A borrowed sister

By Eliza Orne White

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Title: A borrowed sister

Author: Eliza Orne White

Illustrator: Katharine Pyle

Release date: March 16, 2025 [eBook #75627]

Language: English

Original publication: Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1906

Credits: Susan E., David E. Brown, Rod Crawford, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)


*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BORROWED SISTER ***


[Illustration: LOIS AND ELLEN BRINGING HOME A GERANIUM FOR JESSIE
  (_Page 8_)]





  A
  BORROWED SISTER

  BY
  ELIZA ORNE WHITE

  WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
  KATHARINE PYLE

  [Illustration]

  BOSTON AND NEW YORK
  HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
  The Riverside Press Cambridge




  COPYRIGHT 1906 BY ELIZA ORNE WHITE

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED INCLUDING THE RIGHT TO REPRODUCE
  THIS BOOK OR PARTS THEREOF IN ANY FORM

  The Riverside Press
  CAMBRIDGE · MASSACHUSETTS
  PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.




  TO

  M. L. A.

  AND HER DAUGHTER ELIZABETH THIS BOOK
  IS AFFECTIONATELY
  DEDICATED




CONTENTS


     I. JESSIE COMES                                  1

    II. THE WITCH KITTEN                             11

   III. BRIERFIELD                                   20

    IV. BARBARA FRIETCHIE                            31

     V. A SUMMER EXCHANGE                            43

    VI. THE STORM AT HOLLISFORD                      55

   VII. THE VEGETABLE TEA-PARTY                      65

  VIII. THE TREE THAT GREW IN THE PAGES’ GARDEN      75

    IX. MRS. DRAPER’S DARNING-CLASS                  84

     X. A RED LETTER DAY                             91

    XI. GRANDMOTHER LOIS                            103

   XII. THE HOUSE WHERE NOTHING HAPPENED            111

  XIII. THE TRIO CLUB                               121

   XIV. A WINTER PICNIC                             129

    XV. THE CHRISTMAS TREE                          140




LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


  LOIS AND ELLEN BRINGING HOME A GERANIUM FOR JESSIE
    (PAGE 8)                                          _Frontispiece_

  “ANNE AND I HAVE A VEGETABLE GARDEN”                            24

  HER RUBBERS WERE BOATS                                          58

  THE TRIO CLUB                                                  128




A BORROWED SISTER




CHAPTER I

JESSIE COMES


Lois Page, who had been an only child all her life, was to have a
borrowed sister for the space of a year or more, and the prospect
filled her with keen delight. If she had searched the wide world over
she could not have found a more congenial sister than Jessie Matthews.
Lois was equally fond of Ellen Morgan, and Ellen was a more stimulating
friend, but Ellen had an uncertain temper, which would make living with
her a torment, as well as a joy, while Jessie was as serene as a summer
morning.

There was only one person who was not wholly satisfied with the
arrangement, and this was Ellen. She sat on the edge of one of the beds
in Lois’s room, and criticised her arrangements in an aggravating way,
while Lois was clearing out two drawers in her bureau.

“I should think you would rather have Jessie in the spare room,” said
Ellen finally. “It is dreadful to have so little room for one’s things.”

Lois, with a pile of petticoats in her arms, looked up in surprise.

“Why, that’s the joy of it all, Ellen. That’s the best part. Always
having somebody to talk to when you go to bed, and when you wake up in
the morning. You’ve always had a sister, and so you don’t understand
how lonely it is to be all by yourself. It is the loveliest thing that
ever happened to me,” she added, with strong emphasis.

Ellen had borne as much as she could. “I think it is perfectly horrid,”
said she.

Lois was pulling open the lower drawer in the bureau and crowding in
the petticoats. She looked up in bewildered surprise.

“I thought you loved Jessie,” she said.

“I like her well enough,” returned Ellen, who was in truth very fond of
Jessie, “but I think it is perfectly horrid for you to have her living
with you. You’ll have such a good time every single minute that you
won’t care any more about me.”

Lois came over and sat down on the edge of the bed and put her arms
around Ellen. “Why, Ellen, you dear thing!” she exclaimed. Lois loved
her friends so intensely that it never seemed possible they could care
equally for her, and this admission from the self-reliant Ellen, who
was such a favorite, filled her with an amazed joy.

“I shall care just as much for you,” Lois said. “It will be the same
as it is with you and Anne. And there will be four of us to do things
together.”

“I shall expect to play with you every single day,” said Ellen.

“Why, of course.”

“And I don’t want you to like Jessie any better than you like me; I
couldn’t stand that. I know she’s ever so much nicer, and I don’t see
how you can help it.”

“I love you both dearly,” said Lois.

After this the atmosphere was cleared, and Ellen began to take an
interest in the preparation of Lois’s closet.

“Do you think she’ll like the right-hand side or the left-hand side
best?” asked Lois, who always needed a great deal of advice from her
friends.

“The right-hand side is lots more convenient, because it is over next
the shelves.”

“But the left-hand side has that extra row of hooks across the end, and
she has so many more dresses than I have.”

Lois paused irresolutely, with a pink frock in one hand and a brown one
in the other.

“I don’t see how you ever get anything done, it takes you so long to
decide,” said Ellen impatiently.

“It does take me a good while,” Lois admitted apologetically.

Her tone softened Ellen, and she helped Lois move her dresses, deciding
that Jessie should have rather more than half of the right-hand side of
the closet.

Lois and Ellen wanted to do all they could to make Jessie’s arrival a
cheerful one.

“I am going to the greenhouse to buy some flowers for Jessie,” Ellen
said. “She loves flowers. Won’t you come with me?”

The two children went out into the world that was beginning to be made
over new by a gentle April shower. Lois reflected, as she closed the
door, that it was almost a year from the first time that she and Ellen
had met. Lois remembered how lonely she had been because Daisy, her
best friend, had gone away forever, and then almost as soon as the door
closed to shut Daisy out, it opened to let Ellen in. Lois felt very
thankful and happy, as they went along the village street. They stopped
at Ellen’s house and unlocked a battered bank that she had owned for
many years. She had refused to have Lois go shares with her in the
matter of the flowers, and so Lois quietly dropped in a ten-cent piece
through the slit in the top while Ellen was taking out two ten-cent
pieces from the door at the back.

“Lois Page!” she protested. “I wanted it to be all my present.”

“It is,” said Lois. “But I guess I’ve a right to put my money in a
savings’ bank, if I like. It is a good safe bank.”

Ellen had so little money that Lois could not bear to have her squander
twenty cents so recklessly.

Ellen’s formidable brothers were coming in at the gate as the two
little girls were going out. In the winter, when Lois had stayed under
the Morgans’ hospitable roof, she had grown to be good friends with
these boys, but now that she had not seen them for some time her old
shyness returned.

“Hullo,” said Amyas and Reuben.

“Hullo,” said Lois in a faint voice. She dropped her eyes and did not
look at them as she and Ellen passed through the gate.

When the children reached the greenhouse they were speechless at first
in their admiration, for there was such a brilliant array of flowers.

“What are you going to get for Jessie?” Lois inquired.

“Pink roses,” said Ellen, who generally had her mind made up. She
glanced at a jar full of them as she spoke. “How much are they a
dozen?” she asked.

“Two dollars,” replied the black-haired girl behind the counter.

“Two dollars!” Ellen’s face fell. “Then six would be a dollar,” she
added after a moment’s hesitation.

“Yes.”

“And for twenty cents”--the calculation was too intricate. Ellen looked
up with a puzzled frown. “How many could I have for twenty cents?”

“One. They are twenty cents apiece.”

“Only one rose for twenty cents! And it would fade so soon!” said Ellen.

Lois had her nose buried in the roses. “Oh, Ellen, they are so lovely!”
she exclaimed. “It seems as if just one rose was lovelier than a lot of
anything else.”

But Ellen did not think so.

“You can get a whole plant for twenty cents,” said the girl, “and it
could be set out in the garden later and last all summer.”

A whole living, growing plant for the same price as a single evanescent
rose! How incredible that seemed! The children wandered around the
greenhouse, looking first at one plant and then at another; even Ellen
was for once undecided. There were fragrant hyacinths in bud and
blossom, pink ones, white ones, and others of a beautiful shade of
lilac, and lilac was Jessie’s color; but the hyacinths, while perfect
for the moment, would be out of blossom soon. Lois was attracted by a
Marguerite, with its delicate white petals and yellow centre. It looked
like Jessie, she said.

“It looks just like a common field daisy,” objected Ellen, who was in
an obstinate mood and preferred to choose her own plant. She went over
to the other end of the greenhouse, where the geraniums were. They were
stocky little plants; most of them were in blossom or in bud. There
were pink geraniums and dark red ones, besides several of a brilliant
scarlet. Lois looked at them irresolutely, but Ellen instantly set her
affections on a scarlet geranium, with two gorgeous blossoms, as a
concession to the present, as well as a bud of promise.

“I should like that one,” she said.

“That is twenty-five cents.”

“That is the one I want,” repeated Ellen firmly, “but I’ve only got
twenty cents.” It seemed to her that nothing else in life would satisfy
her but this one geranium, with its full and perfect flowers.

“You can have any of these for twenty cents,” said the girl, indicating
an inferior group.

“This is a nice one; it has three buds,” said Lois.

“It is all right for you who are going to live in the house with it,
but I want it to look beautiful when I give it to her. I want that
one,” said Ellen, “and I don’t want any other, and I only want to pay
twenty cents.”

The girl looked at Ellen, she saw determination written all over her
eager face and shining out from her dark eyes, and she remembered her
own childhood not so many years ago.

“I guess if my father was here he’d let you have that geranium for
twenty cents,” she said.

Ellen’s eyes shone, and she paid over her two ten-cent pieces and
hastily seized her property.

When they reached Lois’s room, Ellen put the red geranium on a little
table in front of the wide window. There were white muslin curtains
tied back with white cords and tassels. The walls were a soft gray, and
although the cushion on the window seat was many-hued, and so were the
rugs, the general effect was more subdued than Ellen liked, and this
blaze of scarlet pleased her.

A little later they heard the sound of horses’ hoofs and wheels in the
distance.

“She is coming! She is coming!” cried Lois, and Ellen had a bitter pang
at the rapture of that tone.

It was only the ice-cart lumbering down the street.

The children were in the parlor with their faces pressed close against
the window. A bright fire was burning on the hearth and Lois’s mother
sat before it with her sewing.

Here Jessie was at last! The carriage stopped at the gate, and a
golden-haired girl alighted, and came swiftly along the walk. Ellen and
Lois ran out to meet her. Lois flung her arms about Jessie.

“You dear, dear thing!” she said. “It is so good to have you here!”

Then she looked at Jessie, and saw that her face was wet with tears,
and she remembered that this day, which was the happiest in her own
life, was perhaps the saddest in Jessie’s, for she had just parted from
her father and mother, who were to sail for Europe on account of her
father’s ill health.

Lois felt very shy and could not say anything more. Her own joy seemed
positively wrong.

Jessie smiled bravely through her tears.

“It is so lovely to be coming to live with you, Lois,” she said, “and
it was dear of you, Ellen, to be here to meet me.”

Jessie put one arm around Lois and the other around Ellen. Ellen did
not feel any longer that Jessie was to separate them; it seemed instead
as if they would all three be drawn more closely together.

“Lois and I have bought a scarlet geranium for you, Jessie.”

It was impossible to keep back this great announcement any longer.

“It was your present,” said Lois.

Ellen no longer wanted to have the whole glory of the gift.

“It was our present,” she said; “you know you put your money in my
bank.”




CHAPTER II

THE WITCH KITTEN


The first evening was the cosiest that Lois had ever known. It seemed
like a party, having three at supper instead of two. Lois looked across
the table at Jessie, and thought how wonderful it was that she was not
merely spending one night with them, as she often did, but at least a
year of nights.

After tea, when they sat before the fire in the parlor, Mrs. Page began
to read Scott’s “Talisman” aloud, and only those who are used to being
the solitary audience can know the rapture of sharing the pleasure with
another listener. Even when not a word was said it was an intense joy
just to look across at Jessie’s expressive face. Presently a piercing
mew was heard, and Lois opened the door for Minnie, her cat. Minnie had
been spending her evenings in Lois’s lap of late.

“Sweetheart,” Lois said remorsefully, “it was too bad that I forgot all
about you. She is perfectly devoted to me,” she explained to Jessie;
“sometimes I will find her waiting by my chair, and the moment I sit
down she hops into my lap.”

“The dear little thing!” said Jessie. “Come, Minnie,” she called
caressingly, “come and say good evening to me. I am going to live here
now.”

Then a strange thing happened; Minnie, the constant, devoted Minnie,
walked across the room, past Lois, and jumped into Jessie’s lap.

“Dear, friendly little pussy,” said Jessie.

“She likes the chair you are in, and your gown is woollier than
Lois’s,” said Mrs. Page practically.

“Oh, mother, you don’t understand Minnie,” protested Lois. “She knows
how nice Jessie is, and she wants to make her feel at home.”

Nevertheless it was something of a trial to have Minnie’s affections
divided with another.

That night after they went to bed the two children talked so late that
Mrs. Page finally came to the door and stopped them by saying that if
they were going to talk so long every night she should have to put
Jessie in the spare room. Early in the morning the happy chatter began
again, and Mrs. Page noticed what a different expression her little
girl had as she came into the dining-room with her arm around Jessie’s
waist. Jessie was almost a year older than Lois and she was much
taller. She was not pretty, but she had such a wholesome, bright face
that her friends never thought of her as plain, and then her golden
hair was a great attraction. Lois wished that she herself had golden
hair. She had said so that morning, as Jessie stood before the bureau
brushing her yellow locks.

“Would you like my nose and my freckles as well as my hair?” Jessie
asked, turning around with a smile, “because, if you would, I should be
glad to give them to you.”

“Oh, Jessie, you dear, dear thing!” said Lois, giving her a hug.

And so the new order began, and as the happy days sped by, Mrs. Page
rejoiced in the success of her experiment. As for Jessie herself, it
was hard at first to get used to the contracted life in a country town,
for heretofore her time had been divided between New York and the free
out-of-door life of Brierfield Farm, three miles from the village. When
the spring days began to lengthen and the buds to swell, and the birds
found their way back from the south, Jessie often longed for the house
on the edge of the woods, for the pony on which she rode bare-back, for
her faithful collie dog, but most of all for her light-hearted father
and mother and her older sister, with whom she had wandered through the
fields and woods as contentedly as if they were of her own age. Now all
was sadly changed, for her father, who was once the merriest of the
company, was under the dark cloud of illness, and the ocean divided her
from him and her mother, while Cicely was at Bryn Mawr.

Gradually, however, Jessie adjusted herself to life under the new
conditions, and as she was very fond both of Lois and Mrs. Page, she
soon felt entirely at home.

Everything conspired to make her feel so, even Minnie, who added to the
good cheer of the household by presenting the family with a pair of
kittens.

If kittens were not quite the absorbing interest to Lois that they had
been before Jessie came, they were a great event, and she and Jessie
visited the wood-cellar with joy. Mrs. Page said that each of the
children could have a kitten for her own, until it was old enough to be
given away.

Now there was not the slightest doubt that one kitten was so much
prettier than the other that Lois had a struggle in her own mind as to
whether to give Jessie the beauty of the family or to keep it. As an
only child everything had formerly revolved around Lois, and now there
was always some one else to be considered,--not that this fact in the
least dampened her pleasure in Jessie’s society.

“This one is the prettiest,” said Lois, holding up a white and gray
kitten beautifully marked. “See her little white face with the gray
hair parted in the middle, and the gray shawl on her back that looks as
if it were just tumbling off. It is that lovely, silvery gray like blue
fox.”

“Yes, it is one of the prettiest kittens I ever saw,” said Jessie.

“The other isn’t very pretty,” said Lois. “Of course I always love
tiger cats, but it isn’t marked so prettily as Minnie is; it has a
smoochy, mixed-up face.”

“No, it isn’t so pretty, but it is a dear,” said Jessie.

Lois nerved herself for a great sacrifice. “Jessie, you must have the
maltese and white kitten,” she said.

“I? Oh, no, Minnie isn’t my cat. I don’t mind, truly, which I have.
Anything in the shape of a darling furry kitten will suit me.”

“And you really don’t mind?” Lois began slowly.

“Why, of course I don’t. What difference does it make so long as they
are both here?”

Now it made a great deal of difference to Lois, for she liked to have a
thing for her very own. For a fortnight the kittens led a placid life
in the wood-cellar, and then they were moved up into the play-room,
where Lois had her doll house. It was then that the children began to
get the real good of the kittens.

“There is something very queer about your kitten’s front paws,” said
Lois to Jessie one afternoon. “They look so big and clumsy.”

“Why, it has got two more toes than it ought to have!” Jessie exclaimed.

It made Lois feel uncomfortable to see these extra toes. It was as if a
person had five fingers and two thumbs.

“It was so dark in the wood-cellar I never noticed. Poor Jessie! Don’t
you want to change?”

“No, indeed! It is my kitten. If I had a child that turned out to be
funny-looking I wouldn’t want to change it, and besides, why shouldn’t
you have the best-looking kitten?”

“But it seems so selfish of me,” sighed Lois.

“Don’t let’s say anything more about it.”

“Does it make you feel crawly to see its six toes?” Lois asked
anxiously.

“No, I think it is quite interesting. It is so unlike any one else’s
kitten.”

Lois always preferred things that were just like other people’s, but
she was thankful that Jessie felt differently.

Presently Mr. Morgan, Ellen’s father, came to make a call. Mrs. Page
was out, but Lois and Jessie saw him coming up the steps. Mr. Morgan
was one of the few people of whom Lois was not afraid. She had loved
him dearly ever since she had first seen him, a year ago.

“He is going away. Maggie hasn’t told him we are in,” she said in a
disappointed voice.

“He is probably making a lot of parish calls, and can’t stop to bother
with children,” said Jessie.

“I am sure if he knew I was at home he would want to see me.” Lois ran
down the stairs and out of the front door and caught up with him, just
as he reached the gate.

“Oh, Mr. Morgan, please come back,” she cried breathlessly. “Jessie and
I are at home, and there are some kittens I know you would like to see.
We are your parishioners just as much as mother is,” she added.

