Just for this night,” he added, as he saw her face.

“Why, Jasper?” asked Polly quickly, the color dropping out of her cheek.

“Well, the truth is, I was afraid,” began Jasper.

“Oh! go on, and dance me up and down, Daddy,” screamed Elyot, beating
his heels with all his might.

Polly laid her hand on the small feet. “No, no, dear; Mamsie’s going
to talk now. Why, Jasper?” she asked again. This time she stood quite
still, and looked at him.

Jasper swung his boy lightly to the ground. “Off with you!” he cried
with a laugh, and Elyot scuttled away. “Now, Polly,” as he put his
arm around her, and drew her to a seat, “the fact is, I thought you
wouldn’t sit down and go over those books to-night if I brought out the
bag.”

“And so I wouldn’t,” declared Polly. “Of course not, with the dear old
bag waiting. How could I?”

“That’s just it,” said Jasper; “and it’s not fair for me to bring the
bag, with those waiting, either;” he nodded over at the untied packet
and the new books scattered about. “You ought to have at least one go
at them before being tied down to business matters.”

Polly broke loose from him, and ran over to the easy-chair. “And did
you think I would so much as look at these once?” she cried, her face
flushing up to the brown waves. “Oh! oh! I just detest them now.” She
looked down at the pile with the same face that she carried in the
little brown house when the old stove burned Mamsie’s birthday cake.

“But, Polly,” said Jasper, hurrying over to comfort her, “you see it’s
just this way. I’m tying you down too much to business detail, and you
ought to be enjoying yourself more, dear.”

“And don’t you suppose, Jasper,” cried Polly, turning on his troubled
face a radiant one, “that lovely old bag is just the dearest dear in
all the world next to you and the children? Oh, say you will never
leave it again! Do say so, Jasper;” she clung to him.

“I am so afraid I’m making your life too full of care, Polly,” said
Jasper gravely, “to bring the bag out every night. And this evening we
might go over the new books, and have a break in the routine for once.”

“And let you work over all your papers alone, Jasper,” cried Polly,
aghast. “O Jasper!”

[Illustration: “Dance me up and down, daddy!” screamed Elyot.]

“I can find time to do them, dear; don’t worry. And it would be better
for you.”

“And indeed it would be the worst thing in all this world, dear,”
protested Polly, shaking her brown head. “I should be so dismal,
Jasper, you can’t think, without our lovely time working together after
dinner. When the bag is done, then we’ll play and read, and do all
sorts of things. But that first hour is the best of the whole evening,
Jasper; it truly is.”

“I’m sure I love it,” cried Jasper, with kindling eyes; “I never could
do it so well without you, nor in half the time, Polly.”

“Well, then you must just promise you’ll never leave the bag back in
the office,” said Polly, laughing. “Promise now, Jasper.”

“I suppose I must,” said Jasper, laughing too. “Here come Alexia and
Pickering,” looking down the carriage-drive.

“We’ve come out to dinner, Polly, if you want us,” said Alexia,
hurrying in, Pickering’s tall figure following. “Goodness me! how you
can live so far out of town, I don’t see!”

“So you say every time I chance to meet you, Alexia” said Jasper.

“Yes, and that’s the reason she’s decided to try it herself,” said
Pickering with a drawl.

“O Alexia!” Polly gave her a small hug, as she helped her off with her
things, “are you really coming to Badgertown? Oh, how nice!”

“Pickering is always springing things on me, and telling everything I
say,” said Alexia, trying to send a cross grimace over at her husband,
but ending with a short laugh instead, “and just because I said I
wanted to have a house near you, Polly, he’s got it into his head I’m
coming out here to live.”

Pickering indulged in a long laugh.

“And I think it’s a shame,” declared Alexia, with a very injured
face, “to have one’s husband go about, and spoil all one’s surprise
parties--so there!”

“Then you really do mean to come to Badgertown to live, Alexia?” cried
Polly with sparkling eyes. “Oh, you dear! how perfectly delightful!”

“I suppose I’ll have to, Polly,” said Alexia, “as I must be just as
near you as I can get. But I do think Badgertown is utterly horrid,
and you ought to be ashamed to live out here so far. I’m dying to
have that cunning little yellow house on the hill, Polly,” she broke
off suddenly, “with the barberry-bushes in front, and we’ve come out
here to see it after dinner. Now you know it all; only I was going to
ask you to go out and take a walk, and then bring you up there with a
flourish, and give you a grand surprise. And now it’s as tame as tame
can be.” She shook her linger at Pickering, who bore it like a veteran.

“How’s baby?” asked Polly, when the wraps were off, and they were all
seated on the long veranda for a talk.

“He’s the dearest little rat you ever saw,” said Alexia, who couldn’t
forgive her boy for not being a girl, whom she could call Polly. “He’s
two teeth, and four more coming.”

“Alexia always counts those teeth that are coming with so much gusto,”
said Pickering.

“And why shouldn’t I?” cried Alexia. “It would be perfectly horrid if
he stopped with two teeth; you know it would yourself, Pickering. And
to-day, Polly Pepper, you can’t think”--

“I decidedly object to having my wife called Polly Pepper,” said
Jasper, trying to get on a grave look. “Polly Pepper King is all right.
But be sure to put on the King.”

“Oh! we girls shall never call her anything else but Polly
Pepper--never in all this world, Jasper,” said Alexia carelessly.
“Well, you tell what baby did to-day, Pickering. I’m quite tired
out with all my trial of getting here, and the disappointment of my
surprise spoiled.” She leaned back in the rattan chair, and played with
her rings.

“Our child,” said Pickering solemnly, “developed a most astonishing
mental power this morning, and actually uttered two consecutive
syllables like this, ‘Ar-goo!’”

“So did Elyot at the same tender age,” observed Jasper, “and Barby too,
I believe.”

“Now, you just be quiet, Pickering!” Alexia cried, starting forward;
“and aren’t you ashamed, Jasper, to help him on? Baby actually said the
most beautiful words; he really and truly did. And that’s what I wanted
to come out for to-night, Polly, as much as to look at the house, to
tell you that baby’s talking; and he’s only eight months old! Think of
that, now!”

“I met Roslyn May down town to-day,” said Pickering when the laugh had
subsided.

“Did you!” exclaimed Jasper.

Polly stopped laughing at one of Alexia’s sallies, and met her
husband’s eyes. His look said, “Strange he did not come out here.”

“Yes; he just got in day before yesterday, he told me, from England. I
couldn’t understand what he came over for.”

“He is going to stay some time, I suppose,” said Jasper, “now he’s
here.”

“No, he was on the way to the steamer, when we ran across each other on
Broadway,--sailed to-day on the Cunarder; that is, he said he was going
to.”

“He was going right back!” exclaimed Polly; and going over to Jasper’s
side, she lay her hand on his. “What do you mean, Pickering?”

“It’s just so, Polly,” said Pickering, feeling awfully that he must
make the sad droop in her eyes, and the color go out of her face.

“He probably is coming back soon--he may have been cabled back--a dozen
things may have happened,” said Jasper. “Don’t feel so badly, dear.”

“Well, Phronsie must never know he has been over,” said Polly.
“Promise, Alexia, you never’ll tell her! You won’t, dear, will you?”
She ran over and put her arms around Alexia.

“Horses won’t drag it out of me,” declared Alexia. “I won’t ever
mention Roslyn May to”--

“Hush!--hush! here she comes,” warned Polly frantically, pinching
Alexia’s arm to make her stop.

“Oh, mercy! Well, I didn’t say anything,” said Alexia.

Phronsie came around the veranda corner in her soft white gown. “We’re
going to have a candy party to-night,” she said.

“And a peanut party,” cried the children at her heels, as they scurried
over the veranda steps. “Tell it all, Phronsie; tell it all.”

“And you’re just in time, Alexia and Pickering,” said Phronsie, with
a smile, “to come over to the little brown house after dinner, to the
party.”

“And you’ve got to pull candy with me, Mrs. Dodge,” declared Elyot,
who just adored her, racing up to possess himself of her long white
fingers, glittering with rings.

“Oh, mercy me! I can’t. Why, I’ve on my best dress,” she said, to tease
him.

“Mamsie will let you have one of her aprons,” he cried, “or my nice
Mrs. Higby will. I’ll go and ask her.”

“No, I’m going to; Mrs. Higby will let me have the aprons,” shouted
Barby, turning her back on her father, in whose lap she had thrown
herself, and rushing after him.

“We’re all in for it, I see,” said Pickering. “Well, King, you’re my
boy, seeing the others have got champions. What do you want? I’ll see
you through this candy scrape.”

“I’d rather have my brother Jasper,” said King, not over politely, “but
I’ll take you.”

“O King!” remonstrated Phronsie gently.

“Let him alone, Phronsie,” said Pickering. “King is delicious when
unadulterated. Well, my boy, so I’ll consider myself engaged to you for
this evening at the party.”

“All right,” said King coolly.

“And Mrs. Higby says we can have all the aprons we want,” announced
Elyot, rushing back.

“And she’ll boil the candy while we’re at dinner,” piped Barby,
tumbling after.

“This knocks your pretty plan of gazing at the yellow house, sky-high,
Alexia,” whispered Pickering, under cover of the noise.

“No, it doesn’t,” she retorted. “We’ll go afterward, when the children
are abed. It’s moonlight, and we can see it just as well.”

“Think of choosing a house by moonlight!” laughed Pickering.

“Just as well as to choose it by sunlight, as long as we can see,” said
Alexia, jingling the house-key they had secured from the agent on the
way up. “Yes; we’ll have quite time before we take the train home.”

“Oh, you can’t go home to-night!” cried Polly and Jasper together. “The
idea! with a party and house-hunting on your hands. Stay over, Alexia.”

“I must be in town at eight in the morning,” said Pickering, getting
out of his chair to stretch his long legs and look at the hills.
“Alexia can stay if she wants to.”

“As if I could or would, when my husband can’t,” she cried. “And
there’s that blessed child left all alone!”

“But since he’s learned to converse,” said Pickering, “he can ask for
his rations. So he’s not to be considered.”

“Well, I’m perfectly shocked!” declared Alexia. “And I shall go home
with you in the late train.”

Oh, the candy frolic of that night! Everybody had such a glorious time
that the little old kitchen rang with the jollity that flowed over,
taking in all Primrose Lane, and down as far as “Grandma Bascom’s”
little cottage. “Grandma” now had to lie abed with her rheumatism; but
Polly and Jasper found time to slip away a bit in the midst of the
festivities and carry her a little dish of the candy before the nuts
were put in, for “Grandma” didn’t like nuts, and she did like molasses
candy. And Polly carried a few other things in a small basket on her
arm.

“For I never shall forget, Jasper,” she said as they hurried along,
“how good Grandma was the day Phronsie hurt her toe. Oh, that horrible
old ‘receet’ of Mirandy’s wedding-cake! I thought it would kill me to
wait for it. Dear, dear,” laughed Polly, “how we do remember, don’t we,
Jasper, things we used to do when we were children?”

“I’m sure I never want to forget what we did in the little brown
house,” said Jasper. “Well, Grandma was always good, I remember,
bringing raisins and all that. Now, Polly, we must tell her every
single bit of Joel’s last letter; for she’ll question us up just as
closely, you may be sure.”

[Illustration: “We’ve come out to dinner, Polly,” said Alexia.]

“I know it,” said Polly, hanging to his arm; “and Joel thinks as much
of Grandma as she does of him. It’s so nice of him, Jappy, isn’t it?”

“Oh, yes, indeed!” said Jasper, nodding briskly; “for no matter how
tired Joe is,--and he must get awfully used up sometimes, Polly, with
that big parish of his,--he’s always doing something for her. It was
fine for him to buy her that big easy-chair with the first money he had
saved up after he paid father back for his education.”

“Dear, beautiful old Joel!” cried Polly, with shining eyes.

“How upset father was,” exclaimed Jasper, in a reminiscent mood, “when
Joe made him take that money back. I declare, Polly, I never saw him so
upset in all my life!”

“It was right for Joel to make him,” said Polly stoutly.

“Yes, I know it. But Father had so set his mind on doing it for Joe.”

“But Joey couldn’t take it to keep,” declared Polly. “You know he
really couldn’t, Jasper.”

“Of course not,” said Jasper quickly. “But what we should have done
without Phronsie to make the peace between them, I don’t know. Well,
here we are.”

       *       *       *       *       *

“See here,” cried Alexia, Mrs. Higby’s red plaid apron working all up
her long figure, as she had tied it by the strings around her neck,
“if somebody doesn’t go over and call Polly Pepper home, why I’ll
just go myself.” She brandished the big wooden spoon, a few drops of
molasses trailing off over the floor.

“I suppose that is meant for me,” said Pickering, placidly eating the
big piece he ought to have been pulling, “as I’m the only one she
orders round.”

“Horrors!” cried Alexia, glancing along the tip of the spoon, “just
see the mischief I’ve done! Now the Peppers won’t ever let me in this
kitchen again.”

“I’ll wipe it up,” said Elyot, running over to her, with sticky hands,
and face streaked with molasses.

“Oh!” exclaimed Alexia with a grimace, and edging away. “Oh, my
goodness, me! and see my husband eating candy like a little pig, and me
in this dreadful scrape.”

“I wish I was your husband,” said little Elyot, getting down on his
knees; and, seizing the first thing he could find, which proved to be a
fine damask napkin, he began to vigorously mop the floor.

“Mercy me! what have you got?” cried Alexia, her sharp eyes peering at
him. “Oh! give it to me.” She seized it from his hand, and threw down
the spoon. “Come along, do,” and she hauled him out into the entry.
“It’s one of Polly Pepper’s bestest napkins; we brought it over on
the cake-plate. Now we must just douse it into a pail of water; but
goodness knows where that is.”

“Hoh!” said Elyot, “I know where there’s one, just as easy as not. Come
on.”

It was now his turn to haul Alexia, and he did it so successfully that
she was soon over the little steps, and in the “Provision Room.”

“If ever I’m thankful,” she sighed gratefully, “it is to see that
sticky mess come out,” when Elyot had delightedly plunged the napkin
into a pail of water standing in the corner. “Oh, my goodness me! if it
had spoiled that; and it’s one of her great big embroidered K’s, too!
Well, come on; we must run back, or the whole troop of them will be
after us. Wring it out and hang it up, do! Now come on.”

She picked up her skirts, and skipped over the steps, Elyot scuttling
after, in time to hear Pickering say, “Evidently my wife doesn’t
intend to take the train with me, for she’s disappeared.”

[Illustration: “Somebody take off this!”]

“I haven’t disappeared at all; I’m here,” cried Alexia at his elbow.
“The idea! Why, I’m going to look at the house on the hill; but
’tisn’t time yet,” drawing a long breath.

“Going to look at the house on the hill! Well, I guess you won’t
to-night,” said Pickering, taking out his watch; “it’s just a quarter
of ten, and the train leaves at ten. So, good-by, Alexia; you’ve got to
stay all night.”

“Oh, I can’t--I won’t!” cried Alexia. “Oh, dear! somebody take off this
horrible old apron,” wildly twisting this way and that.

“I will--I will,” cried little Elyot, fumbling at the strings.

“Oh, dear--dear!” wailed Alexia, “my face is all stuck up;
somebody--where’s Mrs. Higby? Oh, somebody wash it, please!” She was
rushing around after her bonnet now, Elyot hanging to the apron-strings
valiantly, this process tying them tighter than ever at each step.

“Here, hold on, can’t you!” roared Pickering. “You’ll never get her
undone at that rate.”

“Yes, I will, too,” cried Elyot, tugging away, and tumbling against
Mrs. Higby with a towel, wet at one end, in her hand.

“Oh, dear, dear! and that blessed child at home alone,” cried Alexia.
“Mercy! here’s my best bonnet down by the coal-scoop. Well, as long as
I’ve got anything to put on my head I suppose I should be thankful. Oh,
dear! where’s that wet towel? Do cut the strings of this horrible old
apron--Oh, dear! what shall I do!” She whirled around on them all, as
the door opened, and in ran Polly and Jasper, with glowing cheeks.

“For goodness sake, Alexia!” began Polly.

“Whew! Is it a menagerie?” cried Jasper.

“Well, it’s bad enough to go visiting, and have your friends run off
to see horrible old women,” said Alexia, whirling more than ever,
“without coming back to laugh at one’s misery. Oh, that’s a dear,
Mrs. Higby!” as that good lady’s scissors clicked, and set her free.
“I’ll bring you out a new pair of strings next time I come. Come on,
Pickering--good-by, everybody;” and she was out and running down the
path by the time he found his hat.

“Oh dear!” and back she came again, “I forgot my face; it’s all stuck
up. Do, somebody, wash this molasses off.” And Polly gave her a dab
with the wet towel, and a little kiss at the same time.

“You didn’t wash it in the right place,” grumbled Alexia, running off
again; “it was the other cheek. Oh dear, dear! Come on, Pickering; we
shall lose the train.”




CHAPTER III.

JOHNNY.


“What a pity that Johnny couldn’t come to the candy party,” sighed
Phronsie the next day, looking over at the little brown house across
the lane, which presented the same serene appearance, as if such jovial
affairs had not been; “but I suppose Mrs. Fargo knew best, and he
really was too tired, as they’d just come.”

“Mrs. Fargo surely does know best,” said Polly, stopping long enough in
her trial of a very difficult passage in the sonata to fling this over
her shoulder to Phronsie; “for you know, Phronsie, Johnny is just awful
when he’s tired out.”

“Yes; I know,” said Phronsie, with another sigh, “but then he’s Johnny,
you know, Polly.”

“And the dearest dear of a Johnny too!” cried Polly warmly, going
on with her practising. “O Phronsie, supposing I _shouldn’t_ play
this--good!” She stopped suddenly, and leaned both hands on the
music-rest at the dreadful thought.

Phronsie stopped looking over the children’s books on the table, and,
setting them straight, came over to her side.

“You can’t make a mistake,” she breathed confidently. “Why, Polly, you
play it beautifully!”

“But I may,” broke in Polly recklessly. “Oh, I may, Phronsie! And then,
oh, dear! I could never hold my head up in all this world. It would be
so very dreadful for Jasper and the children, for me not to play it as
it ought to be.”

Phronsie leaned over Polly’s shoulder, and put two soft arms around her
neck. “You will play it good, Polly,” she declared; “and Mamsie would
say,--I know she would,--that you’re not to think of what you’ll do at
the time, till the time comes.”

“You blessed child!” cried Polly, whirling around on the music-stool.
“O Phronsie! you’re just such a comfort as you were that day when
Grandpapa brought you and put you in my arms, when I broke down
practising, and I’d almost made up my mind to go home. Now, then, I’ll
just stop worrying, and play ahead.”

And she sat up straight, and flashed all the brilliant passages over
again, Phronsie standing quite still to watch Polly’s fingers flying up
and down.

But, notwithstanding all Phronsie’s comfort, Polly knew that she would
have to give hard and constant work to make this, the supreme effort
of her life thus far in a musical way, a success. It was the first
time that anybody outside of the highest professional lines had been
asked to play with the Symphony Orchestra; and when this urgent request
had been laid before Polly, she had said, “Oh, no! I cannot play well
enough.”

But Mrs. Jasper King’s reputation as a pianist had gone farther than
Polly knew. A request came, signed by a long list of people whose names
were high in an artistic sense, fortified by the best citizens of the
good old town of Berton,--itself a guaranty of anything in that line,
for was it not the home of the Symphony? When this came, and Polly saw
Jasper’s eyes, she gave a little gasp. “I will, dear, if you think
best,” she said, looking at no one but him.

“It’s just as you say, Polly,” Jasper had answered. But his eyes shone,
and he instinctively straightened up with pride. And when she had said,
“O Jasper! if you think I can, I’ll do it,”--“I know you can, Polly,”
Jasper had declared, and Polly had said “Yes,” and great delight
reigned everywhere; and Grandpapa had patted her head, and said, “Well
done, Polly! To think of all those hard hours of practice in the old
days turning out like this;” and Mamsie had smiled at her in a way that
only Mamsie could smile. And Polly and Jasper had hurried off to Berton
the next morning, Jasper swinging the little publishing bag, on the
way to the train, with a jubilant hand; and in the lapse of the hard
working hours, when things eased up a bit, he had said to Mr. Marlowe
(for it was Marlowe & King now, in bright gilt letters over the big
door), “I am going with my wife to select the music,” for Polly was a
prime favorite with Mr. Marlowe, and everything was told to him.

And Jasper and Polly went to the music-store, and ransacked the
shelves, and tried various selections, for Polly was to play what
she liked; and after the piece was picked out, then the two went to
luncheon at the cunning little restaurant on a side street, nice and
quiet, where they could talk it all over.

But sometimes, when Polly was all alone in the big music-room
opening on the side veranda, she trembled all over at the terrible
responsibility she had taken upon herself. It seemed so very much worse
to fail now that she bore Jasper’s honored name, than if she were
only unknown and simple “Polly Pepper.” And to-day she could not help
showing this dismay to Phronsie.

“But Mamsie would say so,” repeated Polly over and over to herself
bravely, “just what Phronsie did.” And then at it she would fly harder
than ever. And every evening after the “publishing bag” had been looked
over in Jasper’s and Polly’s little den, and its contents sorted and
attended to for the morrow, Jasper would always say, “Now, Polly, for
the music;” and Polly would fly to the piano, while he drew up a big
easy-chair to her side, to settle into it restfully; and the others
would hurry in at the first note, and then Polly’s concert would begin.
And every night she knew she played it a little bit better, and her
cheeks glowed, and her heart took comfort.

[Illustration: Tying on her big garden hat, Phronsie went across the
road.]

Phronsie put away the little sewing-bag as soon as Polly finished
practising this morning, and hung it on its hook over Grandpapa’s
newspaper rack,--for she always sat and sewed in the music-room
mornings when Polly practised, generally making sails for the boys,
just as Polly had done years ago, or clothes for Barby’s dolls,--and
tying on her big garden hat, she went over across the road, and down
around the corner, to the big house where Mrs. Fargo and Johnny had
come to board for the summer, arriving a week earlier than they
intended, as it was warm at home, and Mrs. Fargo watched jealously over
Johnny’s health.

“It does seem so very nice to have you here, dear Mrs. Fargo,” she
said, coming upon that lady in one of her big square rooms. For Mrs.
Fargo had taken the whole upper floor of the house, and was in the
depths of the misery of unpacking the huge trunks with which the rooms
and hall seemed to be full, the maid busy as a bee in the process,
while Johnny was under foot every other minute in a way terrible to
behold. “And now I’m going to help.” She laid aside her big hat on the
bed.

“O Phronsie!” cried Mrs. Fargo, turning a pink, distressed face to
her, “it’s perfectly lovely to see you; but you’re not going to work,
dear. It’s bad enough for me. Joanna, the nails aren’t out of that box
of books. You’ll have to go down, and tell Mr. Brown to come and draw
them.”

“I’ll draw them,” cried Johnny, springing out from behind a trunk he
was trying with all his might to move. “I’ve got my own hammer; yes,
sir-ee! Now get out of the way; I’m coming.”

“O Johnny! you can’t,” remonstrated Mrs. Fargo quickly. “You’re not big
enough; it needs a strong man.”

“I’m ’most a man,” said Johnny, twitching away from her. “I’m going to
do it.”

“But your hammer is in the box of your playthings,” said Mrs. Fargo,
glad to remember this.

“I don’t care; I’ll get Mr. Brown’s, then,” declared Johnny, prancing
off.

“Oh, dear me! Phronsie, do stop that boy,” begged Mrs. Fargo, tired and
distressed.

“Johnny,” called Phronsie softly. She did not offer to go after him.
“Come here, dear.”

“Am going for Mr. Brown’s hammer,” said Johnny, edging off.

“I want you, dear.”

“Am going for Mr. Brown’s hammer.” Yet he came back. “What you want?”

“I’m going to take you over with me, if your mamma says so, to our
house; and if you’re very good, Johnny, you shall ride on the donkey.
May I take him, Mrs. Fargo?”

“Oh, if you only will!” breathed Mrs. Fargo thankfully.

“I don’t want any old hammer!” screamed Johnny in a transport; “the
donkey’s a good deal gooder,” scrambling down the stairs.

“And I’ll send Mr. Brown up to open the box,” said Phronsie, tying on
her hat, and going after him.

But she didn’t get Johnny over to the donkey, after all; for, just as
she had seen Mr. Brown on his way up-stairs to open the box, some one
ran up the steps, two at a time, with, “O Phronsie, I’ve a day off!”
most joyfully.

“Why, I don’t see how, Dick,” said Phronsie, looking at him from under
her big hat.

“Never mind. I have it, anyhow; tell you later. Now for some fun! That
chap here?” looking suddenly at Johnny, who now began at the bottom of
the steps to howl to Phronsie to hurry for the donkey.

“Yes; they came a week sooner than they expected,” said Phronsie. “They
got here yesterday.”

“Botheration! Well, now, Phronsie, let the boy alone. I’m only here for
a day, you know. He’s all right if turned out in the dirt to play. I
want you to go to drive.”

“I promised him he should ride on the donkey,” said Phronsie. “I had
to, for his mother and Joanna have all the unpacking to do. And he
must, Dick.”

“Hand him over to me, then,” said Dick. “I’ll give him a donkey-treat,
Phronsie.”

“Oh, thank you, Dick; and then I can help Mrs. Fargo,” turning back to
the door.

“See, here,” cried Dick; “I’m doing this to help you out of it. Now,
you’ve got to go to drive with me afterward, Phronsie.” He stopped with
his foot on the upper step, and looked at her. “Grandpapa said I might
try the new pair next time I came out. Will you?”

“We can take Johnny,” said Phronsie, pausing a bit. “Yes, Dick, I’ll
go.”

“Bother him for a nuisance!” growled Dick.

But as this was all that he could get from Phronsie, he hurried off,
and overtook Johnny trying to get on by himself to the donkey’s back,
where he peacefully browsed in the paddock.

“Hold on there!” roared Dick at him, as only a college boy can roar.
But Johnny was in no mind to hold on to anything but the donkey. This
he did so effectually, sticking his toes into the sides of the animal,
that the donkey at last sent out a hind foot. Away went Johnny, half
across the field, it seemed to Dick, hurrying up; and then he lay still
as a stone.

[Illustration: “Johnny! open your eyes,” cried Dick.]

“Oh, dear!” cried Dick, in the greatest distress. “Here, Johnny, open
your eyes,” kneeling down beside him on the grass. “Come, get up, and
stop shamming;” for there was a dreadful feeling at Dick’s heart,
that, if he didn’t keep joking about it, Johnny would be found to be
hurt.

But Johnny wouldn’t get up, and he wouldn’t open his eyes; so Dick was
forced to pick him up, the donkey, finding that he incommoded no one
by running away, now trotting up to stare at the little figure on the
grass. “Here, give me some of that water,” cried Dick hoarsely, to
one of the stable boys, who appeared around the paddock with a pail.
“Dash it over his face,” as the boy came shambling up. “Donkey kicked
him--oh, my goodness! he doesn’t stir,” as the contents of the pail
streamed over Johnny’s face.

“I’ll carry him for you,” said the boy, setting down the pail.

“You get out--oh! beg your pardon--I’ll carry him myself.”

Just then Polly looked out of the window, humming the last bars of her
sonata.

“Why, Dick!” as she spied him, “how funny that you’re home. Oh,
what”--as she caught sight of a little boy’s figure in his arms.

“It’s Johnny,” said Dick, lifting his pale face to the window, as he
hurried along. But Polly didn’t hear; speeding over the stairs, she
ran out to the lawn, and over the walk to the paddock-edge. “O Dick!”
she exclaimed again. Then she held herself in check, as she saw his
face. “I believe he’s all right,” she began cheerfully.

“He’s dead!” declared Dick hoarsely, and staggering on.

“Oh, no, Dick!--oh, no!” protested Polly, hurrying by his side. “Bring
him in here,” she said, pointing to the side veranda.

Dick still staggered on, up the steps, and into the house.

“Oh, if Papa Fisher were only here!” sighed Polly; then she looked at
Dick. “But how nice it is that there’s such a good doctor here. You
know, Father Fisher told us to send for him if anything was the matter
with us. There, lay Johnny on the sofa here, and then run, Dicky, do,
and get the doctor. He lives on Porter Road, the third house this way.
Take the pony-cart. Dr. Phillips is his name,” she called after him;
then she touched the electric bell at her elbow.

“Tell Mrs. Higby to come here at once,” said Polly to the maid, who
popped in her head in obedience to the summons.

[Illustration: “Oh, he’s rolled off,” cried Polly, aghast.]

“I must get some hartshorn,” said Polly; “he won’t stir, poor boy. I’ll
run up to my room and get it.” In less time than it takes to tell it,
Polly was off and back, to find Mrs. Higby just arrived in the doorway,
saying, “Did you want me, Ma’am? Jane said as how one of the boys was
sick.”

“O Mrs. Higby!” gasped Polly, the color beginning to come back to her
cheek. “It’s Johnny--on the lounge. Here, I’ve the hartshorn,” holding
up the bottle. “He was kicked by the donkey--Dick’s gone for the
doctor.” All this in one breath, as they were going across the room,
the good woman in advance.

“I don’t see,”--began Mrs. Higby.

“And some one must tell Mrs. Fargo,” mourned Polly, back of the ample
figure. “Why--where”--for the sofa was empty.

“Oh, he’s rolled off! though how he could, I don’t see,” said Polly,
aghast, and tumbling down on her knees to peer under the sofa, Mrs.
Higby pulling it out from the wall to facilitate matters. “He was just
as if he were dead. O Mrs. Higby! where do you suppose he is?”

“I’m sure I don’t know,” declared Mrs. Higby, thoroughly alarmed; “like
enough, Mrs. King, it’s flew to his head, and he’s gone crazy.”

At this direful prospect, Polly set up a most diligent search here,
there, and everywhere a small boy of eight would be supposed to rest
under such conditions, assisted as well as she could be by Mrs. Higby,
whose ample figure, impelled by her fright, knocked down more articles
than she could well set to rights again, until at last they were
compelled to call in others to the search.

And in the midst of it all, they heard a shout out in the direction
of the stables; and, running out to the veranda, they saw Johnny
triumphantly sticking to the donkey’s back, while he waved a small
switch the stable--boy had just obligingly cut for him.

“Pay him up now for your tumble,” advised the boy.

“See, I did get on all by myself!” shouted Johnny at them. “Runned away
when Mrs. King went up-stairs;” then he turned, and waved his stick at
Dick and Dr. Phillips driving at a furious pace into the side yard.




CHAPTER IV.

CAN SHE GO TO MRS. KING’S RECEPTION?


“I’ll ask Uncle Carroll. Uncle Carroll, sha’n’t Aunt Fay take me?
Please say yes.”

“No use to ask him, Grace; you’re too young.”

“_Please_, Uncle Carroll, don’t mind what Aunt Fay says. Just _you_ say
I’m to go.”

“Where?” he dropped his paper.

“Out to Mrs. King’s reception to-morrow afternoon.”

“Nonsense! You’re too young.”

“Child, I told you so,” said Aunt Fay quietly, slipping the cosey on
the tea-pot again.

“Too young!” Grace pulled savagely at the girlish hair on her brow, and
twisted her long braid hanging down her back, up high on her head.

“I’ll do up my hair, and pull down my face--so,” lengthening her round
cheeks--“anything, to just get the chance of going,” she cried. “O
Uncle Carroll! and I’m sixteen. You’re positively cruel.”

“You’re nothing but a school-girl,” said Aunt Fay; “the idea of going
to a reception.”

“Why, those receptions of Mrs. King’s are packed; you don’t seem to
understand, Grace; and you’d take the standing-room of some one else,”
added Uncle Carroll.

“I’d take my own standing-room,” declared Grace positively, “and I
wouldn’t tread on other people’s toes;” seeing a chance for her, since
the two guardians of her peace had begun to argue the point. “Just
think, I’ve never seen the King house nor Miss Phronsie.”

“Well, she’s a raving, tearing beauty,” said Uncle Carroll, “and worth
going miles to see, I tell you.”

“And I want to see Mrs. King again,” cried Grace, pursuing her
advantage. “I got a peek at her once, when she came to call at the
Drysdales. Bella and I heard she was in the drawing-room, and we crept
in behind the cabinet. She was just lovely; and the color kept coming
and going in her cheeks, and her brown eyes were laughing, and I’ll do
anything to see her again.”

“She’s the rage, that’s a fact,” assented Uncle Carroll. “Well, Mrs.
Atherton, why don’t you take the child for once; I would.”

“Carroll Atherton!” exclaimed his wife in dismay, “how could I ever
look her father and mother in the face, and they’ve trusted her to us,
while she went to school, to do the right thing by her. The idea of a
sixteen-year-old girl, and a school-girl, going to a reception!”

“The child won’t have a chance to get there any other way,” observed
Mr. Atherton. “One little social break won’t matter.”

“The worst place to make a social break is at Mrs. King’s,” said Mrs.
Atherton. “No, Grace, you can_not_ go.” She set her lips tightly
together. “Any other thing you might ask, I’d try to indulge you in;
but I won’t make a _faux pas_ at Mrs. Jasper King’s.”

“I don’t want anything else,” cried Grace in a passion. Just then a
young girl ran over the steps, and plunged without ceremony into the
pretty breakfast-room.

“Oh, joy--joy--joy!” she cried, beating her hands together, “mamma’s
going to take me to Mrs. King’s reception to-morrow afternoon.”

[Illustration: “The idea of a school-girl going to a reception,” said
aunt Fay.]

“Bella Drysdale!” shrieked Grace, deserting her chair to throw her
arms around her friend. “There, Uncle Carroll, now you see what Mrs.
Drysdale’s going to do for Bella,” she flung over her shoulder, not
deigning to notice her aunt.

“It’s too bad,” began Mr. Atherton.

“I shall see that lovely Mrs. King again,” cried Bella in a rapture.
“Brother Tom’s going to get a look at Miss Phronsie; and we’ve got a
cousin from Chicago, and he’s going for the express purpose of seeing
her. Oh! everybody will be there, Grace. Mamma says you _must_ go.”

“You’re older than Grace,” began Mrs. Atherton to gain a little time
before the storm should begin again around her head.

“Only one month,” said Bella; “what’s that?”

“Sixteen days!” cried Grace, “only sixteen days! Just think of that
paltry atom of time to keep one away from that glorious reception.
Uncle, wouldn’t you be ashamed to have every one know that Aunt
Fay kept me away for just sixteen days? I should positively die of
mortification.”

“Well, you cannot go anyway,” suddenly and decidedly declared Mrs.
Atherton. Mrs. Drysdale or no Mrs. Drysdale, whom she followed when it
suited her to do so, she was determined to keep to that decision. “It
is of no use to argue and to tease--you can_not_ go.”

Bella dragged Grace off to her room, and shut the door on their woes.

“I shall go! I shall go!” declared Grace in a white heat, raging up and
down the room.

“Oh, mercy! Mrs. King won’t have you, if you go on that way. She’s
awfully nice and particular. Stop it, Grace.” Bella shook her arm.

“I’m going--I’m going--I’m going, so there!” declared Grace
determinedly. “That’s settled. Now, how shall I do it? Help me to
think, Bella.” She stopped suddenly.

“What’s the use of thinking,” cried that young lady, throwing herself
on the broad window-seat in among its cushions, and stretching
restfully, “as long as you can’t go?”

“As long as I can go, you mean,” corrected Grace, an ugly little gleam
in her blue eyes.

“Well, you’re a regular Western fury,” declared Bella, regarding her.
“Gracious, I wouldn’t have taken you from the ‘wild and woolly plains’
as your aunt has for a year!”

“Don’t speak to me of Aunt,” commanded Grace, frowning heavily. “What
has she done? Kept me out of this, the thing I wanted most of all.
And besides, the ‘wild and woolly West’--why, I haven’t been educated
there, as you know. It’s New England, if any place, that’s to blame for
me. Oh, oh, I’ve an idea!”

Bella sat up straight, the transition was so great, to stare, as Grace
ran softly to the door, opened it, and looked and listened; then locked
it again, and tiptoed back.

“The very thing!” She seized Bella’s hands, and dragged her off the
window-seat. “I’m going to be your Western friend; you put that idea
into my head--don’t you see? dressed up. O Bella, you stupid, you owl,
I’m going as your visitor; and I’ll hire my bonnet and gown, and change
my hair, so Aunt won’t catch me. And--and--what joy!”

When the luckless Bella, nearly danced out of breath, was released, she
made a faint protest. But she was fairly talked off her feet again;
and by that time the fun of the thing had entered into her soul and
clutched her. So she said “yes,” and began to plan as smartly as Grace
herself.

“But mother never will take you in all this world,” she said, sobering
down.

“Did you for an instant suppose I was going to let your mother know who
I am?” cried Grace, bursting into a laugh. “Oh, what a sweet owl you
are, Bella Drysdale! Of course I’m going to fool her too.”

“Well, she won’t let me take a stranger,” said Bella sharply, tired of
being called an owl twice. “I guess I’m as smart as you, Grace Tupper.
I should know better than to get up such a silly plan.”

“I’m to be Miss Strange from Omaha, Nebraska,” said Grace solemnly;
“a pupil of Miss Willoughby’s boarding- and day-school. All this is
true--my name is Grace Strange Tupper. And because I don’t happen to
board, instead of going to her day-school at Miss Willoughby’s, isn’t
my fault. I would if I could. Now, Owlie, do you see?”

“If you call me an owl again I won’t do a single thing about it,” cried
Bella stubbornly; “that’s flat.”

“So she was a dear,” cried Grace, soothing her, and launching at the
same time into an animated discussion as to ways and means; which
milliner to hire the bonnet from, and which was the most becoming way
to do up her hair, and how to darken her eyebrows, till Bella looked
at her watch aghast. “And I’ve a horrible French letter to write for
to-morrow, or Mademoiselle will kill me, and mamma won’t let me go to
the reception.”

“Oh, misery! Hurry, do; run every step of the way home,” begged Grace,
nearly pushing her out of the room as she ran off.

And the next afternoon Grace shut herself up again in her room; and
while the French maid was evolving the usual fine creation out of her
aunt for the reception, Grace was also doing wonders,--to steal softly
down the stairs, and out and away to Bella’s.

“I thought I’d save you the trouble of calling for me,” she said, in a
sweet little drawl as far unlike her usual tones as possible, as she
entered the long Drysdale drawing-room. “Oh, beg pardon, I thought
Bella was here!”

“Er--no; allow me to do the honors.” A tall young man with shoulders
built for ball-team work, came slowly into the centre of the room.
“Bella will be down soon. Take a seat, Miss”--

“Strange,” murmured Grace faintly, and wondering if her front frizzes
had slipped, and if the pencilling under her eyes looked natural.
“I--I--it isn’t any matter. I suppose I’m too early.”

She sank into an easy-chair in the darkest shadow of the room, and
covered her feet primly with her hired gown, regardless of the wasted
elegance of her new little boots. These had been her one extravagance;
but now she was too far gone to care whether or no they were seen.

“Oh, Bella’s the same as she was ten years ago when I last visited
here,” observed the young man, carelessly leaning his elbow on the
mantelpiece, and staring at her. “She was always a tardy little thing,
I remember; kept us waiting everlastingly when we were going outing.”

So this was Bella’s cousin from Chicago. Well, he was perfectly horrid
to talk that way of her dearest friend; and besides, what sharp black
eyes he had, piercing through and through her. She put her hand up
involuntarily to feel of her frizzes, shivered, and drew in her boots
farther than ever under her chair.

“I don’t think it is very nice to speak so of your relatives when you
are visiting them,” she observed to her own astonishment. Then she
would have bitten out her tongue sooner than have spoken.

“Er--oh, beg pardon, did you speak?” exclaimed the young man, starting
out of a revery.

Joy! he hadn’t heard her. “No--that is--it isn’t any matter,” said
Grace hastily. “I was going to say I think Bella is perfectly splendid.
We all do at school.”

“You attend Miss Willoughby’s boarding-school, I believe,” said the
black-eyed young man, bending on her a sharper gaze than ever. “It’s a
delightful school I’m told. Isn’t that a fact?”

Grace was saved from replying by his next remark, which he presented
without any pause to speak of. “I’ve two cousins, Jenny and Francina
Day, there. I’m going over to call on them this evening after dinner.”

Oh, horrors! Why hadn’t Bella told her of this before she had taken
upon herself such a scrape! Well, there was no help for it now; there
was no other way, if she would see Mrs. King, and be part and parcel
of Mrs. King’s great reception. She tried to recover herself enough
to smile; but she felt, as she afterward told Bella, as if her face
wobbled all over.

“I’m glad to meet somebody who will give me a sort of a welcome there.
Fact is, I don’t know my cousins by sight. Never saw but one of them,
and she was a kid of three years old. Are they nice girls?”

“Perfectly splendid,” said Grace recklessly, glad to think she had made
up a long, outstanding fight between Jenny and herself just the day
before, and stifling the qualms of conscience when she reflected on
Francina’s heavy dulness. “Oh, I’m so glad they’re your cousins,” she
said, smiling radiantly.

The sharp-eyed young man showed two rows of even white teeth as he also
smiled expansively.

“Miss Willoughby is extremely gracious to allow you to go to a swell
reception,” he said slowly. “If I’d supposed it would be of any use,
I’d have begged my cousins off. I presume it’s too late for me to run
around now and get them.”

“Oh, yes, yes,” cried Grace, starting forward, and beating one
little boot in terror on the carpet. “Miss Willoughby doesn’t
like short notice about anything; and--and--it’s an awful long way
there--and--here comes Bella.” To her great relief in came that young
lady, resplendent in a new blue hat quite perky, with a grown-up air
that was matched by Bella’s manners as she drew on a white kid glove.

Grace deserted her shady corner, and flew at her. “O Bella, do hurry,”
as she threw her arm around her; “it’s dreadfully late; do be quick; we
ought to go.”

“There’s oceans of time,” said Bella with a drawl, and smoothing out
the little finger in a painstaking way. “Mamma isn’t half ready yet--at
least she hasn’t her bonnet on. Oh! do you know my cousin Charley
Swan?” indicating with a nod the sharp-eyed young man.

“We’ve entertained each other for a good half-hour or so,” observed
Charley, not particular as to exact statements. “Say, Bella, if Aunt
Isabel isn’t ready, I believe I’ll run around to Miss Willoughby’s, and
get her to let Jenny and Francina off to go with us. Stupid in me not
to think of it till I saw Miss Strange come in.”

“Er--ow!” Grace gave a sharp nip to Bella’s plump arm. “Stop him,” she
whispered tragically. Bella pulled out a hair-pin from some mysterious
quarter under her hat, and set it in again, before she condescended to
answer. “No, you must not, Charley,” she said, pursing up her small
mouth, and then falling to on her glove again. “Button it, will you?”
presenting it to him. “You see, mamma will be very angry; for she’s
just as likely to settle her bonnet right the first attempt. I’ve known
her to. And although Tom’s no doubt wrestling in the agonies of tying
his necktie, yet it’s just like him to hop down without the least
warning before you could possibly get back. Then think of me!” She
spread her white gloves dramatically out, as if words were unequal to
the occasion.

Just then Tom whistled his way in. “Whew, you ready in your togs,
Charley! Well, it takes you Western fellows to be spry. Where’s the
mother?” turning to Bella.

“Here’s Miss Strange, Tom,” said his sister, clutching Grace’s arm;
“haven’t you any manners? Angela, this is my brother Tom.”

Grace started at the word Angela, and forgot to bow, as Tom doubled up
like a jack-knife and made her his best obeisance. Then it was too
late when she remembered; and she stood there blushing under the hired
bonnet, till Charley remarked in a way that did not help matters any,
“Oh, so I am an older acquaintance of Miss Strange than you, Tom.”

“How did you ever tell such an awful story as to say my name was
Angela,” cried Grace in a whisper as they hurried off to the carriage,
Mrs. Drysdale at last appearing.

“I didn’t say so; stop pinching me; I’m black and blue already,”
retorted Bella. “I’ve a right to call you what I’ve a mind to. And I’m
going to call you Angela the rest of this blessed afternoon. So mind
you act as if you’d heard the name before. If you don’t, I’ll tell
everybody who you are.”

