Part 20 (1/2)

”I know it,” said Jasper, bursting into a laugh. ”I must have looked like--I don't know what. But it was good fun, Polly.”

And then Phronsie came running up, and after her came Grandpapa to see that she got there all right.

”Oh, Polly, do you see the windmills?” she cried, clapping her small hands.

”Yes, Pet,” said Polly, looking all along the soft curves of the sh.o.r.e, ”there are hundreds of them, aren't there?”

”There was a girl coming out of the door of one of them,” announced Phronsie, climbing up on the seat and putting her arm around Polly's neck. ”Polly, I'd like to live in a windmill; I would,” she whispered close to her ear.

”Would you, Pet?”

”Yes, I would truly,” she said. ”Why couldn't I, Polly, just like that girl I saw coming out of the door?” she asked, looking back wistfully.

”Well, that girl never had a little brown house to live in,” said Polly; ”think of that, Phronsie.”

XIII

”THE CLEANEST PLACE IN ALL HOLLAND”

”Oh, Polly, see the cunning little doll-houses!” exclaimed Phronsie in a little scream, flying about from Grandpapa at the head of his party on their way up from the boat-landing, and then back to the rear of the procession, which happened to be Polly and Jasper.

”Hush, Phronsie, don't talk so loud; they are not doll-houses,” said Polly. ”People live in them.”

”People live in them!” echoed Phronsie, standing quite still on the paved road, that shone as if just freshly scoured.

”Yes, yes; come along, child, the people will hear you,” said Polly, seizing her hand.

Phronsie suffered herself to be piloted along, but she stumbled more than once over the cobbles, her eyes were so busy.

”Take care, Phronsie,” warned Polly, ”you came near falling on your nose that time.”

”I'll go on the other side,” said Jasper; ”there, now, Phronsie, give us your hand. Well, I don't wonder you are surprised. I never saw such a place as this Broek is.”

”They've just washed it all up, haven't they, Jasper?” asked Polly, her brown eyes scanning the little walks along each tiny garden they pa.s.sed. Everything shone alike.

”They're always was.h.i.+ng up, I believe,” answered Jasper, with a laugh.

”I suppose they live in a pail of water, so to speak.”

”Oh, Jasper, in a pail of water!” exclaimed Phronsie, between them, poking her head out to look for such a strange and unwarrantable sight provided by the inhabitants of Broek.

”I mean they're always scrubbing, so they can never be separated from their pails of water,” said Jasper.

”It seems almost too bad to step on such clean roads,” said Polly, getting up on her tiptoes, and stepping gingerly off. When Phronsie saw Polly do that, she got up on her tiptoes too, and tried to get over the ground with her.

”You can't do that long,” said Jasper, with a laugh for both, ”and it wouldn't do any good, Polly, if you could, for these Broek women will have to come out and scrub up after us all the same.”

”I suppose they will,” said Polly, with a sigh of relief, coming down on to the rest of her feet, which proceeding, Phronsie was very glad to copy. ”And it isn't as nice as it looks to walk on the tips of your toes. Jasper, do see those cunning little windows and those china images inside!”

”It seems as if they were all windows,” said Jasper, scanning the tiny panes s.h.i.+ning at them from all the cottages. ”Dear me, the Broek women have something to do, don't they, to keep everything so s.h.i.+ny and clean?”