“Well, if I have new parishioners, for the kittens are new, I suppose,
I shall surely have to come back, for I always make it a rule to call
on new parishioners the first fortnight after they come to town.”

Lois laughed. “I meant that Jessie and I are your parishioners,” she
explained gayly.

“Well, Jessie,” said Mr. Morgan, taking both her hands in his, “it is a
great pleasure to have you so near us. And now I am to see the kittens?”

“We’ll bring them down to you,” said Jessie.

“Minnie would be nearly out of her mind if we did. You won’t mind
coming upstairs, will you, Mr. Morgan?” Lois asked.

“I want you to find a name for my kitten,” Lois said after they reached
the play-room. “You gave Gem and Jane such beautiful names.”

She handed him the lovely gray and white one.

“What a beauty this is!” he said. “It seems to have on a chinchilla
shawl, like the one my aunt used to wear. Suppose you call her
Chinchilla. Chilly will make a good nickname.”

“The other is Jessie’s,” Lois told him. “It is rather plain and it has
six toes.”

Mr. Morgan inspected the small morsel of fur gravely.

“It is a witch kitten,” he announced. “How fortunate you are, Jessie!
A double-pawed kitten is always supposed to bring its possessor the
rarest luck. Suppose you call it Mittens. I had a witch cat named
Mittens when I was a boy.”

“And did you have great luck?” Lois asked. She was already beginning
to wish that the double-pawed kitten belonged to her, but speedily
stifled this selfish thought, for dear Jessie deserved all the luck she
could get.

“Yes. I had a very serious illness while he was with us.”

“I don’t call that good luck,” Lois said dolefully.

“Perhaps you would have died if it hadn’t been for the witch kitten,”
Jessie suggested, with a smile.

“That was the way I looked at it,” said Mr. Morgan gravely. “Then our
barn caught on fire, and part of it burned, but we got the animals out
and the house did not catch. There was the witch kitten again. If it
hadn’t been for him we might have lost everything; and I had trouble
with my eyes that year, and had to leave school, and the out-of-door
life made me strong and healthy. Altogether, there was no end to the
debt of gratitude that I owed that kitten, for without him I might have
thought I was unlucky.”

Jessie gave Mittens a little squeeze. “I am so glad I have a witch
kitten,” she said.




CHAPTER III

BRIERFIELD


It seemed to Lois and Jessie as if spring would never come, for there
was an April snowstorm a few days after Jessie arrived, and the snow
lingered on the north side of the house and in the woods; gradually,
however, it disappeared, and the green began to creep over the hills
and meadows.

At last there came such a warm April morning that Jessie said, “Spring
has really come! I am sure the mayflowers are out on the hill back of
Brierfield. Oh! dear Aunt Elizabeth, mayn’t we have the carriage this
afternoon and all drive over to Brierfield and pick them?”

Jessie’s coming had made a great change already. Formerly Mrs. Page
used to have to urge Lois to go out, unless some child came to play
with her, but now she found it hard to get the children to come in even
at mealtimes. One of the changes that Jessie’s coming brought, was the
use of the horses that had been left at Brierfield. Whenever Mrs. Page
wanted a drive she had only to go to the telephone and order a horse
to appear at a certain hour. The telephone had been a parting gift from
Mrs. Matthews to Lois’s mother.

“Please, Aunt Elizabeth, can’t we go?” Jessie persisted.

Mrs. Page was busy finishing a spring frock for Lois.

“I am afraid I oughtn’t to go this afternoon,” she said. “I have the
rest of my seeds to plant, and I want to finish this dress so that Lois
can wear it to church to-morrow. We might go next Saturday.”

“It may rain next Saturday,” Jessie objected, “and I am afraid the
mayflowers will be through blossoming.”

“I don’t mind wearing my winter dress all the spring,” said Lois.

Mrs. Page hesitated. Perhaps, after all, it was better to give the
children this pleasure, for spring only comes once a year.

“We will go this afternoon,” she decided, “and you children may come
into the garden with me this morning while I plant the seeds.”

A little later they went out into the sunny garden, and the children
helped Mrs. Page make a trench for her nasturtium seeds.

“Please, dear Aunt Elizabeth, mayn’t Lois and I have a garden, just a
small one?” begged Jessie. “I always had one at home, to plant anything
I liked in, and one year I mixed flower seeds and vegetable seeds
together, and squashes and nasturtiums and melons and poppies came up
side by side.”

Mrs. Page laughed. “If I give you and Lois each a bed I shall want
you to make them as pretty as possible, so as to be an ornament to my
garden,” she said.

Mrs. Page’s slender figure was enveloped in a brown linen apron with
pockets, in which were packages of seeds. Even in the brown apron
she looked more dainty than most people did in their best clothes,
Lois thought. Lois’s mind had been reveling in wild combinations of
vegetables and flowers, and it was a disappointment to find that their
gardens must conform to the rule of their well-ordered lives.

“Don’t you think it would be nice, mother, to have flowers in the
middle, and a border of melons and squashes?” she ventured.

“No, I think you will find a flower garden is enough to keep you busy.
You know you will have to weed it.”

Lois made a little grimace.

Mrs. Page always spent a great deal of time in her garden, and she had
often tried to induce Lois to help her weed, but Lois was always sure
to remember some very important thing that had to be done at once. In
Jessie, however, Mrs. Page found a garden companion after her own heart.

She gave the children a variety of seeds. Jessie had a decided
plan, but Lois did not know how she wanted to arrange her bed, and
finally copied Jessie. They planted mignonette and pansy seed in a
border around the beds, and inside they put a glorious mixture of
seeds,--nasturtiums, verbenas, portulacas, poppies, and cosmos. They
could hardly wait, they were in such a hurry for everything to come up
and blossom. They had almost finished planting the seeds when Ellen
Morgan joined them. She was on her way home from the village, where she
had been doing some errands for her mother, and her hands were full of
small bundles.

“Mother’s in an awful hurry for these things,” she said, “so I can’t
stop, but I just wanted to know if you and Jessie can come to play with
me this afternoon.”

“We can’t, because we are going to drive over to Brierfield,” said Lois.

Ellen looked very much disappointed.

She sat down on the end of a bench and asked what they were planting.

“Anne and I have a vegetable garden,” Ellen told them. “It isn’t as
pretty as a flower garden, but we expect to have lovely things to
eat,--melons and cucumbers and squashes. We are going to have a party
when all the vegetables are ripe” (Ellen had thought of this on the
spur of the moment), “and we’ll invite you.”

“How nice!” Lois was already tasting the melons in imagination. “We
wanted some melons and squashes in our garden,” she said regretfully,
“but mother thought they would spoil the looks of the flower beds.”

“Ellen, I am afraid you ought to be going home, if your mother is in a
hurry for those things,” said Mrs. Page, “but why can’t you come back
and dine here, and go to Brierfield with us this afternoon?”

“Oh, Mrs. Page, how perfectly lovely!” said Ellen ecstatically.

She rose, but lingered to play with Minnie, who came along at the
moment.

When Ellen finally reached home she ran up to the room where her
mother was at work with a seamstress, dumped the parcels in a heap on
the table, and said breathlessly, “Mother, I’m going to dine with the
Pages and we are going to drive to Brierfield and pick mayflowers this
afternoon.”

[Illustration: “ANNE AND I HAVE A VEGETABLE GARDEN”]

“How delightful!” exclaimed Mrs. Morgan, looking up from her sewing.
“That is why it took Ellen three quarters of an hour to go to the
village,” she thought. “You can take the sugar down to Almira,” she
said. “She is waiting for it.”

In the kitchen Ellen’s mind was distracted by some very fat raisins
that Almira was stoning, and when she found what the dessert was to
be, she was almost sorry she had promised to dine at the Pages’. She
consoled herself, however, by eating a handful of the raisins.

From the kitchen window Ellen had a view of the vegetable garden that
was to be such a source of joy to them later, and she suddenly had a
bright idea. When she returned to the Pages’ she had some choice seeds
in her pocket, and before they started on the drive she went out into
the garden all by herself, on the pretense of finding Minnie. Hastily
glancing around to make sure that no one was looking, she put half the
seeds in the centre of Lois’s bed, and the other half in the middle of
Jessie’s. Her face broke into a mischievous smile.

“I guess they’ll have a nice surprise,” she thought.

As they were starting on the drive, she suddenly gave a chuckle.

“What are you laughing at, Ellen?” asked Lois.

“I am laughing because I am so very happy,” Ellen answered.

“It didn’t sound like that kind of a laugh,” said Lois.

“Isn’t it fortunate Ellen happened to come along to-day,” she added;
“we’ve had a lot of luck since the witch kitten came.”

“Let’s take the witch kitten with us,” said Ellen, “then we shall be
sure to find lots of mayflowers.”

“My dear Ellen!” gasped Mrs. Page.

“I am afraid the kitten and Jessie’s dog wouldn’t agree very well,”
said Lois.

“Joy is very gentle. I wish, Aunt Elizabeth, that you would let me take
Joy back with us just for a day or two,” Jessie pleaded.

“That wouldn’t be safe. Joy may be gentle, but Minnie is not; she is
very fierce when she is taking care of her kittens.”

“Why do you call her Aunt Elizabeth?” asked Ellen. “She isn’t any
relation to you, is she?”

“She and my mother were friends when they were little girls.”

“Oh,” said Ellen. She felt very much “out of it.”

They were already reaching the outskirts of the town, and very soon
they came to a stretch of wood road. It made Lois feel so happy to see
the tiny leaf-buds and to watch some birds flying overhead, that it
almost seemed as if she must cry out, “Spring is here! spring is here!
and afterwards will come summer, and there won’t be any icy winter for
a very long time!”

But Lois’s delight was even greater when they were climbing the wooded
hill behind Brierfield farm. Ellen shouted with joy, and Jessie felt
like some wild thing that had escaped from a cage. The children thought
there never had been such a spring day. The sky was blue, with just
a few fleecy clouds floating in it, and the tall pines and fir-trees
made such a thick green shelter that it seemed as if summer had come.
There was the resinous smell of the pines and of the fir balsams and
hemlocks, the soft green of the moss, and, most delicious of all, the
delicate fragrance of the mayflowers. Jessie was the first to find
them; she held up a long spray of pink blossoms and gave it to Mrs.
Page.

Ellen immediately pulled some up by the roots.

“You mustn’t do that,” said Jessie. “Father never lets us pull any
roots, for if we do, the mayflowers will soon die out.”

Suddenly there was an addition to their company. A yellow and white dog
came running up the path, and presently there was the mingling of furry
paws and childish arms.

“Joy, you darling, did you know my voice?” said Jessie. The collie had
leaped upon her, and was licking her face with passionate devotion. She
put her arms around his neck, and her tears rained upon his head.

“She loves Joy just as much as I love Minnie,” thought Lois.

They stayed in the pine woods until Mrs. Page and Jessie had their
baskets full of mayflowers, and Ellen and Lois had half filled theirs,
for they had taken several excursions, and there had been a great deal
to look at and to talk about.

“I suppose if we are to stop at Brierfield for a cup of tea, we ought
to be going,” said Mrs. Page, looking at her watch.

The parlor at Brierfield was a long room, with a low ceiling with brown
rafters. Even in its half-dismantled state, it looked more attractive
to Jessie than any room she had ever seen. There were no curtains at
the windows now, but one could see the woods and the hills all the
better, and although the sofas and chairs had on linen covers, nothing
could disguise their quaint, old-fashioned shape. The rugs had been put
away, but the books were left in the low bookcases, and a bright fire
was burning on the hearth, and near it was a little tea-table. There
was a gap in the room where the grand piano had once been, that was now
blocking up Mrs. Page’s small parlor, where it had gone in order that
Jessie might keep on with her music lessons.

Presently Emmeline, the farmer’s wife and the care-taker, brought in a
waiter with tea and lemon and little cakes.

“Emmeline!” cried Jessie, and she threw her arms about the old servant.

“How d’ye do, Miss Jessie? You look real well. I guess it agrees with
you to live with Miss Lois.”

After she had had a talk with Emmeline, Mrs. Page gave the children hot
lemonade, with plenty of sugar and just a dash of tea.

Joy planted himself at Jessie’s feet and she fed him with portions of
her cake. When she had no more he went around to Lois. She was afraid
of all dogs, and felt very uncomfortable as he fixed his beseeching
eyes on her. Presently he touched her with his paw. She hastily dropped
the rest of her cake and moved back.

“I guess you’d have been frightened away by the big spider all right,
if you had been little Miss Muffet,” said Ellen. “Come here, Joy. I am
not a bit afraid of you.”

Joy came. He jumped up on Ellen and began to lick her face.

“I didn’t say I wanted you to kiss me,” said Ellen. “Get down! Jessie,
make him get down.”

Jessie only laughed. “You shouldn’t have invited him to come, if you
hadn’t wanted him,” she said.

“I wish we could come to these woods every Saturday, mother,” said
Lois, as they drove away.

Mrs. Page felt, as the children did, as if she had not had such a happy
afternoon for a very long time.

“There is always so much that ought to be done,” she sighed.




CHAPTER IV

BARBARA FRIETCHIE


All through this happy spring there was only one part of Lois’s life
that she did not enjoy, and this was school; for it seemed such a waste
of sunny hours, when the birds were singing and the trees were coming
into leaf, and the seeds in the garden were beginning to sprout, to
have to leave this delightful out-of-door world and shut one’s self up
for hours in a stuffy room, and have tiresome lessons in numbers, or
draw maps, or read aloud. The garden was altogether too interesting to
leave. They could almost see the plants grow from day to day.

“There are a lot of queer things coming up in the middle of my bed,
where I meant to plant my fuchsia,” said Lois one morning. “What can
they be? They don’t look like weeds.”

“And I have some funny things in the centre of mine, too,” said Jessie,
“just where I meant to put my scarlet geranium.”

“That’s a pretty thing,” said Lois.

“It looks as if it were going to be a cucumber vine,” said Jessie,
who was something of a farmer, “but I don’t see how it could have got
there.”

A few days later, the superior knowledge of Mrs. Page and Joe Mills,
the gardener, was all that was needed to show that these intruders were
cucumber vines, squash vines, and melons.

“Ellen must have planted them there,” said Lois. “Don’t you remember,
when we went to Brierfield, she went down into the garden to find
Minnie, and how she laughed afterwards, because she was so happy, she
said? I knew it wasn’t that kind of a laugh.”

Lois could hardly wait until the next morning to see Ellen. Unluckily
Ellen was a little late at school, and the other children were all in
their seats when she came in very fast and flushed, as if she had run
all the way. Ellen had a desk on the right-hand side of Lois now, and
Lois looked across at her and smiled. She meant that smile to say, “I
have so much to talk about at recess, that I can hardly wait.”

Ellen smiled too, then she cautiously took a piece of paper and a
pencil out of her desk. She held them so that Lois could see them, and
then partly covered them with her hand. As soon as Miss Benton was
busy with one of the classes, Ellen handed the paper and pencil to
Lois. “You can write whatever you have to say,” the action seemed to
suggest.

Lois hesitated. She was a conscientious child and did not like to break
one of the rules of the school, but her curiosity was very strong, and
after a while it conquered her principles. She wrote, “Was it you who
planted all those vegitables in our gardens? I think it was very funny,
but mother made Joe Mills move them into the vegitable garden, all but
one cucumber vine for each of us.”

The note was passed back without being detected by the teacher, and
Ellen took another half sheet out of her desk. She sat lost in thought
for a few moments, leaning her head on her hand. Finally, she seized
her pencil and began to write very fast, as if fearing that her
inspiration would leave her. Presently she handed the paper to Lois.
Lois spread it open and glanced up furtively.

“Lois Page, is that a note that you have?” said Miss Benton severely.
“Bring it straight to me. Any information that you have received will
doubtless be of value to all of us.”

Lois read her note through hastily, before complying with her teacher’s
request. It ran as follows:--

  Lois, Lois, quite contrary,
  How does your garden grow?
  With squash vine and melon,
  All planted by Ellen,
  And cucumbers all in a row.

Lois was quite sure the information would not be useful to the school,
and Miss Benton seemed to think so too, for when she had read the note
she put it into her desk.

“You and Ellen can stay after school,” she said.

And then she began to tell the scholars about the reading of patriotic
pieces that she planned to have on the Friday that came nearest to
Decoration Day. She wanted each boy and girl to bring some piece about
slavery or the civil war.

“We will have a preliminary reading next week Friday,” she said, “and
we will then choose the two best readers, those who have the fewest
criticisms, to head the different sides, and select six or eight others
to take part in a programme which you can all invite your parents to
attend.”

Lois felt a joy in this announcement, mixed with a fear. She was sure
she was one of the best readers, and hoped she might be chosen to
head a side. And yet what a trial it would be to have to stand on the
platform and face, not only the scholars, but also a group of mothers,
and still worse, fathers! The children could talk of little else for
the next day or two, and Lois made her mother’s life a burden until she
found something for her to read. The choice finally fell on “Barbara
Frietchie.”

Jessie had settled what her selection should be the moment the plan
was suggested. She meant to read Whittier’s “Astræa at the Capitol:
Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia, 1862,” a poem that
her father was very fond of and had read to her more than once.

Ellen browsed in her father’s library, and made his life a torment to
him until he had got down a row of green volumes for her, and patiently
helped her choose a poem. He advised first one thing and then another,
and after all, Ellen made her own selection. She became fascinated by
a poem of Longfellow’s called “The Slave in the Dismal Swamp,” and she
went around the house reading it in blood-curdling tones.

  “In dark fens of the Dismal Swamp
     The hunted Negro lay;
   He saw the fire of the midnight camp,
   And heard at times a horse’s tramp
     And a bloodhound’s distant bay.”

       *       *       *       *       *

  “On his forehead he bore the brand of shame,
   And the rags, that hid his mangled frame,
     Were the livery of disgrace.”

Lois, meanwhile, was driving her mother to the verge of madness by
insisting upon reading “Barbara Frietchie” to her half a dozen times a
day. Jessie, on the other hand, read her poem over in solitude.

Lois tried first one way of reading and then another.

  “‘Shoot, if you must, this old gray head,
    But spare your country’s flag,’ she said,”

she repeated dramatically. “Mother, do you think I ought to bow my head
when I read that, or shake it from side to side?”