This had the effect of throwing Grace into such a panic that she
answered Mrs. Drysdale’s kind attempts at conversation with her at
random, and the twenty miles to Badgertown were made in a whirl of
emotions possessing her, till by the time the train paused at the
little station, she had a confused notion of either telling her whole
story and throwing herself on the mercy of the chaperone, or of
picking up her long skirts, and fleeing over the country meadows toward
home.

Instead, she was saying, “Thank you; yes, I’d rather walk,” to Cousin
Charley. Bella and Tom said the same thing. Mrs. Drysdale was helped
into one of the carriages that always ran back and forth on Mrs. King’s
reception days--a bevy of ladies and gentlemen filling the others; and
off they all set, to meet in the dressing-rooms at “The Oaks.”




CHAPTER V.

MRS. JASPER KING’S RECEPTION.


“We’re in an awful hole,” gasped Bella, pulling Grace off to the
farthest corner of the dressing-room. “Er--do get away from that maid;
you don’t want her sharp eyes all over you. No, we don’t either of us
want any help;” over her shoulder at that functionary. “Now, Grace,
er--Angela, you’ve gone and got me into this scrape, and I shall never
hold up my head again in all this world.”

Poor Grace’s head couldn’t droop any more than it did, as she mumbled
miserably, “I know it. Oh, dear me!”

This was worse than all, and Bella took fresh alarm. “For mercy’s sake,
hold up your head and look big, as if you were somebody.” It was now
her turn to pinch Grace.

“I can’t; because I’m not somebody,” sighed Grace. The frizzes even
seemed to droop miserably on her brow; and she looked like a wilted
flower, all her smart hired glory gone suddenly out of her.

“What a horrible scrape!” cried Bella between her teeth. “Oh, dear me,
Grace, you _must_ behave! Dear, dear!” as some ladies hovered near.

“I think your mother wants to go down now,” said one; “she is trying to
signal you. Introduce your young friend to me, will you?”

“Oh, I can’t go down-stairs!” cried Grace in a spasm of terror, and
catching Bella’s arm in a way to make her faint, as that young lady
looked over to the knot of ladies by the door, one of whom was waving
her fan frantically.

The lady who had requested the introduction, extending her hand in a
winning way, Bella twitched away from the clutch, and said quickly,
“Miss Grace Strange--I mean Miss Angela Tupper. Oh, dear me! I don’t
feel very well, and mamma wants me. Come on.” She fairly hauled Grace
out through the ranks of elegant women, regardless of their dismay at
her haste. “See what you have done,” her black looks said when at last
she permitted Grace a glimpse of her face.

“You young ladies must attend to my movements, and not expect me to
signal you,” said Mrs. Drysdale, her face only sweetly black, like a
becoming thunder-cloud, as Miss Willoughby’s parlor boarder was one
of the offenders. She could scold Bella easier at home. Just then a
stout lady trying to get by, with a good deal of jet trimming about her
person, sent out one of the octopus threads, and hooked Mrs. Drysdale
in the most vulnerable point,--the choice old lace on her sleeves.

“Excuse me,” panted the stout lady, pulling at the entanglement.
“There, break it, I’m sure I don’t care.”

“I’ll get it out,” cried Mrs. Drysdale in a terror, laying a quick hand
on it.

“Step out of the doorway, please,” said some one. And the stout lady
and Mrs. Drysdale edged off as one person, and everybody in the
vicinity fell to helping; even Grace was brought out of her misery
enough to take her turn. As she bent over her task, some one’s elbow
gave her French bonnet a knock. Out fell a hair-pin from her frizzes,
and she felt rather than saw the curious eyes of the lady next to her
upon her hair. So she deserted the jet and lace, making Mrs. Drysdale
say with some asperity, “I think you have not bettered it any, Miss
Strange.” Then she looked up into the face of her next neighbor. She
was the lady who had asked Bella to introduce her.

[Illustration: Grace darted behind a tall fern, and hid her hot,
distressed face.]

Grace fled out into the wide upper hall, fragrant with its wealth
of blossoms, and darted behind a tall fern, where she hid her hot,
distressed face, and tried to stop the throbbing of her heart.

“Well, now get Miss Strange,” Mrs. Drysdale was saying as she emerged
into the hall. “It is the last time I shall ever allow you to ask a
friend to go with you, Bella. Where in the world is she?” peering about.

Bella flew back into the room. “Grace, Grace,” she cried in a loud
voice.

“Here I am,” said Grace miserably, and creeping out from behind the
fern. “I was so hot, and it’s cool out here,” feeling the necessity for
words with the audience that now hung on the scene, and the throng of
ladies coming and going to the dressing-room, and whose passage they
were blocking up.

Mrs. Drysdale did not vouchsafe a word, only gave her one look, stepped
back, and called her daughter in a tone that scared Bella more than all
the rest, and the three sailed down-stairs. That is, the lady sailed;
but Bella went with the tread of an angry young lion, while the parlor
boarder at Miss Willoughby’s slipped after as best she could.

The next thing she knew, she was being introduced to a radiant vision,
and feeling the warm touch of a kind hand, and looking into clear
brown eyes, and hearing Mrs. Jasper King say, “I am very glad to see
you, Miss Strange.” And then, despite the crowd pressing her, and
that Bella was picking her by the sleeve, the kind hand retained her
trembling one, “I want to see more of you. Come up and speak to me
later,” said Mrs. King, and she smiled; and that cut deepest of all.

Grace broke away from her friends, and made a dive for oblivion.
Anywhere--perhaps behind a sheltering palm, till the Drysdales were
ready to go home; she could watch and slip out then. Instead, however,
of reaching such a haven, she ran against a tall young man in the hall,
and not stopping to beg pardon, rushed on.

“Hello!” exclaimed Mr. Charley Swan startled out of his politeness,
and following her after the rebound, “anything I can do for you, Miss
Strange?”

The sound of this name only added to Grace’s terror, and he had some
difficulty in gaining her side.

“If you please, I’d advise you to stop. People don’t run about in this
way, you know, at receptions; knocking folks down, and all that. Now,
what’s the trouble?” He stood squarely in front of her, and between
annihilating with his looks a curious youth who was taking this all
in, and preserving a calm exterior for the rest of the throng surging
through the hall, he still gave her a penetrating glance.

“Oh, I’m so wretched!” gasped Grace, all caution thrown to the winds,
and clasping her hands.

“Not altogether festive,” said Charley Swan, “that’s a fact. Well, now
that orchestra’s going to play, thank Heaven for that. You just take my
arm--Miss--Miss Strange, and we’ll get out of this mob.”

He had to slip Grace’s hand himself within his arm. There it lay, and
shook like a leaf. Charley piloted her into the large conservatory
opening into the library, and somehow she found herself in a quiet
corner with just room enough for another person on the rattan seat.

“Now, that’s what I call comfort,” he said, not looking at her, to
give her time to recover herself. “Mrs. King is a perfect marvel in
the flower line, and her music. Did you know that all these orchids
are given her by Mr. King the father? Gracious! don’t I wish some old
gentleman would take a fancy to me, and pet me with bank-notes and
smother me in orchids. Look around a bit, Miss Strange.”

“I can’t,” said Grace in a low voice; “I’ve no right to.”

“Hush! here comes a perfect old harpy for news, I know by her
pinched-up nose, and the way she sets her lorgnette. Hold your tongue,
Miss Strange,--beg your pardon, but it’s a desperate case,--till she
gets away. Yes, as I was saying, these orchids are surely the rarest
specimens I’ve ever seen.”

The “old harpy” drew near, and levelled her glances behind her
lorgnette at Grace. It was the lady who had asked Bella to introduce
her young friend.

“Are you ill, Miss”--she hesitated, and then laughed unpleasantly,
“Tupper--or--Strange?” she asked sweetly, and drawing near till she
stood over the two.

Charley Swan surveyed her coolly as Grace stammered out something.

“Thanks,” he drawled. “Miss Strange was faint; but as she is a great
friend of our family and came with us, I believe I can take care of
her. Anything I can do for you, Miss--” he hesitated, just as she had
done, looking her squarely in the face; so that, without supplying the
name, she murmured something about the beauty of the flowers, and moved
off.

[Illustration: “Are you ill, Miss Tupper--or--Strange?” and she laughed
unpleasantly.]

“Old reptile,” said Charley between his teeth.

“Oh, don’t!” protested Grace, with a little shiver; “she’s right. She
sees I’m a humbug.”

Mr. Swan did not seem to be at all surprised at this confession, but
stood up suddenly.

“Look here,” he said; “you keep your seat. Don’t say a word; _she_
won’t come back, and you don’t know any one else, I’ll be bound.
Anyway, don’t talk. I’m going to get you an ice.”

“No, no,” cried Grace, the color flooding her face; “not a single
thing; I won’t take it. I can’t. Why, I’ve come here all dressed up as
one of Mrs. Willoughby’s parlor boarders. I’m only Grace Tupper--you
don’t know. It would choke me.”

“It’s pretty bad, I’ll not deny,” said Charley, sitting down; “but if
everybody told how they got to receptions, you wouldn’t be alone in
humbuggery, I’ll venture to say.”

“But I’ve disobeyed my Au--Aunt Ath--Atherton,” said Grace, battling
with her sobs, and twisting her fingers to keep from crying like a
baby, “and--I--hired this bonnet, and--and”--

“And you’ve spoiled yourself with those horrid eyebrows,” finished
Charley; “and if I were you, I’d take off that monstrosity of a frizz,
and put the thing in your pocket.”

“Oh, I can’t!” gasped Grace, raising her blue eyes in terror to his
face; “why, Aunt will know me then.”

“Is she here?” demanded Charley with a whistle. He couldn’t help it;
this last was too much even for him.

“Yes--that is, she was coming. Oh, dear me! and I suppose I’ll be
expelled from Miss Willoughby’s school, and I’ll go home, and it’ll
kill father and mother and Jimmy and the baby. I never thought of that.”

“At least I believe we’ll save Jimmy and the baby,” said Charley in a
tone of encouragement.

“And Mrs. King smi--smiled at me.” Grace broke down, and cried into her
handkerchief, so that Charlie jumped up. “See here,” he said abruptly,
“I want to take you down to see some of the greenhouses; they’re
wonders.” He made her get up, and take his arm again, while he hurried
her off over the grounds. But they hadn’t gone far, when she saw a lady
in advance walking with two gentlemen.

“There’s Aunt!” she cried; and before Charley could say anything, she
broke away from him, and rushed down a side path.

It was worse than useless to follow her, as the attention thus drawn
to her would be disastrous. So Charley sauntered along, first getting
a good view of “Aunt” in her lavender bonnet, so he would know her
again, and then hastening to the mansion, if perchance he might
befriend Grace once more.

“Charley Swan!” exclaimed Bella, running up, “where _is_--er--Angela
Strange?”

“Miss Tupper has just left me,” said Charley gravely, and pausing
abruptly.

“Miss Tupper? Oh, my good gracious!” cried Bella with a little laugh,
“you mean Miss Strange.”

“She says her name is Tupper,” said Charley. “I really suppose she
ought to know.”

“Oh, dear, dear! then she has told you,” said Bella with a long sigh.
“Well, I’m glad. Such an afternoon as I’ve had!”

“See here, Bella,” said Charley. “You get her; she’s run down that
path,” nodding in the direction of Grace’s flight; “and you and I will
take her home. She took fright because she saw her aunt. Be lively now.”

“Dear, dear!” cried Bella in vexation and alarm. “Well, I’m sure,
precious little comfort I’ve had at this reception!”

“Hurry up, now. I’ll go in and make our excuses to Aunt Isabel.”

But when Bella reached a turn in the shrubbery, she found a little heap
on the ground, a group of people bending over it, conspicuous in the
front being the lady who had asked her to introduce Grace, now using a
lorgnette most vigorously.

What happened next, Bella never could tell. She only knew that the
gardeners lifted Grace, and carried her into one of the back doors,
giving her up to the care of the housekeeper, whom they called Mrs.
Higby, and that some of the ladies and gentlemen followed, proposing
various remedies, the lady with the lorgnette pressing after most
assiduously.

“She tripped on her gown and fell just as we were coming along,” said
this lady sweetly. “She seems somehow unused to a long gown. Let me
bathe her face.”

“Here comes Miss Phronsie,” said Mrs. Higby. “Now that blessed dear has
heard of the accident. Make way for Miss Phronsie.”

Phronsie came softly up in her beautiful white gown. She laid down her
bunch of lilies-of-the-valley on the table, and bent over the young
girl, laying a quiet hand on the cold one. “Poor thing,” she said, and
she dropped a kiss on the white cheek.

To everybody’s surprise, two tears gushed out and rolled down the white
face. “Leave her to me,” said Phronsie gently. “Now, if everybody will
please go out, Mrs. Higby and I will take care of her.”

“You would better let me stay,” the lorgnette lady had the temerity to
say.

“We do not need you,” said Phronsie, coolly regarding her. “Will you
please go out with the others?”

When Charley Swan came stalking in by the back door, it was to see Miss
Phronsie Pepper with her arms around Grace as they sat on the lounge
in the housekeeper’s dining-room, and Bella Drysdale crouched on the
floor, with her hands clasped in Phronsie’s lap.




CHAPTER VI.

GRACE.


“Don’t cry,” Phronsie was saying; “because if you do, I cannot help
you.”

“She has told everything--just every single thing, Charley,” announced
Bella, tragically turning around to him.

Charley Swan stood like a statue, with no eyes for any one but
Phronsie. She turned a grave face on him. “I’m afraid she’s badly
hurt,” she said. “I think you will have to get Dr. Phillips, Mrs.
Higby.”

“It’s only my foot,” said Grace with a little moan.

“Let me go for him,” begged Charley, coming out of his frozen state.

“One of the men’ll go,” said Mrs. Higby. “La! don’t you stir a mite.”
She went to the door, gave the message, and came back with a sigh of
relief. “You poor child, you,” bending over Grace’s foot. “You must
have turned it clean over itself. There, there, the cold water’ll be
the best we can do for it till the doctor gets here. My!” as her glance
fell again on the dark circles under the blue eyes, and the elaborate
frizzes; then she fell to coughing, and speedily betook herself to the
farther end of the room.

“I’ll hold her,” she said presently, coming back. “Miss Phronsie,
you’re wanted every single minute in the best room. Let me sit there
where you be.”

Bella sprang to her feet, and blushed rose red. “I forgot you’d left
the reception. Oh, do excuse me! And please, Miss Phronsie Pepper,
don’t stay here any longer.”

“I shall stay,” said Phronsie, “till I see that she is better.”

“Where’s Phronsie? Mrs. Higby, do you know where Miss Phronsie is?”
cried old Mr. King, putting his head in the doorway. “Oh, my good
gracious!” as his eye caught the group.

Grace hopped off the lounge, and hobbled along on one foot. “Oh, sir!
it’s my fault,” she panted; then she fell flat on the floor.

When she came to herself, she was lying on a bed whose white hangings
she could dimly see as she opened her eyes. Her foot felt heavy and
queer.

“I’m sure I cannot apologize enough to you, Mrs. King,” said a voice
that she was quite familiar with. “This school-girl prank is quite
unforgivable, I know, but I hope you won’t lay it up against me.”

“We ought not to talk here, Mrs. Atherton,” said Polly gently; then
they went out into the other room.

“I don’t think Bella Drysdale is just the right companion for her,”
said Mrs. Atherton. “I have thought so for some time. Now I shall do my
best to break up the intimacy.”

“Ugh--O Aunt Fay!” shrieked Grace, trying to raise herself in bed. But
she only succeeded in falling back heavily with a groan.

“Dear me, that girl has quite upset me,” cried Mrs. Atherton, trembling
nervously.

“Do you stay out here, Mrs. Atherton,” said Polly brightly, with a
gentle hand putting her on the sofa; then she went into the room where
Grace lay, closed the door, and stepped softly up to the bed.

“Now, little girl,” she said, just as if Grace were six years old
instead of sixteen, “you must stop crying, and do not move. If you do,
your foot may be injured for life.”

“I can’t help crying,” said poor Grace, covering her face with both
hands.

“You can help doing anything that is wrong,” said Polly gently. Then
she brought a brush and comb, unpinned the frizzes, and laid them on
the white toilet-table, and began to brush the soft, straight, shining
hair.

“It wasn’t Bella at all,” sobbed Grace. “She didn’t want to do it, but
I made her. Oh! I can’t give Bella up, Mrs. King.”

“You shall tell your Aunt all about it when you are better,” said
Polly. “Now we must not talk about it. You are going to stay with me
until your foot is well enough for you to be moved.”

“What, here in this house with you?” cried Grace, almost speechless
with astonishment.

“Yes,” said Polly; “you see, you’ve given your poor foot a terrible
wrench, and Dr. Phillips isn’t willing that you should be moved just
yet. And he can come and see you so much easier here, Grace.”

[Illustration: “I shall get my Mamsie,” cried a small, determined
voice.]

“O Mrs. King!” Grace rolled her head on the pillow to look at her, “you
don’t know how wicked I’ve been. You can’t know, or you never’d keep me
here in all this world. Why, I disobeyed my aunt to come here.”

“Yes, I do know,” said Polly gravely. “I know it all. But I said we
wouldn’t talk about it now.” Then Polly sat down on the edge of the bed
in her beautiful reception-gown, and Grace felt too wicked to touch
it with one finger, although she longed to; and Mrs. King held her
hand, and told her stories about her own girlhood,--how the Peppers
lived in the little brown house just around the lane, “where you will
go when you are able to walk, dear;” and how Joel was the pastor of a
big church in New York, and where Ben and Davie were; and how the dear
mother had gone abroad with Father Fisher because he was tired and
needed rest, and wanted to visit the hospitals again, and some foreign
doctors; and then she told about Johnny, and the railroad accident that
took his mother away to heaven, and how good Mrs. Fargo had adopted
him for her very own boy, and they were there at Badgertown for the
whole summer. And how Mr. Higby, in whose farmhouse the people were
all carried who were hurt, had sold his farm, and was now their head
gardener, and good Mrs. Higby was the housekeeper.

“Yes, I think she is quite good,” said Grace, snuggling up to the kind
hand; “she didn’t scold me a bit, but she looked so sorry for me, Mrs.
King.”

“And Johnny’s just the dearest dear,” said Polly, who always believed
him but little short of a cherub; and then she told how he was thrown
from the donkey just the week before, but “it didn’t hurt him a bit,
and”--

“If you please, Mrs. King, the children are ready to go to bed,” said
Katrina, putting her white cap in the door.

“And now I must go to my chicks,” said Polly, getting off the bed. Then
she bent over, and set a kiss on the pale cheek. “Don’t you worry about
anything,” she said. “I shall ask my sister Phronsie to stay with you.”

“Mrs. King,” cried Grace, nervously clutching the brocade dress, “there
is one thing,--if you could keep Aunt Fay from writing this to my
mother. Oh, please do, dear Mrs. King!”

“She won’t do it,” said Mrs. King quietly; “don’t be afraid, Grace.”

Grace gave her one look, and relaxed her hold.

“I shall get my Mamsie,” cried a small, determined voice; and Elyot
rushed in in his nightgown, followed by Barby in hers, hugging a
dilapidated black doll. “Mamsie,” cried Barby, stumbling over to her
arms.

“Don’t you go in there,” commanded King, coming last, in his nightgown.
“Sister Polly, I couldn’t help it, I came to keep them out.”

“Oh, dear me,” cried Katrina, who had gone back after delivering her
message, now hurrying in. “Children, how can you!”

“Bad, naughty Katty,” said Barby, shaking her curls at her, “to keep me
away from my mummy. Go ’way, Katty.”

“O Barby!” said Polly gently, and nestling her little girl up to her.

“Oh, what a cunning little thing!” cried Grace in a rapture. “Oh, do
let her stay, Mrs. King!” as Polly made signs for Katrina to take her.

“What you in my bed for?” cried King sturdily; “say, and who are you?”

“O King!” said Polly; “why, that isn’t like my boy.”

“Oh, have I taken his bed?” asked Grace in dismay, and making another
effort to rise.

[Illustration: Elyot perched at the foot, where he surveyed Grace at
his leisure.]

“He calls it his because once when he was sick he left the nursery and
came in here to sleep,” said Polly. “Now come, children, say good-night
to Miss Grace, and then we must fly to bed.” Elyot had one of her
hands now; and he clambered up on the bed, where he perched on the
foot, and surveyed Grace at his leisure.

“Is that her name because she says grace at the table?” he asked after
a pause.

“No, dear, that was her baby name; isn’t it a pretty one?”

“Was she ever a baby?” asked Barby, looking with intense interest at
Grace’s long figure under the bedclothes.

“Yes, indeed; she was once a little baby just like all you children.”

“O mamma! not a _little_ one,” said Elyot incredulously.

“Not a wee, wee, teenty one,” said Barby, shaking her head.

“I guess she was as long as that,” said King, measuring off a piece on
Grace’s frame, that he supposed a suitable length, “just about as long
as that.”

“Take care, dear. You may touch her lame foot,” said Polly.

And then the children, who had been in the little brown house when the
accident occurred, clamored to know all about it. But Polly was firm;
and telling them they should hear how it happened on the morrow, she
held Barby down for a good-night kiss, a proceeding all the others
imitated, till the three swarmed around Grace’s pillow.

“Good-night,” said Barby, with a sleepy little hum; “do you say
‘Now-I-lay-me-down-to-seep’”?

“No,” said Grace. How long ago it seemed since she had felt too old to
repeat that prayer!

“Mamsie, she doesn’t say ‘Now-I-lay-me-down-to-seep,’” said Barby,
trying to open wide her eyes.

“Come, dears.”

“What _do_ you say?” cried Elyot, pulling the bedspread, “say?”

“Elyot!” said his mother. He took one look at her face, and then
scuttled off, picking up the nightgown to facilitate progress.

So Polly went off, her baby on her arm. Barby, whose eyes drooped at
every step, dropped the black doll out of her sleepy hand; Katrina
picked it up, and helped the boys along.

Just then Phronsie came in with a pleased expression on her face to see
how cheery everything was.

“Your aunt has gone,” she said; “but she is coming out to-morrow to see
how you are.”

[Illustration: So Polly went off, her baby on her arm.]

Grace achieved a sitting posture, impossible as it had seemed before.
“Oh, _dear_ Mrs. King!” she screamed, “now I know she will write to
mamma this evening.”

Polly set Barby in her little crib, then sped back. “No, Grace,” she
said, “she won’t write; you can trust me, dear.”

“She always writes evenings when she’s anything on her mind,” said
Grace; “and she’d hurry about this.” But upon Mrs. King’s assuring her
that she would take the care of this upon herself, Grace cuddled down
again, and let Phronsie comfort her.

And by and by, while Polly’s messenger was speeding to the city with
just such a letter as she knew how to write, addressed to Mrs. Carroll
Atherton, Mrs. Higby herself came up with Grace’s supper; and when she
saw how cheery things were, and how everything was beginning to mend,
she put her arms akimbo, and said, “My land! but you’ll be as spry as a
cricket in a week.”

“I brought you some flowers,” said Phronsie, laying down a little bunch
where Grace’s fingers could reach them.

Grace looked at them, but did not offer to touch them.

“What is it?” asked Phronsie.

“Might I just have one little sprig of those you held in your hand when
you came after I was hurt, Miss Phronsie?”

“Why, yes, you may. Mrs. Higby, will you get them? You may have the
whole bunch,” she said to Grace.

“Oh, only just one sprig, please,” said Grace eagerly.

But the whole bunch of lilies-of-the-valley was brought; and Grace held
them in her hands, and buried her face in them, and then she opened her
mouth obediently, while Mrs. Higby, after tucking a napkin under her
chin, fed her from a generous plate of milk-toast, and everything was
getting quite jolly.

“She looks better already, don’t she, Miss Phronsie!” exclaimed Mrs.
Higby in admiration of the effect of the treatment. “My! but ain’t this
nice milk-toast, though! I guess I know, for I made it myself. There,
take this, poor dear.”

“I’m sorry to make you all so much trouble,” said Grace penitently,
with her mouth half full.

“Don’t feed her too fast, please, Mrs. Higby,” said Phronsie, looking
on with the deepest interest.

“My land! she ought to eat to keep her strength up,” said Mrs. Higby,
plying the spoon industriously. “Just so much milk-toast such as this
is, and every hour you’ll see that leg of hers getting well like
lightning.”

And then old Mr. King had to come and stand in the doorway, and say
how glad he was that the foot was hurt no worse, for it had given him
a dreadful fright to see her fear of his displeasure. And when Grace
saw his handsome face light up with a smile for her, her last fear left
her; and she gave a sigh of relief as he went off, obediently finished
the toast, and settled back on her pillow.

“Land, how weak she must be to eat like that! she feels the need of
victuals,” said Mrs. Higby. “Now I’ll run down and make you another
slice,” nodding to Grace, “you poor dear, you.”

“Oh, don’t let her!” begged Grace in alarm. “O Miss Phronsie! I
couldn’t eat another morsel.”

“She doesn’t want any more, Mrs. Higby,” said Phronsie; “truly she
doesn’t.”

“But just s’posin’ she should be weak and faint in the night,” said
Mrs. Higby. “I’d better make just one little thin slice, hadn’t I, Miss
Phronsie,” standing irresolute in the doorway.

“No,” said Phronsie firmly. “I don’t think you had, Mrs. Higby. There,
I’m going to tuck her up now, and then I shall stay with her.”

“Will you, Miss Phronsie?” cried Grace in delight.

“Yes,” said Phronsie, “I shall stay just as long as you want me to.”




CHAPTER VII.

POLLY MAKES MATTERS RIGHT.


“Polly,” said Phronsie the next morning, “I do wish Mamsie was here.”

It was the first time that Phronsie had said anything to show she
wished the mother back; and Polly, who knew so well how all such
utterance had been controlled, turned and stared at her.

“I do really wish that Mamsie was home again,” said Phronsie, this time
with a sigh, shaking her head decidedly.

“How you can, Phronsie,” broke in Polly impulsively, “oh, I don’t see,
when you know how Mamsie needed the change, and how she would never let
Papa-Doctor go alone! O Phronsie!”

But in spite of that, “O Phronsie!” Phronsie still reiterated, “Yes, I
do wish she was here!” And then she told the reason.

“Poor Grace,” she said, “is crying, and Mamsie would know what to say
to her.”

“She shouldn’t cry,” said Polly vexedly. “Dear me, I think it is the
weakest thing after a person has done wrongly to cry over it.”

“Ah, but Grace was very wrong,” said Phronsie sadly; “and she can’t
help it, Polly, when it all comes over her again. Just think, she
disobeyed her aunt.”

“To disobey mother” had always been such a heinous crime in the “Pepper
children’s” eyes, that Polly’s work dropped in her lap, and she sat as
still as Phronsie for the space of a moment. Then she said brightly to
cheer Phronsie, “But it doesn’t help matters any to cry over it. Yet to
be sure,” very suddenly, “I cried dreadfully when I’d been cross and
hateful to Mrs. Chatterton. To be sure, so I did.”

Suddenly Polly laid down her work, and went swiftly out of the room.
She positively ran into the pretty bed-chamber where, under the white
hangings, Grace was sobbing her young heart out.

“Dear child,” said Polly, kneeling down by the bed, and laying a steady
and gentle hand on the shaking figure, “I know just how you feel; for
I cried once, just as miserably as you are crying, because I had been
wicked.”

“_You_ wicked!” cried Grace, backing up so suddenly that Polly was
nearly upset, “O Mrs. King, that could never be!”

“Ah, Grace, but it was; and it was much worse for me to be wicked,
for I had had Mamsie all my life,--and you don’t know what our Mamsie
was,--while you have been away from your mother, you said, ever since
you were six years old.”

[Illustration: “Dear child,” said Polly, “I know just how you feel.”]

“Yes,” said Grace. It was some relief that she did not have to tell
that boarding-school life as she had found it in New England schools
was ever so many degrees better than those years could have been under
the nominal care of a mother given up to her own pursuits.

“And I was rude and hateful to a poor sick old woman,” said Polly
suddenly, laying her soft, warm hand on Grace’s shaking ones; “and I
said awfully cruel things to her, Grace; oh, you can’t think how it
makes me feel now to remember them!”

A tear or two crept out of Polly’s eyes as she said this, and dropped
on the counterpane.

“Why, you’re crying yourself, Mrs. King!” exclaimed Grace, lifting her
red, swollen eyelids in astonishment.

“I know it,” said Polly, smiling brightly, and dashing off the tears
with a quick hand. “You can’t think how it makes me feel, Grace, after
all these years, to remember what I said to old Mrs. Chatterton.”

“She must have been horrid to you to have made you say those things,”
said Grace stoutly. “I just hate her, to make you feel badly even now.”

It was a new thing to comfort any one else and she pulled away one of
her hands from Polly’s clasp, and laid it on Mrs. King’s shoulder,
forgetting her own misery while she did so.

“She didn’t make me,” corrected Polly, “never mind what she said to me.
Mamsie always used to say no one but ourselves could make us do and
say things. No, Grace; it was because I lost my temper. Oh, I was so
frightfully angry, I remember! And then I went up-stairs as hard as I
could run, wishing every step that I could only get back the words I
had uttered; and I hid in the trunk-room, and got down on the floor,
and cried and cried--oh, how I cried! And then, when I finally came
out and went down-stairs, everybody was hurrying about, troubled and
anxious, because Mrs. Chatterton was ill; and then I thought that I had
killed her.”

“Oh, dear me!” said Grace.

“And after that,” went on Polly, “I can’t tell you how I felt. But I
didn’t cry any more. I just tried to do something for the poor woman.
And after the longest time, Grandpapa told me Mrs. Chatterton had
received bad news,--her favorite nephew had been drowned at sea.”

“I’m glad of that,” said Grace. “I mean, I’m glad that you knew it
wasn’t anything you had said that made her sick. Well, do please go on,
Mrs. King.”

“This all happened--the telegram coming, I mean--while I was up in the
trunk-room,” said Polly; “so of course I did not hear the news, though
everybody thought I had. But I felt, oh, so dreadfully, that I had
made her unhappy just before that awful blow came. And I shall always
remember it.”

“Please don’t feel badly, dear Mrs. King,” begged Grace softly, turning
comforter. “Oh! I wish you wouldn’t,” gently patting Polly’s shoulder.

“But I did not cry any more,” said Polly. “I remember I used to squeeze
the tears back, when they seemed determined to come, as I thought about
it; for Mamsie had told us it was very wicked to cry over anything we
had done, because it distressed every one about us.”

“Did she?” asked Grace with great interest, as a wholly new idea struck
her. “Why, I thought one’s eyes were one’s own, and one could do as she
pleased with ’em.”

“Ah, but you see, no one of us can do as she pleases, Grace,” said
Polly, shaking her head. “That you will find out more and more, the
older you grow. And besides, Mamsie said it was a great sign of
weakness to give yourself up to fits of crying after you had done
wrongly. I remember what she used to tell us: ‘To set about righting
the wrong was better than a million tears.’”

“Mrs. King,” exclaimed Grace suddenly, letting her hand fall idle on
the bedspread, to peer into Polly’s face, “I think your mother must
have been just the nicest”--mother, she was going to say, but pulled
herself up in time--“person in all this world.”

“Oh, you can’t guess what she was--what she is,” cried Polly warmly,
“till you see our Mamsie.”

“And I won’t cry another single bit,” declared Grace, setting her lips
tightly together; and doubling up her handkerchief into a little wad,
she threw it to the foot of the bed, as a thing for which there could
be no further use.

“That’s right, dear,” said Polly, setting a kiss on the flushed cheek;
“because, you see, it troubles Phronsie dreadfully. She’s made almost
sick by it, Grace. You can’t think”--and Polly’s face drooped.

“Oh, dear, dear!” wailed Grace remorsefully, and wriggling about in
distress; “what have I done? Oh! please, dear Mrs. King, do tell her
I’ve stopped crying, and that I never will cry again in all this world.
Please hurry, and tell her so this very minute.”

“So I will,” promised Polly cheerily, and going out. “And I will ask
her to come in and see for herself how good you are.” She gave her
a bright smile that seemed to hop right down into the sorry heart,
telling her there was still some comfort left for her.

When Polly next looked in, about an hour after, Grace was propped
up against the pillows, her fingers busy with one of the sails for
the boys’ boats, Phronsie sitting by her side, stitching away on the
counterpart. A little table was drawn up to the side of the bed, with
the work materials on it; and Phronsie had just been telling something
gleeful, for Grace broke into a merry little laugh.

“Now, this looks something like,” said Polly approvingly in the
doorway. She had her walking things on. “Grace, dear,” she said,
coming in and standing at the foot of the bed, “I am going to town
this morning; and I thought I would go around and see your aunt, Mrs.
Atherton,--I wrote her so last night,--and report how well you are
getting on. It will save her the trouble of coming out. And now, do you
wish me to do anything for you?”

She sent a keen glance out of her clear brown eyes full into the
troubled face.

Grace threw down her work. “Mrs. King,” she cried, while the hot blood
went all over her face, “I told Miss Phronsie I’d like to write to Miss
Willoughby, and tell her all about it.”

“You cannot write,” said Polly, while a gleam of pleasure came into her
face, “until Dr. Phillips has been here and said you can. But I will go
to Miss Willoughby, and tell her everything you say.”

“Will you, Mrs. King?” cried Grace. “But oh, won’t it trouble you too
much?”

“No,” said Polly, “it will not trouble me too much, child.”

“Mrs. King,” said Grace, brokenly, and clasping her hands, “will you
please ask Miss Willoughby to forgive me for the disgrace I’ve brought
on her school; and please tell her I didn’t think of that when I began.
I thought it was only myself I had to consider. And please tell her I
mean to study and do everything I can to please her after this. But
perhaps she won’t let me ever come back to her day-school;” and Grace’s
face became suddenly overcast, as if she were going to cry; but she bit
her lips, and held her hands tightly together instead. “Then I suppose
I must bear it.”

“I’ll tell her every word,” said Polly. “Anything else, dear?”

“If you could see Mrs. Drysdale, and tell her how sorry I am, perhaps
some time, in several years, she’ll forgive me for disgracing her so.
Oh, and do tell dear Bella that she mustn’t mind if Aunt Fay should
happen to say anything cross to her, because everybody knows now that
Bella didn’t want to take me here, but I made her.”

“Anything else?” asked Polly, after a pause. “How about the hired
bonnet and dress at the milliner’s?”

“Oh, dear, dear!” cried Grace, with a rush of dismay at the throng of
bad results of her wrongdoing; “you can’t do all these things, Mrs.
King! Oh, dear me! what shall I do?”

“Grace,” said Polly warningly.

Grace looked up and struggled with her tears, but she could not say
anything for a minute. Then she broke out, “She said it would be five
dollars for the two; and my pocket-book is at home. There’s plenty in
it,” she added hastily, in confusion, “for papa had just sent me on my
allowance; but I can’t get at it.”

“I shall go in and pay Madame Le Farge,” said Polly quietly, “and then
you can pay me afterward, Grace. And Mrs. Higby is to pack up the dress
and bonnet, and send them in by express. And Mrs. Atherton is to send
your trunk out to-day. Then, dear, you will be quite comfortable as to
clothes. Good-by;” and Polly came around to the side of the bed, and
leaned over the back of the little table, and kissed her.

Grace, regardless of the fine walking-dress with its dainty bonnet and
lace boa, threw both arms around Polly’s neck, and hugged her close.

“Take care,” warned Phronsie.

“Never mind,” said Polly, taking a rosy face from the embrace; “no
harm is done. That is just the way we all used to fly at Mamsie. All
right, Gracie;” going off with a smile.

“And now I’ve gone and done the wrong thing again,” mourned Grace in
confusion, huddling down into the bed, and not looking at the discarded
sail. “Oh, dear me! I wish I could think in time.”

“King wants his boat-sails this afternoon, Grace,” said Phronsie
gently, “and I promised them.”

So Grace picked up the boat-sail, with its needle sticking in it just
as she had thrown it aside, and Phronsie gathered up the narrative of
some funny mishaps they had in a little German town when they were all
last abroad, and presently they were both as merry again as before; and
only the Dresden clock on the white mantel interrupted them.

Without a bit of warning, the door that Polly had left ajar was pushed
wide open, and a tall figure appeared just about to stalk in. “Oh, beg
your pardon!” he exclaimed, beating a retreat.

“O Joel!” cried Phronsie, jumping out of her chair to run across the
room and into the tall figure’s arms, “when did you come?”

“Just got here,” said Joel; “walked from the station; didn’t run across
anybody but Patsy on the grounds. Anybody sick? and who’s that?”
nodding into the room, as they had now edged off into the hall.

“That’s a friend,” said Phronsie, “who only came yesterday, and she
fell and hurt her foot. O Joe, it is so good to see you!”

“Yes, it is good to be here,” cried Joel, feasting his eyes on her.
“Well, where’s Polly?”

“Gone to town,” said Phronsie; “and she said we were not to wait
luncheon for her.”

“That’s too bad,” said Joel, “for I must be off this afternoon;” and
he pulled out his watch. “And now I’ll tell you, Phronsie, what I’ve
come for. I want you and Grandpapa to go back with me for a few weeks.
I can’t tell you why now, only that I want you both. I’m dead tired of
being alone. Now, do persuade him to come, Phronsie.” Joel took her
hand and held it close, his other arm being around her.

“O Joel!” cried Phronsie in great dismay, “I can’t go just now. Could
you wait a few days, perhaps a week; could you, Joey dear?”

A sound very much like a groan came from the room behind them.
Phronsie tore herself away from Joel, stepped back, and shut the door.
“Oh, how could I be so careless!” she said remorsefully. “Now she’s
heard every word we said, poor thing.”




CHAPTER VIII.

ALEXIA COLLECTS THE NEWS.


Joel ran off for a little visit to Grandma Bascom, at which time he
unloaded himself of various packages, to find places for them on
her cupboard shelves alongside the cracked sugar-bowl that had been
supposed to contain Mirandy’s “wedding-cake receet.” Then he shut up
his disappointment to himself as best he might, and took the last train
for New York alone.

“It can’t be helped, Joe,” old Mr. King had said; “Phronsie has her
hands full with that girl. So you must wait for us.”

“Bother that girl!” Joel looked. Then he thought better of it. “All
right; come when you can,” he had replied, as his brow cleared. On the
way to the station he ran across Alexia, who had just arrived, as usual
in a terrible hurry to see Polly.

“Goodness me, Joel, you here!” she exclaimed with no show of ceremony.
“Don’t I wish I had a parish, and could run about the country as you
do; and here I am tied to a husband and a baby.”

“Poor husband and baby!” said Joel with a grin, who liked Alexia
immensely, but always kept her on short commons of flattery.

“The most dreadful thing, Joel, you can imagine,” gasped Alexia. “Oh,
dear me! I’ve hurried so--to tell Polly--there’s a girl who wormed
herself into her reception, and”--

“Whose reception--the girl’s, or Polly’s?” asked Joel.

“You know--Polly’s of course. She pretended to be”--

“Who--Polly, or the girl?”

“Joe Pepper, if you don’t stop and listen, I’ll never, never speak to
you again!” cried Alexia in a pet.

“That would be terrible,” said Joel with a laugh. “Good-by, Alexia,”
putting out his hand, “I shall lose my train if I stay to get to the
end of that recital.”

“Joe, Joe!” cried Alexia, running after him. But he strode off, calling
back, “I’ll trust Polly.” And his train approaching the depot, Alexia,
bemoaning her fate in not getting out to Badgertown earlier, skipped
off to “The Oaks” in no very pleasant frame of mind.

“Where’s Polly?” she cried to Phronsie in the conservatory as she ran
through the library.

“Polly’s gone to town,” said Phronsie, cutting off some blossoms to add
to the bunch in her hand.

“To town! Oh, dear me!” screamed Alexia. “And I’ve only just come out!
What _did_ she want to go to town to-day for, Phronsie?”

“She had to go, Alexia,” said Phronsie, pausing as she saw Alexia was
really distressed; “what is the matter?”

“Oh! then I must tell you,” said Alexia. “Oh, my! I’m so hot, as if I’d
run every speck of the way.”

“I’ll get you a fan,” said Phronsie, coming into the library. “There
are some, Alexia, on the table.”

“Whew!” Alexia possessed herself of one, and fanned vigorously, so
that she set all the feathers on her much-betrimmed hat into a violent
flutter. “Oh! it’s all over town, Phronsie,” she said.

[Illustration: “Polly’s gone to town,” said Phronsie, cutting off some
blossoms to add to the bundle in her hand.]

“What is all over town?” asked Phronsie quietly.

“Oh, about that dreadful Strange, or Tupper girl--how she wormed
herself in here at Polly’s reception. I heard of it this afternoon, and
I just stopped to run home and tell Baby I was coming out here to let
Polly know. Oh, dear me!”

“I’m sorry for Grace,” breathed Phronsie pityingly. “Oh! I hope she
won’t know anything about it.”

“Sorry for Grace,” repeated Alexia, throwing down the fan, “well, I
should say! I believe it was all a plan between Mrs. Atherton and that
Mrs. Drysdale, to get her here.”

“Oh, no, Alexia! it wasn’t,” said Phronsie decidedly, shaking her head;
“because Grace has told us all about it. It was nobody’s fault but her
own.”

“Well, I can’t abide that Mrs. Drysdale,” declared Alexia, who had
reasons of her own for not being in love with that lady; “and as for
Mrs. Atherton, why, she’s well enough, I suppose, only a trifle weak in
the upper story. Well, and oh, dear me! Miss Fitzwilliam said”--

“Did Miss Fitzwilliam tell you,” asked Phronsie quietly, “the story of
Grace’s coming here?”

“Yes,” said Alexia; “she told us all. And she said she saw through her
disguise, and that it was Mrs. Atherton’s niece.”

“Who are all?” asked Phronsie.

“Why, all of us in the Campbell’s drawing-room, child. What makes you
question a body up so close. It doesn’t make any difference, does it,
where or how I heard it, if everybody’s talking of it?”

“Everybody isn’t a few people in Mrs. Campbell’s drawing-room, Alexia,”
said Phronsie; yet she sighed, and the bunch of flowers in her hand
trembled a little.

This made Alexia more vexed than ever. “Well, there was Captain
Sledges; he’s home on a furlough, you know; and, oh! the Romeynes from
New York, and two or three others, besides some of our Berton set,”
said Alexia. “Oh! there was quite a nice little lot, Phronsie, to hear
the news. And I just tore out, I was so vexed, and only stopped to tell
Baby, and”--

Phronsie turned her brown eyes full on Alexia. “I hope you stood up
for poor Grace. She’s only sixteen, and she didn’t stop to think, she
says.”

“I stand up for her--how could I?” cried Alexia. “I never saw the girl.
Oh, dear me! now you’re going to take her part, and comfort and pet
her. It’s just like you, Phronsie; I wouldn’t go near that Atherton
house, nor even send a word to her.”

“It isn’t necessary,” said Phronsie, in the quietest of tones; “for
Grace hasn’t been home, and she’s going to stay here, I hope, a good
while.”

“She’s in this house?” screamed Alexia, tumbling off the sofa to gain
her feet, “oh, my good gracious me, Phronsie Pepper!”

“Yes,” said Phronsie; “she’s in this house, Alexia. She fell yesterday,
and hurt her foot very badly; and Dr. Phillips said this morning when
he saw it, that she ought not to be moved for a week or two. And
Polly’s had her clothes sent out, and I hope she’s going to stay a good
while; for I like her, Alexia, very much indeed.”

It was a long speech for Phronsie to make; and she sat quite still
after it was over, and looked at Mrs. Dodge.

“Oh, dear me! and now you’ll give up all your time to taking care of
her, and coddling her up. How do you know but what she will go and do
something just as bad when she gets well again?” cried Alexia.

“Ah, but I know she won’t, Alexia,” said Phronsie, shaking her head
decidedly. “She’s awfully sorry and ashamed, and she’s been made almost
sick by it.”

“So she ought to be,” cried Alexia wrathfully. “Now I know what Polly’s
doing in town to-day, running about in the heat--she’s fixing up the
trouble this girl made.”