She looked so very far from the gray-haired Barbara, as she gave her
head first a nod and then a shake, that Mrs. Page burst into unfeeling
laughter.

“Mother, I think it is too bad of you to laugh,” Lois protested. And
presently she came to the lines,

  “‘Who touches a hair of yon gray head
    Dies like a dog! March on!’ he said.

“Mother, do you think I made my voice deep enough? Did it sound like a
man’s? I think it is better to read in different voices, don’t you?”

Mrs. Page was almost hysterical now. “My dear child, you read a great
deal better two days ago, before you had this craze for the dramatic.
Just read straight ahead in your natural voice, and perfectly simply.”

“But, mother, you ought to hear Ellen read the hunted negro in the
Dismal Swamp, and the bloodhound’s curdling cry! It sends cold shivers
down your back.”

“Luckily, Ellen’s reading is not my responsibility. If it were, I
should pass into an early grave, between you.”

As the day for the preliminary reading approached, Lois grew more and
more nervous. She read “Barbara Frietchie” over six times on Thursday:
twice to Jessie, three times to her mother, and when Mrs. Page’s
patience finally gave out, she selected Maggie for a victim, and going
out into the kitchen, she read the whole poem through to her.

  “‘Shoot, if you must, this old gray head,
    But spare your country’s flag,’ she said.”

She had finally decided not to make any gesture at this point.

“Isn’t that great, Maggie?” she asked.

Maggie was so much impressed, that it almost decided Lois to adopt the
dramatic manner, in spite of her mother’s counsels.

Friday afternoon came at last, and then the awful space of time that
preceded her own reading, when Lois sat trembling in her seat, as the
children were called on alphabetically. Oh, why did not her name begin
with one of the first letters in the alphabet, like fortunate Dora
Robertson’s, who stood up and read a spirited war piece in a mouse-like
voice, and then sat down with the pleased expression of the martyr
whose sufferings are quickly over. Ellen Morgan came next. She walked
to the platform with the brave exterior of the general preparing for
battle.

To say that the reading of “The Slave in the Dismal Swamp” produced a
distinct sensation, is to put it mildly. Whatever Ellen’s faults of
delivery might be, there was a passion of earnestness about her, an
entire forgetfulness of herself, that turned the smile that came at
first into respectful attention, and then admiration. As the children
listened, it seemed as if they could see the hunted negro, and hear
with him the horse’s tramp and the bloodhound’s distant bay.

When Ellen sat down, there were tears in her eyes, and there were tears
in Miss Benton’s eyes, too.

“How had Ellen done it?” Lois asked herself. It was all so very simple,
but Lois had a conviction in her heart that she herself, if she were
to read “Barbara Frietchie” over a hundred times, for as many days,
could never equal the simple pathos of Ellen’s voice.

Ethel Smith, Edward Cory, Gertrude Brown, and other girls and boys
followed, but no one began to approach Ellen. Finally Jessie’s turn
came. Lois had heard her read her poem only once. Jessie went up on the
platform with the same quiet dignity with which she did everything.
Lois thought how very lovely she looked in her new lilac gingham frock.

Jessie had a voice that was like music, and the poem she read with the
utmost simplicity was so beautiful that the children were as quiet as
if they were in church.

  “I knew that truth would crush the lie,--
     Somehow, some time, the end would be;
     Yet scarcely dared I hope to see
   The triumph with my mortal eye.

  “But now I see it! In the sun
     A free flag floats from yonder dome,
     And at the nation’s hearth and home
   The justice long delayed is done.”

Lois looked out of the window at the flag on the flagstaff, as it
gently floated in the breeze. It suddenly came over her, as no lesson
in history had ever taught her, what the civil war had meant. First
there was Ellen’s slave, and then the war had come and made him free.
There was a little catch in her throat, and she saw the flag now
through a blur of tears.

Joel Carpenter came next; and as there were no K’s in school, Lois’s
turn would come afterwards. She clutched her book, and her heart began
to beat very fast. It seemed no longer of any use to try to read, for
no one else had begun to do as well as Ellen and Jessie. Then Lois
thought of Maggie and her honest enthusiasm. The thought of Maggie gave
her courage as she walked across the school-room floor and mounted the
platform. For one moment her heart failed her, and then she made up her
mind that she would read “Barbara Frietchie” as she had never read it
before. She opened her book nervously and glanced down at the printed
page, then she made a flurried bow and prepared to read, but the words
that met her astonished gaze were “Cobbler Keezar’s Vision.” For a
moment she was half dazed, then she recognized the horrible truth that
she had lost her place. She turned the leaves hastily. In the confusion
of the moment she had forgotten in what part of the book “Barbara
Frietchie” lay hidden. “To Englishmen,” “The Preacher,” “The Tent on
the Beach,”--she turned hastily to the table of contents, but even
there “Barbara Frietchie” seemed to take a teasing pleasure in keeping
herself unrevealed. Here she was at last,--“Barbara Frietchie,” page
279.

Lois made another bow, a bow of humiliation, and then she began to
read. All the joy of the day had gone for her, and all the hope of
outshining Ellen and Jessie. She could hardly find her voice. She could
hear herself going over the pages with the mouse-like quiet with which
Dora Robertson had read. When she came to--

  “‘Shoot, if you must, this old gray head,
    But spare your country’s flag,’ she said,”

Lois read the words faintly, as if poor Barbara’s spirit had been
completely quenched by her strenuous day; and she made Stonewall
Jackson say,--

  “‘Who touches a hair of yon gray head
    Dies like a dog! March on!’ he said,”

in the gentle voice of a lady ordering a cup of tea. It was all too
terrible, but she got through it somehow, and when she made another bow
at the end, and finally sank into her seat, the only comfort she could
find in life was the certainty that this horrible ordeal would not
have to be repeated on the following Friday, for no one with a thinking
brain could put her reading among the first ten.

When every one had finished, even Reuben Morgan, who came at the end
of the school alphabet, and who, to Lois’s comfort, read in the same
poor-spirited way in which she had, the criticisms of the reading began.

Lois hardly heard what the children said, until her attention was
caught by a few words in Ethel Smith’s critical, clear-cut tones, “Lois
Page made three bows.”

Ellen and Jessie were unanimously chosen to head the sides. Lois felt
that she ought to be glad that her two best friends had this honor, but
she could be glad of nothing now; she could only wish that she could
hide her head forever in some spot far from the light of day.

As Lois and Jessie turned in at the gate, they saw Mittens sitting on
the front doorstep, in a calm, unruffled way.

“You are always lucky in everything that happens to you, Jessie,” said
Lois. “I wish I had a witch kitten.”




CHAPTER V

A SUMMER EXCHANGE


When school was over, and Jessie went to spend the long vacation with
her aunt and sister, Lois was so unhappy that it seemed as if she could
hardly live through the separation.

The day after her friend’s departure, Lois, with a pale, miserable
face, came to her mother.

“Mother, it looks so scant in my closet, with all Jessie’s things
gone,” she said. “I don’t see how I am going to stand it until she gets
back.”

Mrs. Page looked up from a stocking that she was darning.

“My dear child,” she returned, “I wish you had more of Jessie’s way of
finding happiness everywhere.”

“But, mother, it is easy for her to be happy, for she is going to be
with her aunt and Cicely. That is one of the worst parts of it, that
she was so glad to go.”

“But even if she had been the one to stay here, she would have
contrived to make herself contented. I think she would be going this
very minute to see the Morgans, and that is what I advise you to do.”

Things looked a little brighter, as Lois put on her hat and shut the
front door behind her, and her face lighted up with a smile when she
met Ellen turning in at the gate.

“You dear thing,” said Lois, “I was just going to see you. Come out on
the piazza and we’ll decide what to play.”

“I have come to tell you that I am going away to-morrow,” said Ellen,
with a solemn face.

“You are going away!” Lois felt that her last ray of comfort had gone.
“Where are you going?” she inquired in a subdued voice.

“To Hollisford, on an exchange with father. We are to drive there and
back, and perhaps we’ll stay over Monday.”

“What a lovely thing to do!” said Lois, with a sigh of envy.

“Yes, it is nice, and the nicest part is that father says I can ask
some girl to go too. I am wondering if Ethel Smith would enjoy it.”

At the mention of Ethel’s name poor Lois had a stab of jealousy.

“I know Ethel would like it very much,” she said slowly.

“I am not sure that it would not be better to ask Dora Robertson,”
Ellen continued; “she does not have so much fun as Ethel has.”

“Yes, Dora would just love it.”

“Goosie!” and Ellen put her arm impetuously around Lois’s waist; “do
you suppose I’d ask any one in the world but you? I can’t help teasing
you, because I can always get a rise out of you.”

“Do you mean that you and your father are going to take me on a driving
journey?” Lois asked, with shining eyes.

“Perhaps your mother won’t let you go,” said the irrepressible Ellen.
“In that case I’ll have a chance to ask Gertrude Brown.”

But Lois only smiled back at Ellen; she was beyond being teased now.

Mrs. Page was delighted that Lois was to have the pleasure of a little
journey, and the next day, after an early lunch, Mr. Morgan and Ellen
drove up to the gate, with Diana the brown horse, in the capacious
buggy that was wide enough for three.

Mrs. Page came out to see them off.

“Your rubbers and raincoat are in the dress-suit case,” she said, as
she put it in under the seat.

“Mother, it can’t rain,” Lois objected. “There isn’t a cloud in the
sky.”

“It may be a weather-breeder. It is well to be prepared for everything.
There are some sandwiches and cookies in this box, in case you are
hungry before you get to Hollisford.”

Oh, the joy of that drive! There would be five long hours before
Hollisford was reached; five hours of summer sunshine, alternating with
shady wood roads, and highways between meadows full of daisies, or else
sweet with new-mown hay. Five hours of the bliss of out of doors, in
company with Ellen and her father!

At first it was enough happiness just to sit still and watch the
landscape, the exquisite fresh green of trees, meadows, and hillsides;
to hear the rustle of the wind among the leaves, to watch a squirrel
as he ran along a stone wall and vanished among the branches of an
oak-tree; to exchange friendly greetings with the dwellers in the
lonely farmhouses scattered along the road; but a time came when the
shadows began to lengthen, when the luncheon had all been eaten and
they wanted more, when Ellen asked how long it would be before they got
to Hollisford. Then it was that Mr. Morgan proposed playing travelers’
whist. They agreed that every live creature, man, woman, child, and
animals of all sorts, should count one, excepting the cat, and she,
for some mysterious reason known only to Ellen, was to count five,
while a cat in the window was to count ten. Lois felt that Ellen had
much the best of it, for she was on the left-hand side, and whenever
they met a carriage, it turned to the right and passed along on Ellen’s
side of the road. Once they met a three-seated wagon drawn by two
horses and with three people on a seat, and this put Ellen far ahead of
Lois.

But at last, to Lois’s joy, there was a weather-beaten, vine-covered,
gray house on her side of the way, close by the roadside, and at the
window were a maltese cat and two maltese kittens.

“Look at the sweet things, Ellen,” said Lois. “Aren’t they darlings?
Three cats in the window for me. That makes thirty all at once. I am
ahead of you now.”

“There is only one cat in the window,” Ellen said. “Kittens oughtn’t to
count as much as cats. They oughtn’t to count more than half as much,
ought they, father?”

“But they are more than half as big as the cat,” Lois protested.

“As we can’t stop to measure all the cats we pass, I think we’ll call
it ten for kittens as well as cats,” Mr. Morgan decided.

“Very well,” said Ellen in an injured tone, “but I don’t think it is
fair.”

Just then a farm laborer and his wife and two little flaxen-haired
girls, one in a pink dress, the other in blue, and a boy in a torn
jacket, strolled out from a house farther down the road, crossed over,
and came along on Ellen’s side of the way.

“Five for me,” she cried.

“But they started on my side of the road,” said Lois.

“I can’t help that. They came over on my side finally.”

“If kittens were half what cats were, children ought to be half what
grown people are,” said Lois.

“But they are not. Father decided kittens and cats should count alike.”

“I only said _if_ they were.”

“But they are not.”

The last mile was enlivened by more than one dispute, for the children
were tired and hungry. The eating of the sandwiches and cookies now
seemed to have taken place in a remote past. Even Lois, who a few hours
before had wanted the afternoon to stretch on and on and never end,
was glad when they stopped at a white tavern with the sign “Hollisford
House” hanging before it.

Lois had traveled so little that her entrance into this country inn was
a great event. It looked very pleasant and homelike, with its broad
piazzas across the first and second stories. The inn stood at one end
of the village common, and facing it across the green was a brick
church with a white belfry.

The group of men who were smoking in the office of the Hollisford
House filled Lois with consternation, and she wondered that Mr. Morgan
and Ellen could take the formidable clerk so calmly. He showed them
to their rooms, up one flight of stairs and at the end of a winding
passage. Mr. Morgan had a small room, and Lois and Ellen shared a very
large one opening out of it.

“What a queer, rambling old room!” said Ellen; “it looks just as if it
might be haunted.”

“Don’t, Ellen, you make me feel quite crawly.”

Ellen went over to the windows and opened the blinds to let in the late
sunlight.

“Oh, Ellen, what a lovely view!” said Lois.

Two of the windows were at the back of the house, and looked out on
a swiftly flowing little brook that came rushing down between its
green banks, as if it were about to run under the tavern, but thinking
better of it, took a sharp turn to the right. There were willow-trees
on either side of the brook, and in the distance beyond the vegetable
garden was a peaceful meadow where two black and white cows were
grazing, and far away at the horizon rose a round, green hill. Lois
was enchanted with the quiet beauty of the scene, but Ellen was more
interested in a white-haired old woman who was taking some pillow-cases
off the clothes-line.

“I wonder why they have such a very old person to help do the work,”
said Ellen; “and why do you suppose she has left that feather-bed so
very near the brook?”

“I never noticed the feather-bed.”

Supper was a formidable meal to poor Lois, because they had to eat it
in a very large dining-room, at a long table half filled with guests.
Lois felt that her shoes had a too conspicuous squeak, as she crossed
the uncarpeted wooden floor. She longed to sit between Ellen and Mr.
Morgan, but Ellen also preferred to sit in the middle. As Lois was
nearest the kitchen, the maid came to her first for orders.

“Beefsteak, baked potatoes, and toast,” she said in an indifferent tone.

Lois wanted all three, but she was afraid this might seem too grasping,
so she said in an almost inaudible voice, “Baked potatoes and toast,
please,” only to find that both Ellen and Mr. Morgan said with bold
courage, “All three.”

When supper was over, they went upstairs to the large room, and Mr.
Morgan read aloud to the two little girls from “Ivanhoe” until their
bed-time.

“I suppose we ought to shut the blinds,” said Ellen, as she and Lois
began to undress. “The side windows open on the piazza, and any one
could look in. It would be very easy for a burglar to get in,” she
added dramatically.

“He wouldn’t find anything to steal,” Lois said cheerfully; “we haven’t
any watches, and I have only ten cents mother gave me to put into the
contribution-box to-morrow.”

“If he finds the ten cents you can tell him what it is for, and he will
leave it for the good cause,” said Ellen.

Lois thought this a very witty remark and she laughed merrily.

“Perhaps the ghost and the burglar will come at the same time, and the
ghost will frighten the burglar away,” she suggested.

“I believe your mother was right about to-day being a weather-breeder,”
said Ellen, as she closed the blinds; “it has clouded over and there
isn’t a star to be seen. I tell you what let’s do,” she added, as
she blew out the lamp and joined Lois in the wide, old-fashioned bed:
“let’s talk until midnight, just for the fun of it.”

“Oh, Ellen,” Lois replied sleepily, “I don’t think I could.”

“Well, you needn’t, then,” said Ellen stiffly. “I know Ethel Smith
would be just delighted to talk to me all night long, if I wished it.”

At the mention of this name Lois rubbed her eyes and said drowsily,
“All right, Ellen, what do you want to talk about?”

“Ghosts and burglars.”

“I don’t believe in ghosts, do you?” Lois asked.

“Well, they are very interesting to talk about, anyway,” said Ellen
non-committally.

After all, Ellen was the first to go to sleep, for her tales were
so exciting that Lois soon became very wide awake; but long before
midnight she too was peacefully slumbering, dropping off to the
accompaniment of the rain that was beginning to fall on the tin roof of
the piazza.

It seemed to her that she had been sleeping a long time when she was
waked by the slamming of a blind. The wind was blowing a gale and
the rain was falling in torrents. There were all sorts of strange
creaking, tapping, rattling noises, and although she was sure it was
only the wind, she could not but think of Ellen’s tales. How the house
shook! and what a noise the brook made as it rushed downhill! The
boards of the floor creaked as if some one were walking over them.
Surely that must be a footstep! There certainly was some one in the
room, and remembering Ellen’s burglar, Lois gave her friend a violent
shake.

“What’s the matter?” Ellen cried in a sleepy, but cross voice.

“Listen, Ellen.”

Ellen gripped Lois’s hand.

Through the surrounding darkness they could catch the glimmer of a
white form.

“It is a ghost,” Ellen said in an awestruck voice; and Lois, who did
not believe in ghosts, wished ardently that it was morning. Ellen held
Lois’s hand as if it were in a vise.

The white object moved stealthily towards the window.

Suddenly Ellen remembered that her father was in the next room.

“Father, father!” she called.

Then the ghost came towards them and said in Mr. Morgan’s comfortable
voice, “I am sorry I waked you up. It is such a storm I was afraid the
rain might be coming in at your east windows.”

Ellen laughed hysterically.

“We thought you were a ghost, father,” she said.

“Or a burglar,” added Lois.

“I am sorry to disappoint you,” said Mr. Morgan.




CHAPTER VI

THE STORM AT HOLLISFORD


The oldest inhabitant could not remember so severe a storm in July as
the one that followed Mrs. Page’s weather-breeder. Ellen, who liked
adventures, was delighted to find, when she waked in the morning, that
it was raining very hard.

She ran to a window and opened the blinds.

“Look, Lois!” she cried; “see how the brook has risen already; it is
almost up to the feather-bed!”

Lois came and looked. All her pretty, peaceful view of the night before
was blurred by the down-coming rain.

In the dining-room the guests were all talking of the storm, as they
ate their baked beans and fish-balls, and when church time approached,
it was raining so hard that Mr. Morgan said he thought that the little
girls had better stay at home.

“I have my raincoat and my rubbers,” said Lois.

“Of course we are going to church,” said Ellen, who longed to be out in
the storm.

“Well, if the landlady can lend you a waterproof,” Mr. Morgan began.

Lois put on her rubbers joyfully.

“I think you are very selfish,” said Ellen, with a gleam of mischief in
her eye that was lost on Lois, “to have two rubbers and never offer me
one.”

Lois pulled one off hastily.

Ellen laughed. “Goosie, what good would one rubber do either of us?”
she said.

“Of course it wouldn’t. I never stopped to think.”

“Ellen, you ought to be ashamed of yourself to tease her so,” said
Ellen’s father.

The landlady was not anxious to brave the storm, and cheerfully lent
Ellen an old-fashioned blue circular waterproof, that swept the ground;
but when it was pinned up with safety-pins and Ellen’s feet were
encased in rubbers far too large for her, the little company set out
for church. The children were glad that the services were to be held in
a white meeting-house a quarter of a mile away, instead of in the brick
one, as it meant a longer walk.

The church was very old, with galleries, and square pews with doors.
They had the building almost to themselves, and Ellen selected a pew
near the door.

“I have to sit so far forward at home that I want to sit where I can
see every one go in,” she whispered to Lois. “Doesn’t it seem just as
if we were keeping house in a dear little room?” she added presently,
as she closed the pew door. Lois, who had been taught never to whisper
in church, pretended not to hear. She sat up very straight with her
hands folded.

It seemed strange to the children that the slender congregation was
composed chiefly of the old or middle-aged, the very persons they would
have supposed the storm would have kept at home.

There were only three children present, besides themselves, and these
were boys, who were marshaled in by a severe-looking lady. When the
first hymn was given out, Ellen felt it her duty to sing as loud as
possible, as there were so few to join in the singing, and she let out
her voice in a way that astonished Lois, and caused a woman in the pew
in front of them to turn around.

When Mr. Morgan began his sermon, Lois found, to her delight, that it
was an old favorite of hers, a sermon upon looking on the bright side,
which he preached the first Sunday she ever heard him.

Lois felt a great deal older than she had done then, and she was sure
she was not half so apt to look on the dark side. Indeed, until Jessie
had gone away on her vacation, there had seldom been a dark side to
look on. Dear, sunny Jessie, who always made light of any little trial.
There never was any one half so sweet as Jessie.

When church was over, there was a temporary lull in the storm, and
Ellen persuaded her father to take them on a little walk across the
bridge and up the hill. Ellen walked into every puddle they came to.
She said that her rubbers were boats, and that it was her duty to give
them a sail whenever she could.

“Ellen, I wish your sense of duty was not quite so strong,” said her
father.

When they came back, they stood for a long time on the bridge throwing
in sticks and watching them sail out on the other side. Ellen had a
name for every vessel.

“Come, children, we really must go home,” said Mr. Morgan, cutting into
a description that Ellen was giving of the crew of the Shooting Star.
“It is beginning to rain hard again.”

[Illustration: HER RUBBERS WERE BOATS]

After their walk the children were very hungry. Lois was beginning to
feel quite at home at the long table. Both she and Ellen were delighted
to find that there was roast chicken for dinner, with the accompaniment
of mashed potatoes, peas, string beans, and jelly: each vegetable was
on a separate little dish. There were four kinds of dessert, apple
pie, raspberry tart, custard pie, and tapioca pudding. Again the maid
came to Lois first, and it was very hard to decide what to take, but
she finally chose raspberry tart and apple pie. The apple pie was made
of dried apples, which was a sad disappointment.

Ellen saw that her father was absorbed in a conversation with the man
next to him, and she seized the opportunity to order all four kinds of
dessert. “Doesn’t it seem just like Thanksgiving?” she whispered to
Lois.

Ellen was eating her raspberry tart when her father unexpectedly turned
and said to the maid, who was waiting for his order, “I see that my
little girl has saved me the trouble of ordering any dessert,” and he
pushed the tapioca pudding and the custard pie towards him, and said,
“That was very thoughtful of you, Ellen.”

“I never can get ahead of father,” Ellen said in a resigned voice.

It rained hard all the afternoon. When they were tired of reading, Lois
and Ellen went out to the barn to see some kittens. There were five of
them, and they were an exceedingly riotous family, and so little used
to people that they would not come near the children. They looked very
fascinating as they peered at Lois and Ellen from distant corners. The
mother was very friendly. She was something like Minnie, only she had
yellow streaks in her fur. Two of the kittens looked like her, two were
black and white, and the prettiest one was yellow and white. “How nice
it is for the cat to have five kittens!” said Lois. “It is so lonely
for Minnie and Mittens, now that Chinchilla has been given away.” Lois
was sure she could make friends with them in time. The landlady gave
her some milk in a pie-plate, which she put down on the barn floor.
The cat at once began to drink, and made the low call to her kittens
that Lois knew so well. Presently, to Lois’s delight, the kittens came
scurrying from different quarters, and there was a family group around
the pie-plate of a mother and her five children.

This excitement made a break in the long Sunday afternoon, and towards
tea-time Mr. Morgan took the children for another walk in the rain.

The next morning it was still raining. The brook had become a raging
torrent, and the feather-bed had been taken in at last. It was all very
well for it to have rained on Sunday, but they had planned to have a
day out of doors exploring the country on Monday, and the children were
not at all pleased to find such a wet day.

How hard it poured! There seemed no prospect of its ever clearing. Lois
and Ellen pressed their noses against the window-pane at intervals, but
there was no exploring to be done on this day.

After breakfast Lois thought it would help and please the landlady if
they made their bed.

It was not an easy one to make, for there was an old-fashioned
feather-bed on top, and punch and pull it as they would, they could not
get it into shape.

“It is like kneading bread,” said Ellen, “only it never seems to get
kneaded.”

When the bed was made it presented a strange appearance, for it stood
up like a mountain in the middle and sloped away in an amazing fashion
at each side.

“Good-morning,” said the landlady pleasantly, as she came in with clean
towels. “For the land’s sake!” She stood as if petrified for a moment,
and then said, “Who made that bed? Did Delia make it? I must give her a
scolding.”

“We made it. We wanted to help you,” Lois faltered.

“Well, the next time you want to help, you had better take a few
lessons in putting on feather-beds first. I guess you don’t have them
where you live.”

“No; I wish we did,” said Ellen, “they are so downy and comfortable.”

The landlady pulled the bed to pieces, and Lois had a discouraged
feeling. She thought she had been of so much help.

Afterwards Mr. Morgan read to them from “Ivanhoe,” and they were so
thrilled over the trials of Rebecca that they forgot they had wanted
the sunshine.

Mr. Morgan had to get home by Tuesday noon, so when the sun finally
came out the next morning, there was no time to do any exploring of the
neighboring country.

The drive home was an adventurous one, for a pond had risen so that it
spread over the road, and as they drove along, the water came up almost
to the steps of the carriage. But this was not all: when they reached
the hill where they had seen the three cats in the window, they found
the road was badly gullied. Mr. Morgan drew up his horse, and Lois
looked with dismay into the yawning chasm in front of them. A great
slice had been taken off the hill, and the road was impassable.

“What shall we do, father?” Ellen asked. Any sort of an adventure
delighted her. “Shall we scramble down into that hole and then climb up
on the other side?” She did not wait for an answer, but plunged into
the abyss, while Lois stood cautiously on the edge.

“I shall have to lead the horse around through that field,” said Mr.
Morgan.

“And you want us to let down those bars for you,” said Ellen,
scrambling up again with the mud clinging to her shoes and skirt. “That
is a cave, and there is an enchanted princess in it who has been turned
into a stone,” she informed Lois. “You ought to go down. It is most
interesting.”

“I don’t care to get my shoes muddy,” said Lois.

It was so exciting to drive through the rocky pasture that the rest of
the journey was commonplace in comparison.

       *       *       *       *       *

No European traveler, returning to his native land, could have had a
greater sense of having had adventures and seen the world than Lois
had, as she went up the steps and opened the green door of her house.
Was it possible that it was only three days since she had left her
quiet home?

“Well, dearest, did you have a good time?” her mother asked.

“We had such a good time, mother, and so many adventures!”

“What were they, dear?”

And then the hopelessness of ever describing them came over Lois. How
could she make her mother know the charm of that glorious drive in the
summer sunshine, or understand the excitement of life in the little
hotel, or feel the terror of the midnight burglar-ghost, the quaint
charm of the old church, and the rapture of the walk in the rain? How
could she make her feel that it was all doubly dear to her because
shared with Ellen and Ellen’s father?

“I am sorry it rained so much of the time,” said Mrs. Page; “it must
have been a great disappointment; but isn’t it fortunate I put in your
rubbers and raincoat?”




CHAPTER VII

THE VEGETABLE TEA-PARTY


School began on the Monday after Labor Day, and so Jessie came back in
time for Lois’s birthday. Lois was delighted to see her, although she
and Ellen had had such a good time together that she had not missed
Jessie half so much as she thought she should. One morning at school
Ellen said, “The vegetables are ripe in Anne’s and my garden, and
mother says I can ask you and Jessie to tea on your birthday.”

“What a lovely thing it is to have a witch kitten in the house!” Lois
exclaimed enthusiastically. “I am sure that is why the vegetables got
ripe just in time for my birthday.”

“Of course,” said Ellen.

Jessie and Lois could hardly wait for the afternoon of the party, and
when it finally came, it was such a warm, pleasant day that to their
great joy they could wear their white muslin dresses.

“Don’t you feel very old?” asked Ellen, as she greeted Lois and gave
her as many kisses as her years demanded.

“No,” Lois answered, “I suppose I ought to, but I don’t.”

She felt very young and shy when she sat down at the supper-table and
found herself placed, as the guest of honor, between Mr. Morgan and the
formidable Amyas. He had grown very tall in the last year, and seemed
much older than in the winter.

The table presented a unique appearance. In the middle was placed a
dish of melons, cut in halves, while at the corners of the centrepiece,
on which the dish stood, were small tumblers of radishes, and in front
of Mr. Morgan was a delicious-looking salad, made of cucumbers and
lettuce, with a cucumber vine encircling the dish.

“I arranged the table myself,” Ellen burst out. “Don’t you think it
looks perfectly lovely?”

Lois had hardly tasted the first mouthful of her salad when the maid
came to her with a letter.

“For me?” cried Lois. “How strange.”

“Some one must have heard you were here,” Amyas suggested.

Lois opened the envelope and found a pink ribbon inside, which just
matched the sash she wore. There were also some lines, which ran as
follows:--

  Here is a ribbon for your hair,
  Pray take it, dear, and place it there.
  May joy and pleasure come to you,
  So hopes your very loving
                                     SUE.

Lois looked across the table at Ellen’s grown-up sister and smiled her
thanks. She was delighted with the ribbon and almost as much pleased
with the verse.

“How nice it must be to be able to write poetry!” she shyly confided to
Amyas.

“Poetry! do you call that stuff poetry?” he asked. “If I only had a
name that would rhyme with anything, I could make much better poetry
for you. I’ll make some that will rhyme with your name,” and a little
later he broke a momentary silence by repeating,--

  “There was a child named Lois Page,
   Who’d reached so very great an age,
   She felt that dolls were surely folly,
   And thus she was most melancholy;
   For dolls she loved with all her heart,
   And from her dolls she could not part.
   Poor little girl, poor Lois Page,
   ’Tis sad to reach so great an age.”

“I shan’t be too old to play with dolls for a very long time,” Lois
stated.

“I am glad of that,” said Amyas, “for I have a small present. Where is
it?”--he felt in his pocket--“oh, here it is; I bought it for myself,
and when I tried it on, mother insisted it was too small for me. What
do you think, Lois?”

He gravely put on a doll’s hat, which was just the right size for
Lois’s Betty. It was made of white straw and was trimmed with a blue
ribbon, and a small feather was stuck in it.

Amyas looked so absurd with the tiny hat perched on top of his yellow
hair that every one burst out laughing.

“Don’t you think it is becoming?” Amyas inquired, with a smirk and
the conscious look in his blue eyes of an affected young lady. “Isn’t
it provoking of mother to say it is too small? If you like it for one
of your dolls, you can have it,” he said, presenting it to her with a
piece of paper on which was written the verse he had just quoted.

“Oh, thank you so much,” said Lois.

“I bought it for Amyas,” Ellen said. “I took down Jean because she is
just the size of Betty and fitted her, and I was so crazy to keep the
hat myself that Amyas gave me one too, so Jean and Betty will have hats
just alike.”

“Ellen is always fond of romancing,” said Amyas.

While Lois was still eating her salad the maid again brought her
something. This time it was a bunch of sweet peas of variegated colors,
and they were separated by a feathery green, so that they looked almost
as if they were growing on the vines. Lois plunged her nose into them
and inhaled the delicious fragrance. A card said, “For Lois, with best
wishes for a happy new year, from S. T. Morgan.”

“I can’t write verses,” said Mrs. Morgan, “but I picked these sweet
peas for you, Lois, with my own hands.”

The next gift was a tiny little box full of cotillon pencils of
different colors. There was a verse with them that ran:--

  Five pencils in their narrow bed,
  Yellow and green, blue, pink, and red.
  Oh, may these colors symbolize
  Woods and sunshine and bluest skies.
  Rainbows, sunsets, red letter days,
  And all life’s gay and pleasant ways.
  May every year of added age
  Bring added joy to Lois Page.

This was Mr. Morgan’s contribution, and it seemed to Lois the sweetest
poem of all.

There were rolls and cold chicken with the salad, and when this course
was finished, the melons were passed around with some cake with
cocoanut frosting. Lois was beginning to think she was not going to
have any more presents when the maid handed her another envelope.
Inside was a charming hand-painted paper doll made by Anne, and these
lines were written in Anne’s clear hand:--

  Here is a maiden with a fan,
  Dressed by your very loving

                         ANNE.

Lois was delighted. The poetic gift of the Morgan family filled her
with amazement.

“Anne painted in the fan on account of the rhyme,” Ellen confided to
the company. “We had such fun, all writing the verses together the
other night, only mother and Reuben can never write any. I am crazy to
have you hear my poem.”

Presently a very large bundle was placed on the table near Lois, and
she began to open it eagerly. She undid one wrapping-paper after
another, until finally she came to a moderate sized candy box.

“Candy; how nice!” said Lois, looking appreciatively at Ellen.

“I hope it will be your favorite kind,” said Ellen. “Guess what it is.”

“Chocolate peppermints,” said Lois.

She opened the cover, pulled up the paraffine paper, and underneath
were disclosed two small cucumbers. The disappointment was so great
that Lois at first could not appreciate the joke. Ellen’s verse was
written in her scrawling hand.

  Dear Lois, in your birthnight slumbers,
  I hope you’ll dream of my cucumbers;
  Of melon, monkey, and hand-organ,
  So hopes your best friend,

                           ELLEN MORGAN.

“Amyas bet me a doll’s hat that I couldn’t make a verse with a rhyme in
it to my own name, but I did,” said Ellen triumphantly.

There was only one more present, a small box of chocolate peppermints
from Reuben. There was no verse with it, only, “Lois from Reuben,” in
Mrs. Morgan’s attractive handwriting. Reuben was down at the other end
of the table next his mother, and Lois could not get enough courage to
thank him. She would wait until after supper. Reuben was even shyer
than she was; he was a little older than Lois, and did not have the
charm of his older brother. Nevertheless, Reuben had been very kind to
her when she had stayed with the Morgans in the winter, having taught
her to skate, and yet she never saw him now without relapsing into her
old fear of him, he was so silent and was apt to look so indifferent.

It happened that Reuben did not sit near Lois in the games they played
after supper, so she had no chance to thank him for his present. Mrs.
Morgan had said that one of the boys would see the children home, and
Lois thought if it were Reuben, she would gather courage to thank him
then, but it proved to be Mr. Morgan who walked back with them. Amyas
came out to the front door politely, but Reuben was nowhere to be seen.

Her pleasure in Reuben’s gift had been spoiled by the fact that the
inscription had been in his mother’s writing. Lois was sure he had not
bought the candy for her himself, but that Mrs. Morgan had felt it
would seem rude if each member of the family were not represented.

“Mother, we had such a lovely time!” Lois said when they reached home.
“I had seven presents and five poems,” and she proceeded to show her
treasures, and to give an animated account of the evening.

Mrs. Page was most sympathetic.

“Mother, you don’t think it is any matter if I don’t thank Reuben, do
you?” Lois asked. “I am sure it was really his mother’s present.”

“I don’t think so,” said Jessie. “I am sure it was only that he was
ashamed of his bad handwriting.”

“Well, at any rate, it is only polite to thank him,” said Mrs. Page,
entirely unaware of what a desperate task she was setting her daughter.

“Of course you ought to,” said Jessie, who would not in the least have
minded thanking a schoolful of children.

“I shall have to thank Reuben to-day,” Lois thought the next morning,
and this reflection was such a weight at her heart that the glorious
September sunshine seemed clouded. When Lois reached school and saw
Reuben come in, her heart began to beat very fast. He had a stolid
expression, and when recess came he went out immediately. As the day
wore on, it seemed more and more impossible to thank him, and when two
unhappy days had dragged themselves by, poor Lois felt that she would
gladly have foregone all the glories of her birthday, if by this means
she could escape thanking this member of the Morgan family for his gift.

“I must do it,” she thought. “Mother said so, and it is rude not to,
but it does not seem as if I could.”

The longer she put it off, the harder it was. On Saturday Lois and
Jessie went to the Morgans’ to play croquet with Anne and Ellen, and
while they were in the midst of a game Reuben appeared, asking some
question about his tennis racquet.

“Now,” thought Lois, “I must do it,” but he was off again like a flash
before the words left her lips.

On Monday morning, when she and Jessie came out at recess, she saw
Reuben and his great friends, Joel Carpenter and Jack Brown, on the
steps of the Baptist meeting-house, which was next to the school-house.
They were deep in conversation, evidently discussing some plan. Without
giving herself time to think, Lois left Jessie and went forward
quickly. The boys were standing on the third step, and so were just
above her. Clasping her hands behind her and with upturned face, she
said hurriedly,--

“Reuben, I thank you very much for my birthday present.”

Then she hastily turned her back on him and fled.