“Alexia,” said Phronsie in a tone indicative of the deepest distress,
and leaning forward to whisper the words, “I almost know that Grace’s
mother never told her about what was right and wrong--I really believe
she didn’t.”

“Well, supposing she didn’t; are you going to take other people’s
children, and bring them up?” exclaimed Alexia. “Phronsie Pepper, I
should think you’d enough on your hands with that Orphan Home down at
Bedford, without any more young ones to look after!”

“And Grace has been away at boarding-school ever since she was six
years old,” mourned Phronsie, without paying the slightest heed to
Alexia; “dear, dear, just think of it, Alexia.”

“Well, I suppose I might as well talk to the wind,” exclaimed Alexia,
“as to try to reason you and Polly against such a Quixotic scheme.
Dear, dear, I can’t do anything with either of you.”

“No,” said Phronsie, “you can’t, Alexia. And now I want you to come up
and see Grace--how nice she is. And you must tell her something lively
to amuse her. Do, dear Alexia.”

She got off from the sofa, and put her arm around the tall, slim figure.

“Ugh!--no, I can’t.” Alexia edged off. “It’s bad enough for you to pet
and coddle her; I’m going home.”

“Come, Alexia,” said Phronsie, holding out her hand; and Mrs. Dodge,
grumbling all the way, went up the stairs after her.

“And just to think,” she said, when they reached the top,--“wait a
minute, Phronsie,--how it’s all over town about her getting in here so;
and you’re giving up your time, and Polly’s too, to take care of her,
I”--

“Hush!” warned Phronsie, picking Alexia’s sleeve, and pointing to the
door of the little room.

“Ugh!--oh, goodness me! I thought she was in the west wing,” gasped
Alexia, in a stage whisper. “Well, I don’t believe she heard anything.”

“Please remember Alexia, to tell her amusing things, for Grace has been
so sad,” said Phronsie, softly drawing Alexia into the room. There was
no one in the little white bed.

Out in the dressing-room they found her, crying bitterly, and trying
to pull her clothes out of her trunk. “I’m going home,” she exclaimed
passionately between her sobs.

“O Grace!” cried Phronsie, hurrying forward to lay a restraining hand
upon her.

“Oh, me--oh, my!” exclaimed Alexia, backing up for support against the
door.

“Please call Mrs. Higby, Alexia,” said Phronsie. And Alexia, glad to do
something, fled with long steps, and presently brought Mrs. Higby, who,
without any more ado, just picked up Grace, with a “Poor lamb, there,
there, don’t cry!” and deposited her on the little white bed again,
where she shook with the passionate declarations that she was going
home, and no one should stop her.

Mrs. Higby examined critically the bandaged foot. “Lucky if she hain’t
hurt it,” and she drew a long breath, “I don’t b’lieve she did, Miss
Phronsie.”

“No, I didn’t,” sobbed Grace; “I hopped on the other foot. Oh, dear,
dear!”

“Please go out,” begged Phronsie. When the door was closed she put her
hand on the hot brow. “Grace,” she said, “I am disappointed in you.”

“I heard what she said,” cried Grace in a gust, and throwing both arms
suddenly around Phronsie. “O Miss Pepper, just get me to Aunt’s--do!
I’ll make her let me go home. And I never’ll trouble any one any more.”

“You can’t be moved yet,” said Phronsie; “and it remains with you to
say whether or no you will be a good girl, Grace, and be a comfort
to us.” Grace could take but one look at her face, it was such a
disapproving one, and she disappeared as far as she could beneath the
bedclothes. “I heard what she said,” she reiterated faintly.

“Ah, Grace,” said Phronsie sadly, “when we have done wrongly, we must
just make up our minds to bear what people say.”

Alexia knocked timidly at the door. “Come in,” called Phronsie.

“I’m awfully sorry you heard what I said,” she mumbled, going up to the
foot of the bed, “everybody don’t know it--only a few people, I guess.
And anyway, I suppose Polly, Mrs. King, will fix it up, and I’m real
sorry for you, and I’ll help you--oh, dear me!”

Phronsie looked at her gratefully. “Alexia, will you tell her about
your baby,” she asked suddenly.

“Oh, that blessed child!” began Alexia in delight; “yes, indeed, that
is, if you’ll take your head out of those bedclothes. I never could
talk to any one unless I could see at least their nose. Well, now,
that’s something like. You know, Miss--Miss”--

“My name is Grace Tupper,” said Grace, who had pulled up a very red
face to lay it against the pillow.

“Oh, yes; well, you must know, Miss Tupper,” ran on Alexia, “that I
really have the best baby in the whole world. He’s a perfect beauty to
begin with, and he’s ever so many teeth, and he talks, and what do you
suppose he was doing when I got home?--I only ran out to pay a few
visits, you know.”

“I don’t know,” said Grace faintly, as Alexia waited for her to speak.

“Why, he was trying to brush his own hair,” said Mrs. Dodge. “Now, that
blessed child must have known his hair didn’t look good. Bonny, that’s
his nurse, lets him muss it up dreadfully, and so the poor dear was
just doing it for himself.”

“I suppose she gave him the brush to play with,” said Grace, interested
at once.

“Never mind how he got it,” cried Alexia, “he was brushing his hair.
Now, I call that very smart indeed; I’m almost afraid to think what
he will become, Miss Tupper, when he grows up. There isn’t anything
that’ll be quite the thing for him.”

“I suppose he can be President of the United States,” said Grace.

“Oh, dear me, no!” cried Alexia hastily. “There have been twenty-four
of them already. I want my boy to be something new, and ahead of other
people. And just think, it won’t be but a little while before he’ll be
in college, and then he’ll be through, and then I’m sure he’ll want to
be something quite unusual; I’m sure he will.”

“What’s his name?” asked Grace, wishing she could see this wonderful
baby.

“Algernon Rhys Dodge,” said Alexia; “isn’t it just a beautiful name? I
wanted to call him after his father, ‘Pickering;’ but I knew it would
be ‘Pick’ all the time to distinguish him, so I gave it up. Well,
you’ll see him often, because we’re going to move out to Badgertown
next week.”

“Are you?” cried Grace, “how nice!”

“Yes,” said Alexia, pleased at the effect of her efforts to entertain,
“we are; into the dearest little yellow cottage, with barberry-bushes
in front. I’ve named it, ‘The Pumpkin’ and”--

“O Alexia! you are only in fun now,” said Phronsie with a little laugh.

“Indeed, and I’m not,” said Alexia; “I’m having my cards engraved
so. Why shouldn’t I have that name, when it’s just the color of a
pumpkin, and not much bigger? and lots and lots of places have the
most ridiculous names, and no rhyme nor reason for them either. You
must come and visit me at ‘The Pumpkin,’ Miss Tupper, when we get in
nicely. Then you’ll see for yourself, if you ever knew such a baby as
that blessed child of mine. Oh, here’s Polly!”

Polly came in swiftly. She had a little white look around her mouth, as
if she were very tired, but she smiled brightly. “It’s all right,” she
said to Grace. “Oh, how nice and cheery you are here! Alexia,” and she
beamed on her, “you’re as good as gold, to come out and be a comfort.”

“Ugh!” exclaimed Alexia, “don’t praise me, Polly.”

“Go and take your things off, do, Polly,” begged Phronsie.

Alexia sprang after Polly as she went out.

“Oh! I’ve been a horrid mean thing, Polly,” she cried, when safe in
Polly’s room, “and I messed things up generally. But I’ll help you
now, and she’s a dear, that Grace Tupper is, and you must go for that
dreadful Fitzwilliam to-morrow;” and then she told Polly the story of
her afternoon.




CHAPTER IX.

PHRONSIE SETTLES THE MATTER.


But Polly didn’t take Miss Fitzwilliam in charge; for Phronsie came to
early breakfast the next morning with her little brown bonnet on, that,
with the walking-suit, meant a day in town. “I am going to Berton,” she
said, “with Jasper.”

The small red breakfast-room at “The Oaks” was always cosey for the
early meal that Jasper took every morning before he grasped the “little
publishing bag” and hurried off for his train. Polly sat behind the
coffee-urn, pouring a cup for him.

“Why, Phronsie!” she exclaimed in surprise; then she asked, “does
Grandpapa know?”

“Yes,” said Phronsie; “I told him last night. I was going to tell you,
Polly, but you were busy in the den with Jasper.”

“Then I’ll pour you a cup of coffee,” said Polly.

“No,” said Phronsie; “I’ll have just a glass of milk, the same as every
day, Polly.”

“O Phronsie!” remonstrated Polly, “take the coffee, do, dear; it will
be a hard day in town.”

But Phronsie shook her head. “Polly,” she said, as she got into her
chair, and the butler had gone out and closed the door, as he always
did that Polly and Jasper might talk through the meal, “I am going to
town to see Miss Fitzwilliam.”

“Phronsie!” exclaimed Polly in great dismay, letting fall her spoon;
Jasper set down his cup to look at Phronsie.

“Yes, I am,” said Phronsie, beginning to drink her milk. Then she took
a piece of toast and buttered it.

“If you are going to town, Phronsie,” began Polly quickly, “do have a
hot chop, dear.”

“No,” said Phronsie; “I do not want it, Polly. I am going to take an
orange in my bag. Please, Polly, let me tell you about it.”

Polly looked over at Jasper in despair. His eyes said, “Don’t worry,
dear. Perhaps she won’t do it.”

“You see,” said Phronsie deliberately, “Miss Fitzwilliam must not be
left to spread the story about Grace. And she won’t want to when I tell
her all about it. She’ll feel sorry that she told in the first place.”

“You don’t know Miss Fitzwilliam, Phronsie, if you say so,” burst
out Polly. “She’s the veriest gossip there is in all Berton--or the
universe either. It won’t do a bit of good for you to go to see her.
She can’t change, child; she’s too old.”

“Ah, but she must,” said Phronsie, shaking her head; “and if nobody
tells her how wrong it is to set people against Grace--why, she will go
on doing so all the time.”

“Phronsie,” said Polly desperately, and leaning past the coffee-urn,
“I can’t bear to have you put yourself in that old gossip’s house. Oh,
dear me! why is it that nobody puts her down? Everybody hates her; and
then they listen to her stories just the same.”

“That’s just it,” said Jasper, pushing back his chair; “they listen to
her stories, Polly, as you say. They’re as bad as she is, every whit.”

“But I can’t see them all, I’m afraid,” said Phronsie, setting down her
empty glass. “Miss Fitzwilliam started it, so I ought to talk with
her.”

“Phronsie, does Grandpapa know you’re going to see Miss Fitzwilliam?”
asked Polly, seeing here a ray of hope that the visit to town would be
given up.

“Oh, yes! did you think I would go to see her without telling
Grandpapa, Polly?” asked Phronsie with a grieved look in her brown eyes.

“No, dear,” said Polly hastily.

Then she got out of her chair, and ran around to drop a kiss on
Phronsie’s yellow hair; but Phronsie moving just then, the kiss fell
on the little bunch of brown flowers on the top of her bonnet. “Dear
me!” said Polly with a laugh, “well, I’m sure I’m willing to kiss your
bonnet, Phronsie, as it isn’t all decked up with birds’ wings. I knew,
of course, you’d tell Grandpapa everything, Phronsie.”

“Oh, I couldn’t wear a bird’s wings on my bonnet; you know I couldn’t,
Polly!” exclaimed Phronsie in horror.

“No more could I,” declared Polly. “I should feel as if I’d murdered
the sweetest thing on earth, to perk a bird up on my bonnet. Oh, dear
me!” aghast at the thought. “Jasper, what shall we do,” as Phronsie got
up and went over to the sideboard to get an orange for her bag, “to
keep Phronsie from going to town?”

“I don’t believe we better try any more, Polly,” said Jasper, going
over to take his wife’s hand. “I really believe it’s best to let
Phronsie alone, for she thinks that she ought to go.”

“But that old thing!” began Polly impulsively, “and our Phronsie.”

“It won’t hurt Phronsie,” said Jasper wisely, putting his arm around
Polly’s waist, to look into her eyes. “No, Polly, I don’t believe we
ought to say any more. Come, Phronsie, are you ready?”

“Yes, I am,” said Phronsie, patting her little bag; “all ready, Jasper.
Polly, I’ll get your red wool; you said you didn’t have time yesterday.”

“Oh, you dear!” cried Polly, comforted by Jasper’s words. “But don’t
tire yourself, Phronsie; it’s no matter; I can wait.”

“If anybody is going to town with me, she must hurry up; that’s all I
say,” called Jasper, giving Polly a kiss and, running off.

Polly ached to say, “Don’t go to Miss Fitzwilliam’s,” as Phronsie set
a kiss on her cheek; but remembering Jasper’s words, she smothered the
longing with a sigh. “Well, good-by, child,” as Phronsie ran down the
path to the dog-cart that was to carry them to the train.

When Phronsie left Jasper as he turned off into the business section,
and she waited for the electric car bound for the old residential part
of the town, he gave her a bright smile. “Success to you, Phronsie
dear! What train are you coming out on?”

“I don’t know,” said Phronsie; “don’t wait for me. I wish you wouldn’t,
Jasper.”

“All right. It shall be as you wish, Phronsie. Good-by, dear.” He
flashed her another smile, and was off, to plunge into the work of the
day.

“I do think Jasper is the dearest brother that ever lived,” said
Phronsie to herself as she hurried on her car. A little old woman,
whose back was bent, and the ends of whose white hair had escaped from
her rusty black bonnet, stood in her way, clutching one of the leather
straps that hung from the bar that ran across the top of the car.

“Move up in front,” shouted the conductor, giving a push to the little
old woman’s back; “this lady can’t get in.”

[Illustration: Phronsie led the little old white-haired woman to the
vacated seat.]

“Never mind,” said Phronsie; “I can stand here just as well.”

“Move up, I say,” repeated the conductor, with another shove.

Thereupon three or four collegians, bound for the university a few
miles off, precipitated themselves out of their seats, the fortunate
one who was first, hustling against the little old woman in black.
“Will you take my seat?” taking off his cap to Phronsie.

“Thank you,” said Phronsie gravely. Then she touched the bent shoulder
gently, and took hold of the pinched hand clinging to the strap; the
other one she could now see was filled with bundles. “Here is a seat
for you;” and before any one could say anything, she had led the little
old white-haired woman to the vacated seat, arranged her bundles more
comfortably in her lap, and gone down to the end of the car again.

The collegians’ faces got dreadfully red. No one of them dared to try
it again, for an old gentleman who had seen it all had gotten out of
his seat, and with a courtly bow was proffering it to her.

“Thank you,” Phronsie was saying, refusing it, with a smile. “I really
do not mind standing.” And the three collegians melted out suddenly to
the front platform, and away the car flew, and Phronsie was soon at
the corner down which she was to turn to the three story brick house
that had the honor to be owned by Miss Honora Fitzwilliam.

She was in, the trim maid said; and Phronsie gave a sigh of relief, as
she stumbled on down the darkened hall, to find a seat in the still
more darkened drawing-room, whose door the maid opened deferentially.

“What name?” she asked in the same manner.

Phronsie took out a card from her plain brown leather case. The maid
departed, bearing this evidence that Miss Sophronia Pepper, The Oaks,
Badgertown, was awaiting Miss Fitzwilliam’s pleasure.

It was fully half an hour before that lady made her appearance, with
everything as fresh as possible about her, her side-curls beautifully
gotten up. Even the lorgnette was ready.

“Oh! I am _so glad_ to see you, my dear Miss Pepper,” she began
effusively, extending both hands, “Phronsie, I may call you, may I
not?” Phronsie did not answer, only to say, “Good-morning;” so Miss
Fitzwilliam exclaimed hastily, “That stupid Eliza! this room is as
black as midnight.” She stepped to the other side of the apartment,
and gave a nervous twitch to the bell. “Let some light into this room,”
as the maid came in; “how careless of you not to open the shutters by
this time.”

Eliza opened her mouth to say something, but evidently was too
frightened to carry out her intention, and throwing the shutters wide,
hurried out of the room as if glad to get away.

The morning sunlight flooded the long drawing-room, whose faded
coverings looked tired out; several thin places very near to becoming
holes could plainly be seen on the furniture, while even the mantel
ornaments looked depressed.

Miss Fitzwilliam sprang to her feet, and energetically thrust the
shutters half way to. “That stupid Eliza!” she ejaculated again. “I
hope, Miss Pepper, that you are not troubled as I am with servants.
They are really the plague of my life, although I change every
fortnight or so.” Then she came back and sat down on the faded red sofa
by Phronsie’s side. “What a most beautiful reception your sister’s was,
to be sure!” she cried rapturously. “I always make it a point to exert
myself to go to Badgertown whenever she gives one. And I’m so sorry
for you, that you were all so annoyed Tuesday by that”--

“Miss Fitzwilliam,” said Phronsie, breaking in to the stream of talk.
“I have come to see you about that very thing.” Then she looked
steadily into the little steel-gray eyes before her.

“And have you, my dear?” cried Miss Fitzwilliam delightedly. “I suppose
you want my advice what to do.” She tried to lay her pinched and
restless fingers on the quiet gloved ones in Phronsie’s lap, to show
her sympathy; but the young girl not stirring, Miss Fitzwilliam pulled
hers back, and went on rapidly, “As it was such an outrageous thing, I
would”--

“Miss Fitzwilliam,” Phronsie did not pause now, but went swiftly on
to the end, not removing her gaze from the other’s face, “I’ve come
to see you about this matter, because I know that after you’ve heard
all about it, you’ll be sorry for the young girl who did such a wrong
thing. Just think, she’s only sixteen, and she hasn’t been with her
mother only vacations when she was home from school, since she was six
years old. And as soon as she did it, and got there to the reception,
she’d have undone it all if she could,--oh, a thousand times! And she
made Bella Drysdale take her. Mrs. Drysdale didn’t know anything about
it, but thought she was a parlor boarder at Miss Willoughby’s; and Mrs.
Atherton didn’t know either. Grace has told it all to us, and that she
alone was to blame. It was the first time that she has ever done such
a thing, and she didn’t stop to think before she did it. And now she
can’t forgive herself; she must always be sorry to the end of her life:
so all of us must help her to bear it.”

“Miss Phronsie Pepper!” screamed Miss Fitzwilliam, throwing away her
self-control as Phronsie paused, “you don’t mean to say that you think
people should take up this Tupper girl; why, I’ve told everybody I
could about it! I went around yesterday, and I’m going again this
afternoon.” Her thin face glowed, and her pinched-up nose was set high
in the air with positive delight.

“I know you did tell them yesterday,” said Phronsie quietly; “but I
think you’ll be sorry for that when you come to think it over.”

“Sorry? Indeed, no!” sniffed Miss Fitzwilliam. “I shall get as many as
I can to know it before nightfall. It’s my duty. Sorry, indeed!”

Phronsie surveyed her gravely. “You will be very sorry, I think, Miss
Fitzwilliam,” she said again quietly; “it will spoil that young girl’s
whole life, to repeat that story.”

“And you’ll be very glad,” cried Miss Fitzwilliam shrilly, “that I did
take the pains to tell it, and to warn people against such a little
impostor. How do you know that she won’t repeat this experiment again
at your house?”

“She will not, because”--

“And that stuff about hurting her foot was half of it made up,” said
Miss Fitzwilliam; “that’s the reason I wanted to stay and help you. I
found her out long before.” She gave a little triumphant cackle; “and I
wanted to see her foot, if that wasn’t all a pretence, so”--

“Oh, no, it wasn’t!” said Phronsie, who couldn’t help interrupting;
“because she”--

“But you wouldn’t let me stay. However, I have started the story about
her, I am glad to say; I suppose she went home soon after, didn’t she?”
she asked quickly, greedy for the last bit of news.

“No,” said Phronsie; “she did not.”

“That shows what kind of a girl she is!” exclaimed Miss Fitzwilliam
with venom, “after worming herself in there, to hang on until you had
to send her home.”

“Miss Fitzwilliam,” said Phronsie so decidedly that Miss Fitzwilliam
pulled herself up at the beginning of another harangue, “don’t you
understand--can’t you understand, that Grace Tupper is not that kind
of a girl at all? She began this as a childish freak; she is most
dreadfully sorry for it, and she would give everything--yes, the whole
world,” said Phronsie, clasping her hands while her face drooped
sorrowfully, “if she hadn’t done it.”

“Pshaw!” exclaimed Miss Fitzwilliam in disdain. Then she put back her
head on her spare shoulders, and laughed loud and long. “Anyway, Miss
Pepper, I shall do as I think best about it. And I do think best to
tell this story wherever I have a good opportunity.” She set her thin
lips together unpleasantly.

“In that case,” said Phronsie, rising, “I will trouble you no further.
And will you be so very good, Miss Fitzwilliam, as to discontinue
calling at ‘The Oaks’? Grace Tupper is our guest, our _dear_ guest; and
my sister, Mrs. King and I hope that she will stay there a long time,
for we are both already very fond of her. I will bid you good-morning.”

It was impossible for Miss Fitzwilliam to get her breath to speak.
Twice she essayed it, but no words came; and vexed that she had made
such a terrible blunder, and with her own hand cut off visiting
relations with Mrs. Jasper King and her sister, Miss Pepper, she made
another effort, this time even managing a ghastly smile.

“Of course if you are going to take her up, why I will let the
matter drop,” she gasped. But Miss Pepper did not appear to notice,
nor to observe the outstretched hand, but went swiftly out. On the
old-fashioned table in the hall was the morning paper, still unread.
Wild with chagrin, Miss Fitzwilliam seized it to divert her mind, as
the door closed after Phronsie; and whirling the sheet to the social
news, read: “Miss Grace Strange Tupper, niece of Mrs. Carroll Atherton,
is the guest of Mrs. Jasper King at ‘The Oaks’ Badgertown.”

When Phronsie completed her round of calls, beginning with Mrs. Coyle
Campbell, everybody knew that it was to be the fashion to take up
Grace Tupper. And each one vied with the others, to be ahead in the
matter of sympathy and help.

Then Phronsie hurried down town to buy Polly’s red worsted.




CHAPTER X.

SUCCESS FOR POLLY.


The grand extra concert, the best of the year, given by the Symphony
Orchestra, with Mrs. Jasper King as pianist, was over, and only
a delightful memory. Every member of the orchestra declared no
such performer on the piano had it ever been their good fortune to
accompany, and musical critics went a little wild in their efforts to
find adequate expressions to describe her treatment of the theme she
had chosen.

It was a great society event; all the fashionable world of Berton being
in evidence, with good sprinklings from New York and other towns to
overcrowd the house. But Polly, although her heart responded, most
especially for Jasper’s sake, to these tokens of cordial interest and
admiration, felt her whole soul drawn to the old friends who, here and
there, were in conspicuous seats among the audience. They were all
there, as far as was possible. Miss Salisbury, who had left her school
and the duties that never before allowed her to wander, recklessly
dropped all this time into the sub-principal’s hands, and went off to
hear her dear old pupil, Polly Pepper.

Cathie Harrison, living in the South with her grandmother, made that
old lady pick up her belongings, and take a two weeks’ jaunt, that
included Berton on its return. Amy Loughead in New York, under the care
of her aunt, Mrs. Montgomery, of course was there; the two happening to
take the same train on with the Rev. Joel Pepper, who had collected his
friend Robert Bingley for that very purpose.

The Cabots and Van Meters, besides Ben Pepper, who represented that
house now, the Alstynes, Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Dyce, and a score
or more of other old friends, all turned up at the last minute,
and electrified Polly with swift glances of recognition across the
crowded hall, that cheered her on over the difficult passages better
than any applause could possibly have done. Charlotte Chatterton
seemed to be the only one left out. She was in Europe, turning out
something wonderful, if accounts were true, with her voice--“unlocked
by Phronsie’s golden key,” Charlotte always said, in telling how
Phronsie’s generous gift of a portion of old Lady Chatterton’s money
had made it possible for her to cultivate her one talent. Charlotte’s
love for Phronsie was so passionate it seemed to outrun her love for
music, making it a dreary exile for her to stay and study abroad. Only
the hope of seeing Dr. Fisher and Mother Fisher kept her from running
off with a homesick heart to the dear old friends.

Mr. and Mrs. Mason Whitney of course were there, and Van, mightily
proud of being in his father’s business, and engaged to one of
the sweetest girls born and brought up in his set, “the little
blue-and-white creature,” whom Joel so desperately entertained at the
Welcome-Home-party years ago. Van had regularly offered himself to
Phronsie at any and every opportunity that had presented itself in the
past three years, to be as regularly but more gently refused. And now
he had wisely concluded to pass that pleasing attention down to Dick,
or rather Dick had taken it upon himself, with small care whether or
no Mr. Van passed it along. And Van had looked around for the best way
to settle in life, to get ready for that partnership with his father
which he fondly hoped was just ahead of him; so he proposed and was
accepted promptly by Gladys Ray, who had, it seems, been waiting for
him all the time; and everybody was delighted; and Van was so important
with it all, his mother having brought along little Miss Ray in the
party, that Percy, a newly fledged lawyer with his shingle just out,
who was in the party also, found it hard to bear with equanimity his
unimportance, and the trouble of his monocle, just assumed.

Dick brought along a whole lot of his jolly brother collegians, among
them the three who figured in Phronsie’s car episode, and who trusted
not to be recognized; but Dick, not knowing anything of it, hauled
along this identical trio, after the concert, and presented them, “Mr.
Fox, Mr. Beresford, and Mr. Sargent,” when they immediately had the
appearance of desiring to melt away again.

Dick was here, there, and everywhere on this occasion, bubbling over
with jubilation. Was he not to go into the house of Marlowe & King “the
very day after graduation--yes, sir!” to begin his dream of being a
publisher.

But the best of all, in Polly’s eyes, was the presence of Jasper’s and
her dear friend David Marlowe, who sat in one of the front rows. Mr.
Marlowe never took his eyes from Polly; but sat quietly through it
all, when it became impossible for the other friends to control their
intense interest. But how his keen gray eyes glistened! And when it was
all over, he put his good right hand on Jasper’s, “My boy!” said he in
that strong, clear voice of his; and Jasper knew all his friend’s heart
better than if many words had been uttered.

The only disappointment in certain quarters was that Polly had issued
her command that no flowers should be given, thus throwing Dick, as
well as some other friends, into incipient rebellion.

“No, indeed,” said Polly, who dearly loved to be elegant in just the
right way, when some inkling of Dick’s extravagant plans had come to
her, “not so much as a solitary sprig--now remember, Dicky,” one glance
of her brown eyes, and Dicky and everybody else knew that offence in
this respect meant a terrible thing.

But afterward, when they got Polly away from “the mob,” as the
collegians called it, of those swarming up to congratulate, then
Jasper took matters into his own hands, and disclosed the surprise
he had planned for Polly; and with Mr. Marlowe’s aid, he piloted all
the old friends, and a goodly number of new ones, to the special cars
waiting for them, and away they all went for dinner, and to top off the
evening at “The Oaks.”

Phronsie had sent a very special invitation to Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Atherton, to Mrs. Drysdale and to Bella, and also to “Cousin Charley
Swan;” so they all came. And Miss Willoughby was there, and she found
an old schoolfellow in Miss Salisbury before the evening was half out;
and everything went merrily as possible in every section of the big
company.

And Alexia, whose little “Pumpkin” was bursting with guests, up for
the occasion,--she having stipulated that Cathie Harrison and Cathie
Harrison’s grandmother should be part of her especial share,--was there
in full force, helping, with Mrs. Fargo and Pickering, to receive
and do the honors, having “told the baby all about it before,” and
consigned him to Bonny’s tender mercies.

And when the dinner had proceeded to the toasts, Jasper looked
across the table into his wife’s eyes, “Yes, Polly,” he said to
her questioning look, “I cabled Mamsie the very minute you finished
playing.”

“Indeed he did!” cried Mr. Marlowe, smiling into her rosy face.

“O Jasper, how lovely of you!” cried Polly with dewy eyes. “And is that
what you signalled the usher for?”

“Yes, dear,” he said, smiling at her; “I had it all written before. You
didn’t think I could leave the dear Mamsie a minute longer than was
necessary without the news?”

“No, Jasper,” she said; “but oh, how lovely in you to do it!”

Phronsie, opposite Grandpapa, who was stately and resplendent at the
head of one of the other tables, looked over happily, “O Jasper!” she
exclaimed, clasping her hands, “does Mamsie really know it now?”

“Yes, Phronsie,” said Jasper, beaming at her; “she really does.”

Phronsie sat quite still, her hands remaining clasped. It was as if
the dear Mamsie’s face was really there before her, with the light and
cheer that always made everything bright; and a tender look came into
Phronsie’s eyes and around the curves of her mouth. And then her face
drooped; and the dreadful longing that she had had every minute since
Mother Fisher had sailed, just to see her again, settled down upon her.
“Mamsie!” she breathed slowly, but in a way to make everybody turn and
look at her.

Just then the heavy brass knocker on the front door clanged sharply.
One of the maids brought in a yellow envelope, which she handed to
Jasper. He tore it open quickly. “O Polly!” and across the table it
sped to her. “Give it to Phronsie; let her read it first, dear. It’s
from Mamsie!”

When they all came out of the babel of confused delight, Phronsie still
sitting with clasped hands but radiant face, Jasper stood up and read:--

  “To my dear Polly, I send my proud and loving word. I knew she would
  do it. And give my love to Phronsie.

                                                              MAMSIE.”

“We’ll drink her health,” cried Jasper. “Simmons, pass the loving-cup.”

So the butler took down the massive silver loving-cup, that had been
for generation after generation in the King family, from the oaken
sideboard, and filled it with pure cold water to the brim, “The only
thing worthy of it,” said Polly; and all the company stood up, and
Jasper lifted it high, with “Our Mamsie, now as always our guide, our
comfort, and our delight; we pledge ourselves anew to her in loyal
love.” And then the cup went around silently to every one.

[Illustration: The loving-cup was filled with pure cold water to the
brim, “The only thing worthy of it,” said Polly.]

And Ben proposed Father Fisher, and everybody drank his health and
happiness; and then Polly turned a happy face over toward old Mr. King.
“Our dear Grandpapa was _everything_,” she said; “I don’t know what we
should ever have done without him.”

And around went the loving-cup again. And this neat little speech so
touched the old gentleman that he got out of his chair, and responded
right gallantly to his daughter, and to the rest of the “Five Little
Peppers.” And Jasper’s eyes shone with proud delight, and everybody
applauded to the echo. And then Davie, the new instructor in literature
at a Western university, and already booked in the minds of all present
for the professor’s chair, was called out for a speech; and a right
good one it was too, the Rev. Joel pounding vigorously his approval
above all the others on the festal board.

And Hamilton Dyce tried his hand at talking a bit, and brought down the
house with many funny reminiscences; and Mr. Marlowe said, as he always
did, exactly the right word in the right place; and Joel was called for
loudly, but he had slipped away just then, so several of the others
talked; and then Jasper brought down his improvised gavel, the handle
of Grandpapa’s cane, “Speeches declared over! We will now adjourn to
the little brown house;” and Polly led off proudly with Grandpapa, as
was quite right, Phronsie and Mr. Marlowe following, the rest of the
company falling in as they chose, with Jasper at the rear corralling
all the stragglers into line.

“Let’s march all around it, father dear,” whispered Polly, gleefully as
a child. So they led off in the moonlight the long procession around
and around the little brown house, till some one proposed unwinding and
going the other way. But they didn’t do it, but just broke ranks, and
rushed unceremoniously into the old kitchen.

And there were Polly’s two hundred candles she longed for in the old
days, all alight most merrily, which explained the Rev. Joel’s absence
from the last part of the speech-making; and after that there was no
more quiet. The old kitchen resounded to the babel of happy voices,
until at last everybody drew up in a circle of chairs, getting the
Peppers in the centre, whom they besieged for stories of those old
times.

“I’m a Pepper!” cried Jasper, scrambling into the charmed circle. “I
was in those happy days.”

“Yes, Jappy belongs to us,” said Phronsie.

“Jap always felt so smart,” declared Van enviously, “because he knew
the Peppers first.” Percy looked as if he wanted to say as much,
but concluded to keep still, and only readjusted his monocle to his
satisfaction.

“We shouldn’t any of us have had or done anything if it hadn’t been for
Jappy; hey, old fellow,” declared Ben, clapping him on the shoulder.

“And dear Grandpapa,” cried Phronsie, with a world of affection in her
eyes, looking over at him.

“Well, Phronsie did it with her gingerbread boy,” said Jasper quickly.
“It was Phronsie, after all, who brought us all together.”

And then everybody clamored for the story of the gingerbread boy again;
so off they rushed on that, old Mr. King edging his chair a little
nearer to the Pepper circle. And then Polly’s old stove had to come in
for a share of attention, and how she had to stuff all the cracks with
paper, and Ben stuffed it with putty, and-- “Davie gave boot-tops,”
broke in Joel, grimly even now at the remembrance of how he felt
because he hadn’t any to give.

And then that brought up Mamsie’s birthday cake, and the momentous work
of getting ready for its baking; and how Phronsie’s toe was pounded;
and how good Grandma Bascom was, and how she wasn’t able now to get out
of her bed because of the rheumatism, but that those guests who stayed
over were to go down the lane to see her to-morrow.

And how the cake, compounded after “Mirandy’s weddin’ receet” was at
last made, and hidden in the old cupboard.

“Joe was such a precious nuisance in those days,” said Jasper, “always
poking and peering around; I suppose they were afraid he’d find it out.”

“We truly had a dreadful time,” said Polly, shaking her head, “to keep
him away from that cupboard.”

“That old cupboard!” declared Joel, bounding out of the circle to swing
wide the upper door. “Oh, what a lot of conniving, and how many dark
conspiracies it might tell!”

And how the dreadful measles fell upon the whole Pepper flock, and the
dear mother was almost in despair, and how good dear Doctor Fisher was,
and how he saved Polly’s eyes, and then got her her stove. And then how
the wonderful Christmas had come from Jappy and Grandpapa, and Polly
had her bird and her flowers, and Ben had made a Santa Claus wig out of
the hair in Mamsie’s old cushion, sprinkling it snowy white with flour.
And how Mamsie had hidden all the splendid presents over at Parson
Henderson’s.

“Such a time as we had,” breathed both the parson and his wife, who had
run up from the Orphan Home at Dunraven for the occasion.

Well--and how Phronsie had her doll, such a gorgeous affair she was
afraid for days to show her to Seraphina, for fear of hurting the
feelings of the latter. And then Phronsie had to get out of her chair,
and make her way out of the circle surrounding the Pepper group, and go
into the bedroom, where, kneeling down before the old bureau, she drew
with a loving hand from the lowest drawer the two dolls.

“Bring the little red-topped shoes, too, Phronsie,” called Polly; “do,
dear.”

[Illustration: With her arms full, Phronsie entered the kitchen.]

So Phronsie reached back into the farthest corner, and carefully drew
out a tissue paper bundle that held the precious shoes, just as she
had worn them last; and with her arms full, she was just entering
the kitchen, all eyes upon her, when Polly said in answer to some
question, “Yes, Mamsie wrote they would be in Rome next month.”

Grace Tupper sprang suddenly from her chair. “O Mrs. King! will they,
will they? Then perhaps they will see my cousin Roslyn May.”




CHAPTER XI.

ON THE WAY TO THE BEEBES.


“I’m going down to see dear Mr. Beebe and dear Mrs. Beebe,” cried Elyot
suddenly the next morning; and he threw down the small trowel with
which he had been spatting his mud-pie into shape, and jumped up, “Come
along, Barby, you may go too,” he said. “We won’t trouble anybody to
take us, ’cause they’re all busy. I know the way.”

“I know the way too,” declared Barby sturdily; and deserting the
spatting of her mud-pie which she had been engaged in without the aid
of a trowel, she stood straight, and thoughtfully rubbed her fingers on
her brown linen pinafore.

“Huh--you’re too little to know the way,” laughed Elyot; “but then I’m
here, I can take you down,” he added patronizingly.

“I don’t want to be tooken; I’m going myself,” said Barby decidedly;
“this very one minute I’m going;” and she trudged off in the direction
of the high road, not once looking back.

Elyot ran after her in alarm, and twitched her pinafore, “That isn’t
the way; we’ve got to go down through the lane.”

“I’m going to see my own Mr. Beebe, and my very own Mrs. Beebe, all
alone by myself,” declared Barby, keeping on. And presently, coming to
a descent in the ground, she dropped flat, and rolled over and over,
her usual method of going down hill; at the bottom picking herself up
to resume her journey.

“I’ll scream right out, and then they’ll come after us, and we won’t
either of us get there,” said Elyot, taking long steps down the bank
after her.

Barby stopped at this, and waited for him to come up. “You may come
too,” she said; and she put out her fat little hand to him.

Elyot took it contentedly. “You see, Barby,” he said, “you couldn’t get
along without me. We must keep out of the road at first, because it
would worry folks to see us going alone. But I know the way perfectly;
and then how glad dear Mr. Beebe and dear Mrs. Beebe will be when they
see us coming in.”

“Oh, so glad!” hummed Barby; “I guess they’ll be very glad, Elyot. And
I shall just kiss dear Mr. Beebe, and say, ‘How do you do, dear Mr.
Beebe, pretty well I thank you mostly.’”

“No, Barby, you don’t say the things together like that,” corrected
Elyot; “that isn’t right.”

“Yes, it is,” contradicted Barby sturdily. “And I shall say, ‘How
do you do, my dear very own Mrs. Beebe, and pretty well I thank you
mostly.’ I’ve heard Mrs. Higby say it.”

“You mustn’t say such things, Barby,” ordered Elyot, shaking her small
sleeve with determination. “You don’t know how to make calls yet. Mamma
wouldn’t like you to talk that way.”

“My mummy would,” declared Barby, shaking herself free, and panting
from her exertions. “My mummy loves dear Mr. Beebe and dear Mrs. Beebe,
and Barby loves them too. And I shall see all the shoes, all the little
wee baby ones, and the great big ones, and I’m going to stay all day,
and have pink sticks for dinner.” She turned her hot little face up at
him, and struck off bravely again, but her feet dragged.

“You’re getting awfully tired,” said Elyot; “let’s go back.”

“No, no, no!” protested Barby, making all possible speed. So Elyot had
nothing to do but to follow, which he did smartly, keeping close at her
side.

“And they’ll be so s’prised to see us,” went on Barby, growing
confidential. “Oh, dear me! why don’t their home ever come, I wonder.”

“Oh! we’re not half way there yet,” said Elyot cheerfully; “it’s off
that way, so,” waving his arm down the winding road, “then it’s down
this way,” sweeping off in the opposite direction.

“Oh, dear me!” said Barby, with a small sigh she could not suppress,
“why is it so long, I wonder? Won’t it come sooner?”

“You better give me your hand,” said Elyot, looking down into the tired
little face.

So Barby gave him her hand; and not caring much where she planted her
feet, she pattered unsteadily on over the dusty road, letting Elyot do
all the talking.

Presently she said, “I’m tired, Elyot, truly I am,” and tumbled down, a
sleepy little heap, in a thicket of blackberry-bushes.

“Oh, you mustn’t!” cried Elyot, pulling her arm; “wake up, Barby.
Mamsie wouldn’t like you to go to sleep here by the road.” But Barby
only hummed once, “I’m so tired, truly I am;” and tucking her hand
under her chin, she fell fast asleep.

Elyot looked up and down the road. There was nobody in sight. It
was too far to carry her, that he knew from his recollection of the
distance as he had been taken there in the carriage. Nevertheless, he
got her somehow up in his arms, and staggered off a few steps; but she
slipped out, and rolled up more of a heap than ever on the ground.

At last he ran out into the middle of the road, and watched for some
one to come by; and as no one appeared, he gathered up his small soul
with the best courage he could muster, and sat down on a big stone by
the side of the road.

“Some one has got to come by pretty soon,” he said.

How long he waited no one knew. It seemed to him hours, when,
“Gee-lang--there, sho, now,” struck upon his ears, and an old farmer
came around a bend in the road with a wagon-load of grain.

Elyot got off his stone, and dashed over to him on unsteady little
legs. “Oh, say, Mr. Man! please would you take us, my sister and me,
please?”

“Sho,” cried the farmer, pulling up his old gray horse, “sho
there--why, who be ye?” staring at him.

[Illustration: Elyot gathered up his small soul with the best courage
he could muster, and sat down on a big stone by the side of the road.]

“Oh, please, Mr. Man, take us in your wagon!” begged Elyot quickly, and
not thinking it best to answer any questions, “I’ll bring her;” and
he ran over to Barby. “Sit up now, you must; there’s a good, kind man
going to carry us in his wagon,” while the farmer rested his hands,
with the ends of the old leather reins, in his lap, and scratched his
shock of light hair in perplexity.

“We’re coming,” cried Elyot at last, tugging Barby along. Her eyes were
half closed, and she protested every inch of the way, but he got her up
to the side of the wagon.

“Land o’ Goshen!” exclaimed the farmer, jumping out, “I’ll help
ye; there ye be.” He picked Barby up, and lifted her over among
the grain-bags. “Curl up, now--she can sleep easy as a kitten,” he
said. Elyot had already clambered up to the driver’s seat in great
satisfaction; so presently they were off, rattling down the turnpike.

“Wher’ ye goin’ to in Hingham?” at last asked the farmer; “mebbe now ye
want to be dropped this side o’ th’ town?”

“We don’t want to be dropped at all,” cried Elyot, hanging to the
wagon-seat with both hands. “Oh, please don’t drop us, Mr. Man!” He
glanced over his shoulder at Barby, peacefully asleep, her head on a
grain-bag.

“I mean, where d’ye want to be let out? Mebbe this side o’ th’ town,”
explained the farmer; “or shall I carry ye to Hingham?”

“Oh, we don’t want to go to Hingham at all,” said Elyot, hanging on for
dear life.

The old farmer pulled up so suddenly that despite his care, Elyot
nearly fell out. “Don’t want to go to Hingham!” he roared; “what did ye
ask me to take ye there for, then?”

“Oh, I didn’t!” said Elyot stoutly; “I asked you to take us in your
wagon. And you’re so good, thank you, Mr. Man.”

“Well, an’ that’s the same thing; for my wagon’s goin’ to Hingham;
that’s where I live. Where in thunder do you want to go, you an’ th’
girl?” he pointed with his thumb over his shoulder to Barby.

“Oh! we want to go to see dear Mr. Beebe and dear Mrs. Beebe, you know.
We’ve been wanting to go for a good many days; and Johnny couldn’t come
over to our house this morning, and everybody was busy, so it was a
good time;” Elyot kept on talking, under the impression that the farmer
wouldn’t look so if conversation went on.

“Well, where’s Mr. Beebe live?” demanded the farmer after an interval
of despair.

“Why, don’t you know? I know the place just as easy,” exclaimed Elyot
with a little laugh.

“Where is’t?”

“It’s down about there;” Elyot gave a wide sweep to his arm, thereby
almost knocking off the farmer’s broad-brimmed straw hat; “and he has
such lots and lots of shoes”--as an after-thought.

“Shoes? be ye talkin’ of a shoe-shop?” asked the farmer.

“Why, of course. I thought you knew that,” remarked Elyot in disdain.
“And dear Mr. Beebe will say”--

“Never mind what he’ll say till he gets ye,” said the farmer grimly.
“Now, can’t ye remember where that Mr. Beebe lives? I’ll be switched,
if I don’t b’lieve it’s Badgertown.”

“Yes, yes, that’s it; of course he lives there,” said Elyot, nodding
furiously. “And please, aren’t we most there? I like your wagon; but we
ought to hurry, ’cause Mr. and Mrs. Beebe will ask us to dinner, and”--

“Land o’ Goshen, I am in a scrape!” exclaimed the old farmer, slapping
his knee with a dingy hand. “Here I be with two young ones on my
hands, an’ don’t know no more’n one o’ them what to do. An’ I can’t go
clear back to them shoe-shop Beebes, an’ I don’t durst go forrards.
Well, mebbe some one’ll heave along, who’s goin’ to Badgertown, an’ll
take ’em.”

But no one “heaving along” for a good half-hour, the old farmer was
just about to turn his old gray horse in despair, when an ancient gig
appeared, whose swaying top gave him a delicious hope long before it
came within talking distance; and he cried joyfully, “Well, if this
here ain’t luck! Now, there’s Miss Sally an’ Belindy Scrannage a-goin’
over to Badgertown of course.”

Long before the old gig got alongside the wagon, the farmer had begun
to shout out the story; and by the time it was all over, Miss Belinda,
who wasn’t driving, had made a place on the old leather seat between
her sister and herself; and sleepy little Barby being set thereon, the
small head was cuddled up against that lady’s spencer waist, with one
mitted hand put carefully around the little figure to hold her close.

“You get up an’ set on that basket,” said Miss Sally, who held the
reins, and who was always under the impression that the ancient horse
was just going to run away. “It’s good we took the flat-covered one
to-day; ’twon’t hurt it; there’s some garden-sass we’re a-carryin’ to
our folks in Badgertown. There, get up.”

“Can’t I sit on behind?” begged Elyot, who didn’t view the basket with
great affection. It would be fine to swing his legs in freedom, instead
of being cooped up with the old ladies.

“No, you can’t,” said Miss Sally with authority; “we might drop you off
and never know it. I’m a-goin’ to have you where I can see you. Get in,
an’ set still.”

“They’re to go to Mr. Beebe’s shoe-store, ye know, on High Street,”
roared the old farmer after them from his high wagon.

“Yes, yes, we’re goin’ right past there,” called back Miss Sally in a
thin, high voice, firmly grasping the reins, and keeping an eye for
danger ahead. “Go easy there, Billy.”

Elyot, from his perch on the flat basket, with his back to Billy,
surveyed her carefully. He could tell by the big mole on her chin
that it was no one whom he had ever seen before. He was quite sure he
should have remembered that mole; and then he looked Miss Belinda over.
Meantime he had to cling to the basket tightly; for the cover, even
though flat, was quite slippery, and Billy had a way of putting his
heels down unexpectedly with a thud, and not always so evenly as one
ought to expect.

“Now, ain’t that a nice seat?” asked Miss Sally briskly, when they had
plodded along in this fashion for a mile or so.

“No; I do not think it is,” said Elyot, hanging on, and wishing he
could turn around, or jump out and rest his legs just once.

“Tush-tush! little boys shouldn’t be so free with their tongues,” said
Miss Sally, slapping the reins smartly up and down Billy’s back. “Land!
when I was a little girl I always set in front on a basket like that
when pa and ma took me ridin’.”

“Was it slippery?” asked Elyot, feeling a little less miserable since
some one would talk, “just like this one?” patting it.

“Yes, just as like it as two peas. Sho, now, Billy! An’ I remember when
pa took me to Cornwall Centre, and I never moved once on my basket,
but sat just as pretty. An’ I didn’t muss my pelisse a mite. Don’t you
remember their telling on’t when we got home, Belindy?” turning to her
sister in pride.

“Yes, I remember,” said Miss Belinda, with a glance of veneration at
the big square figure; “an’ I know ma alwus said you were a proper
child to take away, Sally.”

“Didn’t you ask to get down once, and just stretch your legs just
once?” asked Elyot, who felt that the time had now arrived when he must
beg that favor.

“Oh, dear me, no!” said Miss Sally in horror. “Why, that wouldn’t have
been proper, child. No, indeed, I just set pretty all the way.”




CHAPTER XII.

AT THE BEEBES.


When they turned the corner of High Street, which was the former
post-road of the old town, and began to descend its somewhat crooked
slope, Elyot flew off from his basket, and began to shout excitedly,
“Oh, there it is--there it is, oh, _please_ stop!”

“Set down, child!” commanded Miss Sally sharply; and gathering the
leather reins in one hand, she picked him energetically by the blouse.
Miss Belinda exclaimed faintly, “Oh, he’ll fall out!” and put out her
mitted fingers to help.

“You keep quiet, Belindy,” said Miss Sally brusquely; “you got one
child to look after; I’ll see to this one. Now, set still,” to Elyot,
“till we get there. Then, goodness knows I’ll be glad enough to let you
out.”

Elyot tried to still his throbbing heart and hang to the basket,
craning his neck to watch the Beebe shop, while Billy leisurely picked
his way over the cobble-stones.

“There, here you be!” exclaimed Miss Sally, as at last they drew up in
front of the little shop, “to home; and, my land, I’m thankful enough!”

Elyot was out over the wheel long before she finished, and holding up
his arms for Barby.

“That boy can’t carry her,” cried Miss Belinda nervously from the
depths of the gig; “let me get out, Sally, and take her in.”

“Nonsense!” exclaimed Miss Sally, who knew very well what settling Miss
Belinda in again would be; “she’ll wake up soon’s she’s on the ground.
And her folks’ll come out and get her. Give her to me.”

With that she bundled Barby out, a sleepy little heap, into Elyot’s
outstretched arms. “Now, run right along in to home,” she commanded;
and slapping the reins over Billy’s back, the gig passed slowly down
the street, Miss Belinda working her spare figure around to apply her
eye to the square of dingy glass at the back.

“I hope they’ll get in safe,” she breathed anxiously.

“Nonsense!” said Miss Sally again. “Well, now, Belindy,” and she took
up the interrupted thread of their morning’s business, “I b’lieve we
better not take up this jell to Mrs. Jasper King’s till afternoon.
Seein’ we’re here, we better do a mite o’ tradin’.”

“Very well,” said Miss Belindy meekly, who would have said, “Very well”
if the other way had been proposed.

Meanwhile Elyot, not taking one blissful moment to stretch his legs,
staggered over the uneven pavement, and set Barby on the broad, flat
doorstone. Then he doubled up his little fist, being too short to reach
the old knocker, and too polite to enter the shop without any summons
at all, and rapped with all his force on the green door. Nobody coming,
he propped Barby safely up against the upper step so that she would not
fall over on her nose, and ran and peered into the little window strung
with shoes and boots and rubbers of every description.

“Mr. Beebe!” he cried in a shrill little voice, and plastering his face
against the small panes of glass, “oh, my dear Mr. Beebe, please let me
in!”

“Open the door, and go in, child,” said a good-natured woman coming
along; “folks don’t knock when they’re going to th’ shop. Th’ knocker’s
for Sundays, when you’re goin’ to call.” With that she reached over
Barby, and threw wide the door. “Mr. Beebe,” she called, “here’s
somebody wants to see you.”

“Oh, let me tell ’em first!” screamed Elyot, running past her, and
precipitating himself into a fat old lady in a white cap with a good
deal of pink ribbon. “We’ve come all this way to see you!”

“Oh, my good gracious me!” exclaimed Mrs. Beebe, raising both hands
in astonishment, then clasping him close. “Pa! pa!” she screamed,
“here’s the little King boy come to see us! Is your ma out there in the
carriage?” all in the same breath.

“Oh, no!” cried Elyot, in the greatest pride; “we came all alone by
ourselfs--and Barby’s out on the step;” and he dragged Mrs. Beebe along
by the apron.

Old Mr. Beebe, a good deal slower than he used to be, came leaning on
his cane, out from the little room at the back, and over to the green
front door.

[Illustration: He propped Barby up against the upper step, and ran and
peered into the little window strung with shoes.]

“Well, now, my little dear,” he kept saying all the way with a pleased
smile, and beaming kindly over his big silver spectacles, “that’s nice
to see you to-day.”

“You poor lamb, you,” Mrs. Beebe was saying to Barby, and trying to
lean over to lift her up, “there, there, oh, you pretty creeter, you!
Pa, I don’t s’pose you can carry her. Oh, dear, I’m such a stout old
woman, an’ good for nothin’!”

“Oh! I’ll get her in,” said Elyot, really afraid that Mrs. Beebe would
tumble over; and before Mr. Beebe could remonstrate, he had lifted
Barby, and rolled her in over the sill, both of the Beebes “ohing” and
“ahing” all the time.

“Now, dear, there ain’t no manner o’ use in askin’ you how you come,”
said Mrs. Beebe, restraining her curiosity, “the first thing to do is
to see after that poor lamb there. Do you s’pose, Elyot, you could
manage to get her onto the sofy, an’ I’ll off with her shoes an’ bathe
them poor tired little feet. Oh, you poor lamb, you!”

“Yes, I can,” said Elyot manfully; and between the help that old Mr.
Beebe gave and old Mrs. Beebe contributed, Barby was soon on the old
chintz sofa.

“Now, says I,” declared old Mr. Beebe, rubbing his hands, “that’s
something like it. I’ll take off her shoes, wife, that’s in my line;
an’ you get the hot water an’ bathe her feet.” So he drew up a chair
to the side of the sofa, and putting Barby’s little dusty boots on his
knee, he drew them off, and the stockings; and Mrs. Beebe, coming out
with a big bowl, and a towel over her arm, sat down in the chair that
Elyot drew up for her. “Oh, me! oh, my!” she exclaimed compassionately,
“the poor precious little toes!” caressing them.

Elyot threw himself on the floor, and rolled and stretched in perfect
abandon.

“And he’s so tired too,” said old Mrs. Beebe, stopping in her work to
peer at him over her spectacles.

“Yes, I am,” declared Elyot; “so awfully tired sitting on a basket.”

“Sitting on a basket!” ejaculated both of the Beebes together.

Elyot nodded, and took another roll.

Just then Barby pulled away the white toes that Mrs. Beebe had
submerged with the warm cloth. “Oh!” she exclaimed, opening her eyes
dewy with sleep, and regarding them fixedly, “I want some pink sticks
for dinner; I’m hungry, truly I am.”

“I’d rather have one of the sugar doughnuts, please,” said Elyot, now
that his legs began to feel better, finding that he was very hungry too.

Old Mr. Beebe laughed till his sides shook and his spectacles tumbled
off, and Mrs. Beebe laughed too, and Elyot began to laugh, for he
was so comforted with it all, and he knew the doughnuts were coming;
and Barby laughed too, and it was so very jolly, that no one heard a
customer come in, until he said rather gruffly, “Is my boot half-soled,
Mr. Beebe?”

“Oh, bless you, yes!” said Mr. Beebe, getting up and hobbling over to
the other side of the room, and he lifted a curtain that concealed a
shelf where the repaired articles were kept; “yes, I had that done
yist’day, Mr. Coombs,” he said, bringing it out.

“You come along with me,” whispered old Mrs. Beebe to Elyot, “an’ we’ll
git the doughnuts. Lucky I made a big lot yist’day; I must ’a’ known
you were comin’;” and she laughed again.

“And bring the pink sticks,” cried Barby after them. Then she leaned
back on the old chintz pillow, and gazed entranced at the beautiful
rows and rows of shoes dangling from strings across the room, and
strung across the little window. And great green things, that afterward
old Mr. Beebe showed her were boxes that contained shoes and rubbers;
each had one of the articles hanging to it. And there, on the top shelf
of all, was a long row of big rubber boots--oh, and it smelt so very
lovely! Barby lay quite still, and sniffed and sniffed in delight.
And even when a long pink cinnamon stick was brought and put into her
chubby little hand, she held it loosely and still gazed on.

“It’s a pink stick,” shouted Elyot at her, his mouth full, and taking
his face out from behind a big doughnut.

“Isn’t it beautiful!” hummed Barby in delight. “An’ oh! how do you
do, my dear very own Mrs. Beebe, and pretty well I thank you mostly,”
remembering her manners.

“She will say such dreadful things,” broke in Elyot, quite mortified,
notwithstanding his satisfaction; “but you must excuse her, dear Mrs.
Beebe, ’cause she’s very little, you know.”

“You blessed dear!” cried old Mrs. Beebe, quite overcome with
admiration, and covering the little round face with kisses till her
cap-border trembled.

“And I shall say just the very same thing to dear Mr. Beebe,” declared
Barby decidedly. Then she began on her pink stick.

“There ain’t no mortal use askin’ them blessed dears how they come
here nor anythin’, till they gits rested, Jotham,” said Mrs. Beebe,
taking her good man by the arm as the customer departed, and whispering
violently. “And my! they’re as hungry--” she glanced around at them as
she spoke.

“They better ’a’ had somethin’ more solid ’n candy,” said old Mr.
Beebe, critically eying them too.

“Goodness me!” cried old Mrs. Beebe, “I wouldn’t ’a’ kept that blessed
child from her pink stick a minute more’n I could help. Look at her
suck it now!”

Barby’s face was wreathed in smiles, as she lay on her back, in the
fullest enjoyment of her pink stick, that was rapidly melting, and
adding considerable of itself to the dust that the mud-pie baking and
the travel had given her small countenance.

“Time enough to give ’em somethin’ solid when they’ve got what they
wanted,” said the old lady wisely. “Now, Jotham, we must let Mrs. King
know as soon as we can that them childern are here. Think how she’s
a-worritin’.”

“To be sure--to _be_ sure!” exclaimed old Mr. Beebe thoughtfully;
“well, how’ll we do it, Sarah. I can’t get down there, an’ now we don’t
keep no horse--well, I d’no what to do.”

“We must get some one to go for us,” said Mrs. Beebe determinedly; and
going to the door, she peered anxiously up and down the street. “Now,
there’s them two old ladies who come over from Hingham every week or
so,--the Scrannages,--I see their gig in front o’ Simons’s shop. I
wonder if they’d go for us. I mean to ask ’em.”

She untied her apron, and threw it over her shoulders, it being more
elegant than to go out with nothing over her waist, and waddled down
the street.

The Misses Scrannage were selecting a new calico dress apiece at Mr.
Simons’s shop; and he had taken them down to the extreme end, to see
the beautiful new stock he had just gotten in. They were now in a
complete state of bewilderment, not knowing whether or no to get a
bright pink with purple spots on it for Sally, as they were afraid it
wouldn’t wash, Mr. Simons solemnly assuring them every minute in which
there was a lull in their consultations, that he knew for an absolute
certainty that it _couldn’t_ fade. And when this was decided and cut
off, there was the choosing of Miss Belinda’s gown. She had set her
heart on two shades of green worked in together, with little white dots
all over the whole.

“I know that won’t wash,” declared Miss Sally scornfully; “an’ then how
’twill look when it streaks,” she was saying as old Mrs. Beebe stepped
into the shop.

“It never’ll do to interrupt ’em when they’re choosin’ caliker gownds,”
said the old lady to herself; “s’posin’ they shouldn’t get the right
ones, they’d blame me every blessed time they put ’em on. Oh, dear me!
I must wait; p’r’aps they’re most through.”

But it was a good three-quarters of an hour before Mr. Simons clicked
his scissors through the two pieces of calico, and they were torn off
beyond recall. Every minute old Mrs. Beebe had been on the point of
rushing home, or rather waddling, and had restrained herself, thinking
she heard the supreme moment of decision approaching. “Pa knows where
the cold meat, an’ the pies, an’ the bread is,” she comforted herself,
when she got nervous sitting on the wooden stool they brought her to
wait on. Now she hurried as fast as she could down to the end of the
shop.

“How d’ye do, Miss Sally and Miss Belindy Scrannage?” she said in her
most polite way, “I want to ask a gret favor;” trying to pull Miss
Sally, as the woman of business in the family, aside, that no one might
overhear.

“The little King children, Mrs. Jasper King’s, are at my house. Poor
things! they must ’a’ walked clear down here, when no one knew it,
and”--

“I brung ’em in our gig,” proclaimed Miss Sally in a loud voice. “Oh,
my land, an’ good gracious me!”




CHAPTER XIII.

FOUND.


“Oh, now,” cried King joyfully, “I can go and play with Elyot and
Barby!” He sprang up, and began to skip to the door.

“Oh, no, dear!” said Phronsie gently; “you had three words spelled
badly, you know. That column must be right, and then you can go.”

“O sister Phronsie!” King began to whine. And then he grumbled, “I wish
there weren’t any lessons in the world. I just hate ’em, I do.”

Joel thrust his head in the doorway. “May I come in?” he asked Phronsie.

“Yes, indeed,” she said with a smile.

“Well, well, King,” he said, going over to the little desk, and laying
his hand on it, “do you know I said just those words you’ve used, once
to Mamsie; and I wish I could forget it.”

“You said you hated books!” repeated King in amazement, and forgetting
to cry, a thing he had just made up his mind to do. “Why, you know just
everything.”

“Not quite that,” said Joel, bursting into a laugh; “but I know
considerably more because of what Mamsie said to me then.”

“And what did Mamsie say?” asked King, intensely interested, and
leaning across his little desk.

“She said study didn’t amount to much unless one was glad of the
chance, and that she would stick to it if she had to work herself to
skin and bone. I tell you, King, that just about killed me for Mamsie
to have to tell me that.”

King drew a long breath. “Do you s’pose she’d have to say so to me, if
she was here now?” he asked presently.

“I verily do,” said Joel, with a keen glance out of his black eyes
that looked so very like his mother’s, that King quailed immediately.
“I’ll--I’ll study, brother Joel,” he said, reaching for the neglected
spelling-book.

Joel gave him a pat on his stubby head. “Good for you,” he said.

Outside, Alexia was saying to Amy Loughead in the hall, “Oh! no use to
try to get a squint at Phronsie in the morning till ten o’clock.”

“What is she doing?” asked Amy.

“Oh! she hears King’s lessons for an hour, and studies with him; he’s
her care, you know, while Mrs. Fisher is away. But she might slip off
a few minutes once in a while, and he’d study by himself. But horses
can’t drag her away till the hour is up.”

“No,” said Amy slowly, “I shouldn’t think they could.”

“Umph!” said Alexia, remembering Polly’s frightful trials with her
little music-scholar. Then she added kindly, “Oh! of course not;
but we do want her just awfully this morning. We’re going to have a
driving-party down to the Glen; and of course no one can do anything
without Phronsie.”

“Oh! of course not,” said Amy.

“Well, it won’t make that tiresome clock go ahead any faster,” observed
Alexia, “to watch it,” tearing off her gaze from the tall clock in an
angle of the hall, “so I’m going off to find Cathie.”

Amy sat down in a niche by the window, and busied herself with a
little book she drew out of her pocket. How long she read she did not
know, but King rushed past in a whirlwind of delight. “Phronsie said
I could go! Hooray!” and Phronsie came out into the hall, followed by
Joel.

“Now,” said Phronsie, “we must hurry and get up the Glen driving-party.
Joel, please see that Johnson understands that the horses are brought
around for those who are to ride. And, O Joel! please see that the drag
is ready, and my cart.”

“Oh, yes! and the trap, and the whole list of them. You ride Firefly,
Phronsie, of course; and I’m going to take one of the black horses,
Polly said I could, and ride with you.”

“No,” said Phronsie; “Grace Tupper is to ride Firefly.”

“Oh, no, Phron!” protested Joel.

“I asked her to,” said Phronsie. “She used to ride a good deal, and she
hasn’t had a chance for a long while. I want her to, Joel.”

“Any other time would do just as well,” began Joel. But Phronsie looked
at him, and he hastened to add, “But of course it’s just as you please.
Well, then, I shall drive you.”

“Yes, so you may,” cried Phronsie, well pleased, “and Amy too. Take us
both, Joel, do.” She put her arm around the young girl affectionately.

Joel suppressed what he felt, and said, “All right,” and was just
rushing out, when in ran King.

“Phronsie, where are Elyot and Barby?”

“Just over the east terrace,” said Phronsie. “I saw them a little while
ago when you were at your lesson.”

“Well, they aren’t there now,” declared King in an injured tone. “Now,
I know they meant to run away from me.”

“Oh, no, King dear!” said Phronsie, putting a gentle hand on his hot
face.

“Well, where are they, then?” demanded King wrathfully.

“I’ll go and hunt for them,” said Phronsie merrily. “Come, Amy, let us
find those babies.”

So Amy Loughead and Phronsie picked up their skirts and sped over
the terraces, King racing on ahead, all three calling, “Bar-_by_!
Ely-_ot_!” at the top of their voices.

“There, they aren’t here, you can see for yourself,” said King,
turning a hot and flushed face upon them after a while.

“No,” said Phronsie, the pink color deserting her cheek, “I see they
are not, King.” Then, as he began to look frightened, she brightened
up, and said cheerily, “Do you run up to the house, Amy dear, and get
the horn from Mrs. Higby; then, King, you shall blow it, and that’ll
surely bring them back.”

“I’m going to get brother Joel first,” cried King, scampering off in
the direction of the stables.

“And tell him to set Patsy to hunting on the grounds,” called Phronsie
after him.

But despite the vigorous horn-blowing presently set up, King puffing
out his cheeks with all his might, and Patsy and two or three of
the other stable-men scouring the grounds, headed by Joel; and
notwithstanding that Phronsie and Amy ran hither and thither spreading
the alarm, till Polly and nearly all the guests in the house were just
so many searching-parties, exploring the little brown house and every
other place that would be likely to attract the children, no trace of
the two children could be found. And King threw himself disconsolately
into Phronsie’s arms, crying as if his heart would break.

Miss Salisbury was up on the front veranda; she so far forgot herself
as to wring her hands, when she thought no one observed her.

“O Miss Salisbury!” cried Amy Loughead, running up, “will you be so
very good as to tell Aunt Montgomery that I’m going down the road to
hunt for the children. I may not be back, you know, for some time.”

“Hey, what’s that?” cried Robert Bingley, sauntering along the side
veranda. He was waiting for the assembling of the driving-party, and
hadn’t heard a word of the bad news.

“The two children are lost,” said Amy briefly, before she ran off.

“Great Cæsar’s ghost!” cried Robert Bingley. “Excuse me, Miss
Salisbury,” as he now saw her; and clearing the veranda railing with
one bound, he struck off for the group on the lawn. Just below lay the
deserted mud-pies and the two little trowels.

Meantime Amy, gathering up her skirts with one shaking hand, skipped
down the road, only one feeling uppermost in her heart,--to find
Polly’s children. “I must, or I shall die,” sobbed Amy to herself, the
tears splashing over her pretty blue lawn gown.

An old scissors-grinder came down the road, ringing his bell violently.
“Oh, sir!” cried Amy, rushing up at him, “have you seen two little
children, a boy and a girl? they’re lost, and we don’t know where to
find them.” She wrung her hands now, and cried all over her dress.

“Hey?” cried the scissors-grinder.

“Oh! please, sir, do tell me if you have seen them,” begged Amy.

“I’m deef,” said the scissors-grinder, “and I don’t know what you’re
saying, Miss;” and he put his hand behind his ear, and opened his
mouth, as if in that way his hearing might be improved. So Amy got up
on tiptoe, and shouted it all into his ear; and he shook his head, and
declared he hadn’t seen a child on the road that morning, and he had
just come from Badgertown Centre.

“I’ll tell you what I’ll do,” he said. “I’ll ring my bell, and
then I’ll cry, ‘Child lost’--no, ‘two children lo-ost,’ and then
everybody’ll know it, and look out for ’em.” So he went on, ringing
and jingling, and calling it out, while she flew down along the road.

“There isn’t any use in your doing this,” said a voice back of her as
she sped along; and Robert Bingley dashed up in a dog-cart. “Here, Miss
Loughead, jump in, and we’ll search for those two kids together.”

“They’re Polly’s children,” announced Amy, as if stating a wholly
new fact, and turning her sorrowful face, down which the tears were
chasing, to him; “and it will just kill her, Mr. Bingley, if they’re
not found.”

“Jump in,” said Mr. Bingley, extending his hand to help her; “excuse
my not getting out, but this horse is bound to go. There, now,” as she
was seated, “which way, of all the ways in the universe, would those
children be likely to take--that’s the question. Then I should take the
other.”

“The scissors-man said he hadn’t seen a child on this road; and he has
just come from Badgertown,” said Amy.

“I saw you interviewing him,” said Robert Bingley. “Well, as that
remarkably stupid individual did give utterance to that fact, I should
state my private opinion to be that those children took this very road.
He’s too stupid to know a child when he sees it.”

“Mr. Bingley,” cried Amy, all the color deserting her cheek, and in her
sudden terror she seized his arm, “oh, I’ve just thought--there’s the
pond, you know.”

“No, I don’t know,” said Bingley, distressed at her fright, but
outwardly as cool as ice.

“Why, Spot Pond, they call it,” said Amy with a little gasp. “Phronsie
was telling me about it--what a pretty place it was, and how they would
take me fishing there, and”--

“Were the children about so that they heard you?” he asked abruptly.

“Yes--no, I believe not,” she said, racking her brain to remember; “but
they may have gone there just the same.”

“Where is it, do you know?” asked Bingley, slackening speed a little.

“It’s on this road. After you get by the schoolhouse, then turn to the
right--that is, it’s just a little off the road,” said Amy; “she told
me all about it at the breakfast-table. O Mr. Bingley, do let us go
there!”

“There’s the schoolhouse,” said Bingley, spying it a little distance
away; “so as the pond is a short bit away, we better try it, instead of
going home for assistance.” He gave the whip to the pony, and off they
spun.

But Spot Pond was still and lovely and serene. Not a ripple disturbed
its clear surface, and only a cat-bird screamed at them overhead.

“They couldn’t have walked clear down here by this time,” said Robert
Bingley; “besides, there are no little boot-tracks anywhere.” Amy
clasped her hands tightly together.

“Now I shall interview the schoolmarm,” said Robert Bingley, driving
back; and rapping on the schoolhouse door, he brought out the teacher,
book in hand, and a fringe of scholars, older and younger, around her.

“No,” she said to his question; “we haven’t any of us seen any little
children. Have you,” turning to some big boys who sat by the window,
“seen any go by?”

“No’m,” they said; and Bingley, feeling sure that nothing could have
escaped a boy at such a vantage-ground, set his teeth together hard,
and turned irresolutely.

Amy Loughead now sat up quite straight. “Oh! I can’t go home, Mr.
Bingley,” she said, “and see Polly, and not take the children to her.
Please take me into the town, and I’ll ask everybody there, in all the
shops, and along the streets and houses. Somebody must know.”

“Not a bad idea,” said Robert Bingley, whipping up, “and at least your
plan has action in it; and I confess myself that I don’t want to go
home either without something to show for it.”

It was well past midday when Amy, who had asked at every farmhouse
and each smarter residence within the village itself, now began to
traverse the High Street, where all the shops were crowded together as
a trading centre. Bingley had begged to get out and do this for her;
but she had refused so decidedly, and plodded on so persistently, that
he was forced to obey her, and he watched her little figure and pale,
set face, compassionately. She had just asked at the milliner’s, gay
with its spring and summer ribbons and flowers, and smart in the perky
hats adorning the big window, and had turned away despairingly, going
into the neighboring shops, and asking the same question, to leave
everybody sad and anxious to help, when they knew Mr. Jasper King’s
children were lost. Mechanically she turned up the next step of a
little shop, wedged in between two taller ones, and having on the sign
above the green door,--

     J. BEEBE.
  BOOTS AND SHOES.

[Illustration: There was Barby in a little wooden chair, eating bread
and butter with a very sticky face.]

“Have you seen,” she began, with no hope of success, “two little”--and
there was Barby in a little wooden chair, eating bread and butter with
a very sticky face, while Elyot was capering around the small shop on a
cane, an old man with big silver spectacles laughing to see him go.




CHAPTER XIV.

HOME AGAIN.


The “Scrannage girls,” as their neighbors called them, were seated in
high-back chairs in the big hall at “The Oaks;” their gig, in which
they had followed as best they could the swift pony-cart bearing home
the children, was tied at the end of the carriage-drive. They had
cups of tea in their hands, from which they drew long draughts of
inspiration and refreshment to help along their part of the tale.

Polly sat down in front of them on a low cushioned seat, clasping her
baby in her arms, and Elyot crouched on the floor, his arms in his
mother’s lap; the rest of the household and guests crowding up for the
recital, old Mr. King at the visitors’ right hand, and Amy Loughead
modestly selecting the background.

“Ye see,” said Miss Sally, who as usual was spokeswoman, “it was jest
this way. We made up our minds to go to town this mornin’; one thing
on account o’ bringin’ you the jell you’d ordered, marm,” bobbing her
large bonnet at Mrs. King.

“Yes,” said Polly. “Well, and where did you meet the children, Miss
Scrannage?” clasping Barby very closely.

“I was a-goin’ to tell you. Land! but this tea is proper good, Mis’
King,” taking a long draught of it, and smacking her lips. “Well, we
made up our minds to come to town as I was a-sayin’.”

“My good woman,” said Mr. King, “we do not care for all those
particulars. What we do want to know is where you met those children?”
pointing to Elyot and Barby.

Miss Sally Scrannage turned her large face and looked at him. Wasn’t
she a Scrannage of Hingham, Jabez Scrannage’s daughter? and was she
going to be put down that way, even if this was the great Mr. King,
and he worth his millions? She set down her teacup, and gathered up
the crumbs of cake carefully in a little heap in her napkin before she
was ready to open her mouth. Phronsie stepped softly out of the group,
and going up to the two old ladies, she laid her hand gently on the
big, square shoulder, “Don’t you understand, dear Miss Scrannage,” she
said, “that we are all so anxious to know at once, just as soon as we
possibly can, when you first saw the children. Their poor mother cannot
bear to wait.”

Miss Sally followed the hand that pointed to Polly. When she saw the
tears on the cheek usually so bright, her own face softened, and her
battle feathers, so to speak, drooped. “And I’ll tell you quick’s
I can, my dear,” she said, “seein’ you ask so pretty. But I ain’t
accustomed to be spoke to like a dog, an’ ordered ’round, you know.
Let’s see; ’twas after we’d got by the Hammatt place, Belindy, warn’t
it, when we saw Abiel Babbidge driv up by the side o’ the road, an’
he a-settin’ still, an’ his horse not movin’ a hoof, an’ sez I--you
remember what I sez, Belindy, says I”--

“Did Mr. Babbidge have the children in his wagon?” asked Phronsie,
still standing by her side.

“Yes, he did; we was quite a piece by the Hammatt place.”

“A _good_ piece,” said Miss Belinda.

“Yes, just as I say, a good piece.”

“How far is the Hammatt place from here? Ask her, Phronsie,” said old
Mr. King.

“How many miles do you think the Hammatt place is from here, Miss
Scrannage?” asked Phronsie.

“Well, I d’no. It might be six mile, and then again it might be five. I
hain’t heard folks say.”

“Never mind,” said Mr. King.

“Well, Jabez he was a-sittin’ stock still as a stun, an’ it scart me.
I didn’t know but what he was dead. If it had ’a’ been cold weather, I
should suppose he’d fruz. And I says to him, says”--

“Where did he say he found the children?” asked Phronsie.

“I was a-comin’ to that,” said Miss Sally shortly; and picking up her
tea again, she took a good swallow. “Well, Jabez he says to me, he
says, ‘Get these childern home, will ye, Miss Scrannage?’ I’m very sure
he said home, ain’t you, B’lindy.”

“I don’t remember,” said Miss Belinda.

Miss Sally tossed her a look of scorn. “Well, I do,” she sniffed. “He
says, ‘Get these childern home, will ye, Miss Scrannage, down to Mr.
Beebe’s shoe-shop?’ An’ sister an’ me said of course we would; an’ he
an’ I got the childern in, an’”--

[Illustration: “The ‘Scrannage Girls,’ as their neighbors called them.”]

“And she put me on a slippery basket, and I couldn’t see the horse,”
said Elyot; “and I didn’t like it!”

“O Elyot!” said his mother gently, patting his head; “just think how
kind dear Miss Sally was. You couldn’t have gotten home without her,
dear.”

Elyot grunted feebly something that was inaudible, especially as Miss
Sally, much mollified by Mrs. King’s words, proceeded,--

“So B’lindy took care of the little girl,”--Polly glanced over with
a smile at “sister’s” meek face,--“an’ I had the wust, ’cause I had
to drive, an’ I had that boy. Well, an’ we went fust of all to the
shoe-shop. I was a-comin’ here with the jell fust, but then I thought,
bein’ you said you warn’t”--

“Oh! I didn’t need the jelly,” said Polly hastily; “thank you for going
to Mr. Beebe’s first.”

“An’ I jest let the childern out, of course, as I s’posed ’twas their
home, an’ that’s all I know, ’cept that old Mis’ Beebe run in to
Simons’s with an apun over her head,--we was tradin’, gettin’ some new
calikers, you know,” said Miss Sally in an important way, “an’”--

“She asked you to let us know, did she?” asked Phronsie.

“Yes, she did; an’ then I told her I was the one that brung them
childern to her shop, an’ then we heard a squeal, an’ that boy there,”
pointing her long finger at Elyot, “come runnin’ in the shop, an’ said
he’d come to bid old Mis’ Beebe good-by, and the little girl come along
too, an’ he said they’d sent for ’em to come home right away, an’ he
was a-comin’ again some time--but I know one thing, an’ that is, that I
won’t bring him.”

“Sally, Sally,” ventured Miss Belinda in a shocked tone.

“Dear Miss Scrannage,” cried Polly, rushing out of her seat, and
clinging to Barby, while Elyot dragged after, clutching her gown, “and
dear Miss Belinda, you don’t know how grateful I am to you for all
your lovely care of my little ones. I wish--oh, how I wish my husband
was home to thank you too! Oh! we never can repay you.” She took their
withered and hard hands in her soft, warm ones.

“And I’d like to kiss you,” said Barby, putting up her rosy lips,
“anyway her--I would like to kiss her,” pointing to Miss Belinda, who
was blushing like a winter apple, and beaming at her.

“No, we never can repay you,” repeated Polly out of a full heart.

Miss Sally received all this with the greatest satisfaction, but her
cup of happiness was quite full when Grandpapa got deliberately out of
his chair and advanced to her.

“And you mustn’t mind what an old fellow says, Miss Scrannage,” he
said, holding out his hand with a courtly bow. “Goodness me, my dear
woman, can you guess what we’ve suffered when those blessed babies
couldn’t be found? And so shake hands, and forgive whatever you didn’t
like in my words.”

“Oh, I’ll forgive!” said Miss Scrannage, putting out her toil-worn
hand with just as much pride; “an’ mebbe I hadn’t orter been so quick
myself; but I can’t help it, for I’ve got it from the Scrannage side o’
th’ house, an’ it’s hard to pull up. Well, now, B’lindy, seein’ all’s
comfortable, we better be a-goin’. We’re goin’ to stay all night, ye
know,” she said, addressing the company, “down to our cousin’s in town;
but we got to go to one or two more o’ th’ shops, an’ then we want to
visit some before supper.”

Mr. King did not dare to interrupt; but he kept fingering his
pocket-book nervously, well concealed as it was. His eyes sought
Phronsie’s face and Polly’s, and finding no encouragement in either,
he cleared his throat, “Hem! well, now, Miss Scrannage, I don’t want to
hinder you; but what sort of a man is this Mr. Babbidge, I believe you
said his name was, that gave the children to you?”

“Oh! he’s a good sort o’ man, ’Biel Babbidge is,” replied Miss Sally,
“dretful poor he is, an’”--

“Poor, is he?” cried old Mr. King with interest.

“Land, yes! never was forehanded; couldn’t be, with that sick wife of
his.”

“Is she sick?” asked Phronsie pityingly.

“Yes; hain’t done a hand’s turn for a year, with rheumatiz, an’ before
that ’twas newmony, an’ before that”--

“Poor man!” said Polly; “of course he couldn’t get along, with a sick
wife.”

“That’s so,” assented Miss Sally; “an’ he hain’t got along; has to hire
whatever help he gets in the house. He’s dretful good to his wife; sets
a store by her, an’ treats her jest like a baby. She was a Potter,
lived down to th’”--

“Now, Miss Scrannage,” said old Mr. King desperately, and bringing
the pocket-book out to the surface, “I want to reward somebody for all
their goodness to me and to my family in bringing our children home. Do
help me to do it.”

“You better give it to ’Biel Babbidge, then,” said Miss Sally with a
stiffening in her back, as she looked in his eyes. Then she glanced at
her sister, who straightened herself involuntarily. “Land, yes! he’s
dretful poor, an’ needs it.” She stepped out of her chair with the air
of being able to buy up all Badgertown. “Come, B’lindy, we reelly must
be a-goin’. I thank you for that cup o’ tea, Mis’ King; ’twas reel
pa’ticler good, and you, Miss Phronsie, thank you. Good-day,” with an
old-time courtesy to the company.

Elyot rushed after her. “I’m sorry I said that about the basket,” he
cried.

“Now,” said Phronsie, as they all turned back and went slowly over
the lawn, the whole company having escorted the old ladies to their
carriage, the gentlemen vying in their attentions, and David securing
the honor of unhitching Billy, “why cannot we take our driving-party
over to Hingham to-morrow, instead of to the Glen, and see Mr. and Mrs.
Babbidge?”

“And do up the business with them,” finished old Mr. King. “The very
thing, Phronsie,” with a grateful smile at her. “I only wish I could
wind up my debt to that Miss Scrannage as easily,” he groaned.

“O Phronsie!” cried Polly ecstatically; “that’s a lovely plan. Oh, you
dear, for thinking of it!”

And every one of the company thereupon expressed their great delight.
Suddenly Elyot glanced down the road. “Oh, I see papa!” he howled;
“he’s on top of the stage.”

“Well, well, what is the whole family drawn up here in parade for?”
cried Jasper, swinging himself down from Mr. Tisbett’s side. And “O
Jasper! what has brought you so early?” from Polly. And then all the
story had to be gone over and over, with many things interspersed by
Elyot and Barby, who felt that half enough attention had not been paid
to the Beebes, and who clamored for every one to hear what a splendid
time they’d had in the little shop.

“And I sat in the little chair that Aunt Phronsie sat in,” cried Barby.
“Truly I did, papa,” pulling his sleeve.

“Yes, she did,” said Elyot; “the same little wooden chair that Aunt
Phronsie sat in when she got her red-topped shoes; Mr. Beebe said so.
And I had doughnuts--all I wanted.”

Polly viewed him in alarm, while Joel smacked his lips. “We remember
those doughnuts, don’t we, Dave,” poking the college instructor in the
ribs.

And then they all hurried in, Jasper’s arm around Polly, while his
children hung to his hand; for he had brought out a new piece of music
he wanted to try with Polly before dinner.

On the way to the music-room, Joel picked up a little book from one
of the window-niches in the big hall. “Whose is this?” he asked,
carelessly whirling the leaves of a Greek poem.

“That’s Miss Loughead’s, I believe,” said Robert Bingley, who stood
next, and looking over his shoulder.

“Impossible!” exclaimed Joel impulsively. “What, belong to that little
thing! Why, man alive, she never knew enough to understand that there
was such a book.” And then he turned and met Amy Loughead’s blue eyes.




CHAPTER XV.

SOME HINGHAM CALLS.


“Phronsie,” said Joel desperately, “I can’t take Miss Loughead with us.”

“O Joey! you promised,” said Phronsie in a grieved way.

“But I can’t do it--do beg off for me some way. Why, it’s impossible
for me to look the girl in the face after what I’ve said. How I could
ever have spoken so, I don’t see,” went on Joel remorsefully.

Phronsie was about to say something; but thinking better of it, she
only smiled comfortingly.

“Do, will you, Phronsie?” begged Joel in a wheedling way.

“I think you ought to take Amy all the more because you did speak so,
Joel,” said Phronsie quietly, “so I cannot speak for you, dear.”

Joel turned off, and ground his boot into the gravel. “All right,
Phronsie,” he said, turning around.

But just here Grandpapa came around the curve in the path. “Phronsie,
you will drive me in your cart,” he said.

“Shall I, Grandpapa?”

“Yes, dear; and tell Johnson to put my bay in.”

“Yes, Grandpapa.” Phronsie looked at Joel. His black eyes said, just as
when a boy he had been delighted at anything, “Oh, goody! now I sha’n’t
have to drive that girl to Hingham.”

Phronsie answered the look by, “O Joel! now it will help to make up for
what you said; as you can take Amy Loughead over alone, and that’ll
show her you are sorry.”

Joel’s face lengthened. “Really, Phronsie?”

“I would,” said Phronsie; then she ran off to get ready.

“Miss Loughead,” said Joel awkwardly, going into the music-room where
she stood alone, turning over some of Polly’s music, “I don’t know as
you’ll go with me--I’m sure I shouldn’t, if the cases were reversed;
but I was to take my sister Phronsie and you on the driving-party to
the Glen yesterday, you know.” He paused, having come to the length of
his chain, and stared helplessly at her.

“Yes,” said Amy.

“Well, now it’s Hingham, instead; and Grandpapa wants Phronsie to go
with him, so it leaves you and me out in the cold,” he said with an
attempt at a laugh.

Amy said nothing, so he had to plunge on. “And if you’ll be willing
under the circumstances to let me drive you, why, I’ll do it,” finished
Joel desperately.

“Do you wish to, Mr. Pepper?” asked Amy, raising a pair of clear blue
eyes to his, “because do not really try to do it--to--make up--for
anything. I’d rather you didn’t,” she said earnestly.

“I do wish it,” said Joel heartily, “if you are willing--that’s the
question. Miss Loughead, I never was so sorry in all my life for
anything,” he declared; and he hung his head, wishing he were small
enough to be whipped, and be done with it.

“Don’t feel distressed about it,” said Amy. “I was a little goose, Mr.
Pepper, in the old days; and I just wasted my time, and I wouldn’t
study; and I worried Polly dreadfully.” It was now her turn to look
distressed, and Joel cried out, “Don’t look so, I beg of you.”

“And you were quite right in believing I couldn’t, or I wouldn’t, study
now,” said Amy. “I don’t blame you, Mr. Pepper.” She put out her hand,
which Joel seized remorsefully.

“Will you go?” he cried eagerly, and hanging to it,--“will you?”

“Yes, I will go,” said Amy Loughead, pulling away her hand, and smiling
brightly.

“Oh, beg pardon!” ejaculated Joel, backing off, “I was thinking it was
Phronsie.” Then in hurried Robert Bingley.

“Miss Loughead, I’ve been looking everywhere for you. May I have the
pleasure of driving you to Hingham this morning?”

“I am going with Mr. Joel Pepper,” said Amy. And Joel heard his friend
Bingley say, “Whew!” and he meant to have it out with him some time for
that.

At last they were off,--Mrs. Higby, shading her eyes with her hand,
watched them from the upper door,--all but Jasper, who went as usual
with the “little publishing bag” to town in the early train. The
children were distributed evenly throughout the party on the drag;
Polly and Grace Tupper, Ben and David were on horseback; and Grandpapa
and Phronsie led off in the dog-cart merrily; while Joel and Amy
Loughead brought up the rear, the interval being filled by a big
beach-wagon. When Robert Bingley found how it was, he clambered into
this last, without a sign on his face that he didn’t choose that place
to begin with.

“Well, really,” observed Percy, adjusting his monocle with importance,
“this road looks exactly like all country roads--don’t you know.”

Van, on the back seat with Gladys Ray, grinned. “Astonishing fact,” he
whispered to her. “It’s his monocle that does that.”

“Polly wouldn’t like it to have you make fun of your brother,” she said.

Van colored up to the roots of his light hair. “I’m glad you’re going
to be like Polly, Gladys,” he said, “and keep me straight.”

“Indeed, I’m not going to keep you straight,” she cried with spirit;
“you’ve got to keep yourself straight. But I shall say things that
I’ve heard the Peppers say, for it’s good for you to hear them.”

“Isn’t this fine,” cried David, riding up to the side of the trap--“eh,
Joe? Doesn’t it take you back to the days when we used to race barefoot
along this Hingham road?”

“That it does,” cried Joel, in huge delight, and raised back to his
self-esteem by the quiet poise of the girl beside him, who evidently
meant to take everything as it had been before his cruel and unlucky
speech. “She’s one girl in a thousand for sense and a good heart,” said
Joel to himself many times on the drive. “Nobody else but Polly and
Phronsie could have done it.”

When they reached Hingham, as they did in good time, it was an easy
matter to find Abiel Babbidge’s house. Everybody knew him, and could
tell the old yellow house, run down at the heel, as it were, set back
from the side road. All around it lay one of the New England farms,
whose principal crop seemed to be stones, which, if removed, would
leave not much else. “Good gracious me!” ejaculated old Mr. King, as
Phronsie turned the bay up the scraggly wagon-path to the door.

The whole procession came to a halt. “Phronsie,” said Grandpapa, “you’d
better ask to see Mrs. Babbidge. I’ll tackle him if he is home.”

“Shall I, Grandpapa?” asked Phronsie, getting out.