“Gee!” burst from Joel Carpenter’s lips, as Lois hurried down the
street.




CHAPTER VIII

THE TREE THAT GREW IN THE PAGES’ GARDEN


Whenever anything pleasant happened, the children always pretended that
it was owing to the witch kitten, but in the case of the darning-class
there was no need of making believe, for even such an incredulous
on-looker as Mrs. Page acknowledged that Mittens was the cause of their
good fortune. Lois and Jessie and Anne and Ellen made up between them a
short account of the affair modeled on “The House that Jack Built.”

  This is the tree that grew in the Pages’ garden.

  This is the witch cat that climbed the tree that grew in the Pages’
    garden.

  This is the dog that barked at the witch cat that climbed the tree
    that grew in the Pages’ garden.

  This is the maid in a lilac gown that chased the dog, with an awful
    frown, that barked at the witch cat that climbed the tree that grew
    in the Pages’ garden.

  This is the rent that came in the gown of the dainty maid with the
    awful frown who chased the dog that barked at the witch cat that
    climbed the tree that grew in the Pages’ garden.

  This is the dame in the ancient town who mended the rent in the lilac
    gown of the dainty maid with the awful frown who chased the dog that
    barked at the witch cat that climbed the tree that grew in the
    Pages’ garden.

This was what happened. Lois and Jessie were weeding their flower-beds,
and Minnie and Mittens were frisking about them, unconscious of
approaching evil. They were just behind the children, when a large
brown and white spaniel came into the garden. The little girls were
intent on their weeding, and did not notice his approach, when suddenly
a series of loud barks and terrified mews caused them to turn hastily.
Lois saw a picture that made her heart stand still. Minnie, with her
back up, was rushing valiantly towards the intruder.

“Oh, Jessie, Minnie will be killed!” cried Lois. “Minnie, Minnie
darling, come to me!”

Meanwhile Mittens was seeking the safety of a neighboring tree. He was
so young that he was not sure that dogs could not climb, and so he
went up as high as he could get and sat on a slender branch, huddled
together in a forlorn little heap, a most abject and frightened kitten.

Lois stood petrified, but Jessie instantly ran between the dog and the
cat.

“Don’t, Jessie!” exclaimed Lois, even more afraid for the safety of
her friend than for that of her pets. “He may bite you.”

The dog was still growling; he was just preparing to make another dash
at the cat, who, on her side, was about to spring at his head.

Jessie swooped down on Minnie and deposited the struggling animal in
the cat-house, shutting her in; then she turned to bend her energies
to getting rid of the dog. Finding that he was balked of his prey, he
now took up his station at the foot of the apple-tree where Mittens had
taken refuge, and gave a series of low growls. Poor Mittens answered by
piercing mews.

“Come, poor fellow, come, good dog,” said Jessie.

“He is a bad dog,” said Lois energetically. She was still at a safe
distance, but came a few steps nearer as she spoke. “I think he intends
to stay all night,” she continued. “What shall we do? Poor Mittens will
die of fright, and just hear what a dreadful noise Minnie is making.”

Minnie was walking about on the window-sill of the cat-house like a
raging tiger, furious at having been deprived of her fight.

“The only thing is to try kindness,” said Jessie. “Good dog, poor
doggie, good dog.”

“He is a bad dog,” Lois repeated. She had once more retired to a safe
distance.

“Do keep still, Lois; he doesn’t mean to be bad any more than Minnie
does. I wish I had something for him to eat.”

At this moment the kitten climbed a little higher, and the shaking of
the branch sent a rosy astrachan apple to the ground.

“How stupid I was!” said Jessie. “We had a spaniel once that loved
apples.” She picked one up from the ground, bit out a piece, and
held it before him enticingly. A change came over him, and he slowly
followed her as she moved back a few paces. He turned, however,
irresolutely, to look at the tree. “Good dog, good dog,” Jessie said
soothingly. Finally she succeeded in wholly distracting his attention
from the kitten. She moved slowly back until she got him outside the
yard. Then she gave him the piece of apple.

Meanwhile the dog’s master was looking for him, and the spaniel joined
him and went off down the street.

When Jessie returned to Mittens she said, “Now it is perfectly safe,
you can come down, dear.”

Poor Mittens looked at her as if he would say, “I would come down if
I could.” Fright had made him climb higher than he had ever climbed
before, but it was one thing to climb up and quite another to come down.

The children looked at each other.

“He can’t come down,” Lois said. “What are we to do now? We’ll have to
get Joe Mills to bring a ladder and get him down,” she added presently.

“Joe Mills is working at the Browns’ to-day. It will be nearly six
o’clock when he comes by. Mittens will be almost out of his mind with
fright before that. I can get him down all right.”

“But he is on such a small branch,” Lois objected. “You can never climb
up to him, the branch won’t bear you.”

Jessie’s only answer was to begin to climb the tree. She went up as
high as she could, but the kitten was some distance above her head.

“Mittens, come down, Mittens,” she called caressingly. The kitten
made a feeble movement. Jessie reached up with one hand. Mittens came
cautiously down a little way and Jessie caught him. The branch she was
on was hardly strong enough to bear her weight. It began to show signs
of breaking. Jessie hastily put the kitten on her shoulder so that she
could use her two hands, but in scrambling down her foot slipped, and
she and Mittens fell in a heap on the ground.

“Are you hurt?” Lois asked anxiously.

“No, we are all right, aren’t we, Mittens? Only I have torn my frock,”
and she looked ruefully at a large tear in her skirt.

“Oh, how too bad!” said Lois, “and that is such a pretty dress.”

“I wish I knew how to darn,” said Jessie. “I have made such a lot of
trouble for your mother. Now you never tear your clothes.”

“But I don’t do such interesting things. I’m not brave like you.”

“I hate to tell your mother,” said Jessie.

“Oh, mother won’t mind. She’ll just say, ‘How could you be so
careless!’ and then she’ll mend your skirt so beautifully you’ll hardly
know it was torn.”

“Yes, but she has had to mend so many things for me already,” sighed
Jessie.

At this moment they saw a carriage drive up to the gate, and Mrs.
Draper got out and came along the brick walk to the front door.

Mrs. Draper was old enough to be Mrs. Page’s mother, but in spite of
that fact she was one of Lois’s best friends. She ran up to her now.

“Mother isn’t in; she’ll be so sorry to miss you!” she said.

“I will stop and see you and Jessie,” said Mrs. Draper, signing to her
coachman to drive on. “Let me come out into the garden, it is a perfect
day to stay out of doors.”

“Mrs. Draper, I am not fit to be seen,” said Jessie. “I’ve torn this
dreadful hole in my dress.”

“She has saved the life of our witch cat,” Lois explained, and she gave
Mrs. Draper an account of the incident that lost nothing in the telling.

“I am sorry I was so careless,” said Jessie. “I am always tearing my
clothes. I am so sorry for Aunt Elizabeth!”

“Now if there is one thing that I can do well, it is darning,” said
Mrs. Draper. “I used to darn the stockings and the clothes for a large
family before I was married. Bring the dress over to my house, Jessie,
and I will promise to make it look almost as well as if Mrs. Page did
it. We won’t tell her anything about it until it is mended.”

“Oh, Mrs. Draper, how kind you are! I couldn’t let you do it. Couldn’t
you show me how? I ought to learn to darn, if I am going to be so
careless. You see at home there was always Marie to do the washing
and sewing, and I am afraid I never thought about how much work I was
making.”

Mrs. Draper sat down on the bench in the garden near the children’s
flower-beds. Lois thought how very lovely she looked in her gray gown
and hat that so perfectly harmonized with her gray hair.

“I am afraid it would take you some time to learn,” she said, “so I
will mend this especial frock; but if you would really like to know how
to darn your clothes and your stockings, I shall be delighted to teach
you.” She saw Lois’s wistful, pleading face, and added, “and you too,
of course, Lois dear, and perhaps Anne and Ellen Morgan would like to
join us. I will read aloud to you while you are at work.”

“Oh, Mrs. Draper, that would be perfectly lovely,” cried Lois, “if
mother lets us, and I am sure she will.”

“How well your nasturtiums have lasted!” said Mrs. Draper, “and the
cosmos is beautiful, and what a fine scarlet geranium that is! But what
is that vine in the middle of each bed? Oh, I see, it is a cucumber
vine, and there are cucumbers on it. I did not see them at first. What
an original idea, but it is really quite ornamental.”

“It isn’t Ellen’s fault that there aren’t melons and squashes too,”
said Lois, and she told the whole story.

Mrs. Draper laughed heartily at Ellen’s prank.

“I never knew any one so lucky as I am,” Jessie said to Lois as they
went to bed that night. “Most children would get a dreadful scolding
for tearing their clothes, and here I am having my dress mended by Mrs.
Draper, and we are to have this lovely darning-class.”

“It is a fortunate thing to own a witch kitten,” said Lois.




CHAPTER IX

MRS. DRAPER’S DARNING-CLASS


A few days later, the Drapers’ coachman brought two square envelopes
to the house. Lois found, to her delight, that one was directed to
herself and the other to Jessie. They opened them eagerly. Inside was a
correspondence card with the monogram C. L. D. in silver letters at the
top. On each card was written,--

                MRS. HENRY DRAPER

        BEGS THE PLEASURE OF YOUR COMPANY
  NEXT SATURDAY, FROM HALF-PAST TWO UNTIL HALF-PAST
          THREE, FOR THE FIRST MEETING
             OF THE DARNING-CLASS.


  _Please bring a stocking with a hole in it._


There was some difficulty in getting the stockings, for Mrs. Page had
already done the weekly mending, but she finally suggested that Mrs.
Morgan could easily provide enough for all of them, and this proved to
be the case. The four children met outside the Drapers’ gate. Anne was
more than a year older than Jessie, but she was only a little taller,
as Jessie was large for her age. Anne was a very beautiful girl, with
curly golden hair and blue eyes. She and Jessie put their arms around
each other’s waists, and so did Lois and Ellen. Ellen carried a brown
plaid Boston bag that had grown shabby from long service.

“Isn’t this a hideous old thing?” she asked. “Mother says it is good
enough to last for years. I hate Boston bags! It has four stockings
in it,--one of Anne’s, and one of mine, and one of Amyas’s, and one
of Reuben’s. I am going to mend Amyas’s, for it is so much more
interesting to mend somebody else’s things, and besides, the hole is
a small one, and Anne will mend Reuben’s, and you can mend mine, and
Jessie, Anne’s. Won’t you just love to mend my stocking for me?”

“That depends on the kind of a hole it has,” said Lois unsentimentally.

“You oughtn’t to mind a little thing like that. You ought to be just
crazy to do anything for me. Gertrude Brown would be perfectly thrilled
to have a chance to mend my stocking.”

They were going up the Drapers’ avenue as she spoke, and presently
reached the front door, which was opened by the neat maid in a white
cap.

“I used to be so scared last year when I came to this house,” Lois
confided to Ellen, “but now I don’t mind at all.”

“How prompt you are!” said Mrs. Draper, coming forward to meet them.
“It is so warm to-day that I think it will be pleasant out on the
piazza,” and she led the way through the large hall hung with portraits
of Drapers in the clothes of a past century.

The piazza was at the back of the house, and was glassed in later
in the season. It was large and square like a room, and contained a
sofa and a table and a variety of comfortable chairs, all of green
wicker-work. From the piazza they could look into the Drapers’
beautiful old-fashioned garden. It was a little too late for many
flowers, but there were chrysanthemums of all kinds and colors still in
blossom, besides dahlias and cosmos. The yellows and dull reds of the
chrysanthemums and dahlias pleased the children’s color-loving eyes.

They all stood until Mrs. Draper had seated herself in one of the
armchairs, and then Anne and Jessie slipped into seats near her, while
Ellen and Lois took their places on the green wicker sofa, that they
might be as close together as possible. On the table there was a dainty
bag of white cretonne, with heliotrope fleur-de-lis on it. It was a
large bag and held Mrs. Draper’s darning-materials. Ellen clutched her
brown plaid Boston bag, and hastily slipped it down on the floor on the
other side of the sofa.

Mrs. Draper took four wooden eggs out of her bag and gave one to each
of the class.

“Now if you will give me your stockings, I will show you how to go to
work,” she said.

Ellen stooped to unfasten her bag, and in pulling out the stockings she
sent her thimble and Anne’s flying across the piazza floor.

When they were all at work, the four little girls looked very
business-like as each one sat with an egg in her stocking, which
disclosed the hole in all the roughness of its outline. Anne’s hole,
which fell to Jessie’s share, was a delicate and lady-like one compared
with the sturdy hole in Reuben’s sock which Anne was placidly mending,
and the enormous one in Ellen’s stocking with which poor Lois was
contending.

Mrs. Draper showed them how to draw the hole up around the edge,
and then to put the threads in up and down, and after that to cross
them with other threads, which they wove in and out like a basket
pattern, reminding Jessie of the weaving she had learned years ago at
kindergarten.

“I am going to give a prize to the one who does the best work,” said
Mrs. Draper, and Ellen, who had felt that it didn’t matter very much
whether she was careful or not, so long as it was Amyas’s sock she was
mending, began to pull out her work.

When they were all well under way, Mrs. Draper took from the table a
book bound in black and gold.

“I am going to read to you from ‘The Lady of the Lake,’” said Mrs.
Draper. “This is the very book from which I read when I had a similar
darning-class for my nieces, forty years ago.”

Lois felt very proud when she had the preliminary part of her darning
done, and had put in all the threads that went up and down.

“It looks like a harp with a thousand strings,” whispered Ellen.

“I shall give only a small prize to-day,” said Mrs. Draper. “I have
some sheets of gold and silver paper and some tissue paper of different
colors that I thought perhaps you could use for paper-doll dresses.”

The children’s eyes gleamed with pleasure.

“But after three lessons I am going to give the pupil who has improved
the most, this,” and Mrs. Draper took out of her bag an emery made in
the shape of a strawberry. The children all thought it very beautiful,
for besides being of such a pretty shape and color, it had a silver
top. “This is to be the second prize at the end of three weeks,” and
Mrs. Draper held up a little needle-book covered with white silk that
had a pattern of pink rosebuds and green leaves on it. She untied the
pink ribbons and showed some darning-needles and embroidery needles
inside.

“I think the second prize is the nicest,” said Ellen.

“Well, the most promising pupil can choose which she likes best,” said
Mrs. Draper.

In the middle of the lesson they had a recess; the maid brought out
a tray, and on it were five glasses of lemonade, and some very thin,
delicate ginger cookies.

“This is what I always used to have for my nieces, forty years ago,”
said Mrs. Draper, with a gentle little sigh.

“I am so glad you did!” said Ellen.

As the end of the hour approached, Mrs. Draper brought out the gold and
silver sheets and the tissue paper. There were sheets of nearly all
the colors of the rainbow, green, blue, yellow, red, and also pink and
gray. Lois longed more and more to have those beautiful sheets of paper
for her very own. She tried hard to make her hole look neat, but it was
larger than any of the others, even than the one Anne was darning, and
Anne was so much older and quicker with her fingers that Lois despaired
of equaling her. Mrs. Draper took the four stockings, when they were
finished, and looked at them critically.

“That is not bad for a first attempt,” she said, holding up Anne’s,
“but even that is far from the work I hope you will all do some time.
There is no doubt but that the first prize goes to Anne. I am going to
have a second prize, however, for the one who darned the largest hole,
so, Lois, you will have some of this paper.”

She divided the sheets into two portions, as she spoke, giving twice as
many to Anne as to Lois.

“Now next Saturday,” she said, “I am going to give out the stockings
myself, and let Ellen have the largest hole to mend, because she has
had the smallest to-day, and Lois will have the smallest. Don’t you
think this is only fair?”

“Yes, I do,” Ellen admitted, hanging her head.




CHAPTER X

A RED LETTER DAY


After this, the darning-class became the chief feature in the week, and
the children were sure never to miss a lesson. The book grew more and
more interesting, and so did the darning, as they learned to be less
clumsy with their needles; and when the third Saturday came, the little
girls were most eager to know who were to have the prizes. Anne was
still the best worker, but Ellen had high hopes of getting the first
prize, because she had improved so much.

“She said, you know, the one who had improved the most was to get
it,” Ellen remarked to Lois, as they were walking, arm in arm, up the
Drapers’ avenue. “Now my work was perfectly horrid at first, and I do
it a lot better now.”

“So do I,” said Lois. Lois had no hope of getting the first prize, as
she could see that Anne and Jessie were better workers than she, but
she had a faint hope that her marked improvement would entitle her to
the second.

“Anne and Jessie are so much older than we are that I don’t think it is
fair,” said Ellen.

“Isn’t it fun that we are really to have the prizes given to-day?” said
Lois. “I think this is a red letter day.” This expression, which she
had met for the first time in Mr. Morgan’s verse, had fascinated her.

“I don’t think it will be unless we get a prize,” said Ellen.

It was a very exciting meeting, for the two prizes were in full view
while they worked, and the strawberry had never looked so red and
enticing, and the little needle-book seemed daintier than ever. They
could now darn more than one hole in the hour, and their weekly meeting
was a real godsend to Mrs. Morgan and Mrs. Page. The children were hard
at work, bending over their stockings with flushed faces, when Judge
Draper rushed out on the piazza like a large tornado, stumbling over
Ellen’s Boston bag, and catching at the sofa to prevent his falling.

“Connie, Leonard says it is going to rain to-morrow, and that the wind
is playing the deuce in the hill orchard. I must get in the apples
to-day. I’ve come to ask you to drive up there with me this afternoon.”

“I told you I had an engagement,” said Mrs. Draper, glancing at the
children.

The judge looked at them as if they were of no more importance than
flies, and could be as easily brushed aside.

“But I want you, do you understand? The apples must be picked this
afternoon.”

“And unfortunately I have an engagement.” The more vehement he was, the
quieter she became. “You don’t need me to help you pick apples.”

“But I want your company on the trip.”

The children’s hearts sank while this dialogue was going on. It was
so hard to be in sight of the emery bag and the little needle-book,
so aggravating to be within an hour of solving the great mystery as
to whom they should belong, and then to have the decision postponed
for a whole week. It would be a disappointment that would be almost
unbearable.

“Come, Connie, there is no time to lose. We must start in a quarter of
an hour.”