“Oh, let me!” howled Elyot, trying to spring off from the drag. “I want
to see my nice Mr. Babbidge.”

“And me too,” cried Barby; “let me too!”

King was consumed with envy, and so was Johnny Fargo, because they
had no former acquaintance to plead. “I wouldn’t,” he said, laying a
restraining hand on Elyot’s jacket.

“You let me alone,” cried Elyot crossly, and twitching himself free.
“You don’t know my Mr. Babbidge. Oh, _do_ let me get down!”

“So you shall, dear,” said Polly, riding up to the side of the drag,
“and Barby. Run along now, chickens,” as somebody lifted Barby down and
set her on the ground, “and call your Mr. Babbidge out. We all want to
see him.”

Thereupon King and Johnny screamed for permission to get down, which
being accorded, they whooped off also, and disappeared around the house
in the direction of the dilapidated barn.

Presently Abiel Babbidge appeared, shambling and shamefaced, with one
of the King children hanging to either hand,--the other boys trying to
catch on somewhere, and not succeeding very well.

Polly reined her horse up to his side. “How do you do, Mr. Babbidge?”
she said, putting out her dainty riding-glove. “I am the children’s
mother, and I want to thank you for all the kind care you gave them
yesterday.”

“O Moses and Methuselah!” exclaimed Abiel Babbidge, startled out of any
sort of manners; “ye be! Why, I can’t tech ye’re hand with this.” He
extricated one of his horny palms from Barby’s grasp, and held it up to
her.

Polly shook it warmly. “I cannot thank you, Mr. Babbidge, as I want
to. May I see your wife?” and she rode up to the old horse-block and
dismounted.

Abiel Babbidge’s face fell. “My wife is sick,” he said slowly, and
something like a tear fell from his eye. Elyot pulled away his hand,
and looked up in astonishment at him.

“I know she is not well,” said Polly gently; “but I thought perhaps you
would think she could see me and my sister,” taking Phronsie’s hand.
“But not if you do not think best, Mr. Babbidge.”

“Ye may,” said Mr. Babbidge abruptly. “I declar to gracious I sh’d be
glad to have her see ye both. ’Twould bring her right up, mebbe.”

Old Mr. King got slowly out of the dog-cart while Mr. Babbidge was
escorting Polly and Phronsie in. On the top step, Polly turned and
said softly, “Now run away, children, and don’t make a noise under the
window.”

“Oh, we’re going in!” cried Elyot, pushing with all his might to get in
first.

“Mamma says not,” said Polly; and they tumbled back quickly, and
swarmed into the dog-cart to wait with Grandpapa.

In a few minutes out came Mr. Babbidge’s head and shoulders in the
doorway. “They want ye,” he nodded to old Mr. King; who, mightily
pleased to be summoned, wended his way to the steps.

“Somebody come and sit with those youngsters,” he cried, shaking his
walking-stick at the bunch of them in the cart. So Ben got out of the
drag, and ran up just in time to save the bay from getting a smart
thwack from the whip that Johnny Fargo had captured.

“The next boy that gets hold of that whip will tumble out of this
cart,” said Ben decidedly.

Polly sat by the side of the bed in the old bedroom that opened out
of the kitchen, Phronsie stood by the foot, as Abiel Babbidge said
to Mr. King, “There’s my wife, sir,” and pointed to the bed. Under
the old patched bedquilt she lay, propped up by pillows; everything
marvellously neat, but oh, so coarse and poor! She had a smile on her
thin face; and her hand, all drawn up with rheumatism, was extended in
simple courtesy of an old-time pattern.

“Oh! how do you do, madam?” said old Mr. King much shocked, and for the
life of him not knowing what to say.

But Mrs. Babbidge knew no embarrassment. She asked her husband to get
some more chairs from the kitchen and bring in; and when he, big and
awkward, knocked down more things in the carrying out of this request
than he could pause to pick up, she passed it serenely over, and smiled
at him just the same.

Polly felt the tears in her eyes, in spite of all her efforts to keep
them out. “Dear Mrs. Babbidge,” she said gently, “you know a mother
who has had her little children restored to her as I have, and largely
through your good husband’s kindness,”--here Mrs. Babbidge sent a
proud glance over at him, at which he blushed like a girl under his
big farmer’s hat he forgot to take off,--“finds it hard to express her
thanks; and so I brought you, from my husband and from me, a little
gift.” Here Polly laid down a small parcel on the patched bedquilt, and
tucked it under one of the drawn and twisted hands.

“How about the Scrannage ladies?” asked old Mr. King, drawing Abiel off
to a corner; “they’re pretty well off, I expect.”

“They hain’t got much but pride,” said Abiel, shifting from one foot to
another, “but enough o’ that to carry this hull town.”

“Poor, are they?” asked the old gentleman.

“Poor--well I should say so; why, I guess it comes hard on ’em to keep
a cat. But then they’d rather starve themselves than to scrimp her. But
they’re monstrous ginteel.”

“Dear, dear!” said the old gentleman, with great concern.

“Ye see, they’re a-workin’ to pay off that there mortgage the old
squire left; been a-workin’ on’t for twenty year now, an’ mos’ likely
they’ll die a-workin’ on’t; but then ‘we _will_ die a-workin’ on’t,’ as
Miss Sally said to me only t’other day; and bless my buttons, so she
will,” declared Mr. Babbidge, slapping his knee.

“How much is it?” asked old Mr. King.

“Five hundred dollars,” said Abiel.

“Five hundred dollars!” repeated the old gentleman.

“Yes, ’tis, every bit; awful, ain’t it; ’cause they’re wimmen, an’
there ain’t no way for ’em to arn money, only to make jell.”

“They wouldn’t accept a little gift, you think?” asked the old
gentleman suddenly, “not if she was to give it,” pointing to Polly, “or
her sister?”

“Massy sakes--no,” cried Abiel in alarm; “they’d set the dorg on you;
that is, Miss Sally would, if she had a dorg. They wouldn’t take it
from the angel Gabrel.”

Nevertheless, when they went out of the Babbidge household, the old
gentleman had made up his mind to something; and, by the time they were
on the way homeward, he announced to the rest of the procession, “We
are going down to the Scrannage house.”

[Illustration: “There now, it’s done, Grandpapa, dear,” said Phronsie,
tucking the bit of paper under the old door.]

And down to the “Scrannage house” they went. There it stood, by the
lilac-bushes, with its flag walk between the rows of ancient box; its
blue-green blinds, and its big-knockered door--just as it had stood in
the old squire’s time, with a mortgage on it.

The whole procession drew up silently. “You all sit still,” commanded
the old gentleman. “Phronsie, you come with me.” So, Ben hopping into
the dog-cart again to hold the bay, the two passed up between the rows
of box, and halted at the blue-green door.

“Now, Phronsie, I want you to help me,” said Grandpapa, “because that
Miss Sally Scrannage is truly awful to deal with. But whether she likes
it or not, child, I’m going to lift that mortgage.”

“O Grandpapa, I’m so glad!” exclaimed Phronsie, the sunlight all in her
eyes.

“So,” said the old gentleman, “get behind the lilac-bush here, child;”
and he took out a paper from his pocket-book that proved to be a check,
filled it out, and handed it to Phronsie. “Now stick it under the door,
Phronsie; the crack’s big enough. And when they get home, and find it,
and that Miss Sally comes for me, I can tell her you did it.”

“I will do it, Grandpapa,” said Phronsie, running off happily, to tuck
the bit of paper under the old door. “There, now, it’s done, Grandpapa
dear. And I am so glad.”

“And now let us get in, and drive off like hot shot,” exclaimed the old
gentleman, hurrying down the path. “I really feel as if I heard Miss
Sally after us now.”




CHAPTER XVI.

MR. MARLOWE HELPS MATTERS ALONG.


Phronsie passed slowly up the path to the little brown house door. The
last of the party of guests at “The Oaks” had just departed. She turned
the key in the lock and went in, picking up, on her way, the playthings
the children had left the afternoon before, strewn on the old kitchen
floor.

Phronsie sat down on a low seat, and leaned her head in Mamsie’s old
rocking-chair. Outside, a little gray squirrel ran up and down the
big apple-tree, and peered in the window chattering loudly; the china
basket of sweetbrier noiselessly dropped a petal now and then on the
old kitchen table, and the clock ticked away busily; and still Phronsie
did not move.

“Mamsie,” she was saying softly to herself, “is it very wicked for me
to _want_ to see Roslyn? I will stay with Grandpapa; but oh, I want so
to just see Roslyn.”

And after a long pause she said, “I could not ask Grace all she knows
about him--oh, to think that he is her cousin! because that would not
be right to Grandpapa, who did not want me to see him. But oh! I cannot
help thinking of him; and is it very wicked, Mamsie, just to think of
him?”

Still Phronsie did not move. When she did lift her head, there were no
traces of tears upon her cheek, only her hands were clasped upon her
knee, and a white line settled around the drooping mouth.

“Dear Grandpapa,” she said softly, “he has done everything for us, and
all his comfort is in us. He needs me; and I’ll try again not to think
of Roslyn. But oh, Mamsie!” She laid her head once more upon the old
cushion in the rocking-chair, and kept it there for a long time.

Old Mr. King had gone to town in the early morning train with Jasper.
Having not only a great delight in Mr. Marlowe, so that he seized every
possible opportunity to be with him, Mr. King had absorbed such a
violent pride in the whole publishing business as conducted by Marlowe
and King, that he had become a silent partner, and contributed such
a generous amount of funds as to make possible the great breadth and
extension that had been longed for by its founder.

[Illustration: Phronsie leaned her head upon Mamsie’s old
rocking-chair.]

“And I don’t want anything to say about the working of the capital,”
the old gentleman had cried. “Gracious, man alive,” to Mr. Marlowe,
“I don’t know anything about business; and I can trust you, who have
brought it up to this.”

So Mr. King resolutely kept away from all business conferences to which
he was always asked; and he pinched his lips under his white mustache
very tightly together whenever the fit seized him to give advice.
Whenever this was particularly strong upon him, he invariably kept away
from town, working it off by scolding at the editorials in the morning
paper. At other times he would sometimes take an early morning train
with Jasper, and spend hours in wandering over the big establishment,
in which he was a great favorite, and in reading and examining the
books and periodicals turned out; swelling with pride more and more at
the splendid character of the work he saw before him.

Sometimes Phronsie was with him, and often Polly came; and now and then
Elyot or King hung to his hand, and listened to his delighted praise of
the whole thing.

But this day he announced that he was going alone with Jasper. And when
they arrived at the publishing house, he said, in a very different tone
from that he had used on his first visit,--“And what a first-class fool
I was then, to be sure,” he reflected,--“Jasper, my boy, see if Mr.
Marlowe would like to talk with me now. If not, I’ll go up into the
bindery and see that new machine.”

Mr. Marlowe wasn’t ready to see him, being, as on the former occasion,
occupied with a gentleman who had made the appointment for that hour;
so Mr. King did go up into the bindery, whereat all the working-people
looked up with a smile, as the old gentleman made them his courtliest
bow.

“Father,” cried Jasper, springing up the stairs two at a time, “Mr.
Marlowe is ready now. He is dreadfully sorry to keep you waiting so
long, but it couldn’t be helped. Mr. Strong did not get through,
but lapped over on the agent of the new paper company, who had an
appointment.”

“Say no more, my boy,” cried his father. “I don’t mind waiting a
half-hour. I’ve nothing special to do, and it’s pleasant up here.”

“A half-hour?” repeated Jasper, taking out his watch. “You’ve been up
here just three hours, father!”

“To be sure,” cried the old gentleman, glancing at it, and then
whipping out his own, when he burst out laughing, and took Jasper’s
arm, and went down-stairs.

“I move that we all three go out to luncheon,” said Mr. Marlowe, as
they came into his small private office. “What do you say, Mr. King?”

“Yes, yes, to be sure; a good plan,” assented the old gentleman, who
always said “yes” nowadays to everything Mr. Marlowe proposed.

“And we can begin our talk there, and finish it here,” said the
publisher, putting down his desk-cover.

“Now, Jasper, my boy,” said old Mr. King, when the three were together
in a quiet corner at the restaurant, “I’m going to say something that
will perhaps make you feel badly a bit.”

Jasper put up his hand involuntarily.

“It won’t make a thing come a minute the sooner for talking of it,”
said the old gentleman cheerily; “but I’m not going to live forever,
and that’s a fact. I never should have lasted half so long if it hadn’t
been for you, my boy,” laying his hand across the little table on
Jasper’s, who grasped it eagerly, “and for those blessed Peppers. And,
dear me, I mean to go right straight on living a long while yet,” he
added, with a glance at Jasper’s pale face. “But I want a good talk
with both of you to-day. I don’t mind saying that a certain thing
troubles me, and I want to get it off my mind.”

Mr. Marlowe said nothing, his clear-cut face quietly turned to the old
gentleman, waiting for him to proceed.

“There’s no man living, Marlowe, that I’d ask advice from sooner than
you,” said Mr. King; “and that you know.”

A bright smile shot over the publisher’s face, lighting up the keen
gray eyes with a world of affection. “I know,” he said simply.

“It’s about Phronsie,” said old Mr. King brokenly, and his handsome
white head drooped.

“Don’t, father,” began Jasper, dreadfully distressed; “Phronsie
wouldn’t want you to feel badly.”

“I would let your father speak what is on his mind, Jasper,” said Mr.
Marlowe quietly.

“She--she--oh, you know it already,” said the old gentleman with
difficulty, “formed an attachment with a young sculptor when we were
last abroad. I introduced them myself. He’s General May’s nephew,
working in Rome; got a high degree of talent, and all that. But, oh,
Phronsie!”

Mr. Marlowe’s imperturbable countenance gave no hint to any onlooker
that anything but the most ordinary conversation was in progress; the
other two sitting with their faces to the wall.

“And now that precious child is really and absolutely in love with that
man,” said Mr. King in a subdued but dreadful voice. “I didn’t believe
it until I saw her face the other night when little Grace said he was
her cousin. Marlowe, what _can_ I do?” He grasped the strong right hand
lying on the table.

“Mr. King,” said the publisher, with a lightning-like gleam in the gray
eyes, “I can only tell you certain ways of looking at the matter that
seem right to me. You may not like what I say.”

“You will say it all the same,” said the old gentleman grimly.

“I shall say it all the same,” said Mr. Marlowe.

“That’s what I like you for,” broke in Mr. King. “Why, if I hadn’t
wanted the truth, I wouldn’t have come to you, man.” He leaned forward,
and gazed into the clear gray eyes.

“You approve of Roslyn May as a man?” asked Mr. Marlowe.

“Dear me, yes. Why, if I hadn’t, do you suppose I would have introduced
him to Phronsie,” cried the old gentleman, somewhat irately.

“Certainly not. Now, what is there that you disapprove of in him?”
asked the publisher.

“Nothing; that is, the young fellow is all right, I suppose, only--why
Phronsie is a mere child yet. She’s my little one!”

“Miss Phronsie is twenty years old,” said Mr. Marlowe.

“Bless me, why so she is!” exclaimed Mr. King. And then, as if a wholly
new idea had struck him, he kept repeating to himself at intervals
as the waiter brought the luncheon, “Phronsie is twenty years old.
Phronsie is twenty years old!”

“It doesn’t seem a day since that child sent me her gingerbread boy,”
he said aloud, when the meal was half over.

“I suppose so. That’s a way time has of treating us all,” said Mr.
Marlowe. “Well, I am glad you broached this subject, Mr. King; and now,
with your permission, we will finish it when we get back to my office.”

Jasper shot him a grateful glance; and quite easy in his mind about his
father, now that the ice was really broken, and the dreaded subject
open for future discussion, he gave a sigh of relief as he saw the
countenance of the old gentleman lighten.

“I take it, Mr. King,” observed Mr. Marlowe, when they were once more
in the little private office with orders for no callers to be admitted,
“that Phronsie’s welfare is what you are most concerned about?”

“Yes, yes,” cried the old gentleman; “it is, Marlowe.”

“Then, that is really the only thing for us to consider in this
conversation. You admit that you believe Phronsie to be deeply in love
with this young sculptor?”

Old Mr. King whirled abruptly around on Jasper, “What say you, Jasper?”
he cried. “Perhaps she isn’t,” with a sudden hope that Jasper might
confirm this. But Jasper looked him steadily in the eyes. “You are
right, father. Phronsie has loved him ever since you brought her home,
I believe.”

The old gentleman groaned aloud, and caught at the table for support.

“And it is only her love for you,” said Jasper, seeing in Mr.
Marlowe’s eyes the counsel that the whole of the truth had better be
spoken, “that has made her able not to show it.”

Old Mr. King got out of his chair, and took as many turns around the
small room as its space would allow, fuming like a caged animal.

“And what do you want me to do about it, Marlowe?” he demanded
presently, stopping short in front of that gentleman’s office-chair.

“I do not want, nor advise anything,” said Mr. Marlowe calmly.

“Well, what do you think I ought to do,” he fumed--“that’s the same
thing. Come, speak out and be done with it, man.”

For answer, Mr. Marlowe turned to his desk full of papers. “I’ve talked
enough,” he said with his bright smile. “Think it out for yourself,
King; you’ll do the right thing.” And he put out his strong hand
kindly. The old gentleman grasped it without a word, and hung to it a
moment, then clapped on his hat. “I won’t wait for you, Jasper,” he
said. “I’m going home.”

“Don’t you want me to go with you, father?” cried Jasper with a glance
at Mr. Marlowe.

“You can go just as well as not,” said that gentleman; “there is
nothing pressing this afternoon.”

“No, no,” said the old gentleman imperiously; “I’ll go by myself.
Good-day, Marlowe.”

“Jasper,” said his friend, as the tall, stately figure passed rapidly
out down the long salesroom, “don’t be troubled,” glancing into
Jasper’s overcast face; “it is better as it is. Let him think it out by
himself. And believe me, my boy, the greatest kindness one can do your
father, is to prevent him from being untrue to himself.”

“I know it,” said Jasper; “but, O Mr. Marlowe! you do know, because
you’ve seen it, how he just worships Phronsie. We all do for that
matter; but father--well, that’s different. She’s just everything to
him.”

“And that’s just the very reason he wants to show her that he is worthy
of it,” said the publisher gravely; “and no one must point it out to
him. He must travel that way alone, till he can think only of her good.
And he’ll do it.”




CHAPTER XVII.

ALEXIA HAS GRACE TO HERSELF.


“Well, if I’m not glad to get you here!” cried Alexia that same
morning, dragging Grace into the front doorway of “The Pumpkin.” “Now
you shall make me such a visit! Dear me, won’t we have good times
together,” making all sorts of wild plans in her mind on the spot, to
atone for any former coldness.

“I can’t stay but two days,” cried Grace in alarm. “I’m to go back to
‘The Oaks’ then.”

“Nonsense! Why, it would take you two days to see that blessed child
alone. You’ve no idea how he’s grown this last week,” said Alexia.

“Hadn’t I better see him now?” asked Grace, feeling it unsafe to put
off such a wonderful sight any longer.

“That you had!” exclaimed Alexia, delighted at such enthusiasm. “Come
right up into the nursery this very minute, Grace.”

So the two ran up the winding stairs into the tiny box of a room called
the nursery. There on the floor, sprawling after a red rubber ball, was
Algernon. His mother seized him, and covered his round red face with
kisses. “The blessed, precious baby!” she cried.

“Ar-goo-goo-goo!” screamed Algernon in a passion, and kicking fearfully.

“See how he tries to talk--how he _does_ talk!” cried Alexia, whirling
around with him till his arms and legs appeared to Grace like so many
spokes to a wheel in rapid motion. “Oh, my dear! So he should tell his
old mother all about it. Grace, isn’t he perfectly wonderful?”

“He _is_ a baby,” said Grace, saying the first thing that came into her
mind.

“I knew you’d say so when you came to see him,” declared Alexia, with
a triumphant flush on her sallow face. “That isn’t half he can do,
either.”

She set Algernon on the floor, and dropped there herself, regardless of
her elaborate morning-dress. “Crawl over mummy, now,” she commanded.

But Algernon preferred to crawl just the other way, after his ball.

“That’s just it!” cried Alexia delightedly. “Now, you see he’s not to
be led. He’s going to think for himself. Oh, I expect great things from
that boy, Grace!”

A placid-looking woman in a big stiff white cap sat by the window
sewing.

“Now, there’s Bonny,” said Alexia, still sitting on the floor, and
looking over at her, “she’s thoroughly commonplace, and can’t rise to
the superiority of that blessed child. And strange to say, Grace, his
father can’t either. But I can; oh, you dear!” with that she caught
Algernon by one of his fat little legs, and drew him to her. And then
ensued a wild screaming on Algernon’s part, and a petting on Alexia’s,
Grace backing off to the door, feeling that the room was too small for
so much action.

“Now I’m going to have a talk with you, Grace,” said Alexia presently,
and hanging tightly to her baby, “come,” in one of the lulls when
Algernon paused to take breath, “let’s go into your room.”

“Can we talk with the baby?” asked Grace with wide eyes.

“Nonsense; yes, indeed! Algernon loves to hear conversation, and he
really understands a good deal,” said Alexia, tucking her “blessed
child” under one arm, and going off. “This is your room, right next,
so you can hear his dear little voice the first thing in the morning.
Oh, you darling!” stopping to kiss Algernon. Then she ran with him into
Grace’s small apartment room, and dumped him into the middle of the
bed. “Now, then, Grace, he’s all right. Come in, dear, this is your
room.”

“Will he stay there?” asked Grace fearfully.

“Dear me, yes,” said Alexia; “he’s so very sensible. And I’m going to
sit this side to make it absolutely sure. Well, now, Grace, take off
your bonnet, and come here. I want to ask you something.”

Grace took off her bonnet, and came round by the side of the bed.

“Sit on the foot there, will you,” said Alexia.

“That’s a dear. Well, now, Grace, do tell me about Roslyn May. I’ve
been dying to know, and couldn’t get a chance with all this swarm of
company around our ears, ever since you said he was your cousin the
other night. How did that ever happen?”

“Why, he was born so,” said Grace.

“Of course, you stupid child,” cried Alexia; “why, even Algernon would
know that! But I mean--oh, isn’t it just the most wonderful thing in
all the world that it turns out that Roslyn May is your cousin?”

“Why, no; I don’t see how it is very wonderful,” said Grace in a
perplexed way.

“Oh, dear me! well, you are stupid--I mean! well, I wish I could tell
you, but I suppose I mustn’t.”

“And what made everybody look so queer when I spoke his name, when
Mrs. King said that the Fishers were going to Rome?” asked Grace,
recognizing here a mystery, and meaning to get at the bottom of it.
“Why did they, Mrs. Dodge?”

“Oh, dear me! Algernon, would you tell her?” asked his mother.

“Ar-goo!” said Algernon, having recovered himself, and finding it very
pleasant to pull at the pillow-shams.

“There, since that blessed child says so, I believe I ought to tell
you, Grace!” said Alexia; “and besides, all our set, the old friends I
mean, know it. Why, Phronsie Pepper and Roslyn May are lovers.”

Grace gave a squeal that entirely threw Algernon’s into the shade, as
she hopped off from the bed, and ran around into Alexia’s arms. “Oh,
say that again--do say it again, dear Mrs. Dodge!” she cried with
blazing cheeks.

[Illustration: “Ar-goo!” said Algernon, finding it very pleasant to
pull at the pillow-shams.]

“Oh, my goodness me!” cried Alexia, feeling of her throat; “how you
scared me, Grace! And you’ve frightened this blessed child;” as
Algernon put up his little lip, and scuttled over like a rabbit to the
side of the bed next to his mother.

“I can’t help it--I can’t help it,” cried Grace wildly, and spinning
around the room on her toes; “to think that my dear Miss Phronsie
Pepper loves my cousin Roslyn May--oh, oh!”

“Do stop!” cried Alexia, picking off her boy from the bed to go after
her and pluck her by the sleeve. “Hush, hush--Bonny will hear. And
besides, it can’t ever be--no, never in all this world, I tell you; so
what’s the use of hopping so.”

“Can’t ever be?” asked Grace, coming to such a dead stop that she
nearly overturned Alexia, baby and all. “Didn’t you say, Mrs. Dodge,
that they loved each other?”

“Yes; oh, dreadfully!” said Alexia, backing up against the wall; “but
it won’t ever be that they will be married, because Grandpapa King
don’t want Phronsie to be married.”

“He don’t want Miss Phronsie to be married when she loves somebody?”
gasped Grace.

“Oh, well! he doesn’t exactly believe that she does love him,” said
Alexia testily, who had privately berated him so many times when
talking it all over with Pickering that she was now sore on the
subject, “and he wants her to himself.”

Grace Tupper sat down on the first thing that she could see, which
proved to be the scrap-basket. “Doesn’t old Mr. King love Miss
Phronsie?” she gasped.

“Yes, yes,” gasped Alexia, running to pull at her; “but get out of
that scrap-basket. Polly Pepper made that for me years ago, and you
are mussing all the ribbons.” And calling to Bonny, who came without a
ripple on her placid countenance, she bundled the baby into her arms,
and began to pull out the big pink bows from which Grace gave a bound.

“I’ll tell you all about it, and then you must tell _me_ all about
it,” she said, when the pink bows were found not to be much crushed
after all. “There, come over here to the sofa. It’s a mercy that you
didn’t ruin that basket. If you had, I’d never have forgiven you, Grace
Tupper, in all this world. Well, you see, it all happened three years
ago when they were abroad,--Phronsie and Grandpapa King and David,
and the Fishers and Charlotte Chatterton,--there was a perfect mob of
them; Charlotte was just going over to begin to study in Germany. And
although Polly and Jasper heard something of it in Mother Fisher’s
letters, it wasn’t till they all got home that we knew how it was. And
then Roslyn May came over twice to see her. And then the most awful
thing, Grace Tupper, in all this world, you can’t think,” she leaned
her elbows on her knees and regarded Grace fixedly, “happened, and I’ve
been worried to death about it ever since.”

“What?” Grace scarcely breathed it, while her large blue eyes dilated
fearfully.

“Why, Roslyn May came across just a few weeks ago,” said Alexia in
a stage whisper, “actually came to this side of the Atlantic, and
didn’t come to see Phronsie! And I think--I really and truly do, Grace
Tupper--that Grandpapa King had something to do about it; for Roslyn
May didn’t stay but one day. What do you think of that?”

It was so very dreadful, that Grace couldn’t think of anything for the
space of a minute; then she said, in a puzzled way, “But how could old
Mr. King have done anything when he didn’t see Roslyn--I don’t see.”

“I don’t see either,” said Alexia irritably, “but it’s my private
opinion publicly confessed that Grandpapa King is mixed up in it some
way. It worries me to skin and bone. And Pickering won’t do anything
when I beg him to, and everything is just as horrid as it can be. Well,
now, tell me all about your cousin Roslyn May,” she added, brightening
up, and eager for the news.

“Why, you see he is my very own cousin,” cried Grace in the greatest
pride.

“How?” interrupted Alexia; “is General May your uncle?”

“Yes,” said Grace; “he is my mother’s brother. And Cousin Roslyn is
awfully smart. Why, when he was a little boy he got hold of some clay,
and he made dogs and pigs and horses just as natural. And Uncle May
took him abroad--you know his mother died when he was a baby.”

“Oh, dear!” said Alexia.

“Yes, she did,” said Grace. “Well, and Uncle May took him abroad to
see if it was really in him to be a sculptor, he said, and everybody
was perfectly astonished. But Roslyn was determined to come home to be
educated.”

“Good for him!” cried Alexia.

“Yes; and so he waited till after he’d got through college before he
really did much sculpturing. Then he went abroad to stay; and I tell
you he’s just worked! Why, haven’t you heard of the things he has done?”

She opened her blue eyes widely at Alexia now.

“Yes--yes, child, of course,” said Alexia; “I don’t want you to tell me
that newspaper talk, I want to hear about _him_. Is he nice?”

“Oh, he’s splendid!” cried Grace, beating her hands together. “If he
were to come into the room now, you’d say you never saw such a handsome
man.”

“I don’t know about that,” said Alexia, who had ideas of her own as to
manly beauty. “Well, go on.”

“And all the girls are in love with him,” said Grace; “but he’s just
devoted to his art, and he don’t care anything for any of them.”

“Except Phronsie,” said Alexia.

“Except Miss Phronsie,” cried Grace, hugging herself at the thought.
“Well, and the first bit of money he ever earned,--it was for a
fountain or something, and it took the prize,--the design, I mean,--he
gave it to a poor boy he knew at home, who hadn’t any money to study
with. And mamma is going over next fall to see him; and I’ve been
teasing her to take me, but she said I must stay with Aunt Atherton
another year and go to school. And now--O Mrs. Dodge! I didn’t tell
you, for this other news scared it all out of my head--Mrs. King has
asked me to stay at ‘The Oaks.’”

“You don’t mean it, Grace?” cried Alexia, catching her by the arm;
“why, I meant to have you myself.”

“Well, I’m to be with dear Mrs. King, and go in every day to Miss
Willoughby,” said Grace in great satisfaction; “for mamma answered Mrs.
King’s letter and said so, and Miss Willoughby says she wants me back
again. She really did, Mrs. Dodge.”

“I don’t doubt it, child,” said Alexia. “I rather like you myself.
Well, now, Grace, this troubles me.” She nursed her knee with her long
arms, and gazed into Grace’s face. “Roslyn May is your cousin, and I am
just determined to do something to help Phronsie. I can’t keep still
any longer; I shall fly out of my head if I do. Now, can’t you write
to him, and ask him why he didn’t come to see Phronsie when he was over
last time? That will bring some sort of an answer, and at least tell us
the reason.”

“Oh, so I will!” cried Grace, springing up; “I will write it now, this
very minute.” Then she stopped suddenly, and her face turned scarlet.
“Mrs. Dodge,” she said, “I’d rather not. I’ve just been silly, you
know, and--and--I don’t mean to do anything I don’t ask Miss Phronsie
or Mrs. King about first.”

“And you blessed child,” cried Alexia, kissing her, “I knew the minute
I’d asked you I’d said the wrong thing. To tell you the truth, Grace,
I never do a single thing without asking Pickering first. Oh, dear
me! but what _shall_ we do? Things can’t be left to themselves so.
Something must be done.”




CHAPTER XVIII.

GRANDPAPA DOES THE RIGHT THING.


The little brown house door opened slowly, and some one came in.
Phronsie raised her head. “Why, Grandpapa!” she exclaimed, “have you
come home?”

“Yes; I thought I would, Phronsie; there wasn’t much to detain me, and
I finished early.”

Phronsie had risen and hurried over to him, putting her hand
affectionately through his arm. “You are not sick, Grandpapa dear?” she
asked, anxiously looking up into his face.

“No, no, child; that is, only sick of myself,” he answered with a short
laugh. Phronsie stood quite still in a puzzled way, regarding him
closely. “There’s nothing to worry about, Phronsie, nothing at all.
Only I thought I’d have a little talk with you. Come here, child.” He
took a seat in a big easy-chair, and drew her to his knee. “There, now
we can be comfortable.”

Phronsie fixed her brown eyes upon him wonderingly.

“Phronsie, I’ve always been a curious old chap. I wouldn’t say so to
any one else, only to you, dear; but I have.”

“O Grandpapa!” cried Phronsie convulsively, and throwing her arms
around his neck, “don’t, don’t, dear Grandpapa! You’ve always and ever
been beautiful,” she sobbed in great distress.

“Well, there, there, child,” said the old gentleman, patting her back
as if she were three years old, and mightily pleased with her tribute,
“you love the old man, and that’s enough. But what I should have done
without you, child, no living mortal knows. I’m sure I cannot tell.
Well; and now, Phronsie, I want to say something, and you must hear me.
Sit up, dear, and let me see your eyes.”

So Phronsie sat up quite straight on his knee, and he held her hands,
and she never took her eyes from his face, but listened attentively to
every word.

“You see, Phronsie, it’s just this way. I’ve been thinking over many
things lately, and I’ve come to the conclusion that I made a mistake
in sending Roslyn May off. So I’ve just been writing to him that it
strikes me he would better run across again.”

All the pink color had gone from Phronsie’s cheek long ago, and she now
sat pale and still, her brown eyes fastened on his face.

“Does that please you, child?” asked old Mr. King after a pause, and
smoothing her yellow hair.

“Grandpapa, has some one been speaking to you about it, and wanting you
to write to Roslyn?” she asked suddenly; the brown eyes flashed, and
she looked at him steadily.

“No indeed; I thought it all out by myself,” he answered with conscious
pride, “and it seems to me the best thing to be done. Really it does,
Phronsie.”

“Do _you_ wish it, Grandpapa?” she asked slowly.

“Yes, I do, child. Listen, now, Phronsie. You are not to cry, child,
nor to feel badly; but you know Grandpapa is an old man, and cannot
last forever, and”--

For answer, Phronsie dropped her head upon his breast, and cried
bitterly. It was some time before he could soothe her, though he tried
every means in his power. At last he said, “This is making me ill,
child.”

Phronsie took up her head quickly, and put her hand caressingly over
his white hair. “Does it, Grandpapa?” she asked, her face working
convulsively.

“Yes; that is, I shall be,” said the old gentleman artfully, “if you
cry. And if you want to please me, Phronsie, you will be very glad that
I wrote to Roslyn. I want to see you happily settled myself, child, and
to enjoy it all. Why, I expect to live years and years, Phronsie;” and
he sat erect, and looked so handsome and strong, that Phronsie smiled
through her tears. “Don’t you love him, child?” he asked abruptly.

“Yes, Grandpapa,” said Phronsie, “I do.”

“Very much?” asked old Mr. King, with a dreadful pang at his heart.

“Very much indeed,” said Phronsie.

“Child, child, why didn’t you tell me?” he cried, holding her to him
remorsefully. “Oh, why didn’t you tell your old Grandpapa?” he groaned.

It was now Phronsie’s turn to comfort him; for he felt so very badly,
that it was some time before she could get him out of the dreadful
state into which he was plunged. But at last they emerged from the
little brown house hand in hand, Phronsie looking up into his smiling
face.

“I’ve been hunting just everywhere for you, father dear,” cried Polly,
running down the terrace to meet them, and waving a yellow envelope.
“It’s from Mamsie, of course. Do open it, Grandpapa,” lapsing, as she
often did, into the old familiar title, “and see what she says.”

With a merry laugh, and holding it so that Phronsie could see, the old
gentleman tore it open, and stared blankly at the words:--

                                 HOTEL CONSTANZI, ROME, _June 22, 18--_.

  “Roslyn May very ill with low fever. Come and bring Phronsie.

                                                       ADONIRAM FISHER.”

They were off the next morning, Grandpapa and Phronsie, hurrying down
to New York to sail on the following day. Joel, informed of it by
telegram, got a brother minister to take his place for a fortnight or
so, and determined to go too. And hardly before Polly and the rest of
the home people at “The Oaks” had accustomed themselves to think of
it as a settled thing surely to be, the little party were off on the
waste of waters, that lengthened every day into a terrible distance
between them and their dear home. But they were going to Mamsie and to
Roslyn! And although Mr. King was dreadfully overcome at the thought
of what might meet them at the end of the journey, as a result (he now
felt quite sure) of his meddling with Phronsie’s happiness, he kept up
pluckily on her account, and never let a sign of his inward trepidation
be seen.

“Oh, how do you do”--Joel was saying very carelessly, as Phronsie came
up to him on deck, to a very elegant-looking person, who extended two
fingers to her--“Mr. Bayley, Mr. Livingston Bayley, you remember,
Phronsie.”

“And Mrs. Livingston Bayley,” said that gentleman, as the young girl
bowed, presenting a handsome, showily dressed person, who eyed Phronsie
all over. “Well, ’pon me honor, this is not half bad, don’t you know,
to meet in this way.”

Phronsie, not knowing exactly what to reply, left it to Joel, who
didn’t care to, but stood gazing blankly out to sea.

“We have only been in America a week,” said the lady in a sweet little
drawl, “and I made Mr. Bayley bring me directly to London again. I
absolutely could not exist unless he did.”

“A beastly boat, ain’t it now?” said Mr. Bayley with a yawn.

“Haven’t tried it yet enough to say,” replied Joel with a short laugh.

“How are all your family?” asked Mr. Bayley a trifle awkwardly, which
so disconcerted him that he paused mid-air for another idea.

“All very well, thank you,” said Joel.

“Your sister, Mrs. King, is she well now?” pursued Mr. Bayley, trying
to be very nonchalant, and fumbling at his cigarette case.

“Very well indeed, thank you,” said Joel.

“Mr. Bayley, I think I must have my constitutional now,” said his wife
with another drawl, and putting her hand on his arm.

“Oh, yes, certainly--certainly,” said Mr. Bayley. “Well, I’m awfully
glad, don’t you know, that we’ve met again,” making elaborate adieux.

“And I hope we shall see much of each other on the voyage,” said Mrs.
Bayley sweetly, with no eyes for any one but Phronsie.

“Thanks,” said Joel as they swept off.

“If you please, miss,” said the deck-steward, coming up and touching
his cap respectfully to Phronsie, “there’s an old woman who says she
wishes you would come to see her. She’s in her stateroom.”

“An old woman?” asked Phronsie wonderingly.

“Yes, miss. She didn’t give her name, but said she saw you come on
board yesterday. And she’s very urgent, miss.”

“I’ll go with you to the door, and you can find out who she is,” said
Joel.

Phronsie moved off after the steward, and held out her hand to Joel.
“You can wait for me outside.”

The stateroom, small and uncomfortable, into which she was ushered,
while Joel paced up and down outside, was so dark, that at first
Phronsie could not see distinctly its occupant.

“O miss!” cried an old lady, trying to rise in her berth, and brushing
away the straying white hair from her cheek, “you don’t remember me.
But I’ll never forget you nor your face.” It was Phronsie’s little old
woman of the Berton electric car.

“What can I do for you?” asked Phronsie gently, and standing by the
berth she smoothed the straying hair.

“O miss, I’m afraid I’m going to die, and I can’t when I’m just going
home.”

“I don’t think you will die,” said Phronsie, “and I am sorry you feel
ill.”

“It is just this way, miss. I’m all worn out with gladness to get home
and put my feet on English ground,” said the little old woman hungrily.
“But I must tell you about it; because if I should die, I want you
to know all about it. You see, my husband and I came over because he
didn’t want to live on his sons, and he fancied America, and being
independent there in a new country. And so we came a good many years
ago; and our sons felt dreadfully, for they wanted us to stay with
them. But John, he’s my husband, said ‘no,’ and you couldn’t move him.
Well, we were very happy living in a little home of our own, and my
husband worked the ground to suit himself as best he could; and though
I worried some, and I know he did, only he was always still like, to
see the grandchildren, they were so cunning when we came away, we did
pretty well. Only English ways of farming are different from yours,
and John was too old to learn new ways, and so we began to get behind.
And we didn’t care to make new friends, and we didn’t know how, and so
when John was taken away there wasn’t any one to advise me, and the
property was sold off for almost nothing. And after I’d got a letter, I
had it in my pocket the day you were kind to me in the car, I was all
so in a tremble I hadn’t read it, I just sat down and answered it when
I got home. It was from one of my sons; and I told him the whole truth,
and he sent me the money, and told me to come on this boat. But I’m
trembling so, miss,” she held up her thin arm that shook like a leaf,
“that I’m afraid I won’t last till I get there. And I want you to see
my boy, who’ll be there to meet me, and tell him for me that his father
said he was sorry we came away, before he died, and he sent his love to
both of ’em, and he blessed all the grandchildren, and so do I;” and
her voice sank to a whisper.

Phronsie knelt down by the berth, and put her face very near to the
troubled one. “Don’t be worried,” she said, as if to a child. “You are
lonely, I think, but not very ill.”

“Ain’t I ill, miss?” cried the little old woman pleadingly. “Oh, I’m
so glad! I thought I was going to be most dreadfully sick, and I was
afraid to call the doctor to hear him say so;” and she gave a sigh of
relief.

“No,” said Phronsie; “I do not really think you are very ill, but I do
believe you want something to eat. Now, I am going to tell you what I
think you had better do, if you want to have me.”

“I wish you would, miss,” said the little old woman gratefully, and
clinging to her.

“A cup of beef tea is the first thing,” said Phronsie cheerfully;
and getting to her feet she touched the electric button, and on the
appearance of the deck-steward, ordered it; “and then I will brush your
hair, and you shall sit up in bed, and I will talk to you.”

“O miss, how good you are!” exclaimed the little old woman, leaning
back against her pillows, while two tears coursed down her cheeks.

“Joey, dear,” said Phronsie, going to the door of the stateroom, “I am
going to stay here now a little while. It is all right, dear,” as Joel
took a look within. The next moment he marched in, and up to the side
of the berth, and put out his hand.

“Well, my good Mrs. Benson, how did you get here?”

The little old woman gave a scream of delight. “O Mr. Pepper!” she
exclaimed, seizing his hand.

“It’s one of my good parishioners, Phronsie,” said Joel, taking both of
the thin little hands in his big strong one; “but I lost sight of her,
and nobody could tell me where she went.”

“I didn’t want to let you know,” said Mrs. Benson shamefacedly; “so
I was going to write you as soon as I got to England, and my son was
going to write too, and thank you for all your kindness to me.”

“Ah, but you don’t know how I looked for you,” said Joel, shaking his
crop of short black curls, that was a dreadful cross for him to carry,
as he admired straight hair intensely, especially “in the ministry,” as
he said.

“Well, I went up to Berton,” said little Mrs. Benson, “because folks
said that there I could get a place as matron in an orphan asylum. But
I didn’t--and then came my son’s letter.”




CHAPTER XIX.

TRYING TO BE CHEERY.


“Oh, dear, dear!” King struggled manfully with his sobs, and then
wailed outright; and running into Polly’s room he crouched behind the
door.

Grace Tupper came after him. “King, you mustn’t,” she whispered,
leaning over to pull him out.

“Let me be!” cried King, wriggling away from her; and he roared on.

“Your sister Polly will hear you,” cried Grace desperately.

“She can’t; she’s got comp’ny,” sobbed King in a fresh burst. “I
wa--want Phronsie, I do!”

“So we all want her,” said Grace with set teeth; “but, O King! don’t
cry, dear. There, there, I’m sorry for you.” She smoothed his stubby
head with a kind hand, wishing she could say something to comfort.

“Who’ll he--hear my lessons?” blubbered King, who never had been known
to worry over them before; “and if I don’t say ’em, Mamsie won’t tell
me I’ve been a good boy. Oh, dear!”

“Now, there is something I can do,” cried Grace joyfully, “I can hear
those lessons, King; and just as soon as Mrs. King’s company has gone,
I mean to ask her if I mayn’t.”

“I don’t want you,” said King, with one eye on her, the other obscured
by his arm, and feeling dreadfully sorry that he had mentioned lessons
anyway.

“But I can help Mrs. King,” cried Grace in a transport, flying around
the room; “for of course she will have to hear them now. And, O King!
I’ll make you pictures of the countries you study about, and the
natives, and”--

“What’s natifs?” asked King, bringing the other eye out.

“Why, the people who live there, and”--

“And make bears, will you, Miss Grace?” cried King, dreadfully excited,
and springing out in front of her. “Oh, say, _please_ do--and have ’em
catch some of the natifs, and chew ’em, and ’most eat ’em up. Will you,
Miss Grace?”

“Yes, I’ll make bears,” said Grace, glad now of her power to sketch,
“and ever so many other things, King; that is, if you are good,” she
said hastily.

“Oh! I’ll be just as good as everything,” said King, clasping his
hands. “Begin now, do, Miss Grace;” and he began to pull her along to
the little room where the lessons were always said.

“No, King,” said Grace, “I can’t begin those lessons until I ask your
sister Polly first. But I’ll draw you a picture of anything you choose.”

“Oh, goody!” exclaimed King, jumping up and down, and making so much
noise that Elyot came running in, and after him Barby, trailing her
doll by one leg.

“Stop, you mustn’t come in here!” shouted King, with a very red face,
and trying to slam the door against them; “Miss Grace and I are going
to do something.”

“What you going to do?” demanded Elyot, crowding in.

“What going to do?” asked Barby, wriggling and pushing.

“Go right straight out!” demanded King, pushing the door with all his
might.

“O King, King!” cried Grace, pulling at his sailor collar.

“This is my mamma’s room,” said Elyot stoutly; “and I am not going
out--so there!”

“My mummy’s room,” declared Barby, shaking her curls at him; “an’ I’m
coming in, I am.”

“You sha’n’t. We’re going to draw the most beautiful pictures of
bears--and eating men up, and everything,” howled King quite beside
himself, and beginning to use his teeth and fingernails.

“Oh, dear me!” cried Grace Tupper, unable to do a thing to stop them.
And she sat right down in the middle of the floor, and began to cry.

Polly’s company just departing, Polly ran lightly over the stairs.
“Why--children!” she exclaimed, pausing at the landing.

“He’s going to draw be-yewtiful bears, mummy,” cried Barby, dreadfully
excited; and being the nearest to the hall, she ran out, and threw
herself into her mother’s arms.

“O boys--boys!” cried Polly sorrowfully, coming in, Barby hanging to
her gown.

Both boys, now engaged in a lively tussle, stopped pulling each
other’s hair, and sat up. Grace Tupper sat still and cried on.

“He wouldn’t let me come in and see it all,” cried Elyot with flashing
eyes.

“No, he wouldn’t, mummy,” said Barby, shaking her head.

“And Miss Grace was going to draw ’em for me,” screamed King; “and they
pushed and scrouged dreadfully.”

“What?” said Polly. “Where did you learn that word, King?”

“Oh, dear, dear!” wailed Grace. “I’m afraid I’m to blame, dear Mrs.
King; but I said I’d draw him some bears--I wanted to help; and now
I’ve only made you trouble.”

“Oh, no, Grace dear!” said Polly gently, “you haven’t made any trouble.
It was very nice and kind of you to offer to do that.”

She had such a sorrowful look in her face as she sat down, that the
boys crept near, and hung their heads.

“I--I--didn’t mean to,” said King, trying not to whimper, “sister
Polly, I really didn’t.” And he was quite near now; but Polly didn’t
look at him nor stir.

“Please don’t look like that, mamma,” begged Elyot, feeling cold creeps
down his back, “I never’ll do so again.”

“Never’ll do so again,” hummed Barby, playing with her mother’s rings.

“To think that when Mamsie is away, and she trusts us all,” said Polly,
when she could find her voice, “that we should do such dreadful things.”

The boys wriggled and twisted, and hid their faces.

“And then, when Phronsie has had to go off with Grandpapa--oh, it quite
breaks me down,” said Polly, and there was a tremble in her voice.

At this, both boys precipitated themselves into her lap, where they
burrowed in speechless misery, Barby yielding herself to it all with a
happy little crow as if part of the play.

“No, no, Barby,” said Polly gently, and shaking her head at her; “mamma
is not playing now. We have been very naughty. Go and get your little
chairs, boys, and sit down quietly.”

So the two boys went out and dragged in their two little cane-seat
chairs, and planted themselves down in them, Barby being put on a
corner of the lounge. And Polly took Grace out into another room and
heard all about it.

“Sister Polly!” called King presently, “oh, do come here!” There was
such a cry in his voice that Polly hurried in, and found him sobbing as
if his heart would break. “I can’t sit here any longer--don’t make me,”
and he hid his face on her neck. “I think of everything bad I ever did.
O sister Polly! I’m so sorry.”

“Then that is as long as I want you to sit here,” said Polly, helping
him out.

“I’ve got to sit longer,” said Elyot gloomily, “because I’m not sorry,”
as King rushed to kiss him. “I wanted to hear about the bears too.”

“And I want bears too,” declared Barby from her sofa; “bad, naughty
King.”

“You shall have the bears,” cried King radiantly, running up to her;
“yes, you shall, Barby; the very first picture Miss Grace draws you
shall have it--and Elyot shall have the next,” he said, after a
minute’s hard thinking.

Polly sent him a happy little smile that warmed every corner of his
small heart.

“Mayn’t Elyot get out now, sister Polly?” he asked pleadingly.

“I’m not sorry,” said Elyot stoutly. “No; I’ve got to stay.”

“You may go out, King, and you too, Barby,” said Polly slowly, “and
shut the door.”

“No; I’m going to stay,” said Barby perversely.

“Barbara.”

Barby slipped to the ground and edged out, and King closed the door,
feeling that it wasn’t so easy to undo being naughty after all.

In a minute the door was opened slowly, and King’s head appeared.
“Sister Polly,” he said, “it truly wasn’t Elyot’s fault, because if I’d
let them in, he would have been good.”

“Go out, dear,” said Polly gently, “and close the door.”

When the door was opened again, Elyot walked into the little room where
they were all waiting for him. No one had done anything, and Grace’s
hands were idle in her lap. Elyot walked up to her. “I’m sorry I made
you feel badly, Miss Grace,” he said; and then he ran and threw his
arms around King. “I don’t want the bears; I’d rather you had them,” he
cried.

[Illustration: “Barby hurried over to Grace. ‘I’m sorry too,’ she said;
‘and I’ll take the bears.’”]

Barby hurried over to Grace. “I’m sorry too,” she said; “and I’ll
take the bears if nobody wants ’em.” So a space being cleared in
the middle of the room, Polly had her little sewing-table brought
in; and presently there was a delightful hum, and everybody talking
and laughing at once. And it was found that Grace Tupper could draw
everything in the most delightful fashion. And bears pursuing men and
women and children in the most impossible places, were executed, and
all sorts of hair-breadth escapes were indulged. And then the children
wanted to color the pictures with their crayons, and then to cut them
out; until the first thing they knew, the “little publishing bag” was
swung over their heads.

“O papa!” screamed the two, and “O brother Jasper!” howled King, “is
it so late?” And then they all swarmed around him to show their work;
and Grace Tupper’s face flushed rosier yet at the praise, for Polly had
come in, and was hanging on her husband’s arm.

And in the midst of the noise and bustle the children made,--for they
seized their papa, and made him play “bear-garden” in earnest,--Grace
made bold to proffer her request to Polly that she might try to hear
King’s lessons.

“I’m afraid I don’t know enough,” she said humbly; “but oh! won’t you
let me try, dear Mrs. King?”

And Polly, looking into the blue eyes, said, “Yes;” and Grace ran off
on happy feet, resolved to do her very best, and to put in practice all
that she had ever learned at school. How she wished now that there were
no idle hours to think of! “But Mrs. King would say that it was of no
use to spend time to think of that now,” she said to herself, “but to
take hold of the books at once.”

“What a comfort Grace is!” said Polly to Jasper, as they were beginning
to try a new duet, and just as he was setting it in place on the
music-rest, “isn’t she, Jasper?”

“Yes indeed,” he said heartily.

But in spite of all their efforts to be cheerful and gay, time dragged
heavily enough. And the first few days after Grandpapa and Phronsie
went, Jasper had hard work to leave Polly when he ran off to business
in the early train.

“I’ll stay home with you, dear,” he said on the third morning, as he
saw the pale face, and the sorrowful look in the usually laughing eyes,
“and we will go and drive, Polly;” cut to the heart to see her so.

“Oh, no, Jasper!” she said quickly, the color flooding her face, “oh,
how could I be so selfish! I didn’t think it would worry you so, and
I’ll make myself look cheerful. Oh! it would just kill me to have you
leave your work. Indeed, Jasper, it would.”

“Then I won’t, Polly,” said Jasper reluctantly; “and don’t worry about
Roslyn May. I do believe they’ll find things better than they fear,
when they get there.”

“But supposing they shouldn’t,” breathed Polly fearfully.

“They will, I verily believe,” said Jasper in ringing tones. “And just
think, Polly, if all goes well, and the boat makes her usual time,
they’ll be there on Monday.”

Polly counted the days and hours, and “even minutes” Alexia said, and
was surprised herself to see how swiftly they flew by.

“It’s such a comfort to think that Joey could go with them,” she said
one day, when Alexia ran over and up into her pretty room to bewail
her woes over a new gown the dressmaker had sent home. Alexia had worn
it over to show it to Polly; and she now turned this way and that,
declaring each side was just so much worse than the other.

“Did you ever see such a fright, Polly Pepper?” she cried, quite
overcome, and sinking into the first chair she could find--“and to
think it was to be my very best gown.”

“Take care,” warned Polly, “you will spoil all that ruching.”

“I don’t care,” said Alexia recklessly, with a vicious pull at a
refractory bow. “Now, look at that; everything sticks up that should
lie down, and flops where it ought to stand out. Oh, dear me! I just
had to wear it over to show you before Pickering sees it, and to let
off steam, because I don’t want to worry him, poor boy. It’s quite
bad enough to pay the bills. Oh, that horrible old Miss Flint! Polly
Pepper, what _shall_ I do?”

Polly dropped the brush with which she was brushing out her bright
brown hair, and ran over. “I’ll tell you what, Alexia,” she said
cheerily, “I think it’s these dreadful bows that are not put on
rightly, that make half the trouble,” picking out one of them; “and
then she has the shoulder-puffs too big.”

“They’re enormous!” exclaimed Alexia, rolling her eyes to compass them
both. “I look just like a toad, Polly.”

“Now, if those were down in the right place,” said Polly, taking little
puckers in them, and then standing back to view the effect, “it would
make ever so much difference in that gown; you can’t think, Alexia.”

“Well, I begin to see hope for it,” said Alexia, sitting up straight
with her usual air; “but when I came in, actually, Polly, I was all
gone to pieces, I was so blue. Oh! what were you saying as I came in? I
remember now; it was about Joel.”

“I was saying it was such a comfort to think that Joey could go with
Grandpapa and Phronsie,” said Polly, flying over to the toilet-table to
her hair again.

“I should think so,” cried Alexia, between whom and Joel there had
always been a great friendship, though nothing could be farther from
their thoughts than to show it to each other. “My goodness me! Joel
Pepper is just the most splendid man that ever lived, except Pickering
and Jasper.”




CHAPTER XX.

FIRE!


“Miss Pepper,” Mrs. Livingston Bayley called sweetly but insistently as
Phronsie hurried by.

“I cannot stop now,” said Phronsie.

Mrs. Bayley reserved her anger, and picked up her novel, until her
husband sauntered up. Then she turned on him furiously from her
steamer-chair.

“Livingston,” she said, forgetting to drawl, “it is perfectly
preposterous in Phronsie Pepper to go on so. I don’t see what Mr. King
is thinking of to allow it.”

“Oh, I don’t have anything to do with Phronsie Pepper,” declared
Mr. Bayley, in a very bad temper, and sitting down, after carefully
adjusting the creases along his trousers legs, “don’t you know; so what
is the use of pitching into a fellow, Celestine.”

“In all our conversation, I have observed you are always very cross if
I allude to the Peppers in any way. It is extremely uncomfortable for
me, Livingston, to have you assume such an attitude toward me.”

[Illustration: “Now, Celestine,” said Mr. Bayley, rolling a fresh
cigarette, “the Peppers are perfectly well able to take care of
themselves.”]

Mr. Bayley said something way down in his throat, and got out of his
steamer-chair for a turn or two on deck.

“Now, Celestine,” he said, coming back and rolling a fresh cigarette as
he stood over her, “I want you to understand, once for all, that I’m
not going to be drawn into collision with the Peppers, don’t you know.
They are perfectly well able to take care of themselves; and I wouldn’t
advise you to try it on, either.”

“She has no mother with her, or”--

“And you’ll be a mother to her. Celestine, that’s too good, don’t you
know. Ha, ha, ha!”

“Your mirth is always as ill-timed as your other attempts at ideas,”
remarked his wife angrily. “I repeat, Phronsie Pepper has no mother
with her to advise her.”

“But she has old Mr. King; and he’s just the very--well, if you want to
tackle him, go ahead.”

“I certainly shall speak to her,” said Mrs. Bayley with dignity.

“And when the old man gets through with you, perhaps you’d like to try
your hand on her brother, Joel Pepper. But I don’t believe you will,
Celestine, I give you my word for it.”

He tossed that cigarette overboard, it not having been rolled to suit
him, and began on another.

“To think of that girl, with her beauty and advantages, taking up with
a miserable old dowdy of a woman whom nobody knows a thing about, and
spending all her time on her.”

“When she might be with you,” cut in Mr. Bayley, getting into his
steamer-chair again, and leaning his elbows on his knees to assist him
through his arduous labor.

“When she might be with me,” repeated Celestine calmly; “think what I
could be to that girl,” she added complacently, and playing with her
rings.

“She isn’t awake to those immense advantages,” observed her husband;
“that is, don’t appear to be.”

“Well, I’ll make her, then,” declared Mrs. Bayley, setting her teeth
hard together.

Mr. Bayley laughed softly to himself.

“Hush! here she comes,” said Mrs. Bayley under her breath. “O Miss
Phronsie!” she smiled sweetly on her.

“Did you want to see me?” asked Phronsie. “I beg your pardon for not
stopping.”

Mr. Bayley got out of his steamer-chair, and pressed it upon her
elaborately. “Do sit down, Miss Phronsie,” begged his wife cordially.

“Thank you,” said Phronsie, “but I cannot, Mrs. Bayley.”

“You never give me any of your time,” said that lady, calling to her
aid a reproachful look, an expression that had always brought down
other victims, “and you know I have some claim upon you, as my husband
is an old friend of your family.” She hadn’t meant to say this when she
began, but for some unaccountable reason her supply of words seemed to
give out.

As this required no answer, Phronsie did not give any, but remained
silent, standing by the steamer-chair.

“You have sufficient time for _new_ friends,” said the lady with
emphasis; “I have seen you with an old woman on the deck several times
the last two days.”

“She needs me,” said Phronsie quietly; “she is all alone.”

“Well, that is just it,” exclaimed Mrs. Bayley eagerly, welcoming her
chance; and throwing back her head, she said rapidly, “do you know I
don’t think it is wise to take up with that old thing. Nobody knows who
she is, and it’s an awful bore for you--wastes your time and all that.
Now, let me give you a piece of advice, Miss Phronsie.”

“Thank you,” said Phronsie; “but my Grandpapa is here, you know, and my
brother,” she did not finish, “to whom I can apply for advice.”

Mrs. Bayley colored angrily. “But they are men, and they don’t think.
Now, there are some very desirable people on board here, and Mr.
Bayley and I could put you in the way of making some of the best of
friends--the very best.”

Mr. Bayley made a sudden movement, and said something to his wife of
which “don’t you know” was all that came to the surface.

“And at any rate,” hurried on Mrs. Bayley, as she saw Phronsie’s face,
“you might amuse me. I am awfully _desolée_, Miss Pepper, and don’t
know what to do with myself.”

Phronsie instinctively glanced at Mr. Bayley.

“Oh, he is no good!” exclaimed his wife petulantly; “all he thinks
of is his cigarettes, and how soon he will be ashore to get to the
horse-races.”

“Thank you,” said Livingston Bayley with a bow, “much obliged, I’m
sure. Miss Pepper, don’t look shocked; it’s all right, don’t you know,
I’m quite used to it, only I didn’t think she’d ring up the curtain for
your benefit.” And as Phronsie made her excuses and went back, he said,
“Well, that’s number one, Celestine. Wonder if you’ll try it again,
don’t you know;” and strolled off.

Phronsie was back, tucking up the steamer-rug over the thin little
figure in the chair marked “Miss Pepper.” “Now,” she said gayly, “you
are all comfortable, you are sure, Mrs. Benson?”

“Indeed, deary, I couldn’t be more so,” said the little old lady
gratefully. “And now, don’t you stay with me any more, but just go
and enjoy yourself. I saw you talking with some of your fine friends
just now, and you’ve left them to come to me. And it worries me, Miss
Pepper.”

“I do not want to go back,” said Phronsie; “and they are no special
friends of ours.”

Joel came up just then, and brought a steamer-chair for Phronsie, and
put her in it. He smiled at her and at old Mrs. Benson, but Phronsie
looked up in his face quickly. “Joel,” she exclaimed as he bent over
her, “what is it? Is Grandpapa all right?”

“Yes indeed; right and sound as a nut,” he said quickly. “He’s deep in
his book, and won’t stir for an hour you may depend.”

Phronsie leaned back in her chair only half-satisfied, as Joel gave her
another smile and hurried off.

He didn’t appear at dinner; and Grandpapa, who always ate his three
meals a day on shipboard, and knew that Joel did the same, thought it
odd. “Ah, Joel’s knocked over,” he said with a laugh, “now we’ll take
him down, Phronsie, for being a poor sailor.”

Phronsie glanced across at his vacant place with a sigh; but she smiled
cheerily to the old gentleman, and the meal went on, old Mr. King being
in the best of spirits, and the life of the captain’s table.

At nightfall, as little Mrs. Benson slipped off to her stateroom,
Phronsie parted with her at the door. “Now I know, deary, the Lord
means me to see my old home once more. Seems as if I could smell the
green grass;” she grasped the young girl’s hands eagerly, and there was
a world of longing in her quiet eyes. “O Miss Pepper! there’s no grass
like the green grass of old England, and there’s no sun like the sun
that shines over old England. I’ve been hungry for it, dear,” her voice
sank to a happy whisper; “but now I’m almost there.”

“Yes,” said Phronsie, happy in the other’s happiness, and feeling a
little of her own dreadful load of suspense lifted; “we shall be in
port day after to-morrow if all goes well.”

“Only one more day after to-morrow,” said the little old lady with
a sudden cry of joy, “and I shall see my two boys. Praise the Lord!
Well, will you kiss me good-night, deary, and forgive an old woman for
keeping you standing so long?”

Phronsie bent over, and laid her fresh young lips on the withered cheek.

“Good-night, deary; and the Lord give you all you want.”

Phronsie went back to stay with Grandpapa on deck. It was a beautiful
night, and he wanted nothing so much as to pace up and down proudly
with her on his arm. “It passes my mind where Joel is,” he said after
a little pause. “He’s not in his stateroom; I went there after dinner.
Sly dog! I suppose he’s working off his seasickness somewhere, and
hopes to keep it from us. But we’ll take the wind out of Master Joel’s
sails--eh, Phronsie;” and he chuckled at the delight in prospect over
laughing at Joel’s boast that he’d never been seasick in his life, “and
nothing can make me seasick, sir!”

[Illustration: “Bless the Lord, Phronsie,” he lifted his sea-cap
reverently, “we’re almost there.”]

“And now, child, I can’t say how thankful I am we’re nearly across.
It’s been the longest voyage; can’t help but be, when one is anxious
to have it over. But bless the Lord, Phronsie,” he lifted his sea-cap
reverently and looked out into the beautiful night, “we’re almost
there. And, my child,” here he pressed Phronsie’s arm tenderly, “I
can’t tell you how I feel, to see you bearing with the old man all
these days, after what I’ve caused you. Oh, I can’t, Phronsie!” His
voice broke, and Phronsie could feel the thrill that went all over him.

“Grandpapa,” she begged, and made him look into her face. “Why, how can
you,” she cried brightly, “when we’re almost there? And you’ve borne up
so well, Grandpapa dear.”

“To be sure--to be sure!” exclaimed the old gentleman, pulling up his
stately figure to its greatest height; “well, where do you suppose that
rascal Joel is?”

It was a good two hours after when Grandpapa said, “Good-night, dear,”
and kissed her. Phronsie threw on her steamer-cloak, and sat down in
her stateroom to wait for--she knew not what. But she must see Joel
some way.

“I cannot ring for the steward, for Grandpapa will then hear me in the
next room. O Joey, Joey! But I know he’s not sick,” went on Phronsie
to herself--“by the way, he looked as if he didn’t want me to question
him.”

Suddenly there came a little knock, and in an instant Joel was in the
stateroom. Phronsie started to her feet, and took his hands.

“O Joey!” she cried, trying not to scream; for his face was black with
grime, and drawn and haggard. “There, there, don’t try to tell me what
has happened,” as he laid his head on her arm.

“Oh! I’ve tried my best--we all have,” said Joel with a convulsive
effort, and raising his head, his face working dreadfully; “but it’s
gained on us--the ship’s on fire, Phronsie! Hush! we can keep it from
Grandpapa a little longer, maybe till morning. O Phronsie!” He held her
so closely that she could scarcely breathe. “It broke out in the cotton
waste this morning--must have been smouldering some time.”

“You have been helping?” asked Phronsie, as he paused unable to utter
another word.

“Yes; took a hand at the pumps,” said Joel, thinking it unnecessary to
relate that he had been at them ever since.

“Oh, my poor boy!” cried Phronsie, taking his face in her hands. “Joel,
Mamsie would be glad.”

“Phronsie, I’m going back. It can be kept under, I think, from the
worst, till morning. The people must not know, for all of us would be
lost then in the row they’d make.” He was whispering hoarsely, and
Phronsie laid her hand over his mouth, “Hush, dear, I know,” she said.

“There are life-preservers in your rooms,” Joel glanced quickly at
hers, “and you know how to get them on if anything _suddenly_ should
happen?”

“Yes, Joey dear.”

“But I shall be back to you--never fear about that.”

“Yes, Joey.”




CHAPTER XXI.

ARE THEY ALL SAFE?


Phronsie thought a moment, and then said to herself, “Yes, I think
I better bring her here, and then we will all be together.” So
slipping out of her stateroom, she went hurriedly, making her way with
difficulty, as the distance was a good one, and the ship rolled badly,
to old Mrs. Benson’s door. “Mrs. Benson,” she said, gently rapping, “it
is I, Phronsie Pepper.”

“Yes, deary.” The little old lady was not asleep, but lay in a happy
doze, in which she was living over again all the beautiful days in her
little English cottage with her lads about her. “Yes, deary; I’ll be
there in a minute.”

“Please hurry, Mrs. Benson,” begged Phronsie.

“And so I will,” said old Mrs. Benson; and presently she opened the
door, and appeared before Phronsie in a short gown and petticoat, her
white hair tucked under a frilled nightcap.

“Anything happened, deary?” she asked anxiously, looking up into
Phronsie’s face.

Phronsie drew her in softly to the middle of the stateroom, and closed
the door. “Dear Mrs. Benson,” she said, taking her hands,--“I want you
to go with me to my stateroom, so that we can all be near each other.”

“And so I will, deary, if you want me to,” said the old woman
obediently; “but what is the matter? Has anything happened?”

“Yes,” said Phronsie; “but don’t make a noise, for the men are working
hard to save us all, and the people are not to know yet, for they would
be so frightened we should all be lost.” She held her mouth close to
the cap-frills. “The ship is on fire!”

Old Mrs. Benson broke away from her with a deep groan, and fell on her
knees by the berth. “Oh, my pretty lads, my pretty lads!”

“Mrs. Benson,” said Phronsie, laying a hand on the thin shoulders,
“there isn’t a moment to lose, for I cannot be away from Grandpapa. I
must go back at once, and you must go with me; come.”

“The Lord forgive me for keeping you,” said the old lady, staggering
to her feet; “now, deary, I’m ready.”

“You better put your dress on,” said Phronsie.

“No, deary; I’ll not wait for anything, or keep you a minute longer.
I’ll go as I am.” She glanced back around the room, as if bidding
everything good-by; then picked up a little picture on the table, and
tucked it into her bosom.

“We must take this,” said Phronsie, pulling out the life-preserver
quickly.

“Yes,” said the little old woman with a shiver.

“And you better lock your door,” said Phronsie, “and take the key, Mrs.
Benson.”

“All right, deary,” said the old woman with another good-by glance.
They were on their way to Phronsie’s stateroom, when suddenly the cry
arose, “Fire! Fire!” and a heavy body staggered by them, pushing them
to right and to left, as he lunged against each stateroom door with a
thud, screaming, “Fire! Fire!”

“Oh, hurry, hurry, Mrs. Benson!” exclaimed Phronsie, helping her along.
The little old lady sank helplessly to the floor.

“Oh, I can’t, deary!” she moaned; “it’s struck me here,” laying her
hand on her heart.

“Then I must carry you,” said Phronsie desperately.

By this time the passage was filling with smoke, and a hoarse babel of
sounds, like a distant roar, broke upon their ears.

A man, one of the crew, ran by so roughly that he brushed Phronsie’s
cheek with his arm. “Oh, please carry this poor woman to my stateroom!”
she cried to him.

[Illustration: “The sailor roared out, ‘The ship’s on fire!’ and was
plunging on.”]

“Leave me, leave me, deary,” the little old lady was saying. “Good-by,
deary; oh, leave the old woman and save yourself!”

The sailor roared out, “The ship’s on fire!” and was plunging on.

“I know it,” said Phronsie; “oh, carry her for me, please!” The hood of
her cloak fell back, and she clasped her hands entreatingly.

“I didn’t know ’twas you,” exclaimed the sailor, looking at her for the
first time; “you’re the one that writ me the letter to my folks.”

“Yes,” said Phronsie.

He seized old Mrs. Benson, and swung her to his shoulder, “Come,” he
cried to Phronsie, “they’re to lower the boats; I’ll save ye both.”

“I must go to Grandpapa,” cried Phronsie, “save her;” and dashed off by
herself.

“No use,” roared the sailor roughly, “you’ll all be lost together. Come
this way;” but he followed her with an oath, with the little old lady.

Stateroom doors were being flung open, and heads thrust out. Now and
then a woman screamed, and men were shouting and cursing. And above it
all that dreadful roar and the blinding smoke!

“Grandpapa! O Grandpapa!” cried Phronsie, reaching the door and
kneeling at it, “O Grandpapa, please hurry, and open the door to
Phronsie!”

“Leave away,” cried the sailor, dropping the little old lady, and
pushing Phronsie aside. Then he backed off, and dashed at the door with
his fist.

“Oh, what is that?” called old Mr. King, sitting straight in his berth.

“Let me in, Grandpapa dear!” begged Phronsie.

“Er--oh--why, Phronsie, child!” Old Mr. King threw wide the door, and
drew her to her feet with a hasty hand.

“Grandpapa,” cried Phronsie, “there is not an instant to lose--the ship
is on fire, Grandpapa. Quick! get his life-preserver,” to the sailor.

Old Mr. King put up a hasty hand, “Not till you have on yours,
Phronsie.”

“No nonsense!” roared the sailor at him, dragging out the
life-preserver to fling it over the handsome white head.

“I’ll get mine in a minute,” cried Phronsie, fastening old Mrs.
Benson’s to her trembling figure.

The rushing of feet, the babel of hoarse cries, the awful roar, and the
stifling smoke made it well-nigh impossible for them to see and to hear
each other. Phronsie knew that the sailor was securing a life-preserver
around her; and then, above all the awful confusion, she heard a voice.

“Joel!” she cried.

“I’ll take her,” cried Joel, “and the other one. Do you look out, Jim,
for the old gentleman. To the boats, my man, to the boats!”

He gathered Phronsie up, and old Mrs. Benson too, the sailor picking up
Mr. King; and never any of them could tell how, but presently they were
in the wild confusion of the hurrying throngs, and crowded in together
at the side of the ship, where they were lowering the boats.

And here Joel leaped away.

“Stay where you are,” he commanded them; drawing his revolver as he
sprang to the captain’s side, who single-handed was trying to keep the
half-crazed crew from leaping into the boat.

“I’ll shoot the first man of you who drops into that boat,” yelled Joel
at the crew. In their wild fury to get first at the boats as they were
lowered, they were knocking the passengers to right and left in their
craze. When they saw him, and knew it was the same man who had worked
at their side for nine long hours, they sullenly gave up and backed
away.

[Illustration: “‘I must go to Grandpapa,’ cried Phronsie, ‘save her;’
and dashed off by herself.”]

“I think I’ll go in this boat, don’t you know,” said a voice close to
them.

“O Livingston! don’t go and leave me.” There was no drawl now in the
shrill, thin voice. “O Miss Pepper, save me! save me!” clutching her.

“Take your hands off,” roared Joel at her, pulling Phronsie away from
her grasp. “No Bayley, the women and children and old people must go
first.”

“Oh, mercy!” shrieked Mrs. Bayley, wild with terror; “oh, save me
somebody! I’ll give any one a thousand dollars to save me,” she
screamed. She had her jewels in a small bag, which she huddled up to
her bosom. But no one heard her, as all rushed on, trampling down the
weaker ones, to get at the boats.

“Is Grandpapa in?” cried Phronsie, as Joel lifted her high, and handed
her over to Jim’s long arms ahead.

“Yes, dear.”

“And Mrs. Benson?”

“Yes, Phronsie.”

“O Joel--_you_!” she cried as she was swung off, and felt herself
drop, drop, to be caught by other strong arms. She lifted her eyes,
her yellow hair streaming away from her face as she called him; and he
turned his begrimed and haggard one at her an instant as he smiled, and
continued to help the women down.

“This boat is full--not another soul comes on,” cried the sailors
shoving off, as a woman, more dead than alive, was dropped in.

Phronsie looked up at Joel; he waved his hand at her, and she turned
and threw her arms around Grandpapa’s neck.

       *       *       *       *       *

The ship’s surgeon bent over the handsome white-haired old gentleman
with the young girl clinging to his neck. They had brought them on
together in that way when picked up, drifting aimlessly in an open
boat, the exhausted sailors drooping over their oars. He listened
carefully for their breathing while he applied all the restoratives,
but they seemed to have passed on over the tide together.

“Oh, my deary; let me try!” It was the little old woman whom they
brought up next, sodden with the salt spray, and laid down beside them.
She raised herself by a violent effort, and threw her wet hands over
Phronsie’s white face. “Oh, my lamb--quick, doctor, now! See, her eyes
are moving--oh, my pretty deary!”

“Grandpapa,” said Phronsie feebly.

“Yes, my lamb,” cried old Mrs. Benson in the energy of hope; “see, she
is coming to!”

But Dr. Ransom knew he had a far more difficult case before him to
work back the receding life into the old body; and he left her to the
woman’s care while he applied the restoratives to Mr. King.

“Lend a hand here, will you?” cried Mrs. Benson to a woman who had not
ceased to bemoan the loss of her possessions since she had been put,
the last passenger, in the boat before they swept off; “do you rub her
feet, while I chafe her hands--oh, my lamb!”

“I cannot do anything,” exclaimed the woman petulantly, and turning
away her head, as she huddled up against the cabin sofa; “my heart is
broken. I’ve lost all--all--and at the last some villain twitched away
my bag of jewels. Oh! what shall I do?”

“Do you talk of jewels,” cried old Mrs. Benson at her, her eyes blazing
underneath her white hair, “at such a time as this--oh, my lamb!”
chafing busily the cold hands.

“And I really cannot help you,” whined the other, “for I am nearly dead
myself.”

“Grandpapa!” Phronsie opened her eyes, and put her hand weakly up.

“Yes, yes, deary,” said the old woman comfortingly. “Has he come to?”
her lips framing the words over to the surgeon.

“No.”

“Oh, my Lord! Yes, yes, deary. There, there, my lamb.”

“Where is Grandpapa?” asked Phronsie faintly.

“He’s right here, my pretty lamb,” said the old woman, her hot tears
raining down on Phronsie’s cold face.

Phronsie gave a sigh of relief. “Joel,” she tried to say, but the
sounds died away in her throat.

“Oh, dear me! I wish somebody would take care of me,” complained the
person on the sofa. “My dear woman, now that Miss Pepper is all right,
will you give me a little attention? I am wringing wet, and as cold as
ice.”

Old Mrs. Benson never turned her head. One of the sailors looked in.
“Bring me some hot water,” she said.

“Oh, my good sir!” exclaimed the other woman, springing up to a sitting
posture, “will you come here? I want you this instant.”

“Bring the hot water!” commanded Mrs. Benson--and he disappeared.

“I do not suppose you know who I am, you ignorant, low-down woman,”
cried the other passionately. “I am Mrs. Livingston Bayley of New York,
now of Bayley Manor, England. Now will you cease your insults to me?”

“Any change?”

The surgeon’s lips framed the word “no,” as he turned his face an
instant; in a second he darted back like lightning, and seized a
spoonful of restorative which he held to the white lips. A long-drawn
sigh, faint but distinct, was heard. Old Mrs. Benson hid her face on
Phronsie’s arm and cried like a child--this time for joy.




CHAPTER XXII.

THE SHADOW TURNS TO SUNSHINE.


Polly stood by her window looking out with a happy face.

Barby glanced up from her play on the floor and saw her so, and
immediately dropped everything and scrambled off, climbing a chair by
Polly’s side.

“Mummy,” cried Barby, wriggling along till she stood on the broad
window-ledge under Polly’s arm.

“Oh, you dear!” exclaimed Polly, clasping her closely, and turning a
happy face. “Barby, _do_ you know that dear Grandpapa and Aunt Phronsie
and Uncle Joel are probably safe on the other side now. _Do_ you know
it, Barbara?”

“You called her Barbara,” said Elyot from the floor, and relinquishing
the charms of a castle ready to receive its final tower, to look over
at them.

“I know it,” said Polly happily. “When everything is so beautiful,
Elyot, I must call my little girl by her own true name--her papa’s dear
mamma’s name. O Barbara, Barbara!” exclaimed Polly with a final kiss.

“And when she’s bad, you call her Barbara,” said Elyot thoughtfully.

“And that is to make my little girl grow up good and beautiful like her
dear grandmamma,” said Polly. “Children, you don’t know how beautiful
your papa’s mamma was; everybody who ever saw her says so.”

“She’s down-stairs in the drawing-room,” said Elyot, as if stating a
wholly new fact for the first time; “and when I go in, I run up and
kiss her dress, and say, ‘How do you do, grandmamma,’ and she smiles at
me.”

“And I say, ‘Boo, grandmamma!’” laughed Barby confidentially.

“Well, if the picture is so beautiful,” said Polly, “you must remember
that dear grandmamma was ever so much more beautiful herself. And she
was good and lovely all through, dears.”

“Here comes a man to our house,” cried Barby, leaning over Polly’s
arms to look out of the window.

[Illustration: “And I say, ‘Boo, grandmamma!’ laughed Barby
confidentially.”]

“It’s Mr. Ferguson,” said Polly, glancing over Barby’s shoulder. “I
suppose he has come out on the early train. Oh! your papa, dear, will
come next train, I verily believe; and then, children, perhaps he will
have a cablegram from Grandpapa and Aunt Phronsie and Uncle Joel. Just
think!”

The maid stood before her saying, “Mr. Ferguson is down-stairs, Mrs.
King, and he wants to see you at once.”

So Polly put Barby down, and hurried off. “Go back, dears,” as they
rushed along the upper hall after her.

Mr. Ferguson, their next neighbor a half-mile or so down the road,
stood in the wide hall nervously twirling his hat.

“Won’t you come in?” asked Mrs. King.

“N--no, I thank you,” said Mr. Ferguson, edging off to the big front
door. “I just called going by from the train. I thought you ought to
know, and there wasn’t any time to go to Mr. King’s office and tell
him.”

“What is it?” asked Polly quietly.

“It’s on the bulletin-board,” said Mr. Ferguson, twirling his hat worse
than ever--“they were putting it out when I went by for the train--I
thought you ought to know.”

Polly felt everything swim before her eyes; but she looked steadily in
his face, and clasped her hands tightly together.

“It’s on the bulletin-board,” repeated Mr. Ferguson, “that the
Llewellyn was burned at sea; but the passengers were picked up by one
of the Harris line of cattle steamers,” he hurried on as he saw her
face, “and carried to Liverpool.”

“Is that _all_?” gasped Polly hoarsely.

Mr. Ferguson looked into his hat, and then gasped out, “N--no; but
perhaps it isn’t true, Mrs. King. It said that the Rev. Joel Pepper was
among the lost. That’s all.”

Polly ran through the hall, and out the side door. “_Jasper, Jasper!_”
she was saying over and over in her heart, though her white lips did
not move. Would she never reach the little brown house! At last she
was speeding up the narrow path and over the well-worn flat stone,
and through the old doorway and on into the bedroom, where she threw
herself on her knees by Mamsie’s big four-poster, just as she had
thrown herself years ago. “Dear God!” she cried now, her face buried in
the gay, patched bedquilt, just as it had been on that afternoon so
long ago, when in that darkened room, her eyes shadowed by a fear of
blindness, they had told her of the worse shadow that hung over Joel,
“make me willing to have anything--yes, _anything_ happen; only make me
good.”

[Illustration: Polly threw herself on her knees by Mamsie’s big
four-poster.]

How long she knelt there she never knew. Jasper hurried through the old
kitchen, and found her so. “O Polly!” kneeling by her side, he cried,
“don’t, don’t, dear! We have each other.”

“O Jasper!” Polly turned, and threw her arms around his neck, burying
her face on his breast as he gathered her up closely. “I was going out
to watch for you,” she cried remorsefully.

“I’ve only just got home, and they told me you were over here. I’d
rather find you here, Polly,” he hastened to add, as he saw her face.

And then Polly smiled, “We have each other, and God, Jasper,” she said.

“Yes,” said Jasper; “and as long as I can say that, Polly, I can bear
everything else.”

There was a step outside in the old kitchen; Jasper sprang to his feet,
Polly by his side.

“It is only I, children,” said Mr. Marlowe.

So they ran out to him, getting him into the easiest chair, and trying
to comfort him; for although he said nothing, it was easy to see how he
was suffering. And sitting one each side, they took a hand and patted
it softly between their own.

“I came as soon as I knew,” Mr. Marlowe was saying quietly; “can I do
anything to help? Have you wired Ben and David? It’s better for them
to hear it first from you.”

“No,” cried Jasper, starting to his feet; “I forgot it.”

“He thought only of me,” cried Polly.

“I’ll attend to it,” said Mr. Marlowe, getting up quickly; “on the way
to the train I cabled to Liverpool for full particulars.”

“Oh, how good you are!” cried Jasper and Polly together.

“But they will cable you from Liverpool probably before this is
answered,” said Mr. Marlowe; “so keep up heart, children.”

“They?” Polly dared not even think “Father” and “Phronsie,” as she
clung to Jasper. “Yes, dear Mr. Marlowe,” she said with a smile, as he
went out.

He came striding in presently, his keen gray eyes alight. “I believe it
is good,” he said, handing a yellow envelope to Jasper; “this has just
come.”

Jasper tore it open, one arm around Polly, and together they cried,
“Oh, _they’re safe_, Mr. Marlowe--all of them--_Joey and all--safe_!”

Mr. Marlowe picked up the yellow sheet as it dropped from their hands.
With a glance like lightning down the page, he gave it back, and rushed
off. “I’ll telegraph to the boys,” they heard him say, as he shot out
the doorway.

Polly seized the cablegram hungrily, and dropped a kiss on it. Then
over and over they read the blissful words:--

                                                             “LIVERPOOL.

  We are safe. Joel and the captain and a sailor named Jim were the
  last to leave the ship. Joel was hurt, but not seriously. Grandpapa
  was exhausted, but in a day or two we shall leave for Rome. Joel
  insists on it. He is to stay here a little longer, at the house of a
  good friend, Mr. Henry Benson, thirty-seven Harley Street.

                                                      SOPHRONIA PEPPER.”

“Now, you two children are going in the next boat to Liverpool,” Mr.
Marlowe hurried in with a smile--“if you can catch it;” and he began
to rummage in the newspaper-folder behind the door. “Let’s see; yes,
Thursday the Abyssinia sails; day after to-morrow--plenty of time.”

“But, Mr. Marlowe, I cannot be spared,” cried Jasper, aghast. “And as
long as everything seems to be so well over there, I ought not to leave
you.”

“I’m going to have my say now, Jasper,” declared the publisher
deliberately, and drawing up his chair to their side. “To be sure,
all is right, thank God, over there; but Polly wants to see Joel for
herself, and you need it, too, after all this anxiety; and then you are
to go on to Rome, and look after them all there.”

“O Mr. Marlowe!” Polly and Jasper turned, and gazed into each other’s
faces. This was too good to be true.

“You are sacrificing yourself,” said Jasper brokenly. “Stop--don’t say
a word, sir, I know just what is to be done; and my work must come on
you. No, no, it isn’t right; I cannot go and leave you; Polly wouldn’t
wish it under such conditions.”

“No,” said Polly, throwing her arm around him; “indeed, I do not wish
it, dear Mr. Marlowe. I wouldn’t go for anything.”

“Listen, now, Polly,” Mr. Marlowe turned his face with a smile toward
her; “you are both like my children, aren’t you?” looking at Jasper now.

“Yes, yes, we are,” they both cried.

“Well, then, I’m going to be obeyed,” he said, getting a hand of each,
and keeping them close. “Now, hear me. You are wife and child and
everything to me, and it is my happiness to look out for you. Don’t go
against my plan, children. Remember, I’m all alone in the world, and
don’t thwart me in this.” He set his lips firmly together, while his
keen gray eyes held them.

“But, sir”--began Jasper.

“No, no, Jasper, it won’t do. I’ve planned it all coming out on the
train. I can get Jacobs; he’s out of a job now. He can take some of
the detail work you look after, so that I shall not carry that. And
I should only worry if you stayed at home. You must go.” Mr. Marlowe
took away his good right hand a moment from Polly’s, to bring it down
quickly on his knee.

“Can you get Jacobs?” asked Jasper joyfully.

“Yes; heard so to-day. I was going to ask you if we better not secure
him anyway. So you see the way is open for you to be off.”

“But there is plenty more that Jacobs cannot do, Mr. Marlowe,” began
Jasper anxiously.

[Illustration: “‘Of course,’ cried Polly, with kindling eyes, ‘splendid
old Joel would do just that very thing, Davie.’”]

“Never mind; I shall plan it so that you’re not to worry. You must
go, Jasper;” and looking in the resolute face with its shining eyes,
they knew it was a settled thing that in two days, if all went well,
they would be off.

And on the next day David came rushing in, breathless with pride and
excitement. “I’m going to Joel,” he panted.

“Why, David,” Polly cried at him, “oh, you dear boy! Can you?”

“Can I?” cried David. “Nothing in all this world is strong enough to
keep me from him. To think that Joel stayed till the very last. O
Polly!”

“I know it,” cried Polly with kindling eyes; “but of course splendid
old Joel would do just that very thing, Davie.” She was hugging his
hands now, and laughing and crying together. “Jasper!” she called,
hurrying into the wide hall, “David has--oh, oh--Ben!” she screamed.

“Well, well,” cried Jasper running up, “you here, Ben?”

“And David,” cried Polly, quite overcome, and laying her head on Ben’s
shoulder.

“Yes, I’m here, of course,” said David, coming out into the hall.

“Jasper!” cried Ben, his honest eyes shining with pride, and
reaching past Polly to give him a handshake such as Ben only could
give, “run your hand in my coat pocket here; there’s a paper, the
_Press-Bulletin_--it’s all in there about Joe.”

“And I have it in mine,” cried David, whirling out a big journal;
“here, Jasper, read mine first.” He shook it in Jasper’s face.

“Softly, there,” cried Jasper just as excited. “Polly, hold one of
these fellows--take Dave there--while I get this paper out of Ben’s
pocket.”

“Polly read mine--read it,” implored Davie. So Polly deserted Ben, and
fastened her brown eyes on the sheet Davie held for her, and Jasper
read his out too; and no one who hadn’t learned it before could hear
a word of it all,--how the Rev. Joel Pepper had worked for nine long
hours with the sailors to subdue the fire; and when it was found that
the ship couldn’t be saved, he it was who kept by the captain’s side
and maintained order, so that everybody got off. And then, at the very
last, those three--the captain and the Rev. Joel and a sailor named
Jim--had jumped for their lives; and the cattle steamer, after picking
up the boat-loads, had come to their rescue, to discover them floating
on broken spars. And the clergyman was injured, but was recovering in
Liverpool. And Mr. Horatio King and his grand-daughter were passengers.
Oh, and it was a marvel that no lives were lost! And then followed
glowing praises of Joel.

“Hear, hear!” cried Ben and Davie, pounding for order. “One or the
other of you stop.” And in ran Alexia and Pickering.

“Oh! what is it?” cried Alexia, rushing up to Polly.

“They are so excited they don’t know what they’re reading,” cried Davie.

“Oh, splendid old Joel!” breathed Polly, turning with shining eyes.

“Good for Joe!” cried Jasper, beginning afresh on his column.

“Give it to me, Polly! give it to me!” exclaimed Alexia, trying to get
hold of the sheet. But Polly only whirled away with it, reading happily
on.