“I am very sorry, children,” began Mrs. Draper, “but you see the judge
wants me to go so much.” Just then a bright idea struck her. “Harry,
why shouldn’t we all go?” she asked. “The children could ride in the
wagon with the barrels, and they could help pick the apples.”

Suddenly the judge seemed to become aware that the little girls
were not flies to be brushed aside, but human beings with desires
and capacities. He saw four young faces, and three of them glanced
up with different degrees of eager anticipation shining in their
eyes. Ellen and Jessie looked as if they could hardly keep back an
exclamation, while if Lois was more subdued, there was a wistful
expression on her countenance that was almost more appealing. It was
the “this-is-too-good-to-be-true, and-so-I-must-not-think-of-it”
expression. Anne alone sat serene and quiet. It was Anne, however,
who settled the fate of the others. She was so very pretty, as she
sat there demurely looking down at her work, that the judge wanted to
take her along with him, and he was also curious to see if it would be
possible to ruffle that calm exterior.

“Children, I believe I will take you.”

A chorus of exclamations followed. “Oh, Judge Draper, how perfectly
lovely!” from Jessie. “How perfectly great!” from Ellen, and “Didn’t I
say it was going to be a red letter day?” in low tones from Lois. Anne
alone said nothing, but she began quietly to fold up her work.

“I will take some of you, anyway,” the judge went on, with a twinkle in
his eye.

A sudden terrible suspense came over the company.

“Miss Anne, now, hasn’t said she wants to go, and perhaps it is too
undignified a trip for her. Miss Anne, would you rather be left behind?”

“No, sir,” said Anne, in her sweet, low voice. “I’d like to go very
much, but there are lots of things I can do at home, if you haven’t
room for me.”

“I guess there’ll be room all right.”

They all went home in a great hurry to get wraps; and the emery bag
and the needle-book, once the envy of all eyes, were left on the table
quite forgotten.

Mrs. Draper and the judge started on ahead in the buggy, leaving the
four children to follow them.

It was great fun scrambling into the wagon, and Ellen immediately
perched herself on top of a barrel.

“There are four barrels, one for each of us,” she said gayly.

Jessie climbed in next and took her place on a barrel, but Lois
hesitated. The barrel looked like a dizzy height to her, and the seat
seemed very insecure.

“Come, Lois, jump in!” Ellen cried impatiently. Lois stood first on one
foot and then on the other. She did not dare to sit on the barrel, and
neither did she dare to say that she was afraid.

“I am going to sit in front with Leonard,” said Anne. “It will be ever
so much more comfortable. Won’t you sit there with me, Lois?”

And this was how it happened that as they drove through the village
street there were two vacant seats in what Ellen named “the orchestra
circle.”

“Hullo! where are you going?” Reuben demanded, as he and Amyas passed
the wagon.

“To pick apples in Judge Draper’s orchard. Don’t you want to come?”
Ellen asked, with suspicious sweetness.

“You bet!”

“Well, you can’t, you know, for you weren’t invited to this theatre
party.”

“I guess we can get admission tickets at the door,” he retorted, and he
and Amyas swung themselves into the wagon without further ceremony.

Lois looked straight ahead, and did not once turn to speak to them.
Ever since she had thanked Reuben for his present, she had crossed the
street whenever she saw him approaching. The pleasure had all gone out
of the trip for Lois. Why had those boys insisted upon coming to spoil
the afternoon?

And here was Jessie evidently finding an added zest in the occasion,
for she greeted them most cordially and talked with the greatest ease.

Anne turned every now and then to put in a word, and Lois was the only
silent member of the party.

“I wish I had stayed at home,” she thought. “Nobody wants me. Nobody
speaks to me.”

They were all laughing and joking together, and she felt very dull and
dumb.

It was a beautiful October afternoon. The sky was even more cloudless
than when they had gone to Brierfield to gather mayflowers, and the
world was quite as beautiful, in a different way. Color flashed at them
all along the road. There were flaming scarlet sumachs, and yellow
maples and red ones, and every now and then a solitary oak sedate in
russet brown. Suddenly they came upon some blue gentians shyly looking
up at them from the roadside. They were so exquisite with their fringed
petals that Lois forgot herself and said, “Look at those beautiful
gentians.” Then, abashed by the sound of her voice, she was silent.

“Let’s get out and pick some,” said Ellen.

“They’ll fade,” said Anne; “we’d better wait until we are coming home.”

The judge and Mrs. Draper were waiting in the orchard to receive their
guests.

“Good Lord! Who invited you to come?” the judge asked, when he saw the
boys.

“We invited ourselves, sir,” said Amyas, with a pleasant smile. “We
thought that ‘Many hands make light work.’”

“Well, as you are here, you may as well stay, but I trust many mouths
won’t make light work.”

They all began picking apples, but Lois stopped every now and then out
of pure joy in the October sunshine and the splendor of the autumn
coloring. At the foot of the hill the yellows and reds of the trees
blended together softly, while in the apple orchard the bright red of
the apples made many little spots of vivid color. Anne in her blue
gown and white sweater looked very graceful as she raised her arm to
pick the apples, and Ellen in her red sweater darted about the field
sampling each tree, but never staying long anywhere.

“You look like a scarlet tanager, Ellen,” said Lois.

“Do I? I would rather look like that than like a blue jay, like Anne.”

Suddenly Lois gave a loud scream. A black snake had wriggled along the
grass and placed himself just at her feet.

“What is the matter?” the others cried.

“It is a snake! I am so afraid of them!”

She felt disgraced in having given way to her fears, and yet she could
not help it.

Anne, who was picking apples near Lois, ran back in fright, while
Jessie and Ellen boldly came over with the boys to look at the snake.

“I think he’s the poisonous kind,” Jessie said. “We’ve had them at
Brierfield.”

Leonard, who was on the other side of the orchard, picked up a big
stick, and started to come over; but Reuben, who always liked to be the
leading spirit whenever there was anything to be done, dashed in ahead.

“I guess he’s done for now,” he said, as he gave the snake some blows
with a stick. “You needn’t be afraid of him any more,” he added to Lois.

Lois still felt ashamed of having screamed. She wished she were brave,
like Jessie and Ellen.

It seemed strange that Reuben should be so much nicer to her after she
had screamed and he had killed the snake. She had supposed her silly
terror would put the finishing touch to his contempt for her.

When they had picked all the apples on the low branches, it was proved
a fortunate thing that the judge had brought so many children with him,
for they climbed up into the higher branches and gathered the fruit
that grew there.

“Come up here where I am, Lois; it’s lots more fun,” Ellen called out.

Lois climbed a little higher, but it made her feel dizzy to look down,
so she clung to a branch, and said she would rather stay where she was.

“You are afraid of everything,” said Ellen. “First you were afraid to
sit on a barrel, and then you were afraid of the snake, and now you are
afraid of an apple-tree.”

“You shut up, Ellen Morgan,” said Reuben. “If you were afraid of a few
more things, you would be a lot pleasanter to live in the house with.”

“So would you,” Ellen returned. “I wish you were a little afraid of me,
and then you wouldn’t say such rude things.”

Most of the time Mrs. Draper had been sitting on the carriage cushion,
which the judge had taken out and put on the top of the stone wall. Now
she went over to the carriage and took out a basket of provisions.

“I was going to have an extra feast to-day on account of giving the
prizes,” she said.

The prizes! Only a few hours before, the children had felt as if they
could not live in peace without knowing who were to receive them, and
not one of them had thought of the prizes since she left the Drapers’
house; for life is full of variety, and the unexpected things that
happen in each day make its charm.

They gathered around Mrs. Draper, and she took out, not only the
customary wafer ginger cookies and a bottle of lemonade, but also some
sandwiches and some nut cake.

“I did not know we were going to have quite such a large company when I
put up the lunch,” she said.

“Never mind,” said Amyas, “I am sure Ellen will be perfectly delighted
to give me her share.”

After the feast was over, they went back to the apple-trees and picked
apples until the sun went down into a bank of clouds almost as golden
as he was himself. The red letter day was coming to an end; but
there is this peculiar charm about red letter days, that while other
days fade into a blur of forgetfulness, the red letter days are ours
forever; and Lois would always remember the autumn foliage, the golden
sunset, Jessie, Anne, and Ellen, as they flitted about the field, Mrs.
Draper, the restful spot in the picture as she sat and watched them,
and the handsome, graceful Amyas; even the snake and Reuben’s kindness
would not be forgotten.

When they came to the gentians once more, as they were driving
downhill, Reuben jumped out of the wagon and began to pick some. He was
quickly followed by Amyas.

“Get enough for me too, Reuben,” Ellen called out.

“You can get some for yourself, if you want any,” he returned
ungraciously.

“I guess I will,” and she sprang out of the wagon and joined them.

Reuben bunched his gentians together clumsily and held them out
awkwardly to Lois without a word. “I must be sure to thank him,” she
thought. “Thank you very much. I am sorry you had so much trouble,” she
said shyly.

“That’s no matter.”

Amyas brought a bouquet of gentians, most daintily arranged, to Jessie,
which he handed her with his accustomed grace. He then presented his
sister Anne with another.

Lois looked down at the flowers in her lap. Anne’s and Jessie’s had a
value which hers did not possess.

“I wish Amyas had given me some,” she thought.




CHAPTER XI

GRANDMOTHER LOIS


Lois’s grandmother, for whom she was named, was coming to make the
Pages a visit, and both Lois and her mother were looking forward to
this event with secret misgivings. Lois tried to think that she was
very fond of her grandmother, but for some reason she never felt
comfortable in her presence, and the more she admired her stately
figure and rapid flow of language, the more awkward and tongue-tied
she felt herself to be. To begin with, her grandmother had made it
very evident that she would have liked her much better if she had been
a boy. As for Lois herself, she was only too thankful that she had
escaped this fate, for boys and dogs were to her mind the dark blots in
an otherwise fair world.

“Lois, I think you had better come to the train with me to meet your
grandmother,” said Mrs. Page, on the afternoon when their guest was to
arrive.

“Jessie and I were going to the Morgans’ to play croquet.”

“You can go there afterwards.”

“Jessie has a music lesson afterwards.”

“Well, I am sorry for your disappointment, but I would like to have you
come with me.”

The train was nearly an hour late, and Lois’s patience was almost
exhausted.

“If we had only known it was going to be late, I could have gone to the
Morgans’,” she said, over and over, until her mother felt like saying,
“I am sure I wish that you had.”

At last the train steamed into the station, and Mrs. Page went
forward as the passengers began to get out. Among the first was an
alert-looking lady, a little past fifty, wearing a well-made black suit
and a black hat with ostrich plumes.

“I am sorry your train is so late,” said Mrs. Page, as she shook hands
with her mother-in-law. “Come, Lois, take your grandmother’s bag.”

Lois, who had hold of her mother’s hand, and was hanging back in the
vain hope of escaping observation, now had to come forward.

“Bless me! How Lois has grown! She is large for her age, and how she
looks like her father around the eyes! She is an out-and-out Page.”

Lois was not sure whether this was meant as a compliment.

“There is a hack over here,” said Mrs. Page. “Will you give me your
check?”

“Here it is. I would rather walk.”

“They don’t charge anything extra for passengers, so you might as well
ride.”

“If that is not New Hampshire all over! It is just as cheap for me to
do something I don’t want to do, and so you propose that I should ride
in that stuffy hack, so as to get the full value of twenty-five cents.”

“Oh, if you would rather walk, we will,” said Mrs. Page, a little
disconcerted. “Only it seems so inhospitable.”

“What a quaint little town it is,” said the elder Mrs. Page, as they
walked up the village street. “I used to tell my husband I could stay
away twenty years, and not one hair would have changed on anybody’s
head. I am sure those are the same bony horses of my youth, that are
tied around the paling of the common. Look at that eccentric old fellow
in arctics! Is he preparing for a snowstorm?”

“That is Captain Taft, Sophie Brown’s father. He can’t find anything
else that is comfortable for his feet.”

“Well, I like his independence. I suppose if he had taken the trip up
the Nile with us last winter, he would have pursued his way calmly
through Egypt in those things. They were planning to have a new block
for Chauncey and the drug-store when I was here three years ago, but I
see they haven’t got around to it yet. I wonder if they have any dotted
veiling at Chauncey’s. When I was here last, they told me they had such
a run on it that it was too much trouble to keep it in stock. I should
think they might at least paint the building.”

“It is a shabby-looking block,” said Lois’s mother.

“You need not apologize for it, my dear. We all know that if you owned
that block it would be scrubbed to a point of painful neatness. I
suppose your house is as immaculate as ever, and that every piece of
furniture is in the same place. I always think of your house as the
house where nothing happens, and, my dear, that is a great compliment.
It is the house of rest, the house of standards and simple living. When
I am tired with the strain of life, or of rushing around the world, I
think of your house as of a haven of peace, and when I get to be an old
lady, I am coming to spend a whole summer with you.”

“That will be very nice,” said Mrs. Page. “I don’t know whether it
would be polite of me to hope you will be an old lady soon.”

“Elizabeth, it is never required of you to tell anything but the truth.
You can’t tell polite fibs with a good grace. I know you are wondering
when I shall consider myself old, and what on earth you would do with
me for a whole summer. Why, that is Sophie Brown, isn’t it, and her
little girl? How do you do, Sophie? I was glad to see your father
looking so well. Is this Gertrude? How she has grown, and how much she
looks like you!”

“What a plain child!” said the elder Mrs. Page, as they passed out of
hearing. “And what a quantity of freckles she has! I know a wash which
is good for freckles.”

When they reached the Pages’ gate, Lois’s grandmother gave a
comprehensive glance at the white house with the green blinds and green
front door, and the spotless brass knocker.

“Elizabeth, it would do me good to see everything belonging to you in
wild chaos and confusion,” she said.

“I am doing the best I can for you in that line. Jessie Matthews is
having her music lesson, so I shall have to take you straight up to
your room.”

When Mrs. Luther Page came down at tea-time, she was much struck with
the change in the parlor.

“How cosy the room looks with a piano in it!” she said. “The very fact
that it is such a large piano and such a small room gives a sort of
rakish charm to the place; but, Elizabeth, how could you make up your
mind to the innovation?”

“It is the Matthewses’ piano; Jessie’s mother wanted her to go on with
her music lessons.”

“And so this is Jessie! My dear, how very large you are of your age.
She is the image of her father, isn’t she? I suppose your mother is as
beautiful as ever?”

“Yes, she is,” said Jessie. “It is a pity I don’t look like her,
isn’t it?” and she flashed a glance at Lois’s grandmother, so full of
a certain quiet amusement in the situation that the elder Mrs. Page
suddenly felt as if she must look after her manners, in the presence of
this young critic.

Lois’s grandmother had brought down a large box done up in white paper
tied with a pink ribbon.

“I have a belated birthday present here for you, Lois,” she said. “I
brought it all the way from Paris.”

Lois undid the parcel with eager fingers. Inside the box was a complete
millinery establishment for dolls. There were several untrimmed hats,
and there were tiny feathers and flowers and gauze scarfs to trim them
with, and there were the standards to put them on, such as there are
in shops. Lois was so delighted that she could hardly speak.

Jessie, on the other hand, was loud in her exclamations.

“I hope you like it, Lois,” said her grandmother.

Did she like it! Lois raised her eloquent eyes to her grandmother’s
face. She felt that she had never liked anything so much in her whole
life.

“And who is this person?” and Mrs. Luther Page went forward to stroke
the cat, who had settled herself for a nap in the deep Morris chair.
“Elizabeth Page! That I should have lived to see the day that you would
allow a cat in the precincts of your parlor! I adore cats. They are as
sacred to me as they are to the Egyptians. What is her name?” and she
turned to Lois.

“Minnie. I wrote to you about her coming to us,” said Lois shyly.

“Yes, I remember now, but I never really get a person into my mind
until I have been introduced to her. Minnie, I am Lois’s grandmother,
and so we must be good friends.”

Lois’s mother stooped to lift Minnie out of the Morris chair.

“Don’t do that, Elizabeth. She will hate me if you do. There are plenty
of chairs here. Goodness! who is this walking in? A second cat? Oh, I
see, it is only a kitten.”

“It is very large of its age,” said Jessie, “and it is not beautiful
like its mother.”

“You saucy child!” said Lois’s grandmother, and from that moment she
and Jessie were firm friends.

“It is a witch kitten,” said Lois, who could not bear to be left out of
the conversation. “Do you notice, grandmother, that it has double paws?
Witch kittens are very lucky; we have had a lot of luck since it came.”

“I have always wanted one of those six-toed kittens. Do you mean to
keep it? Or may I have it when I go home?”

“I have been trying to get some one to take it for the last two
months,” said Mrs. Page. “It will be another proof of our extraordinary
luck if you will take it.”




CHAPTER XII

THE HOUSE WHERE NOTHING HAPPENED


Lois’s grandmother had never enjoyed a visit at her daughter-in-law’s
so much as this one. To begin with, the witch kitten helped to cement
the bond between herself and Lois; and then in the second place,
there was Jessie, who stood as an interpreter, and was always ready
to draw Lois out, and Lois talking was quite a different child from
Lois silent, as her grandmother found. Then, too, the craze for
Bridge had reached the town, and Mrs. Luther Page was never happier
than when playing this game. Several Bridge parties were given in her
honor, and she was asked to dinner at the Drapers’, and to supper at
various houses, including Sophie Brown’s, where she had the pleasure of
seeing Captain Taft, who had exchanged his arctics for some slippers,
embroidered in dull yellow on a green background, by a niece in Dakota.
Best of all, however, were the long drives that the Brierfield horses
made possible, when Mrs. Page and her daughter-in-law and the children
explored the neighboring country, driving through the woods, or to the
summits of distant hills.

The bright autumn coloring had gone, and the dull shades of early
November had taken its place, but there was a peculiar charm in the
soft haze of these Indian summer afternoons. So the time sped by, and
Grandmother Lois, who had come for one week, decided to stay until the
middle of November.

There were only three days of her visit left, when she was sitting one
evening in the parlor, with her daughter-in-law and the children.

“This is my last quiet evening in the dear house where nothing
happens,” she said, as she took out her embroidery. “I wish I hadn’t
promised to play Bridge at the Smiths’ to-morrow. I dislike Mrs. Smith;
she is a pert little upstart. But what could I do? The Bridge birds of
a feather who flock together are sometimes a very queerly assorted set.
Dear me! I have lost my needle! How tiresome!”