“Well, that is too splendid for anything,” cried Jasper, throwing down
the newspaper at last, “Oh, hello, you here, Pick?”

“So you’ve waked up, have you,” cried Pickering, pouncing on the
journal, and edging off into a corner with it. “Then I’ll have a go at
it myself.” Alexia seeing this, deserted Polly, and ran over to him.

“Just one little teenty corner of a scrap,” she said, laying hold of
one edge.

“Get away,” said Pickering, holding fast to it. “I can tell you so much
quicker, Alexia, than you can read it.”

“I’m going to have one corner,” she begged. “Oh, what a mean shame!” as
Pickering turned a cold shoulder to her.

“He’s a shabby little beggar,” said Ben, flying around suddenly to
grasp the newspaper; “there, hold your hands, Alexia. I’ll hold _him_.”

“That’s what I call taking advantage of the defenceless,” said
Pickering, defrauded of his paper. “Ben, you’re a nice friend, to turn
against me like that.”

“Come over here, and I’ll let you have part,” said Alexia sweetly; and
seating herself on a divan, she was soon reading as excitedly as Polly.

“Oh! where has she gone?” she cried at last, jumping up, and dashing
the newspaper to the floor. “Where’s Polly gone?”

“And Jasper too,” said Ben. “Goodness me!” as the door opened, and in
came Polly and the two children, Elyot hanging to his father’s hand.

“I want these blessed dears to hear it--all about their Uncle Joel now,
just as soon as we read it,” said Polly with shining eyes. So everybody
had to go all over it again, the children hanging on every word.




CHAPTER XXIII.

THE REST OF THE PEPPERS ARE OFF.


“I ought not to say anything,” cried Alexia, twisting around a very
damp handkerchief in her nervous fingers.

“No,” said Mrs. Fargo; “I don’t think you had, Alexia.”

“But what shall we do when this great place is empty of Peppers?”
Alexia rolled her eyes up to the vaulted ceiling. They were in the
music-room waiting for Polly, who had gone up-stairs for a list of
people to whom notes must be written announcing her sudden departure.

“I don’t want to think of it,” said Mrs. Fargo helplessly; “but we
ought not to say one word to let Polly see how sorry we are they must
go.”

“Dear me, I haven’t said a word!” cried Alexia in a very injured way.
“Here I’ve been just killing myself to keep it all in, Mrs. Fargo. I
should think you’d compliment me. But no one ever does. And to think
that Grace is going too. Dear me, I shall just rattle around in my old
pumpkin-shell too lonely for anything.”

“You must come over here, and cheer me up,” said Mrs. Fargo, who was to
move from the farmer’s house over to “The Oaks,” with Johnny, to stay
till Polly and Jasper’s return with the children. “Well, I’m glad for
my part that Grace’s mother had sense enough to telegraph back ‘yes,’
and that she is going; she’ll see her cousin, Roslyn May, besides being
with the Peppers. It will be a good thing for Grace.”

“King said he wasn’t going without Grace,” said Alexia; “he’s awfully
fond of her--and I don’t wonder. Oh, dear me! just think of all those
children going away just as my blessed baby had got so he could talk
and play with them!”

“Why, they won’t be gone more than a month or six weeks probably,” said
Mrs. Fargo. “They can’t be, for it’s as much as Mr. Marlowe could do to
get Jasper to go anyway.”

“Well, oh, dear me!” said Alexia, beginning again on her handkerchief.
“I can’t do without Polly Pepper a week. We--goodness, here she comes!”

Polly came hurrying in, a long list in her hand.

“Come into the library, please,” she said. “Oh, you are both so good to
do this!”

Alexia sniffed softly as she followed her, making Mrs. Fargo go
between; then she gave a final dab to her eyes, and resolutely stuffed
her handkerchief in her pocket. “Gracious me, Polly!” she said,
hurrying into a chair, and bending her head so that Polly should not
see her red eyes, “that’s nothing; we’ll do it all--now hunt us up
something else to fly at when this is done.”

“There’s only one thing,” said Polly, “that troubles me.”

“What is it, Polly?” asked Mrs. Fargo.

And Alexia forgot all about her red eyes, and raced out of her chair,
to run around the big table and peer into Polly’s brown ones.

“It’s Grandma Bascom,” said Polly. “I hate to leave her. Mrs. Higby
will look after her splendidly; it isn’t that; but she wants somebody
to go in just as we have every day, and talk to her, and read to her,
and cheer her up.”

“Oh, dear me!” cried Alexia gustily, and falling back. “I can’t take
all your old women, Polly Pepper--and they wouldn’t like me, either.
They’d tell me to go out of the house.”

“Oh, no, they wouldn’t, Alexia!” said Polly with troubled eyes.

“Yes, they would,” contradicted Alexia before she could stop herself;
“they’d want to fling things at me. I don’t know how to talk to
horrible old women, Polly; you know I don’t.”

“And I’m not much better,” said Mrs. Fargo, wrinkling her forehead in
perplexity.

Polly stood quite still, her hand on the top of the oaken chair.

“Well, don’t look like that,” exclaimed Alexia, taking one glance at
the troubled face, “and I’ll go there every day; I’ll sit on the front
door-step from morning to night. I’ll do anything, Polly Pepper--Polly,
did you hear?” running up to shake her arm.

“You might take Baby in with you,” said Polly, turning a brightening
face.

“So I could,” cried Alexia radiantly. “I never thought of that. Oh!
I’ll go in every single day. Don’t you worry about that, Polly.
Promise, now.”

She put her two hands on Polly’s shoulders, and kissed her till Polly’s
cheeks were as red as two roses; then she spun her around till they
both were quite out of breath.

“There, I feel better now!” said Alexia, releasing her and panting;
“we haven’t had such a spin since we were girls together. And to think
of us two old things. Oh, dear, I’ve lost all my hairpins!” She put up
one hand to her head, while she sank to the floor, and groped with the
other under the chairs and the table.

“I think we sha’n’t get this list done very quickly,” observed Mrs.
Fargo, writing away.

“Oh, misery me! Well, what can I do?” wailed Alexia, sitting on the
floor, her bright eyes searching the carpet; “here’s one--that’s good,
and that’s another,” pouncing on them; “there, I’ll let the others be,
and pick ’em up afterward. Here goes;” and pinning up her hair as best
she could, she rushed into her seat, to send her pen scratching wildly
over Polly’s notes.

“Anybody would know who wrote that,” she said, viewing the first one
with great disfavor. “Dear me, I wish I could write like you, Mrs.
Fargo.”

“I write plainly,” said Mrs. Fargo, well pleased at the compliment;
“and that’s all I can say, Alexia.”

“Dear, dear! do talk,” presently cried Alexia, “or I shall begin again
on the old subject. Oh, good! here’s Ben,” as he came in.

“Writing Polly’s notes?” he asked, his eyes lighting up in a pleased
way.

“Yes,” said Alexia, as usual answering first; “and there are such a lot
of them--Mrs. Coyle Campbell’s luncheon next week to get out of. I’m
just finishing that, and a hundred other engagements, and all sorts of
things. Go on and talk, Ben, do, about something. I’m in a bad temper
enough, and I want to be amused, or I shall spoil half of these.”

“What is the matter?” asked Ben leisurely, and sitting down to laugh at
her. “Well, I only wish there was anything I could do to help. But I’ve
been wandering the house over, and there isn’t a thing I’m fit for.”

“How’s Charlotte Chatterton?” asked Alexia suddenly; “seems to me we
don’t hear much from her lately. I suppose you’ll all find her abroad.”

Not receiving any answer, she looked up, her sharp eyes resting on
Ben’s face in surprise.

“She’s well, I suppose,” he began. Alexia laid down her pen in
astonishment, and stared at him. The color was in his cheeks like a
girl’s, and he began to fumble the little envelopes.

“Well, if I can’t help, I won’t at least hinder you,” he said at last
with a short laugh, and getting up, he went out.

Alexia deserted her chair, and ran around to Mrs. Fargo’s.

“Did you see? O Mrs. Fargo! did you see?” she cried, shaking that
lady’s arm.

“Oh, dear me! now I’ve gone and put a ‘g’ on Mrs. Crowninshield’s
name,” exclaimed Mrs. Fargo in vexation. “You shook me just then, my
dear.”

“Never mind your ‘g’s’,” said Alexia coolly; “what’s a ‘g’ in such
bliss as this? O Mrs. Fargo, did you see Ben Pepper?” She hung over her
now in great excitement.

“No; I’m sure I didn’t notice him,” said Mrs. Fargo, trying to erase
the “g”; and making it worse, she gave up the note entirely. “And I
wish you’d go back to your own seat, Alexia,” she added decidedly.

“Oh, I must tell you this!” cried Alexia; “it’s my duty to, if you
didn’t see it for yourself, Mrs. Fargo; Ben Pepper,--don’t you see? Oh,
how perfectly splendid!” She jumped up, and clapped her hands in glee.

“Alexia Dodge,” began Mrs. Fargo. But as well talk to the north wind.

“Don’t you see, Ben Pepper is in love with Charlotte--O Mrs. Fargo!
we’ve been blind and stupid as owls not to see it before; but then,
she’s been gone so long.”

“I can’t call you a goose, Alexia,” observed Mrs. Fargo, laying down
her pen in despair; “for you never were a goose, whatever else you are.
But this time you’ve made a mistake, my dear, a very great mistake.”

“We’ll see!” cried Alexia triumphantly; “I shall just tell Polly to
watch Ben as a cat would a mouse.”

“You better watch these notes,” cried Mrs. Fargo irately, “for they
won’t be done by the time Polly comes back;” which had the effect of
sending Alexia into her chair again, where her pen fairly flew to the
tune of the new thought she had gotten into her head.

Ben kept out of her way so successfully, that although she dodged
after him at all sorts of times, he always slipped around some angle,
or out of a door, leaving Alexia to stare at the bare walls. At last,
particularly as there were many little things she found to her great
delight that she could do for Polly, she gave it up in despair. And
finding David alone for a moment after dinner, she besieged him with
questions.

“Tell me, Davie, now like a good boy; isn’t Ben going to marry
Charlotte Chatterton?”

David drew a long breath; but he wasn’t to be caught this way, so he
said coolly, “I hope so, Alexia; can’t you fix matters up?”

“Oh, you incorrigible boy!” cried Alexia; “you know the secret, I do
believe, and you won’t tell. I think you might tell _me_,” she added
wheedlingly.

“Ask Ben.”

“I know he is. No need to ask him. Now, David, do you know?”

David assumed a very wise look; then he said, “You can guess at such
questions if you like, but I never do. Ask me something easier,
Alexia.”

“Well, I think you are just dreadful!” cried Alexia in despair. “Oh,
dear me, and to-morrow night you’ll all be miles and miles away, and me
left here without Polly!”

       *       *       *       *       *

The next morning she turned from the small station after the cars had
borne away the little group bound for the steamer. “For I can’t ever
bid her good-by again on the boat,” she had said to Pickering. “I tried
that once in the old days you know, and it made me feel a great deal
worse. Come, Mrs. Fargo,” she said, holding out her hand.

“Where are you going?” asked that lady, pausing with her foot on the
step of the King carriage.

“Down to that old Mrs. Bascom’s,” said Alexia, trying to look pleasant,
and hoping no one would look at her, for she was dreadfully afraid she
should cry. “I must begin at once, or I never shall get there.”

“You go to-day, and I will try it to-morrow,” said Mrs. Fargo.

So Alexia jumped desperately into her little dog-cart, and drove
furiously down to the cottage just around Primrose Lane, feeling with
each revolution of the wheels how those other wheels were bearing Polly
on and on, away from her.

[Illustration: “‘She’s gone; and I don’t never ’xpect to live to see
her again, nor him, nor those pretty creeters,’ went on Grandma.”]

“Come in,” said Grandma Bascom, to the rap which she gave with her
whip-handle on the little old door.

“How do you do to-day?” asked Alexia. Then she saw that the old lady
had been crying.

“I’m so sorry for you,” she cried, laying her hand in its neat
driving-glove on the poor withered one; while,--“She’s gone, and I
don’t never ’xpect to live to see her again, nor him, nor those pretty
creeters,” went on Grandma.

“Oh, yes, you will!” said Alexia, gulping down something in her throat.
“Well, now, Grandma, I’m coming in to see you every day.”

“Hey?” cried Grandma.

So Alexia had to bend her tall figure so that she could scream it all
over into Grandma’s ear; and this pleased the old lady so much, to
think she was going to have company besides Mrs. Higby, that Alexia
in great satisfaction pulled up a chair to the bedside, and began to
tell all about the getting off, and what Polly said, and how she came
running back the last thing after she had bidden her good-by to say
over again, “Now, Alexia, remember dear Grandma Bascom.”

“Oh, the pretty creeter!” cried the old lady, quite overcome. And then
Alexia rattled off what everybody else said, and how the children had
each sent a kiss apiece to her, and what Ben and David did, and all
about Jasper, till she was quite spent with her efforts.

“Though I don’t suppose she heard more than one word in ten,” Alexia
told Pickering in relating the events of the day at dinner; “but her
cap bobbed all the while, and she kept saying, ‘Yes, deary.’ And then,
when I got through, she wanted to know what Joel did, and everything
that people said about him, and the whole thing from beginning to end.”

“You better be prepared to tell that story every day; for depend upon
it, Alexia, she’ll ask you for it,” said Pickering.




CHAPTER XXIV.

ALL TOGETHER.


“Mrs. Benson,” said Joel, regarding her fixedly, “they used to say of
me in the old days, that I was perfectly dreadful when I was sick, to
make them stand round, you know, and all that. Now, I know you won’t
say that, will you?” he asked wheedlingly.

“I don’t know,” said the little old lady, shaking her head at her
minister. “You do get your own way somehow or other, sir.”

Joel burst into a loud laugh, then he pulled himself up.

“Jim,” he said, “I’m dreadfully abused by them all, am I not, my fine
fellow?” to a man in the corner.

“Hey, sir?” said Jim, coming forward.

“I say I’m most dreadfully abused,” cried Joel. “Now, I’m going to get
up out of this bed,” giving a smart kick to the clothes.

“And I say you mustn’t,” cried the little old lady in alarm, and
running, both hands full of dishes which she cast on a table on her
way. “Hold down the clothes, Jim, that side; oh! what would the doctor
say?”

“A fig for the doctor!” cried Joel with another lunge, that brought all
the clothes clear away from both sides. “Now, Jim, hand me my toggery,
and help me into it.”

“Oh, oh!” cried little Mrs. Benson, finding the clothes twitched out of
her hands, beginning now to wring them together. “What shall we do? Son
Henry has gone to his store, or I’d call him.”

“And ‘son Henry’ couldn’t do a bit of good if he were here,” observed
Joel calmly; and, sitting on the side of the bed, he issued orders for
his raiment, to right and to left, to Jim. “No, Mother Benson, I’m not
going to be caught by all my family, after they cabled they were to
start--why, they may be here to-morrow, and I tucked into bed like a
sick baby. No, indeed, ma’am! Why, I’m as well as a fish.”

Joel bared a brawny arm, and viewed it with affection, then swung it
out for her to see.

“And just think, it was only a week ago yesterday, and you were picked
up with a big cut on your head, and we all thought you dead for ever so
long,” mourned Mrs. Benson.

“Well, I wasn’t dead; and is that any reason for being mewed up
forever, Mrs. Benson?” asked Joel. “Nonsense! my old head is all ready
for another crack.”

“Heaven forbid!” cried the little old lady, stopping the wringing, to
run around the foot of the bed, and take Joel’s black curls in her
hands and kiss them over and over.

“Such good nursing as I’ve had, Mrs. Benson!” exclaimed Joel, who liked
immensely all this petting. “Jim, you and I will long remember this,
won’t we, old fellow?”

“Ay, ay, sir,” said Jim heartily.

“There!” said Joel, swinging himself up to his full height at last, and
marching across the room. “I’m as good as new, made over, and patched
up, and warranted. Now, Jim, get me a barber, and we’ll have all this
mop off in double quick time.” He shook back the black waves over his
forehead.

“Oh, sir!” cried the little old lady in the greatest distress, “don’t
touch those beautiful curls! I wouldn’t have one of ’em cut for
anything.”

[Illustration: “There!” said Joel, marching across the room. “I’m as
good as new, made over, and patched up, and warranted.”]

“They are the bane of my life,” cried Joel, shaking them viciously.
“You can’t think how I just detest this poll of mine, Mrs. Benson. Why
that idiot of a doctor didn’t shave it all, I don’t see.”

“I wouldn’t let him, sir,” said Mrs. Benson. “And he said the cut on
the head wasn’t what troubled him; you were exhausted with all you’d
done. It’s only a wonder that you pulled through at all.”

“Nonsense!” exploded Joel. “Well, now, don’t you tell my family all
this stuff when they come.”

“I’m going to tell your family everything and all there is to it,”
declared little Mrs. Benson obstinately. “I’m a-going to tell them, if
’twas the last word I’d ever speak, how that precious deary took care
of the old woman, and got her where she could be saved by you and Jim.
And they’re going to hear what _you_ did, and that nothing would have
been of any earthly use if it hadn’t been for you. They shall hear it,
every blessed word, sir. And after there wasn’t so much as a rat left
aboard, and you’d seen the captain and Jim off, you jumped for your
life, and was struck by a floating spar. There, and there, and there!”
she cried.

“Mrs. Benson, dear Mrs. Benson,” began Joel.

“You won’t get me to say I won’t,” cried the little old lady, “because
I _will_ tell them every single thing that you did, and what folks
said, and the whole. There again, sir.”

“Jim, get the barber!” roared Joel at him in great dismay. So the
barber, a thin, dapper little man, soon appeared with all his
paraphernalia; and presently Joel’s black curls were sprawling all over
the floor, little Mrs. Benson on her knees picking them up, and patting
them, and doing them up in a clean old handkerchief to lay away in her
lavender drawer with the rest of her treasures.

And in the midst of it all, in walked Polly and Jasper, Ben and David,
while the three children were here, there, and everywhere.

And on the morrow, the doctor being obliged to say that Joel was
perfectly able to go, having recovered in a remarkable manner, all
the party bade good-by to little Mrs. Benson and “son Henry” and his
family, and off they hurried to Rome; Jim being proud as possible--for
wasn’t he the Rev. Mr. Pepper’s body-servant, to remain so, and go back
home with them?

“I like that house,” said King, looking back at the ironmonger’s red
brick dwelling, on the stoop of which was drawn up the little old lady
and her son the ironmonger and all his family, “a great deal better
than I do the hotel. I wish I could have stayed over night there; it’s
got lots of things in the big front room I didn’t have a chance to see.”

“And oh, they’re so good!” cried Polly, looking back from the carriage
with tears in her eyes. “I can never forget, Joey dear, how good
they’ve been to you.”

“If it had not been for going there, I couldn’t have made Phronsie and
Grandpapa go and leave me,” said Joel. “But dear me, Polly, that good
woman just nursed me up: you can’t think how good she was to me,” cried
Joel affectionately.

“I love her,” broke out Barby, and patting Uncle Joel’s knee to attract
his attention; “and she’s my very own Mrs. Benson, she is; and when I
go again, I shall say, ‘How do you do, my very own Mrs. Benson, and
pretty well I thank you mostly.’”

So in great glee they kept each other’s spirits up along the way. But
as they neared Rome, Polly’s heart sank, and even Joel fidgeted about;
and Jasper and the “Pepper boys” had all they could do to keep things
bright and cheery. Only now and then had it been possible to hear
from Phronsie and the others, and then but scraps of information: that
Roslyn May was mending, although the fever was not broken up; that
Grandpapa was keeping bravely all his anxiety and distress to himself;
and Mamsie wrote how beautiful Phronsie was, till Joel had all he
could do to keep from crying outright. He thought he loved Phronsie as
much as he could before--they all did; but since that night when they
both faced death, and, worse than anything that threatened themselves,
knew that it hung over dear Grandpapa, Joel’s whole soul was bound up
in Phronsie, and it seemed to him as if he could never wait to see
her again. Over and over he beguiled the way with the story of what
Phronsie had said and done on the ship all through that dreadful night,
till Polly and the boys and the children, hanging on his words, knew it
all by heart. And so on to Rome. At last they were there.

Little Dr. Fisher, who had received their telegram, met them. He looked
worn and tired; but he mastered a cheery smile for King and for Polly
and her babies, and he wrung Joel’s hand as only he could wring it;
and he said, “The fever hasn’t left him, but he’s holding his own;”
and that was all they could get out of him. And then they all hurried
off to the hotel where Roslyn May lay fighting for his young life, and
Phronsie, Grandpapa, and Mamsie were watching over him.

“Polly,” said Doctor Fisher desperately, and getting a moment with her
alone. “I must tell you, I think the chances are slim unless”--

A little cry broke from Polly’s lips.

“Hush, Polly, my girl,” warned the little doctor disapprovingly,
regarding her over his big spectacles, “why, that isn’t like you. It
all depends on our keeping our heads, you know.”

“I won’t do it again, Papa Fisher,” said poor Polly.

“Unless we can persuade Roslyn that Phronsie and he are not to be
separated again, I was going to say,” went on Father Fisher calmly.
“You see, he has suffered off here alone by himself a long time--I
know, because he has told me all about it; and then when he came back
after Mr. King,--I don’t blame your father,” the little doctor made
haste to say quickly, “but it was pretty tough on Roslyn,--and then
when he came back to plunge into his work again after Mr. King’s
send-off, why, he hadn’t much strength to fall back on.”

“What can we do?” asked Polly eagerly. “O papa-doctor! tell me, what
can we do?” and she clasped her hands. “I’ll do just anything, if
you’ll only tell me.”

The little doctor beamed on her. “Bless you, Polly,” he said, “I depend
on you to do it all.”

“All?” cried Polly, aghast.

“Yes,” Dr. Fisher nodded briskly. “You see,--I must be quick, for
that scamp of a Joe is listening with all his ears,--you see, Polly,
Roslyn May has got it into his head that as soon as he is well, the old
gentleman will spirit Phronsie away again.”

“He shouldn’t,” began Polly indignantly, “when Grandpapa has brought
her clear over here just to show that he has given up all opposition.”

“Tut, tut, child!” said the little doctor; “you can’t reason with a
sick man. All I say is, that Roslyn May has got it into his head that
Phronsie is to melt away in some sort of fashion as soon as he gets
well; and I can’t do much for him--I really can’t, Polly, as long as
that is in his mind.” He shook his head, and looked so very dejected
and miserable, that Polly’s heart ached for him.

“O Father Fisher,” she cried, “this is very dreadful! Oh, don’t look
so!” seizing his hand; “perhaps something will happen,” she added,
brightening up, “to make him believe that Phronsie is to belong to him.”

“There’s only one thing,” said the little doctor; and he put his mouth
to Polly’s ear and whispered something. “Oh, no, no!” cried Polly,
starting back, “it couldn’t ever be in all this world, _here_!”

“Why not?” Doctor Fisher set his spectacles straight, and looked at her.

“Because--because, why, Phronsie should be married at home, and have
the biggest wedding, Papa Fisher, you ever saw, and such a beautiful
one! Oh, no, no, no, no!” cried Polly, who couldn’t stop herself, but
felt as if she were racing down hill, and all out of breath.

“Wouldn’t it be better than not to have _any_ wedding, Polly?” asked
the little doctor slowly, and looking at her with his small keen eyes.

“Oh, dear me! yes, of course,” cried poor Polly in horror, and
feeling as if the whole world were going awry just then. Not to have a
beautiful wedding, such as Phronsie ought to have, just such an one as
Polly had planned, oh, so many times in her heart, for the pet of the
family! She drew away, and her eyes filled with tears despite all her
efforts.

Doctor Fisher paused a moment to give her time to recover herself, and
looked very grave. “A big wedding isn’t the best of all blessings,” he
said; “and I don’t believe but what Phronsie would prefer the quiet
one--your mother thinks so.”

“Does Mamsie think Phronsie better be married here?” asked Polly,
feeling as if everybody were deserting her.

“She surely does, Polly,” said the little doctor. “Well, I looked to
you to influence Mr. King--but say no more,” as the others crowded
around.

Mamsie! oh, when Polly found herself in the dear arms, and felt the
dear eyes upon her, she seized Jasper’s hand. “O Jasper, we’ll never
let her go again,” she cried, “in all this world!”

[Illustration: “Oh, when Polly found herself in the dear arms, and felt
the dear eyes upon her.”]

But amidst the happiness of all being together again, Polly carried
around with her a heavy heart. She knew that the little doctor was
disappointed in her; and somehow, when she saw the dear Mamsie again,
she felt that this disapproval was shared by the one, whom, next to
Jasper, she loved the best in the world. And in amongst all the delight
with which the whole bunch of Peppers revolved around Phronsie, there
was a little feeling of bitterness creeping up in Polly’s heart, that
Phronsie herself was pining for something more that they must give her.

Jasper found Polly so. “What is it, dear?”

“O Jasper! I’ve put it out of my head, but it won’t stay out,” cried
Polly. “Do you think that Phronsie and Roslyn should be married here?”

“I surely do, Polly,” said Jasper decidedly.

“What?” cried Polly, aghast, all her fine visions of radiance on
Phronsie’s wedding morn tumbling at once. “Then, let us go to Mamsie,”
she said humbly, “and tell her we think so. Don’t let us stop to talk
about it, Jasper; but we ought to go at once--this very minute.”




CHAPTER XXV.

EVERYTHING DEPENDS ON POLLY.


“Jasper,” cried Polly, “do let us go to Mamsie;” so hand in hand they
hurried off to Mrs. Fishers room. But she was not there.

“Oh! now I know that Roslyn is worse,” mourned Polly, not to be
comforted; “and they would not tell me.” But Jasper said cheerfully,
“Oh, no, Polly! probably Father Fisher has taken her out for an airing.”

“Jasper,” cried Polly in great remorse, “if I’d only been willing”--she
heaved a sigh even now at the thought of what might have been
Phronsie’s marriage-day had all gone well, then she put it resolutely
down--“had I just been glad to have her married here, perhaps he’d not
been worse--but now, oh, dear me!” and Polly broke down, and sobbed on
her husband’s shoulder like a child.

He patted her head softly. “Polly, hush, dear; let us go around to
Roslyn’s room, and see for ourselves.”

So Polly mopped her face as best she could with his handkerchief (she
had forgotten her own), and away they hurried to the sick-room. There,
sure enough, was Mrs. Fisher.

“Come in, Polly and Jasper,” she called, as she glanced up, and saw
them in the shadow of the doorway.

Polly, with her heart bounding in relief, crept in, hanging to Jasper’s
hand.

Roslyn looked up from the pile of pillows against which he leaned, and
smiled a wan little smile that lighted up his white face.

“Well, Polly,” he said, “and Jasper; so you are not out this morning?”

“No,” said Jasper, seeing that Polly was past speaking; “but we shall
drive to Pincian Hill this afternoon,” he added cheerily. “Well, old
man,” going up to the couch that was drawn to the window, and taking up
one of the long, thin fingers, “you’ll soon be running around with us,
the best one of all.”

Roslyn smiled wearily, as if the effort were costing him much; then he
shook his head.

“Jasper,” he said slowly, “I will tell you now,--as Phronsie is not in
the room,--I shall never be well. Something will happen to separate us
again.”

“Nonsense, old fellow!” exclaimed Jasper, not knowing what else to say,
and taking refuge in those words. “Why, Grandpapa is willing now, you
know, for you to marry Phronsie, else why would he bring her? You’re
blue, Roslyn; that’s all.”

But Roslyn shook his head, and reiterated, “Something will surely
happen to separate us again.”

Meanwhile Polly was clutching Mother Fisher’s gown. “O Mamsie!” she
cried, “do come out of here; I must talk to you.”

“‘Must’ will have to give way now, Polly,” said Mrs. Fisher, quietly
going on with her work of preparing a gruel by a spirit-lamp over in a
corner; “for this ought to be done first.”

“Oh, do forgive me, Mamsie!” cried Polly, dreadfully ashamed of her
abruptness; “I did not notice what you were doing. But as soon as ever
you get through with that, do, will you, please, then come where I can
talk with you.”

Mother Fisher gave her a keen look. “Yes, Polly,” she said, “I will,
unless some other duty comes in between.” So Polly was forced to wait
as patiently as possible until the gruel was done. Meanwhile she
clasped her hands tightly together, while Jasper and Roslyn talked;
afraid all the while that she should show her increasing dismay, as
certain bits of the conversation fell upon her ears.

At last the gruel was fed to Roslyn, his pillows shaken up, and Dr.
Fisher coming in, Mrs. Fisher turned to Polly.

“Jasper,” said Polly, holding out her hand.

So the two followed Mother Fisher into a smaller apartment that opened
into the sick-room, and Jasper closed the door softly; while Polly
threw herself down on the floor, and buried her face in Mamsie’s lap in
the old way.

“Now, what is it?” asked Mother Fisher, smoothing Polly’s hair, as
Jasper came and took a chair next to the two.

“O Mamsie!” cried Polly brokenly, “I do want Phronsie not to have the
beautiful wedding at home, but to be married here. And do forgive me,”
went on poor Polly, “for not wanting it before--it’s Jasper now who
has shown me how wrong I’ve been.”

“O Mamsie!” cried Jasper, who held Polly’s hand in both of his;
“indeed, she decided this herself. This is all Polly’s own idea.”

“He said he thought Phronsie ought to be allowed to have the wedding
here, when I asked him,” said Polly; “then I knew at once how selfish
I’d been.”

“Don’t say selfish, Polly,” begged Jasper.

“Polly,” said Mother Fisher, and her face lightened, “I do think you
have saved Phronsie from terrible sorrow; for if you can persuade Mr.
King to let her be married here,--and no other person can do it I’m
very sure, as Phronsie won’t speak,--you’ll see Roslyn well again. And
nothing else will bring him up, the doctor and I both think.”

“I persuade Father King!” exclaimed Polly, raising her head in dismay
to look first at Mother Fisher and then at Jasper. “Oh, I never could
in all this world!”

“I imagine you could for Phronsie,” said Mrs. Fisher slowly.

“But he has just brought her clear over here at a dreadful sacrifice
to his feelings,” went on Polly in greater dismay; “and then to be
teased and urged to let her be married, and in a plain little way,
here--oh, I can’t do it!”

“‘Can’t’ is a word that you ought not to spell, Polly,” said Mother
Fisher gravely.

Polly shivered, and shrank down again into Mamsie’s lap. “Oh! I know
you’ve been disappointed in me, Mamsie,” she cried, “because I didn’t
want Phronsie to lose the beautiful marriage-day we all want to give
her at home.”

“Yes,” said Mrs. Fisher slowly, “I was disappointed, Polly.”

“But Polly has come to see it all right now,” cried Jasper eagerly, and
pressing Polly’s hand comfortingly.

“I am glad of that,” said Mrs. Fisher, still smoothing Polly’s bright
brown hair.

“I’ll do it,” said Polly at last, with a gasp, and getting up to her
feet. Jasper put his arm around her, his eyes saying, “I wish I could
help you, Polly.”

“Polly better do it alone,” said Mother Fisher, “and at once; for Mr.
King is in his room reading.”

So Polly, feeling scarcely less miserable than she was before, since
now she must inflict a great blow on dear Grandpapa, went slowly out
into the hall, and on her errand.

Old Mr. King, as usual, was in a terrible state over the newspapers. A
little pile of them lay before him on the table waiting to be scanned,
while he fumed and fretted over the one he held in his hand. Polly
felt, as she obeyed his “Come in” to the timid rap she bestowed on his
door, as if the worst time in all the day were chosen to proffer such a
dreadful request. And for a moment her heart stood still, and she did
not attempt to enter.

“Come in,” commanded the old gentleman in such a dreadful roar that
Polly trembled in every limb, while he marched across the long
apartment and threw the door wide open. “Why in the name of all that’s
sensible, don’t you--oh, my goodness me, Polly child!” and he drew her
in.

He trembled inwardly as much as she, but with difficulty controlled
himself to lead her to a seat. “Now, then, Polly, my child, what is the
matter? Tell your old daddy.” Then, his fears getting the better of
him, he broke out,--

“You’ve brought bad news. Roslyn is worse;” and started for the door.

“Grandpapa--father dear,” cried Polly, flying after him.

“Oh, it isn’t that! It’s--it’s--I’ve come--to--to ask you--”

[Illustration: Old Mr. King stood in front of Polly waiting for her to
proceed.]

The old gentleman led her back to her seat with a puzzled air, and
stood in front of her waiting for her to proceed; then, seeing that
she made no headway, he exclaimed in displeasure, “Why, Polly, am I
so very dreadful that you cannot come to make a simple request of me
without all this fear?”

“Oh! it isn’t a simple request, dear Grandpapa,” said Polly, clasping
her fingers nervously as she realized that all this was only making
matters much worse for Phronsie and for Roslyn; yet for her life she
could get no farther than “it’s--it’s”--

Old Mr. King took a turn or two down the apartment, then came back to
her with such a displeased countenance as she had never seen him wear
before; at sight of which Polly forgot all the attempts at a proper
introduction to her plea, and crying out, “O father, dear! do let
Phronsie and Roslyn be married here; for Dr. Fisher thinks he won’t get
well unless you do,” she threw herself into his arms, and sobbed like a
child.

“Is that all!” exclaimed Mr. King, patting her brown hair.

“All!” cried Polly, taking up her head suddenly to look at him; “all,
Grandpapa! _Are_ you willing?” she gasped.

The old gentleman smiled down at her. “Child, I’m not only willing,
I’m glad,” he said. “Did you think I’d no more sense, Polly, than
to make my little girl any further trouble? They shall be married
to-morrow if they want to be. Now send Phronsie here to me, just as
quickly as you can fly for her,” he commanded, in such a merry tone
that Polly laughed in glee. Seeing which, as it was what he had aimed
at, he got so very cheery as he escorted her to the door and saw her
down the hall, that she ran off on light feet. “Tell her to hurry,”
called old Mr. King as a last word before she disappeared.

“Why, man alive!” said little Dr. Fisher, left alone with his patient,
“I tell you, you are in a fair way to recovery, if you only think so.”
He set his big spectacles straight on his nose, and glared at the white
face on the pile of pillows in what he meant to be a reassuring way.

Roslyn May shook his head, and clasped his long, thin fingers together.

“Dear me!” exclaimed Dr. Fisher, as he felt something coming in his
eyes that caused him to pull out his big handkerchief, and blow his
nose violently. “You are the last man I should expect to preach pluck
to. You’ve had a double allowance of backbone all your life, I take
it,” he added with a short laugh.

“I used to think that I was the possessor of one,” said Roslyn, weakly
smiling.

“Land alive!” cried the little man, delighted at the smile, and
getting cheerier than ever. “You’ve set us all an example in grit and
endurance. Now, don’t be like a cow that gives a good pail of milk and
then kicks it all over,” and he laughed again. “That’s New England
advice; you know I was raised on a farm,” he added.

“I’ve had my death-blow in this fever,” said Roslyn, the smile dying
all out, and turning his face on the pillow. “We shall only be
separated again; for Mr. King will never”--

The little doctor sprang to his side. He had fainted. And in the next
few days, when the fever came back again, each one looked into the
other’s face with despair. All except Phronsie herself.

“Oh, I can_not_ endure it!” It was Charlotte Chatterton who said this.
Charlotte, who had just come, walking in suddenly, with no word of
greeting, or expecting any. She just went up to Mother Fisher, and put
her two hands into the firm ones extended.

“Hush!” said Mother Fisher through white lips. “You will say something
you will be sorry for afterward, maybe, Charlotte.”

Charlotte bit her lip. “Let me help; give me something to do,” she
begged. “No, I don’t want to go to Phronsie yet; it would kill me to
see her suffer. I can_not_ bear it, dear Mrs. Fisher.”

“Charlotte, could you leave your lessons?” asked Mother Fisher suddenly.

“Yes,” said Charlotte, “it was no use for me to stay away; I got so
nervous I couldn’t sing; and even Herr Mericke said I best take a
little time off, and come and see for myself how you were getting on.
And then Ben’s last letter told me that things were worse than you had
reported. And so here I am;” and she drew a long sigh.

“Charlotte, you don’t know how I have wanted you,” said Mrs. Fisher,
drawing her to her side.

“Have you?” cried Charlotte delightedly. “Oh! if I had only known how
badly things were going, I should have dropped everything and come
before.”

“That is precisely the reason,” said Mother Fisher, “why I wouldn’t
let you be told, Charlotte.”

“Where’s Charlotte?” asked Phronsie, hearing some one call her name in
Mamsie’s room.

“You needn’t see her, dear; Charlotte will wait. Do, Phronsie, try and
get some rest,” said Polly.

Phronsie, in her soft white wrapper on the sofa, got up and went to the
door. “Is she in Mamsie’s room?” she asked.

“I’ll call her,” said Polly, “if you’ll only let me tuck you up on the
sofa again, Phronsie.”

“Yes, I will, Polly,” said Phronsie, obediently going back, “if you
will only call Charlotte in.”

So Polly tucked her up, and then ran into Mother Fisher’s room.
“Charlotte, you’re to come,” she said, picking her by the sleeve.

“Oh, I can’t!” cried Charlotte, edging off toward Mother Fisher.

“But you must,” said Polly imperatively, “for Phronsie has sent for
you.”

“Charlotte,” said Mrs. Fisher, with a smile at the tall girl, “I’ll
trust you.”

So Charlotte went off, with her heart warmed, into Phronsie’s room; and
Polly left them together, and ran away to comfort old Mr. King, who
nowadays would hardly let her out of his sight.

“O Charlotte, how good of you to come!” cried Phronsie, putting up her
lips to be kissed, as Charlotte went unsteadily over to the sofa.

Charlotte kneeled down by the sofa, and got tight hold of Phronsie’s
hands, mumbling something, she couldn’t have told what, determined she
wouldn’t break down.

“Charlotte,” said Phronsie very earnestly, “you are not to feel badly
for me, because I almost know that Roslyn will get well. I almost know
it, Charlotte.”

Charlotte gave a deep groan, and slid down to the floor, where she sat,
hanging to Phronsie’s hands.

“God has kept him for me,” Phronsie went on; “and he has brought us
through just everything, Charlotte, and he is going to let Roslyn get
well, I know. And now I want you to help to make the others feel so
too. Will you, Charlotte?”

But Charlotte couldn’t speak. So Phronsie said, “I am so glad you have
come, Charlotte; for you can help Mamsie to see it--that Roslyn will
get well. Poor Mamsie is so tired too.”

Charlotte buried her face in Phronsie’s soft wrapper, and her shoulders
shook with her efforts not to say anything that she “was to be sorry
for afterward.”

“And Polly is worrying,” said Phronsie as a matter of deep confidence,
and a troubled look came over her face. “O Charlotte! if you can only
help Polly not to worry, it will be just beautiful in you. Will you,
Charlotte?”

Again Charlotte could not speak. “Charlotte,” said Phronsie gently, “I
wish you would let me see your face.”

Charlotte brought her head up suddenly. Both cheeks were very red, and
her lips were pressed tightly together.

“Charlotte!” exclaimed Phronsie with a sudden fear; “are you sick?”

“No,” said Charlotte explosively; “but I am afraid I shall say
something I ought not. O Phronsie, if I only _could_ help you!”

“You can,” said Phronsie quietly. “And O Charlotte! I am so glad you
are not sick;” and she gave a relieved sigh.

“I can’t be any help to anybody,” declared Charlotte, “except to
work. I can work, if there’s anything to do, Phronsie; but as for
influencing any one, or helping them to believe anything, I’m good for
nothing.”

“Charlotte,” said Phronsie affectionately, “you help me ever and ever
so much. And so you do help every one of us. And I will tell you what
you can do for me now. Will you sing to me, Charlotte, just those soft
little things you used to, and hold my hand; and I shall go to sleep.”

So Charlotte grasped the edge of the sofa tightly with one hand while
Phronsie held the other; and sitting there on the floor, she sang over
and over the things that she knew Phronsie wanted.

“Charlotte is singing to Phronsie,” cried David, rushing into
Grandpapa’s room, where Polly and Jasper sat with old Mr. King. “Mamsie
said I was to tell you, Polly, so you needn’t worry, for now she will
go to sleep.”




CHAPTER XXVI.

DESTRUCTION THREATENS THE LITTLE BROWN HOUSE.


“Now,” said Mr. Tisbett, “see here, young man, ef you’re a-goin’ to
ride along with me, you’ve jest got to set still. My senses, that ma of
yourn would give me fits ef anythin’ was to happen to you; though why
she should, I don’t see.”

“Let me have the whip,” cried Johnny, wriggling for the possession of
that article.

“No, you don’t!” declared Mr. Tisbett. “Whoa, there!” this to his
horses. “Now, that Mis’ Lambert wants to go to th’ deepo, I’ll be
bound,” pulling up to a big white house a little back from the road.
“Yis’m,” as a handkerchief waved frantically out of one of the
small-paned windows.

“I want to go to Hubbardville, Mr. Tisbett,” said the woman who held
it.

“Well, if you’re a-goin’ to Hubbardville,” observed the stage-driver,
whipping out a big silver watch, “I take it you better be steppin’
lively, Mis’ Lambert. I’m on my way to th’ deepo now, an’ I don’t come
back this way.”

“Mercy me!” exclaimed Mrs. Lambert, darting away from the window; and
in a minute or two she came out, catching her paisley shawl by its
two ends to tuck them under her arm, while she endeavored to pin her
bonnet-strings.

“Susan,” she called over her shoulder to some one in the entry, “I’ve
forgot my bag.” Then she took out one of the pins which she had hastily
put into her mouth for just such emergencies, and pinned up the long
ribbons that might be said to have seen better days.

“I wish folks would be ready when they hail th’ stage,” observed Mr.
Tisbett to Johnny, not careful in the least to lower his voice from his
ordinary tone. Then he roared out, “Come, Mis’ Lambert, I shall have to
go without you.”

“I’m coming!” said Mrs. Lambert quickly.

“Your bonnet ain’t on straight, ma,” said Susan, coming with the bag to
the doorstone.

Mrs. Lambert put up both hands, and twitched it the wrong way, thereby
letting the paisley shawl slip to the ground.

“That’s worse than ’twas before!” exclaimed Susan, giving the bonnet a
pull that carried up one set of her mother’s puffs as neatly as if she
had been scalped, and sent a side-comb flying to the ground.

“Never mind,” said Mrs. Lambert, putting out her hand for the comb, and
beginning to look around for the shawl. “There, fling it on my arm; I
c’n put it on in th’ stage.”

Mr. Tisbett rattling his whip against the dashboard, she stepped off
the stone at the same minute that Susan twitched the puff into place.
“You tell your pa he’ll find his clean shirt an’ stock on th’ bedroom
bureau,” she called, looking back, “this aft’noon.”

“Yes,” said Susan.

“An’ don’t forgit th’ meat bilin’ in th’ pot.”

“No,” said Susan.

“Air you goin’ to git in?” asked Mr. Tisbett sarcastically, by
this time holding the stage-door open, “or air ye goin’ to hold
conversations only? Please let me know, ma’am, for I’m goin’ to start
this ere stage.”

Here was Johnny’s opportunity. He seized the whip, and brought it
smartly down on the off horse, with the result that Mr. Tisbett was
laid flat on his back on the roadside,--round went the wheels, up flew
the horses’ heels, and, in a cloud of dust, Johnny was driving down the
turnpike.

“Th’ stage is goin’!” exclaimed Mrs. Lambert, starting in dismay, and
huddling up her bag and shawl in a small heap together on her arm; “now
I sha’n’t get to Hubbardville. Oh, be you hurt?” as Mr. Tisbett picked
himself up, and plunged down the road after his vehicle.

He roared to some farmers at work in a field to help in the chase,
pointing frantically to the lumbering stage ahead; but they had already
stared at it, and now stopped to listen to him without stirring a
muscle, as he dashed on. The only thing he could think of by way of
possible comfort, was that the horses, through force of habit, might
take it into their heads to go straight to the depot, which proved to
be the case; Johnny being so paralyzed with the grandeur of driving,
that he held the reins steadily all the way.

The only passenger in the stage, a woman with a big bandbox, got out
more dead than alive, as the horses swung up to the little station; and
the men collected there waiting for the train to come, wrenched Johnny,
notwithstanding his howls, from his seat and down to the platform.

“Who is that boy?” demanded the passenger when she could get her breath.

“He b’longs to Mrs. Fargo, one o’ th’ rich folks that’s stayin’ here
this summer,” said one man, rolling his quid over to the other cheek.

“Rich, is he?” the woman set down her bandbox, and advanced to Johnny.
“Well, I’m goin’ to shake that boy, ’cause I know his folks won’t; an’
I want to see it done.” And before any one could put up a hand, she
seized Johnny’s sailor-collar, and shook him smartly. Then she picked
up her bandbox, patted out her dress in satisfaction, and sat down to
wait for the train.

Mr. Tisbett, running along quite blown, came up just then, as Johnny
ran to the woman.

“You shook me,” said Johnny, with blazing cheeks.

“I know it,” said the woman grimly; “an’ if I had time before the train
comes, an’ wasn’t so beat out with th’ shock, I’d do it again.”

Johnny clinched his small hands, and beat the air fruitlessly. “I’ll
tell Mr. King,” he howled.

“Hey? What’s that you say?” cried the woman.

“I’ll tell Mr. King,” screamed Johnny, quite red in the face.

“What’s that boy got to do with the Kings?” said the woman to Mr.
Tisbett; “hurry up and tell me, ’cause the train’s comin’. Mercy! I
wouldn’t ’a’ shook anybody they know, for nothin’.”

But there was no time to explain; and she was helped on the train, with
her bandbox, saying the last thing, “I wouldn’t have shook him for
nothin’, if I’d known”--

There was only one passenger for Mr. Tisbett’s stage,--an old colored
woman with a big-figured lace veil over her face and a variety of
bundles. The stage-driver settled her and her belongings within the
vehicle, then he turned off for Johnny.

“Yes, sir-ee!” dragging him along by his big collar; “you’re goin’ to
set inside, after that ’xploit. Now, marm,” as they reached the stage,
“will you have the goodness to keep an eye on that boy,” hoisting
Johnny in; “an’ where do you want to stop?”

“To Mr. Jasper King’s,” answered the woman. “Land! but ef here ain’t
Johnny Fargo! I done am s’prised”--

“O Candace!” screamed Johnny, tumbling all over her, “did you bring
some red-and-white drops?”

“Yes,” said Candace, “I did; but they’s fer”--

“Look out for him!” screamed Mr. Tisbett, clapping to the door to fly
to his seat. Then he gave the horses their heads, and presently swung
up to “The Oaks” in his usual fine style; for nothing but the best
flourish would satisfy him there.

Candace got out of the stage as leisurely as she could, with Johnny
hauling at her, and insisting that he must carry all the bundles; and
Mr. Tisbett drove off toward Hubbardville.

The big mansion was very still as Candace waddled up the
carriage-drive, with Johnny spilling portions of his armful as he
went along, and then hurrying back to pick them up. “Land!” exclaimed
Candace, toiling on, “if I ain’t glad to get here to see my bressed
folks an’ s’prise dem. I hain’t slept a week o’ nights sence dey done
lef dere ole home. Whew! Ise all out o’ bref.”

“We don’t want to buy anything,” said one of the maids coming out to
the side porch, and looking at the big bag on the old colored woman’s
arm, Johnny being back of the evergreens around one of the curves,
picking up the last article dropped.

“Who’s asked yer to buy anyting?” demanded Candace in scorn, and
seating herself on one of the steps, utterly unable to go farther. “Yer
speak to Mrs. Jasper King as quick as you kin, or to him.”

“Mrs. Jasper King isn’t home. They aren’t any of them home; they’ve
gone abroad,” said the maid.

“Whar’s abroad?” screamed Candace, letting her bag roll out of her
hands to the ground.

“Oh! over to England; and then they were going to Rome,” said the maid
coolly.

“O my bressed chilluns!” mourned Candace, swinging her heavy body
back and forth on the step, while she wrung her black hands. Johnny
staggered up with all the parcels.

“It’s Candace,” screamed Johnny. “Hannah, don’t you know, she lives
where I do when I’m home, and where Mr. King used to live before he
came here. Now will you give me some red-and-white drops?” He deposited
all the bundles on the floor of the porch, and hugged up to the big
black figure.

[Illustration: “‘O my bressed chilluns!’ mourned Candace.”]

Hannah ran to call Mrs. Higby, who sent her for Mrs. Fargo; but she had
gone over to Grandma Bascom’s, it being her morning for that duty, so
the maid hurried down the lane to the little cottage. “O Mrs. Fargo!”
she exclaimed, hurriedly entering. “Oh! where is she?” as the old lady
sat up against her pillows, the only occupant of the room.

“Hey?” said Grandma.

“Where is Mrs. Fargo?” called Hannah excitedly.

“I can’t hear what you say,” replied old Mrs. Bascom, putting one hand
behind her ear.

“I say I want to know where”--

“No, I don’t want anythin’,” said Grandma, dropping her hand, and
settling back into a good position again. “I’m pretty comf’able this
morning, Hannah.”

“Do you know where Mrs. Fargo went to?” cried Hannah in a loud, excited
key, and running everything together. “When did she leave here?”

“Hey?” cried Grandma.

So Hannah had to shout it all over again, till she was quite exhausted;
then she began to content herself with one word, “Fargo,” which she
said over and over.

“She’s just gone,” at last said old Mrs. Bascom.

“Where?” cried the maid, her mouth close to the old lady’s cap-frills.

“Down to th’ village to get me some med’cine,” said Grandma. So
Hannah flew out and over home, and Mrs. Higby sent one of the men in a
pony-cart for Mrs. Fargo. By this time Candace was in a truly dreadful
state with longing to see the face of this old friend. As that lady
used to go with members of the King household to the little shop on
Temple Place, the poor old black woman thought if she could only catch
a sight of Mrs. Fargo, she would somehow get nearer to her “bressed
chilluns.”

“How she does act, doesn’t she, Mrs. Higby?” cried Johnny, who now gave
up all thoughts of the red-and-white drops, and crowding up to compass
as much of this new excitement as possible.

“Hum! I don’t know as she’s any worse actin’ than some other folks not
a thousand miles away,” said Mrs. Higby. “Well, I wish to goodness your
ma would come;” and she hurried to crane her neck out of the window.
“Now, thank fortune,” she cried joyfully, “here she is! Now, Johnny,
you run off an’ play, that’s a good boy,” as Mrs. Fargo hurried in.

Johnny, thus dismissed, ran down the terraces, and over in the
direction of the little brown house. He was never allowed to go in it
without a maid, but this morning he determined to peep in one of the
windows, “Just to see if everything’s there,” he said; and then, after
that performance was over to his satisfaction, he began to play that
he was really going in, and that he lived there, just as the little
Peppers had told about so many times. And then he tried every door; and
at last, to his astonishment, found the one in the “Provision Room”
unlocked, as a careless maid who had been cleaning there that very
morning, under Mrs. Higby’s direction, had left it.

“Oh, goody!” cried Johnny gleefully, racing in; “now I’m a little
Pepper. I’m Joel--no, I don’t want to be Joel. I’m David--no, I don’t
want to be David, either. I’ll be Ben--I’ll be Ben and Joel and David
and all of ’em,” he declared, hurrying around. “Now, what shall I play
first? I’ll--I’ll”--

His eyes fell on the stove. “I’m going to have a baking-day all to
myself!” he cried in joyful tones, and capering in the middle of the
kitchen. “Oh, won’t that be fine! And when they see what splendid cakes
I can bake, they won’t care. Phooh! I can make better things than any
of ’em, I b’lieve. And I know how to make the fire too.” He was now so
busy that the old kitchen presented the appearance of being the scene
of the most active operations of a dozen small boys, as he brought
flour, trailing it all over the neat floor, and sugar and molasses from
the buttery, leaving a chain of sticky drops everywhere he stepped, to
run and get the rolling-pin and handsful of dishes.

“I better make my fire first,” he said in the midst of this, and
dropping everything where he stood. “Now I must get the paper and the
wood;” and he scuttled off to the “Provision Room” to bring them in.
Then, stuffing them into the stove as tightly as he could cram them,
Johnny backed off, and surveyed his work in great pride.

“Now, I know where the matches are kept,” he cried in a jubilant
voice--“in the little blue dish on the shelf;” so pulling up a chair,
he soon had them in his hand, and drawing one as he ran back, he had a
merry little light that made him crow gleefully.

“There, now, sir-ee!” he cried, holding this to a bunch of paper that
stuck up one end out of the stove; “you’ll burn, I guess, when _I_ get
hold of you. Yes, sir-ee!” but the fire running down the match-end and
nipping his fingers, he twitched them off, to wipe them hastily on his
blouse; what there was left of the match tumbling down back of him, in
a small heap of paper and shavings that wouldn’t go into the stove.

Johnny rubbed his hands together joyfully, and hopped up and down
before the stove. “Oh, what cakes I will bake!” he cried. “And perhaps
I’ll put white on top of some of ’em; I haven’t decided yet. And I’ll
make a gingerbread boy--I’ll make a dozen gingerbread boys--I’ll--”

Just here his little legs felt warm; and he backed off from the stove
and whirled around to cool off a bit, to see the heap of papers and
shavings on the floor, in the merriest little blaze imaginable, while
one small tongue of flame reached out and licked his blouse.

Johnny gave one scream and rushed out; the little tongue of flame
persisting in staying on his blouse, while the other little flames left
behind in the old kitchen, every second growing big and strong, were
having a jolly time of it.

“_Fire!_” screamed Johnny, leaving wide the “Provision Room” door as he
bounded off across the lane.

[Illustration: Johnny whirled around to see the heap of papers and
shavings on the floor in the merriest little blaze imaginable.]

“Hillo!” cried Patsy, who came around the palings to look at him, but
not hearing what he said as he rushed madly off for the terraces. “Oh,
murther--murther!”

He cleared everything between Johnny and himself by one or two bounds,
and soon had him rolling over and over on the grass. “Now, to make
_absolutely_ sure,” said Patsy at last, “I’m going to turn the hose on
ye. Been building a bonfire somewheres, I s’pose.”

“There’s more of it in there,” said Johnny, and finding his voice to
point a shaking finger in the direction of the little brown house.

“Where?”

“There.”

No need to ask now. Smoke was coming out of the little brown house
“Provision Room” door. Patsy yelled “_Fire!_” as loud as he could
scream, and dashed down to it. In less time than it takes to tell it,
every man on the place was busy, working with a will to save the little
brown house. The big mansion was deserted of all. Even Candace forgot
her misery and desolation, to waddle as fast as she could to the scene,
wringing her hands and crying as she went.




CHAPTER XXVII.

PHRONSIE’S MARRIAGE BELLS!


Oh, the dear, precious little brown house!

How they worked--every man, woman, and child on the place--to save it!
There was no time for the fire-department down in the village to get
there, although the private alarm from “The Oaks” was sounded. What was
to be done, must be done quickly; and everybody took hold and did the
thing that seemed nearest and best.

Mrs. Higby passed pails of water as rapidly as if her hands and feet
were young; preferring the old-fashioned ways of putting out a fire
to the long lines of hose that the stable-men soon had in and around
the little brown house. Candace, who immediately found that when she
could work for her “bressed folks” she wasn’t lonely, waddled in and
out, carrying everything she could lay her hands on, out to the grass
in safety, despite the fact that she was invited several times by the
workers who didn’t know her, to “get out of the way.”

“Git out ob de way, you’d tell me, pore w’ite trash, you!” Candace
would mutter to herself at such times, smothering her wrath as best she
could till she was sure the little brown house was safe; then she would
teach these servants, one and all, that she was “a relict,” and had
lived with Mr. King’s folks long before they were born. “Tink dey kin
teach _me_,” fumed Candace under her turban, waddling on fiercely.

And after the last vestige of the dreadful flame was out, and the smoke
cleared away, it was found that nothing was burned that would bring
sorrow to one of the “Five Little Peppers.”

Mamsie’s rocking-chair, in which she used to sit in the old days,
sewing the coats and sacks to keep the wolf from the door, was carried
out, the little old cushion blazing at one end; but quick hands had
beaten out the fire, so this was saved. And though the fire had run
along the trail of shavings and paper dropped from Johnny’s armful,
as he carried it in from the “Provision Room,” strange to say, beyond
making dreadful black marks on the old kitchen floor to show its
progress, and the scorching of the cupboard door, no damage was done.
And then everybody drew a long breath, and stopped working, to gaze
into each other’s faces; for the little brown house was safe!

And just then up clattered the village fire-department, and right back
of them appeared Alexia, who, coming out of the post-office to drive to
“The Oaks,” when told the news, made her pony run at top speed, so that
she reached the scene almost at the same moment.

Patsy, who always ran to Mrs. Dodge’s aid, saw her first, and tore
across the lawn, to catch the reins as she flung them to him.

“Is it the little brown house?” gasped Alexia, not daring to look in
that direction, as she jumped out.

“Yes, ma’am,” said Patsy.

“Is it gone? all gone?” she screamed. Then she sat right down on the
bank, and burst into tears.

“No, ma’am!” cried Patsy; “sure it’s not.”

“Not out? Oh, dear, dear, dear!” cried Alexia, waving back and forth in
distress; “it will kill them all. We might as well all be dead as to
have the little brown house burnt up. Oh, dear--dear--dear!”

[Illustration: “‘We might as well all be dead, as to have the little
brown house burnt up,’ said Alexia.”]

“It’s there!” cried Patsy, extending all the fingers of one hand to
point at it; “a-standing just as nice and”--

Alexia sprang to her feet, and seized his arm. “Patsy!” she cried, “do
you mean to tell me that if I turn around I shall see the little brown
house the same as ever?”

“Yis’m,” said Patsy; “if you opens your eyes you will.”

Mrs. Dodge whirled around and took one look; then she sped on light
feet over the terraces and across the lawn.

“She rins like a birud would fly,” said Patsy, watching her;
“dishdainin’ the ground like”--then he hopped into her cart, and drove
it around to the stables. “If ye could turn yere hose onto that boy as
did it, it ud be a blessing,” he said to the firemen.

“Don’t say a word,” said Mrs. Higby, flushed and anxious, “Johnny’s
badly burned; and you must run for Dr. Porter, Patsy.”

“Burned is he?” cried Patsy, and his face fell; for Johnny was a great
favorite of his, despite his words; and he rushed off in Mrs. Dodge’s
pony-cart.

Alexia, after first satisfying herself by investigation that the little
brown house was really safe, and that the precious things huddled out
on the grass were not all burnt up, rushed off to find some one who
could tell her all about it. The first person she ran against was
Candace.

“Oh, my goodness me!” cried Alexia gustily; “how did you get here,
Candace?”

“It’s a mercy I did come,” said Candace, not stopping to answer the
question; “for I don’ know wot dey’d done widout me. Wy, _I_ brung out
mos’ o’ dem tings,” sweeping her black arm over toward the household
treasures on the lawn. “I brung de little cheer, an’ de”--

“Yes, yes,” said Alexia. “Well, how _did_ it ever happen?”

“An’ I brung de tea-kettle an’ de plates an’”--

“Yes, well, never mind those now!” exclaimed Alexia impatiently; “do
tell me, how did it ever happen?”

“Chile,” said Candace, “nebber min’ how it done happen--de ting now is,
who had sense enough to ’tend to gettin’ out de tings. Wot dey’d done
ef I hadn’t a-come I d’no eber in all dis worl’”--

“Hannah!” cried Mrs. Dodge in despair to the maid hurrying by, “do you
know? Tell me, how came the little brown house to be on fire?”

“Johnny Fargo went in and played making a fire,” said Hannah.

“Johnny Fargo! Oh, the little scamp!” cried Alexia; “now that boy ought
to have a good drubbing,” she cried, quite beside herself.

“There can’t anybody give it to him,” said Hannah, hurrying on,
“because he’s burnt, and the doctor’s coming.”

“Oh, the pore leetle lamb!” exclaimed Candace, raising her black
hands; “now I must nuss him. He was so good to bring up my passels,
an’ to wait on me in--well, well, I d’no know wot dey’d have done ef I
hadn’t ’a’ come;” and she waddled off, Mrs. Dodge closely following,
remorsefully determining to do everything in the world now for Johnny
instead of the drubbing.

And so it turned out that the two letters in her pocket she had just
taken out of the post-office when she heard of the fire, remained there
forgotten until the doctor had dressed Johnny’s burns and gone, and she
had Mrs. Fargo on the sofa in Polly’s room, where they had fled for
refuge.

“There, now, you ought not to cry, you know, Mrs. Fargo,” she said.
“Oh, dear me! what would Polly Pepper say to you if she were here? I’m
good for nothing; but you really ought not.”

“Oh, I cannot help it!” cried Mrs. Fargo, deep in her handkerchief. “My
poor little boy! and then to think of that precious house--why, if he’d
set this one on fire, it wouldn’t have been one-half as bad.”

“Well, it didn’t burn up,” cried Alexia, twitching her sleeve, “so
what’s the use of crying now. Oh, dear me--why, here are the letters!”
and she tore them out of her pocket. “One for you, and one for me--from
Polly!” and in a minute she was deep in hers.

Mrs. Fargo, just commencing to read the heading of her own letter,
heard a funny little sound; and glancing up, saw Alexia making every
effort to speak, her face working dreadfully. The letter had fallen
from her hands to the floor.

“Oh! what is it?” cried poor Mrs. Fargo, feeling that this day must
be bewitched, and dreading she knew not what; and she jumped up, too
frightened now to cry, and ran to Polly’s toilet-table for salts.

“Read--read--your letter!” gasped Alexia.

“Oh, I can’t, if it’s bad news!” cried Mrs. Fargo, shrinking and
trembling. “Where are they--oh, here!” She brought the bottle of salts,
and held it to Alexia’s nose.

“Phronsie Pepper is married!” cried Alexia, twitching away her head.

“_Phronsie Pepper is married?_” repeated Mrs. Fargo blankly.

“The very day that Polly wrote,” declared Alexia tragically; then she
made a dive for her letter on the floor.

“Read it, Alexia,” begged Mrs. Fargo, “for I can’t;” and she sank down
on the sofa, and wound her arms around Mrs. Dodge.

“And I’m sure I want to hold on to somebody too,” declared Alexia.
“Oh, dear me, Mrs. Fargo, to think you and I won’t ever see Phronsie
married! Oh, dear, dear!” and the tears of vexation sprang to her eyes.
“And it will almost kill Polly not to have the wedding here--and all
the hosts and hosts of friends Phronsie Pepper has, and--what shall we
do?”

“We can’t do anything,” breathed Mrs. Fargo; “it’s already done--do
read it all,” she added faintly.

So Alexia dashed ahead,--

                                   “‘HOTEL COSTANZI, ROME, _July, 18--_.

“‘DEAR ALEXIA,--

“‘You are to be very glad to begin with, at the piece of news I shall
tell you right away. And that is, that Phronsie was married this
morning to Roslyn May.’--

“Glad! Indeed I’m not!” cried Alexia; “to go and steal such a march
on you and me and all her piles of friends, Mrs. Fargo--and _such_ a
wedding as we’d have given her.”

“The precious dear,” murmured Mrs. Fargo. “Go on, Alexia.”

Alexia sniffed off two or three disappointed tears, and rushed on,--

“‘It was just this way. You see, Roslyn, poor boy, got it into his
head that Grandpapa would separate them again, though of course that
was the fever, and because he had suffered so much since he had last
seen Phronsie; and although he got better, and it seemed as if he were
coming up finely, he brooded so over that idea that Papa-Doctor got
quite in despair. And then Father King’--

“Can’t you see Polly’s face when she is going to tell something
splendid about Mr. King,” cried Alexia, glancing down the page. “Oh,
dear me!--where was I,” going back again, “oh,--‘and then Father King
was just royal! He told Phronsie that all he cared for was to make
her happy, and that nothing would make him so happy as to have the
marriage take place here; and they were just going to tell Roslyn, when
Papa-Doctor sent them word that Roslyn was worse. And then those were
just dreadful days; for the fever came back, and Phronsie smiled when
we looked troubled at her; but she was just like a shadow--so thin and
so white. O Alexia, I can’t bear to think of those days! Charlotte
Chatterton came from Germany, and she was such a comfort; but we all
just clung to each other in despair. Only Phronsie kept saying she knew
Roslyn would get well.’

“This is very dreadful,” sniffed Alexia, wiping away the tears
furtively. At last she just let them rain down. “I’m a miserable,
selfish little pig,” she said, “not to be glad to have her married
there.”

“O poor Phronsie!” sighed Mrs. Fargo, “and poor Polly, and all.”

“‘And--and’” went on Alexia recovering her place in her letter, “‘and
one day when everything seemed the blackest, and as if we couldn’t bear
it another minute longer, Roslyn came up again. And then Grandpapa told
him how everything was to be as he wished. Well, from that moment,
Alexia, the world was bright again, and the sun shone, and we all were
as glad as glad could be: and Roslyn just adores Grandpapa. You can’t
think how devoted they are to each other. And so everything was quickly
arranged--for who do you think should drop down suddenly but Roslyn’s
father, General May! Now, wasn’t that perfectly lovely! I always
suspect that Father King sent for him, though he doesn’t say so.’

“Just think how all those people had Phronsie to themselves,”
mourned Alexia, who, now that Roslyn was mending, returned to her
own grievances. “And Grace Tupper too--she was at that wedding; and
Pickering and you and I, Mrs. Fargo, left out in the cold.”

“I know it,” sighed Mrs. Fargo; “well, go on, Alexia.”

“Oh, dear me! well, where was I? Oh--‘and so this morning Phronsie and
Roslyn were married. Roslyn was very weak; but he was lifted out of
his chair, and insisted on standing during a part of the ceremony. And
Joel married them beautifully. And Grandpapa gave Phronsie away.’

“Oh dear, dear!” screamed Alexia, quite carried out of herself, “why
_couldn’t_ we have been there!

“‘And Roslyn’s just as beautiful and splendid, and he’s my brother
now,’” Polly’s letter went on; “‘and I’m so happy, Alexia, about it,
you can’t think. And Phronsie wore one of her white muslin dresses, and
carried the white prayer-book that Roslyn gave her; and she was married
with his mother’s ring he had worn all these years. And Roslyn looked
like one of the pictures of the young gods, he was so handsome; and
Phronsie--well, she was our Phronsie! Oh! and Roslyn’s work, begun in
his studio, is considered most remarkable. He is surely, so we are told
on all sides, to be one of the foremost sculptors of the age. And you
can’t think how proud Grandpapa is of him!’

“‘And now, you poor dear! I know how badly you feel not to have
Phronsie married at home.’”

Alexia gave a deep groan, as if words were beyond her.

“‘And that you couldn’t even see her married. Well, now, Alexia,
Phronsie wants me to tell you a piece of news, a secret just yet, only
for you and Pickering and dear Mrs. Fargo to know. Roslyn and she are
to live in the little brown house; and he is to build a studio in the
meadow back of it, and not go to Rome only once in a while, when they
want to travel. Did you ever hear of anything so splendid!’”

Alexia squealed in delight; then her sallow cheek turned quite white.
“Mrs. Fargo,” and she clutched that lady’s arm, “suppose, only suppose
for an instant, that it had burned down this morning!

“‘And we are to give her and Roslyn the most beautiful marriage
reception. Oh, you can’t think how beautiful it will all be at “The
Oaks” when they come home’--

“Oh!” squealed Alexia, again seizing Mrs. Fargo by the arm; “now, you
and I will have our good time, won’t we, for being cheated out of all
the rest? It’s too splendid for anything! Mrs. Fargo, I never thought
of the welcome-home party we could give them! Why, that will be almost
as good as having Phronsie married here;” and she jumped off the sofa,
and began to pirouette around the room. “But how can we ever plan it
with Polly away?” and she came to a sudden stop, her brow wrinkling in
perplexity.

“You better finish your letter,” advised Mrs. Fargo. “Polly probably
has something to say on that point. Then you can jump, Alexia, all you
want to.”

So Alexia flew back to her letter. “Where was I? Oh--at ‘“The Oaks”
when they come home. We are coming first, Jasper and I, with the
children and Grace, who has been the dearest little comfort in all this
world. Joel and David, of course, must get back as soon as possible, so
they are coming with us. Ben will stay with Mamsie and Dr. Fisher, and
Grandpapa and Phronsie and Roslyn, a few weeks longer; and then they
will all come home together, and bring Charlotte Chatterton with them.’

“Oh, goody, goody!” exclaimed Alexia, beating her palms together in
joy. “And I’ll venture to say that then you’ll see I’m right, my dear
Mrs. Fargo, about Charlotte Chatterton and Ben.”

“Maybe so,” said Mrs. Fargo wisely. “Well, is that all?”

“Um--um--let me see,” said Alexia, whirling the letter again; “yes,
except--‘I have written a letter with all these details to dear Mrs.
Fargo--and I know you go to see dear Grandma Bascom every day, Alexia;
and do tell her all this that I have told you, and that, please God, we
shall be home, the first party of us, very soon now. And then, dear,
won’t you and I plan for Phronsie’s home-coming!’

“Won’t we, though!” cried Alexia with shining eyes. “Well,” drawing a
long breath, “I must hurry off and tell Grandma Bascom all the news;
and then, says I, I must let that blessed baby know all about it.”




CHAPTER XXVIII.

HOME TO THE LITTLE BROWN HOUSE.


Polly and Jasper and the children were home once more, and everything
was back in the old ways, with Joel in his parish, and David in his
instructor’s chair at the college. And now an intense excitement filled
all the minds of the “Peppers” and their friends over the approaching
“Welcome-Home” they were to give Phronsie.

“It shall be just as splendid as the wedding would have been!” declared
Alexia positively. “Just as bride-y and stunning as it can possibly
be!” she would cry, on one of her rushing-in-and-out visits to “The
Oaks.”

“Do tell me, _are_ the Dunraven Home children surely to be here?” she
asked one day, bursting into Polly’s room, to find her surrounded
by a cloud of white muslin, and clashing her scissors in and out of
little skirt breadths. “Oh, my goodness me! what _are_ you doing, Polly
Pepper?”

“Yes,” cried Polly happily, and sending her scissors down another
breadth; “and these are their dresses, Alexia. Don’t you want to get
another pair of scissors, and help cut off the skirts? Miss Bangs down
in the village is going to make them.”

“Yes, indeed!” cried Alexia, plunging over to Polly’s neat work-basket.
“Oh, dear!” as she rummaged it; “I can’t find another pair, Polly!”

“In the sewing-room,” said Polly, fluttering the cloud busily, to
measure another breadth.

“I’ll set that basket to rights when I come back, for I’ve messed it
up dreadfully,” cried Alexia, flying off, to return with a pair which
she brandished high. “Oh, dear me, Polly Pepper, will you ever in this
world get through with all you’ve on your hands, I wonder! How many
Dunraven youngsters are coming?”

“Twenty,” said Polly, her head on one side, calculating; “that is, Mrs.
Henderson thinks that it is safe to plan to bring as many. And Susan is
really to sing a Welcome-Home song, as they march around Phronsie and
Roslyn.”

“Oh, how perfectly sweet!” breathed Alexia, already deep in the
cutting-off process. “Dear me, how do you keep yours straight? Mine
all skews up.”

“You better draw a thread, then,” advised Polly; “unless you can follow
your eye.”

“My eye is as crooked as can be,” declared Alexia; “I’m in such a
twitter. Well, isn’t it just too lovely that Susan is really to sing.
Phronsie will be delighted. Dear me, don’t you remember how Susan
roared that first day she came, and how she looked--little black image,
I can see her now, sitting up there on a cricket on the platform. I was
frightened to death, and expected she’d break the whole thing up; and
now how good she is, and quite the pride of Phronsie’s heart.”

“Oh! it will be a perfect surprise, I think,” hummed Polly
ecstatically. “Oh! and the village children are going to be at the
station when the trains gets in, with baskets of flowers, and throw
blossoms in Phronsie’s path.”

“Are they?” cried Alexia in delight; “oh, my!”

“Yes, they’ve begged to,” said Polly; “and we are going to let them do
whatever they wish. Phronsie belongs to them too, Alexia, you know.”

“Yes, I know,” said Alexia.

“Polly!” called Jasper, over the stairs.

So Polly threw down the muslin cloud, and ran to meet him.

“Here’s Mr. Tisbett wants to say something,” said Jasper with a smile.
“Now, then,” to the stage-driver, “say just what is on your mind, Mr.
Tisbett.”

“I want to know,” began Mr. Tisbett, shuffling uneasily from one foot
to the other, “’hem--if you’ll let me drive Miss Phronsie an’ her
husband home here from the deepo?”

“I don’t understand,” began Polly.

“In the stage, ye know,” said Mr. Tisbett. “If ye could now let me, I’d
be ’bleeged to ye. Seems if ’twould set me up fer th’ rest o’ my life.
I want to do somethin’ fer that blessed child I’ve seen grow up from a
baby;” and he covered his face with his big hand.

“And so you shall!” cried Polly, seizing his other horny palm, and
ashamed of herself for the dismay that swept over her at this plan,
that would deprive Jasper and her from driving Phronsie and Roslyn up
to “The Oaks.” “Indeed, it is lovely of you, Mr. Tisbett, to think
of it;” which thrilled the honest stage-driver with delight to his
finger-tips.

“An’ I want to hev the priv’lege to drive yer par up too,” said Mr.
Tisbett, turning to Jasper a face covered with confusion. “Land, but
when I think how I shook him up that fust time he ever come here,--an’
I can’t never forget it,--I want to do somethin’ fer him too.”

“Father forgot all about that a long time ago, Mr. Tisbett,” said
Jasper simply, “and so must you.”

“Land, but you can fergit a thing teetotally when you’re the one it’s
done to,” said Mr. Tisbett, scratching his head awkwardly. “Well,
if he’ll only fergive me enough to let me drive him up too, I’ll be
mortally obleeged.” He peered anxiously into Jasper’s face.

“I can answer for father,” cried Jasper heartily; “that he’ll be glad
to have you drive him up here, and it’s very kind of you to think of
it;” and he shook the honest stage-driver’s hand so cordially that Mr.
Tisbett shambled off delightedly.

[Illustration: “‘An’ I want to hev the priv’lege to drive yer par up
too,’ said Mr. Tisbett.”]

And the old church where Phronsie had gone since babyhood, and Mr.
Henderson had preached so long, was to peal its new chimes for the
first time when she came back to Badgertown again. This the people had
begged. The meeting-house was still standing it is true; but it had
been Mr. King’s work, when he gave up his old home to be with Polly
and Jasper, to make it just such a church as Badgertown had longed for.

Oh, and Grandma Bascom was to be brought over in a chair, and have the
seat of honor on the lawn: for this was to be an out-of-door _fête_
for Phronsie, when the day after the arrival the wedding-party at
“The Oaks” would take place, to which all Badgertown was invited, in
addition to the hosts and hosts of other friends.

And the Beebes and Mr. and Mrs. Babbidge and the “Scrannage girls,”
all had very especial invitations; Miss Sally composing a neat little
piece that would tell Mr. King how thankful they were for the old home
saved to them, and that would supplement nicely Miss Belinda’s stiff
note, written after the first shock of finding the check was over. For
the old Scrannage pride had somehow melted away, in a fashion that
probably would have surprised the old squire, who had not much else to
hand down to them but his crotchety disposition and the mortgage. And
Bella Drysdale was invited to stay a few days with Grace, who was in
the seventh heaven of delight that Phronsie Pepper was now really her
cousin.

And dear Mrs. Beebe had a pretty new cap that had a great deal of pink
ribbon about it, that Phronsie had bought abroad for her, and sent home
by Polly. Barby and Elyot begged so hard to carry the box containing it
down to the little shoe-shop, that they were bundled into the pony-cart
one fine morning, and Johnson took them down, each holding fast to the
box between them. And old Mr. Beebe protested, at the trying on that
began at once, that he never had seen a cap in all his life that was
so beautiful nor so becoming--oh! and the shops in the village were
all to be closed on the day of the _fête_, so that everybody, old as
well as young, could be at “The Oaks.” And the long supper-tables were
to be set on the upper lawn, and the lower as well, where the terraces
ended; and the little brown house, filled like a very bower of flowers,
would be open from morning till night to guests--for was not this to be
Phronsie’s own dear, sweet home?

Oh! and the ground was broken a little distance off in the beautiful
old meadow, where the “Five Little Peppers” used to play when any
moments in their busy childhood allowed; and there, near the old
apple-tree, was to be laid the corner-stone--a beautiful block of
marble from Roslyn’s Roman studio--of the new studio that was to rise
very soon. And this was to be put in place on the _fête_ day.

Was there anything that was beautiful and bright and joyful that was
not to be crowded into that blessed day?

And Johnny Fargo, his burns all well, after many repentant talks
cuddled up in Polly’s lap, was comforted. And one day he tugged in a
poor, lean cat, found nobody knew where. “She’ll like it,” he said
stoutly, “when she comes home; and I shall give it to her.”

And every farmhouse dotted here and there around the hill that
overtopped Badgertown Centre had letters from city folk for the next
two weeks, to know if they would take boarders about that time, and
there wasn’t a farmer’s wife who said “No.” And the hotel in Hingham
had all it could do to get ready for the friends who were going there.
And the steamer was hurrying over the sea, that was bringing Phronsie
and her husband, Grandpapa, Mamsie, little Doctor Fisher, Charlotte
Chatterton, and Ben.

At last the day arrived, one of September’s most golden ones, when Mr.
Marlowe telegraphed, “Steamer in. Take the 12.10 train for Badgertown.”
And all the good old town, in waiting for this same beautiful message,
hurried to the little station, at the signal from the church chimes.

The schoolma’am down at the little schoolhouse on the road to Spot Pond
dismissed her scholars instantly on the first note, and tied on her
bonnet, locked her door, and put the key in her pocket, to hurry off
with the rest.

Over the roads to the little station they came by twos and threes,
and in wagons and carryalls, and everything that could be drawn by a
horse. And down around the hill wound an ox-team or two; and every
child held a little nosegay--and then there were the flower maidens,
gay with their baskets of blooms. Oh, old Badgertown was in its gala
dress! While as for the small station, when they arrived it looked like
a flower-garden indeed!

“How can we ever wait, Jasper?” cried Polly, the color flying in and
out of her cheeks, as they found their way out, from among the groups
of waiting people, to the end of the platform; “isn’t it almost time
they should be here?”

“Almost,” said Jasper with shining eyes, and looking at his watch for
the fiftieth time; “only ten more minutes, Polly, and the train will be
due.”

“Ten horrible minutes!” cried Polly, wrinkling her brows. “O Jasper!
keep me off here, or I shall disgrace myself before Barby and Elyot.
They are so patient,” with a glance in their direction.

“Good reason why,” said Jasper with a laugh; “they’ve all those
flower-girls and nosegay children to supervise. See! they are in the
very thickest of the crowd, Polly.”

“Well, they must come with us,” said Polly in a tremor, “or they’ll
lose the first sight. Oh, do bring them, Jasper!”

“And Johnny and King,” cried Jasper, flying off. “Here, you children,
the whole bunch of you, this way!”

But Barby and Elyot, deep in the charms of the Badgertown children,
were so excited that they did not hear. “I’ll get ’em,” said Johnny
running up; and immediately he dashed off and flushed and triumphant,
brought the two little Kings.

“Children,” said Polly with a happy ring in her voice, “you’ll lose
seeing Aunt Phronsie and Uncle Roslyn come in if you do not stand close
by papa and me. Thank you, Johnny,” with a bright smile to him “for
telling them.”

“And I’ll get King now,” cried Johnny, his little heart bumping with
pleasure that he had helped Mrs. King. “Hooray, here, King!” and he
flashed off at a sight of him in one of the groups, while Barby and
Elyot, aghast at what they might have missed, clung close to Polly’s
hand.

Just then up stepped the first selectman, and touched his hat, “We’ve
arranged a place for you, Mr. King and Mrs. King and family,” he said,
“if you’ll come this way.” And he led off importantly through the
groups of townspeople, to whom Polly nodded happily and Jasper raised
his hat, to the other end of the platform. And there, on a staging a
little higher than the platform, and trimmed about with evergreens and
flowers, was a little waiting-place reserved for them.

“Oh, how perfectly lovely, Mr. Bunce,” cried Polly, “for you to do all
this for us!”

“It is so good of you,” said Jasper heartily.

“Ye can see the train come in around the curve,” said Mr. Bunce
straightening up, with conscious pride in every feature of his face.
“And the conductor’s goin’ to stop it right at this pint. Glad you like
it all, Mr. King,” he said; “th’ s’lectmen’ll be pleased.”

“Indeed, how could we help it!” cried Jasper with feeling. “We shall
never forget all that you have done this day, Mr. Bunce.”

“When’ll the train come!” begged Barby, pulling the first selectman by
the arm; “say, when will it? I want it very much, I do.”

“Oh, you’ll see her a-comin’ around that curve pretty soon,” said Mr.
Bunce, taking her soft little palm in his stubby one. “Look sharp, now!”

So Barby stood on tiptoe, and Elyot and the other boys did the same.

“I’ll get you a chair to stand on,” said Mr. Bunce, hurrying into the
station to bring one out; then he put Barby on it. “And now I’ll get
Rev. Mr. Pepper and Mr. David, for you want to be all together;” and
he shambled off, Elyot and King and Johnny swarming upon the chair to
look over Barby’s fat little shoulders.

“I don’t believe it will ever come,” began Barby, as Joel rushed up
and swung her to his broad shoulder with Elyot on the other, and David
hoisted King. Johnny stuck to the chair, when--“Here it comes! _Here it
comes!_” and all the white handkerchiefs came fluttering out, as the
country folk hurried up; the children with the flower-baskets, drawn
up in two lines, gathered their hands full of pretty blossoms; the old
stage, decked with garlands and festoons, with Mr. Tisbett resplendent
in his Sunday clothes on the box, drove up around a waiting corner with
a flourish, to the platform front. And there was Phronsie and Roslyn!
and old Mr. King, his handsome white head bared to the sun, was bowing
to right and to left, while Mamsie and little Doctor Fisher, with Ben
and Charlotte Chatterton brought up the rear.

And then arose a mighty cheer from the throats of the village people!
And the flowers were strewn, and the little nosegays were thrown,
and the whole bunch of Peppers, big and little, passed up through
the blossom-covered path. And Phronsie was helped into the old
flower-decked stage right gallantly by Grandpapa, who turned, and bowed
low to the Badgertown people. “I thank you, my dear friends,” he said,
“for this tribute to the one whom we all love.” And then Jasper said
something to him in a low voice. “And thank you, Mr. Tisbett,” said old
Mr. King, his hat still in his hand, and he put up his other palm to
grasp that of the stage-driver’s, “for asking me to drive up too.”

Mr. Tisbett thought he should fall off from the driver’s box with pride
and delight after that.

And then away--Phronsie smiling into the faces of the village people,
and Roslyn, tall and handsome beside her, bowing his thanks for this
tribute to her. Was there ever such a home-coming before?

“Now, if it won’t rain,” gasped Alexia, on the edge of it all,
“to-morrow, O Pickering!” as they ran for their dog-cart, and drove off
to “The Oaks,” by a short cut.

“Never you fear, Alexia,” said Pickering; “and if it does, nothing can
spoil this Badgertown welcome. It was the finest thing possible.”

“That may be,” said Alexia; “but ‘The Oaks’ _fête_ to-morrow--that
will be _absolutely_ perfect. Do hurry, Pickering; we must get there to
see them drive up.”

And it not only did _not_ rain on the morrow, but was another golden
day for Phronsie. The arches were all up on the lawns at an early hour,
and so was the marriage-bell of white orchids; while the Dunraven
children were in readiness to march, to be followed by Susan’s
“Welcome-Home” song. The rose-trimmed tables couldn’t take on another
blossom; while as for the little brown house--well, it was a bower of
roses, from the old front door clear through to the “Provision Room.”

And Phronsie, in her soft white gown trimmed with white orchids, and
her tall young husband, destined to be so soon famous, moved around
with old Mr. King to all the groups, welcoming and making happy every
one--for it was to be an all-day _fête_, with music and games for the
little ones, and flowers, collation, supper, and wedding-cake for
everybody.

And Jasper was toast-master when everybody was seated at the long
rose-trimmed tables, and right royally did he manage that ceremony.
And Mr. Bunce, the first selectman, responded for the town of
Badgertown, covering himself with glory; and Grandpapa responded
for Phronsie right gallantly. And then she rose in her place by her
husband, in the centre of the table, and Roslyn stood by her side. “I
thank you all very much,” said Phronsie in a clear voice, “for all you
have done for us. We shall never forget it. And we love you very much
indeed, and we are glad to make our home here with you in dear old
Badgertown.”

And then everybody got out of their chairs, and waved their
handkerchiefs,--a white, fluttering cloud,--and tears of joy were
on many cheeks; and then Roslyn May was called on for a speech,
and a splendid one it was too, that all the village folk cheered
mightily. And Mr. Mason Whitney and Mr. Marlowe spoke, and Ben and
David, and there were many calls for Joel. And Pickering Dodge had
a word or two to say; and Rev. Mr. Henderson, oh!--“it was a goodly
wedding-breakfast, and,” as Alexia said, “just _absolutely_ perfect.”

[Illustration: “The little children from the Dunraven Home marched
around Phronsie and her husband, each giving her a white rose as they
passed.”]

“Oh, dear, dear, dear!” she gasped to Mrs. Fargo, after the feast was
over, “it seems as if I couldn’t bear any more bliss. But do look at
Charlotte Chatterton and Ben. Now will you tell me there is nothing in
it?”

“I didn’t say there was nothing in it,” said Mrs. Fargo with a keen
glance at the two.

“But you were cool as an oyster when I tried to tell you about it
long ago,” retorted Alexia. “Oh, dear me!--well, we mustn’t stand
here talking; they are going to dedicate the studio now, and lay the
corner-stone.”

And when this was over, and the block of marble from Roslyn’s studio
from across the sea was laid in place on the old Badgertown meadow, to
be made famous over two continents, then, at a signal from Rev. Mr.
Henderson, the little children from the Dunraven Home marched around
Phronsie and her husband, each giving her a white rose as they passed.
And Susan sent all her young heart into her “Welcome-Home” song; and
everybody applauded her, but she saw only Phronsie’s smile.

“Whoever would have thought that little black creature, that terrorized
us all so that Christmas Day at Dunraven, would turn out such a
beautiful singer?” said David.

“A good many things turn out differently from what we expect,” said
Mamsie with a smile, “and that’s the best of it.”

Joel looked into Amy Loughead’s blue eyes, “Yes, that’s the best of
it,” he said.

Well, the best of all this beautiful _fête_ was yet to come. It was
at sundown, when some of the people, those who had far to drive, were
beginning to talk of going home, and were gathering up their little
children and saying “good-by.” Jasper called “Attention!” and announced
that his brother, Mr. Roslyn May, had something to say to them all. So
they turned back where he stood with Phronsie by his side in the centre
of the lawn; and when the large circle was formed, and all was quite
still, he said in a strong, clear voice,--

“My wife wishes me to tell you that she desires to mark this beautiful
day by a gift to the people of Badgertown, to show her love for you
all. She has therefore asked her brother Jasper to buy for her the
Peters homestead, and all the land belonging to it, and to keep this
purchase a secret until to-day. Added to this, she presents to the
town this check,” he held it aloft,--those who were nearest could see
that there were several figures upon its face,--“that a free library
may be built and maintained, imposing only one condition, and that is,
that the name of the library shall be the ‘Horatio King Library of
Badgertown.’ Mr. Bunce, as first selectman, will you take charge of
this bit of paper?”

Didn’t the people cheer then! The echo of it seemed to reach to
Badgertown’s very centre. And some one ran down and set the church-bell
to ringing again, a merry peal. And with those joyful notes in their
ears, the country folk drove home to their farmhouses, casting many
a backward glance at the “Five Little Peppers,” and the little brown
house, over which the golden gleams of the setting sun were falling.




TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


  Italicized or underlined text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

  Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

  Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

  Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.