“I have some,” said Jessie, and she took out a needle-book tied with
pink ribbon.

“Mrs. Draper gave her that. It was the second prize in the
darning-class,” Lois explained. “Anne Morgan got the first, and I got
the third because I improved so much. It is a pincushion that looks
just like an apple. Wouldn’t you like to see it, grandmother?”

“Of course I should.”

Lois brought out her pincushion and showed it with pride.

“Ellen had the fourth prize,” she continued. “It was a red crocheted
pincushion made to look like a tomato. Mrs. Draper gave it to her
because Ellen is so fond of vegetables. We didn’t know there were to be
more than two prizes, and it was such a lovely surprise!”

Every one went to sleep as peacefully as usual that night, and it was
a little past one o’clock before the disturbance began. They were all
good sleepers, and the bell of the town hall rang noisily for some
time, and yet none of them waked. Then it stopped for a while and
rang again, and it was followed by the louder peal of the bell on the
Methodist Church, which was very near. Grandmother Lois was the first
to wake. She had a confused impression that it was the Fourth of July,
then she remembered the season of the year, and listened with growing
apprehension. On the sidewalk below her windows, there was the hurried
tramp of many feet all going in the same direction, and the sound of
voices. She could see no signs of a fire on her side of the house, so
she hastily put on her wrapper, and went into her daughter-in-law’s
room.

“Wake up, Elizabeth, there is a fire!” she cried.

The younger Mrs. Page roused herself slowly, and then went to the
window and pushed up the curtain, and she and her mother-in-law peered
out into the night. There was a dull red glow all over the southern
side of the sky, and below it a building was burning and the flames
were leaping up in fantastic shapes.

“It’s Chauncey’s, I am sure,” said Mrs. Page, “and the wind is bringing
the sparks over in our direction. I am sorry to frighten you, mother,
but I think it would be wise for you to pack your trunk. I must call
Maggie. I hope the children won’t wake.”

At this moment, however, Jessie was roused by voices directly under her
window, and she was pushing up the curtain. “Lois, Lois!” she called.
“Do wake up and come and look at this beautiful fire. It is the most
glorious thing I ever saw. Just see how the sparks fly!”

Lois joined her, and the two children stood spellbound at the window.
They watched the flames leap up as if they were live things, and
cover the whole building, and they could hear the shouts of the
crowd. Finally one side of the store fell in, and then there was a
magnificent display of fireworks, with the accompaniment of flying
sparks and hoarse cries from the crowd.

“Isn’t that wonderful?” said Jessie.

“Yes, but did you see that? Our fence has caught.”

They had felt no sense of personal danger before, but had watched the
spectacle as if it were a superior kind of fireworks arranged for their
especial benefit. “Mother, mother!” Lois called, “our fence is on fire!”

Jessie, meanwhile, was dressing quickly. “Somebody ought to go down
there with buckets of water to put the fire out as soon as it catches,”
she said.

Lois began to dress too, and Mrs. Page came to their door. “I am sorry
you waked, children. You had better go to bed again; there isn’t
anything you can do. I will wake you if there is any real danger.”

“But the fence is on fire,” said Lois.

Just then there was a loud ringing at the door, and Mrs. Page hurried
down.

“Your fence is on fire,” said Amyas Morgan, “and Reuben and I want some
buckets of water, so we can keep guard and put it out. The whole fire
department is busy down at the square.”

“Is it Chauncey’s that is burning?” Mrs. Page asked.

“Yes.”

“I thought Joe Mills would be sure to come to protect us.”

“I guess he’s busy saving the kids at his house. The block next
Chauncey’s caught first, and the Donnellys have a tenement there. Joe
discovered the fire, but it was well under way before he could give the
alarm.”

Mrs. Page and Maggie went to get some old fire buckets, and the boys
departed, full of importance in being so useful.

Meanwhile Mrs. Luther Page was putting the clothes into her trunk with
nervous haste.

The wind was blowing strongly from the south, and Elizabeth Page, who
never lost her head, went about the house as calmly as if she had
been accustomed to fires from her childhood, quietly collecting her
valuables and packing them in the trunks that she and Maggie brought in
from the store-room. Seeing her mother so occupied, Lois went into the
play-room to gather up some of her treasures. She had so many that it
was hard to choose, but chief of all were her doll Betty and her little
mahogany bureau and bedstead, a candlestick in the form of a griffin,
the doll’s hat Amyas had given her, and the beautiful millinery outfit
that her grandmother had brought her. Some of these things were a
little hard to carry, but Lois managed to transport them all to her
mother’s room, where she deposited them in a heap on the floor.

“For heaven’s sake, Lois Page, what are you doing?” asked her mother,
turning around as the last load was brought in.

“It is just a few of the things I care most about,” said Lois. “I
thought I would bring them in here to save you trouble.”

Mrs. Page looked at Betty, the doll, sitting among the ruins of her
home, and she could not help laughing, for Betty, even in this hour
of affliction, had the same cheerful, self-satisfied expression that
she always wore. She was leaning back against the bureau, with the hat
Amyas had given her put on awry, and she seemed to say, “Look at me.
See how well I can bear adversity!”

Jessie, meanwhile, had quietly packed her trunk, and then came in to
see if she could help her Aunt Elizabeth.

“I am sure there is no real danger,” said Lois’s mother, “but it is
well to be prepared for everything.”

“Elizabeth,” called the elder Mrs. Page, “you must come and help me. I
am so nervous. There are two dresses I can’t get into my trunk. Nora
packed for me when I came. I don’t see how she managed so cleverly. The
dresses are my black satin and my crêpe de chine. I got everything in,
as I thought, and I had the trunk locked, and then I remembered them;
they were in the back of the closet.”

Meanwhile Jessie and Lois slipped out to the cat-house to see how
Minnie and Mittens were bearing the excitement. They found them walking
back and forth on the window-sill. Finding that there was nothing to do
for their favorites, it was not in human nature for the children to go
back to the house without first joining the group at the fence.

Amyas and Reuben were keeping guard manfully; the wind was already
going down, and the sparks that came over were fewer.

“Hullo, Lois,” said Amyas, “I am afraid the fire is going to fizzle
out.”

“What a pity!” said Lois.

“Would you like it better if your house were to get on fire?” Reuben
asked.

“No. But it is such a beautiful thing to look at, that, as long as
Chauncey’s had to burn, I’d like it to keep on a little longer. There
wasn’t anybody hurt, was there?”

“A fireman fell and broke his leg. It was very exciting. We wanted to
stay, but we noticed that your fence was on fire, so we came over,”
said Amyas, who always liked the credit for his kind deeds.

“That was very good of you,” said Lois. She was so taken out of herself
by the fire, that she forgot to be afraid of Amyas and his brother.

“I wonder if there isn’t anything we can do?” said Jessie. “Do you
suppose the firemen would like some hot coffee?”

“You bet!” said Amyas. “Here is one of them who would.”

Jessie went back to the house to tell Mrs. Page that the wind was going
down, and to ask if Maggie might not make some coffee. Lois meant to
follow her, but she stood rooted to the spot, being fascinated by the
spectacle of the fire.

“Mother didn’t want us to wake up,” she said, “but I wouldn’t have
missed this beautiful sight for anything in the world. It is my first
real fire. When the steam-mill burned, it just happened we were away on
a picnic. I always have the worst luck. Where’s Ellen?”

“She and Anne never waked up, and mother wouldn’t let me wake them. She
said Ellen would insist on going to the fire, and she didn’t want her
to.”

“Poor Ellen!” said Lois. It was hard to understand the grown-up point
of view concerning fires. “I should think your mother would have wanted
her to come. It is something she would remember to her dying day.”

“They’ve got the fire under control now,” said Amyas regretfully.

Lois had a distinct sense of disappointment.

A little later hot coffee was served in the Pages’ kitchen, and groups
of firemen came to the door to get it, while Grandmother Lois and
Mrs. Page, Jessie, Lois, Amyas, and Reuben had a picnic lunch in the
dining-room.

“I did say that I thought Chauncey’s was a disgrace to the village and
that it ought to burn down,” said Lois’s grandmother, “and I did say
that nothing ever happened in your house, and that I should like to see
everything you possessed in wild chaos, but, my dear Elizabeth, I never
expected Fate to take me so seriously.”




CHAPTER XIII

THE TRIO CLUB


Winter came early that year, and there was a heavy snowstorm on the day
when Grandmother Lois and Mittens left town. In spite of this, however,
several people, besides the family, went to the station to see her off,
including Sophie Brown and her father.

“Everything comes to him who waits,” said Grandmother Lois, as she saw
the captain coming down the street. “Captain Taft’s arctics have their
proper background at last.”

Lois and Jessie felt very lonely after Grandmother Lois had departed
with the witch kitten, and it was hard to tell which of them they
missed the most. As for Minnie, she was quite unhappy for a day,
and searched the house for Mittens restlessly, and then, with the
philosophy of her race, she adapted herself to the inevitable. It was
not long before she was consoled for her loss by the arrival of three
kittens, all of them black with white breasts and paws.

“It is too bad they are all just alike,” said Lois, as she and her
mother and Jessie inspected the basket that held Minnie’s children.

“I think it is very fortunate,” said Mrs. Page, “for it will be just
as well to keep only one this time, and there will be no trouble in
deciding which it is to be.”

“You are only going to keep one! Oh, mother!” Lois’s face had a
horror-stricken expression. “We must keep them all!”

“It is too hard work to find good homes for them. It will be much
kinder not to try to bring them up, than to have to give them poor
homes later.”

“When I grow up,” said Lois energetically, “I am going to keep as many
cats and kittens as I like. No kitten will have to be sent away.”

“I am glad it will be some years before you are grown up,” said her
mother. “Now, children, to me these kittens are as alike as three peas
in a pod, but you may choose the one you would rather keep, if you have
a preference.”

A closer inspection showed that each one had an individual charm.

“This one is a little beauty,” said Jessie. “See, it has a pink nose,
and a white line that runs up the face.”

“But it has not half as pretty feet as this darling thing,” said Lois,
picking up a scrap of a kitten. “Now that kitten you have, Jessie, has
white shoes on in front and white stockings behind, while this has four
white shoes.”

“All right, we’ll save that one.”

“It would be a wicked shame not to keep this little fellow,” said Lois,
taking up the third kitten. “He is bigger than any of the rest, and his
coat is such a glossy black, and he has such pretty white stockings
behind and white shoes in front; he and the pink-nosed one would make a
fascinating pair. Oh, mother, why can’t we keep them all? Three is such
a small number. There were five kittens at Hollisford.”

“But we have not as much room for them here.”

“Mother, it seems as if there were enough sad things in life that had
to be,” said Lois, “without making such unhappiness for Minnie and
Jessie and me. I will promise to find good homes for them all, if you
will only let them live.”

“Well, dear, I tell you what I will do. I will give you until the end
of the week, and if you can have suitable homes engaged for them by
that time, I will let you keep them all.”

Lois and Jessie were delighted with this decision, and they
immediately began to rack their brains, to consider where they could
place Minnie’s children to the best advantage.

“I wonder if Mrs. Draper would take one,” said Lois. “She is very
kind-hearted, and she only has Gem. Let’s go round and ask her.”

But, tender-hearted as Mrs. Draper was, she had the same extraordinary
point of view concerning cats that seemed to be shared by most grown
people, namely, that one cat is enough for one household.

“Perhaps Mrs. Donnelly will take one,” Mrs. Draper suggested. “Although
they are so poor, they are very kind to animals, and they lost their
cat at the time of the fire.”

And so the children went around to the forlorn, bare rooms that were
the temporary home of Mrs. Donnelly and her son Joe Mills, and her six
Donnelly children.

The little girls went up three flights of narrow, dark stairs, nearly
running into the refrigerator in the entry, and knocked on Mrs.
Donnelly’s door.

She opened it a crack and peered out to see who was there, and when she
found it was only Jessie and Lois, she flung the door open hospitably.
“Come right in, children. I thought you was the insurance man, and I
did not have anything for him this week. Evelina,” to a small child
who was sitting on the floor, “get up and come to speak to these little
girls, and you stop making such a racket, George Thomas. Excuse the
wash-tub being in the middle of the room; it rained so hard the first
of the week, I didn’t get round to my washing.”

Meanwhile, Jessie was taking in every detail of the poor little room,
and with her usual desire to help, she was wondering what she could
do to make them a little more comfortable. She quickly decided that
this would not be a happy home for one of the black pussies, and was
wondering what excuse she could give for the call.

“We have come to see if you would like to engage a kitten,” said Lois,
who had waited for Jessie to speak first. “We heard you lost yours.”

“I don’t want the bother of any more cats. There’s altogether too many
of them round here now. My! the cat-concerts that go on in the alley
back of us! George Thomas, I told you not to touch the molasses. You
are a bad boy. I shall have to whip you. Beulah! you just let the table
alone.”

Jessie and Lois sadly left the Donnelly mansion, feeling that one more
dream had failed to come true. On the way home they stopped at the
grocery store to ask the grocer to let them know if he heard of any
one, on his rounds, who wanted a kitten, but he was very discouraging.
“We have two kittens here in the store we want to find homes for,” he
said.

In recess at school, the next day, Lois asked first one child and then
another if she wanted a kitten.

“You can never think of but one thing at a time, Lois Page,” said Ethel
Smith. “I’m sick to death of hearing about your cat and her kittens.”

“Did you say you had a kitten to dispose of?” Miss Benton asked. “We
want one very much; I have been trying to find a black one, but I will
take anything I can get, as I don’t want to wait much longer.”

“These are black,” said Lois eagerly, “only they have some white on
them; white breasts and paws, and white spots on their faces. Will that
make any difference?”

“No; I suppose they will catch mice just as well.”

Lois and Jessie were in a very happy frame of mind, as they went home
from school. To have so successfully found a home for one of their
protégées gave them new courage.

In the afternoon, Miss Greenleaf, Jessie’s music-teacher, came to give
her a lesson, and was taken out to inspect the kittens. Miss Greenleaf
was young, with a round face and figure, and large eyes that looked
almost like those of a child. She was very much fascinated by the
kittens. “I must have one,” she said. “Why, they are exactly alike,
aren’t they? You will have to call them the Trio Club, and I will give
them musical names. This little thing with the pink nose seems very
full of life; we’ll call her Presto, and the big one can be Andantino,
and the middle-sized one Allegro. The darling things! I will engage
Presto; she is the prettiest.”

After that, Lois felt happier. To break into a little company dignified
by such a name as the Trio Club, and ruthlessly to destroy a creature
called Andantino or Allegro, seemed too hard-hearted a thing for her
mother to do.

And yet Lois still had a somewhat insecure feeling, and so she
continued to bore every one she met by saying, “I don’t suppose you
happen to want a young kitten, do you? A black one with the dearest
white paws? We have three of them, and we call them the Trio Club.”

Finally, at the end of the week, Lois had to go to the dentist to have
a tooth filled. She dreaded it very much, and the fact that both her
mother and Jessie went with her gave her but little comfort. As Lois
sat waiting in the outer room until the last patient should leave, she
thought how much she was going to be hurt, and how hard it was that
holes came in teeth. There were many things about the arrangement of
the world that Lois could not understand.

She picked up a magazine that lay on the table and began to turn the
leaves. It was a magazine with pictures in it, and some of them were
very pretty, but they failed to distract her mind. Then she looked out
of the window at the men and women who were passing. Did they all have
fillings in their teeth? Finally, the other patient went out and the
awful moment came when Lois mounted the dentist’s chair. After all, it
did not really hurt her much to have the tooth filled. It was expecting
all the time that she was going to be hurt that was the worst part.

“You have very good teeth,” said the dentist, as he polished off the
filling. He had such a kind expression that a sudden idea seized Lois.

“We have three black kittens at home,” she said; “they are almost
exactly alike, so we call them the Trio Club, but mother does not want
us to keep any, unless we have homes engaged for them all. You don’t
happen to want a young kitten, do you?”

“That is exactly what I do want,” said the dentist.

[Illustration: THE TRIO CLUB]




CHAPTER XIV

A WINTER PICNIC


Lois had always liked summer better than winter, but this year she
changed her mind, and thought that nothing could be quite so good as
these December days, when the crisp air sent the blood tingling through
her veins. The white world, with the dark trees powdered with snow,
and in the late afternoons the blood-red sunsets warm and glowing
against the cold white, had an especial charm. And into this world,
as beautiful as fairy-land, Lois walked hand in hand with Jessie and
Ellen; while coasting, sleigh-riding, and skating made a sort of
carnival of each day. Now that her fear of the Morgan boys had been
cured, there was an added interest in having them of the party. Lois
could skate well enough to join the others, and Amyas and Reuben often
took her and Jessie, with their sisters, on coasting-parties. Lois had
never known before the joys of the “double-runner,” and although she
felt she took her life in her hands every time she went down a steep
hill, there was a fearful pleasure in the descent, and a thankfulness
and surprise each time she reached the bottom safely, that made
coasting a pastime of which she never tired.

“I think,” said Jessie, one morning, “that we ought to do something for
those poor Donnellys at Christmas. I wish we could have a Christmas
tree for them. Couldn’t we, Aunt Elizabeth?”

“It would be a great amount of work,” said Mrs. Page, “and I know that
a good deal has been done for the Donnellys already. We have been
making some clothes for them in the sewing-circle.”

“I didn’t mean clothes,” said Jessie; “and we’ll do all the work if
you will only let us have the tree. There are plenty of hemlocks at
Brierfield; I am sure Garrett would cut one down for us. I can see
just the way it would look,” she went on eagerly. “We can get a lot
of candles, and make lovely decorations out of gold and silver paper,
and for very little money we can buy some toys, and the candy can be
put in colored candy-horns, which we can make ourselves. There are six
Donnellys, four girls and two boys, and their rooms are so forlorn! and
we could have the tree in the play-room, where it would not trouble any
one, except the Trio Club, and they could be put into the laundry for
once. Oh, please, Aunt Elizabeth, mayn’t we have it, if we’ll promise
to do all the work, and pay for it ourselves?”

“Oh, mother, dear, it would be so lovely!” said Lois. “I never had a
Christmas tree.”

“You never had a Christmas tree!” Jessie exclaimed. “Why, you poor
darling, that seems terrible! I’ll have to put something on the tree
for you.”

Mrs. Page had learned by experience that Jessie’s ideas were practical
ones, and after a little more debating she said that they could have
the Christmas tree. Anne and Ellen were asked to join in the scheme,
and the children had a secret session one stormy afternoon in the attic
at the top of the Morgans’ house. It was a delightful place, with a
large table and a tool-chest, and plenty of room to work or play.

“Hullo,” said Amyas, coming in to get some tools, “what are you four up
to?”

“It is a secret,” said Ellen solemnly, “and no one is to know anything
about it.”

“What a lot of money you’ve got!” he said, looking into Ellen’s lap,
where the contents of her bank were gathered together in a heap.

“It isn’t so much as it looks. It’s mostly coppers,” said Ellen in
dejected tones. “I thought there would be a lot more. I haven’t got
all the presents for the family yet, so I am afraid I can only
spare fifteen cents, but Lois is going to give twenty-five and Anne
twenty-five, and Jessie a dollar; that makes a dollar and sixty-five
cents. Don’t you want to give us some money, Amyas?” she added in her
sweetest tones. “It is for a perfectly fine cause.”

“No, I thank you. I don’t go it blind. If you want any money, you’ve
got to tell me what it’s for.”

“Why not tell him?” said Anne. “You tell him, Jessie; it is your idea.”

Amyas was far more interested in the plan than they had dared to hope.
He not only promised them fifty cents, but, what was far better, he
proposed that he and Reuben should go over to Brierfield with them to
get the tree. “We’ll go on the Saturday before Christmas,” he decided,
“and we’ll have a regular spree. We’ll start in the morning, and we’ll
take the double-runner, and when we come to Morse’s hill we’ll coast
down it, and we’ll steal one or two rides behind carts, so it won’t be
too long a walk. We’ll have luncheon out of doors, and then cut the
tree down and bring it home on the sled.”

The four girls were greatly thrilled by this exciting programme.

“Oh dear, I’m so afraid mother won’t let me go!” said Lois.

“Oh, she’ll have to! I’ll make her let you,” said Amyas.

Mrs. Page did not altogether approve of the scheme. She was afraid it
would be too much for Lois, and she was sure that some of them would
take cold eating out of doors. She weakened after a time, for they were
so bitterly disappointed, and finally said they might go, if they would
have their luncheon in the house at Brierfield, and take some older
person with them. Susan Morgan cheerfully consented to be the older
person.

Lois was sure it was going to storm on the Saturday before Christmas.
She worked herself up into a fever of anxiety.

“I know it will snow! It is just my luck.”

“And I am sure it will be pleasant; it is just my luck,” said Jessie.
“Why not think it is going to be pleasant, and then you will be sure to
have that much fun out of it?”

Lois waked early the Saturday before Christmas, and she went to the
window and pushed up the curtain. It was not light yet, but there was a
dull streak of red in the east.

“Wake up, Jessie, wake up!” she cried, “it is going to be a pleasant
day.”

“It seems almost too cold to go,” said Mrs. Page, after breakfast, as
she looked at the thermometer; “it is only nine above zero, and there
is a wind.”

“But, mother, you will let us go,” begged Lois.

“Of course, dear, if the others go, but I am afraid you will not get
very much pleasure out of it.”

Not get very much pleasure out of it! Jessie and Lois expected to enjoy
the day as they had never enjoyed anything in their whole lives!

At ten o’clock the Morgans appeared,--such a merry, lively company in
their gay tam-o’-shanters and sweaters, that Mrs. Page changed her
mind, and decided that they were going to have a good time in spite of
the weather.

“Poor mother,” said Lois, “I hope you won’t be lonely. I wish you were
coming too.”

“Do come along, Mrs. Page,” Amyas said; “you can get on the
double-runner whenever you are tired.”

But Mrs. Page was very busy over some Christmas presents, and she was
glad to have a quiet day to herself.

Every one they passed, as they went along the village street, glanced
at the children with interest.

“We look as if we were going coasting,” said Ellen. “No one will
imagine what else we are going to do.”

The first person to speak to them was Captain Taft. “Going coasting?”
he asked.

“Yes.”

“Well, I should say there was too cold a wind, but young folks don’t
mind. I suppose I wouldn’t have minded myself, once.”

And the next was Mrs. Robertson. “Are you going coasting?” she inquired
in disapproving tones. “It is much too cold. I wouldn’t let Dora go.”

And the third was Joel Carpenter. “Are you going coasting?” he said
joyfully. “I’ll come along too.”

They were not particularly anxious to have him share their secret, but
they did not know how to get rid of him, and so he joined them.

They had a glorious coast down Morse’s hill. Lois was on the forward
sled, and it was very exciting to fly past the vanishing trees and then
sweep around the curve near the bottom. She had certainly thought they
would tip over that time. Presently there came along an empty cart
bound for the woods.

“Let’s steal a ride,” whispered Amyas. He hitched the sled on behind,
and they all got on silently with stealthy tread like conspirators. A
little later the driver turned his head.

“Good-morning,” he said genially. “Won’t you all get into my cart?”

His cordiality was something of a shock, and took the zest out of the
stolen ride.

The lunch at Brierfield was one of the pleasantest parts of the day,
for some huge logs were burning in the hall fireplace, and they all sat
in a semi-circle around the cheerful blaze. Susan and Jessie unpacked
the lunch, and they had a merry meal. If it was not quite so romantic
eating their sandwiches and cake before the fire as it would have been
under the pine-trees, it was certainly more comfortable.

Best of all was the walk in the afternoon and the choosing a
hemlock-tree. It was very cold and still in the woods, and the snow
was as white as if it had fallen that very day. The mayflowers were
hidden now, and the birches and maples lifted bare branches to the
sky. Everything was different from what it had been on the April day
when Lois was so glad that icy winter was far away, except the pines
and hemlocks, that were as green as if they had forgotten it was not
spring. A red-headed woodpecker, that had perched on a neighboring
branch, flew away at their approach into the heart of the woods.

“Oh, how beautiful it is!” said Lois. “What a pity that everybody can’t
have such a good time!”

“Every one can have out of doors if they want it,” said Jessie.

“Amyas, do see what a nice tree this is! Let’s cut this one down,” said
Ellen.

“What, that scrubby thing?” Reuben asked. “That’s too lop-sided.”

“Let’s each choose a tree,” said Anne, and they scattered like a covey
of birds.

Lois and Jessie kept together, and they found a tree, almost perfect in
its symmetry, tall and yet not too tall. The moment they saw it they
felt it must be _the_ tree. Even Ellen was forced to acknowledge the
wisdom of their choice, and the boys soon felled it and strapped it to
the double-runner.

The journey back in the afternoon was not so delightful as the morning
trip.

“I wish that hills could be tipped the other way, like a teeter,” said
Ellen, when they came to Morse’s hill. “It is perfectly horrid to have
that long, steep climb.”

Lois was beginning to feel very tired, but she tried to look as if she
liked to climb hills.

“You are tired out, Lois,” said Susan Morgan kindly.

“I’m not much tired.”

Reuben began untying the tree.

“What are you doing?” Amyas asked. “The tree is all right.”

“I am going to carry it awhile,” said Reuben, “and then Lois and Jessie
can get on the sled, and you and Joel can pull them up the hill.”

“I am not a bit tired,” said Jessie, and she looked so fresh that Lois
felt ashamed to have given out.

“I’d like to ride,” said Ellen.

Reuben gave a scornful laugh. “You? You are as well able to pull Amyas
up the hill as he is to pull you. You’re just lazy.”

“Why isn’t Lois lazy?”

“She is tired.”

“I am sorry to give you so much trouble,” said Lois, as she got on the
sled. She wondered why the boys were so good to her, when in their
heart of hearts they must think her so poor-spirited to get tired. She
wished she were as strong as Jessie and Ellen.

“We had a splendid time, mother,” said Lois, when they reached home.

“It was great,” said Jessie.

“I had a successful day, too,” said Mrs. Page. “I got Grandmother
Lois’s Christmas box packed, and I finished your present and Jessie’s.”

“How exciting that sounds, mother! I wish we knew what they were.”




CHAPTER XV

THE CHRISTMAS TREE


“Oh, mother dear, you can’t come in just yet,” Lois said; “we don’t
want you to see the tree until it is entirely ready.”

Jessie, having promised that they would do all the work themselves, was
carrying out her agreement to the letter, and Mrs. Page, who wanted to
help them, had to be contented merely to give advice. There had been
many secret sessions in the play-room and in the Morgans’ attic, and
Jessie and Lois had taken several trips to the village store. They had
just come in from a final one now.

“Your money seems to have held out like the widow’s cruse of oil,” said
Mrs. Page.

“Why, yes, mother. We thought we had spent it all, and we wanted to
get some more animals, and Reuben gave us twenty cents, and then Joel
Carpenter gave us a quarter, and then Reuben did not like to have Joel
give more than he did, when Joel wasn’t in the secret to begin with, so
Reuben gave ten cents more, and then Joel gave ten, and then Reuben
gave another ten. It was as exciting as an auction. Reuben had to
borrow of Amyas, and Amyas wouldn’t lend him more than ten cents, so
Reuben had to drop out because he was ‘dead broke,’ he said, and Joel
came out five cents ahead of him. I think it was too bad, for he wasn’t
half so interested in the tree as Reuben was.”

“But it was nice to get the extra five cents,” said Jessie.

Just before the guests came, Mrs. Page slipped into the play-room,
unseen by Lois and Jessie, and tied six pairs of mittens, and three red
tam-o’-shanters and three blue ones, to the tree. She also decorated
the branches with two pink and two scarlet flannel petticoats, and
some socks. After this she tied on thirteen costume crackers. Then she
quietly slipped out of the room.

The Donnellys were so afraid of being late that they arrived half an
hour too early. This was a little inconvenient, for Jessie and Lois
were dressing.

Maggie knocked on their door and said, “Your company has come. They are
waiting in the entry.”

“Dear me, what shall we do!” said Lois. “Do you mind if they stay in
the kitchen, Maggie, until we come down?”

“It would hurt their feelings and make them think they had come too
early,” said Jessie. “Aunt Elizabeth,” she called out, “would you mind
talking to the Donnellys until we are ready? Please say how ashamed we
are to be so late. Perhaps they would like to go down to the laundry
and see Minnie and the Trio Club.”

And so it happened that Mrs. Page headed a procession of six Donnellys,
all painfully shy and all dressed in their best clothes, and took them
down to the temporary dwelling-place of the Trio Club.

The ice was soon broken, for no one could long feel any stiffness in
the presence of these engaging animals.

Each Donnelly made a dive for a kitten. George Thomas secured one,
Beulah was the happy possessor of a second, while Michael and Evelina
chased Presto around the room, and Michael finally got her, much to
Evelina’s disappointment. Miriam Donnelly had taken Minnie in her arms,
while May Lilian walked around the room, stroking each kitten in turn.

“What is this one’s name?” she asked shyly.

“That is Minnie. That is the mother cat.”

“My! but she looks like a kitten herself!” said May Lilian.

“Yes, she is a small cat.”

“And what is this one’s name?”

“Allegro.”

“What a funny name!”

“I didn’t name her,” said Mrs. Page. “If I had, I should have given her
a good sensible name.”

“And what is mine called?” asked George Thomas.

“Andantino.”

“I guess you didn’t name that one either,” said Michael, with a grin.

“We are ready now,” Jessie called down.

The other guests had come, and they were all taken upstairs, and the
door of the play-room was flung open.

The Morgans and Jessie and Joel Carpenter had seen other Christmas
trees that were more elaborate, while to Lois and the Donnellys,
who only knew Sunday-school and school Christmas trees, there was
an especial charm about this one because it was their very own. The
four Donnelly girls sat in a row on the sofa, with their feet stuck
out primly in front of them. They looked very grave, as if it would
be quite improper to smile. Miriam, who was the oldest, kept them in
excellent order. Michael and George Thomas politely stood until Mrs.
Page asked them to be seated.

Jessie and Lois gave a cry of pleasure when they saw the petticoats and
tam-o’-shanters. “How perfectly splendid, Aunt Elizabeth!” Jessie said.

The tree was a pretty sight, for it had many candles on it, and the
little points of light were very brilliant against the background of
green. Everything meant some happy recollection to Lois: the tree
reminded her of that beautiful walk in the woods, and the candy-horns
made her think of a delightful snowy afternoon in the Morgans’ attic,
when she and Jessie and the Morgans sat around the table with paste and
scissors and colored paper. She was so awkward, and Anne and Amyas were
so kind in helping her! And the candles and the animals! Would she ever
forget that trip to the village store, when Amyas came in unexpectedly
and made the clerk take ten cents off the whole amount, because they
had bought so many things? There was a second trip and a third, and
still another, each with some pleasant memory quite distinct from all
the rest. And it was dear Jessie who had made it possible. Without her
they would not have had a Christmas tree.

The Donnellys were delighted with their presents; even Miriam’s
face relaxed when she was given a blue hair ribbon and a pretty
handkerchief with an M in one corner. George Thomas was much pleased
with a teeter with a yellow chicken on either end. His eyes were glued
to this toy. “First it goes down, and then it goes up, and when one
chicken is up, the other is down,” said George Thomas.

The costume crackers were a delightful surprise, and Mrs. Page told
the children they might dress up in the contents before they had their
simple refreshments. George Thomas’s costume cracker contained a pink
sun-bonnet, in which he courageously arrayed himself, while Beulah wore
a soldier’s cap, and Lois put on a helmet, and Ellen donned a fool’s
cap.

“I am sorry we can only have lemonade and Uneeda biscuit and
ginger-snaps,” said Lois, as Maggie came in with a tray; “our money did
not hold out for everything.”

“It is a pretty good kind of Uneeda biscuit,” said Michael, who had
at last found courage to speak. He had just put on a blue and yellow
toque, and every one seemed so amused by the effect that he felt that,
in spite of Miriam, it was the proper thing to smile.

Some fairy wand seemed to have changed the Uneeda biscuit into Maggie’s
delicate orange cake and chocolate cake, and presently, in addition
to the lemonade, there came in some raspberry sherbet and macaroon
ice-cream.

The children’s eyes shone, and George Thomas finally put down his
teeter.

“First it goes up, and then it goes down,” he said dreamily, “and when
one chicken is--my! what lovely pink and white ice-cream!”

“You may put your presents on the table,” said Mrs. Page to the
Donnellys, “and then you will have room for your plates.”

The four Donnelly girls rose and carried their treasures across the
room, and the boys followed their example.

“Nobody must touch my teeter,” said George Thomas.

The presents cost very little, but there were a good many of them, for
each Donnelly had a pencil and a block of paper, and the girls had
sheets of colored tissue paper, and bags of beads, while each of the
smaller children had a toy animal, and the older ones were given games
and books that had once belonged to the Morgans.

After the cake and ice-cream had been eaten, there came the great
surprise of the evening, for Jessie had a small present ready for each
of the Morgans and Joel Carpenter and Lois, as well as another trifle
for each Donnelly.

Lois’s was a small, flat parcel tied with a pink ribbon.

“How perfectly lovely!” she said, as she gazed at the contents of the
package. “What a beautiful expression she has!”

“Is it a photograph of your mother?” asked Amyas.

“No, it’s my cat. Such a dear picture of Minnie in her basket! I wish I
had a picture of the Trio Club, too.”

Then to her joy she discovered that there were two mounted photographs,
and lifting the upper one, she saw underneath the three black faces of
the Trio Club standing out in bold relief against the light basket.
“Oh, the darling things!” she exclaimed. “That is Andantino, I am sure,
but I can’t tell Presto and Allegro apart. I wish I could have had a
picture of their legs, but you can’t expect everything.”

“My goodness! I should say you couldn’t,” said Amyas. “Jessie got me
to take their pictures, and the way they skipped around was a caution.
Just as I thought I had them fixed, one would scramble out of the
basket and scoot off to its mother. And the mother was a terror. Twice
I thought I had got her, when she opened her mouth and yelled. She’s
enough to spoil any picture. The next time Jessie asks me to take the
photograph of a cat, I am going to break my leg, or go out of town.”

The Morgans and Joel Carpenter went early, as they were going home to
their own Christmas trees, and the Donnellys looked at one another
irresolutely. Miriam was equally afraid of leaving too soon and staying
too late.

“You haven’t got to go yet,” said Jessie. “It is so early.”

“I don’t know as there is any great hurry,” said Miriam.

“Mother said we might stay until half-past seven if you seemed to
expect us to,” said George Thomas.

       *       *       *       *       *

“Well, children, it was a great success,” Mrs. Page said to Jessie
and Lois, as the last Donnelly closed the front door behind him, “and
certainly no children could have better manners than those Donnellys.
You must feel very tired, Jessie dear. Here is a foreign letter for
you; it came in the five o’clock mail.”

A Christmas letter from her mother! Jessie gave a little cry of delight
as she opened it. There were two foreign postal-cards inside; one was
the charming picture of an Angora cat, for Lois, the other, which was
for Jessie, was a group of three children standing with their arms
around one another.

“It is like you and Ellen and me,” said Lois.

Jessie read her letter through eagerly. She glanced up with an
expression of rapturous delight.

“They are coming earlier than I expected them,” she said. “Father is so
much better, and has his heart so set on getting home, that the doctor
says they may sail in January. Oh, Aunt Elizabeth! It seems too good to
be true!”

The tears came into Lois’s eyes. The months had been long as they
passed, but as she looked back, it seemed only a short time since that
April afternoon when her dear borrowed sister had alighted at the gate,
and she had gone so eagerly to meet her, and had found the tears in
Jessie’s eyes. Now it was Jessie who was happy and she who was sad. It
was just like George Thomas’s teeter.

Jessie saw that Lois was crying. “You darling child, what is the
matter?” she asked.

“I am thinking of the time when you will be going away. It has all been
so lovely, everything from the very first minute. And it will be over
so soon, and you won’t be my sister any more.”

“It isn’t as if I were going far. We shall see each other every day;
and you will be coming to spend a night with me every week, and I shall
spend a night with you. We shall always be like sisters. If you once
have a sister, you can’t lose her,” said Jessie.




TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

Perceived typographical errors have been corrected.

Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.





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