Part 31 (2/2)
”Oh!” said Ned and Laurie in chorus, their faces brightening; and Laurie added apologetically: ”Gee, we didn't want to make her cry, Polly!”
”That sort of a cry doesn't hurt,” said Polly.
Afterward Mrs. Deane said a great deal, and said it very sweetly, and the boys got more or less embarra.s.sed, and were heartily glad when she drew Ned to her and kissed him, much to that youth's distress, and the incident ended in laughter. By noon the shutters were done, and nine industrious amateur painters were swarming over the back of the little house. I'm not going to tell you that the job was done as perfectly as Sprague and Currie, Painters and Paper-hangers, would have done it, but you're to believe that it was done much quicker and at a far greater saving of money! And when it was finished no one except a professional would ever have known the difference. Perhaps there was more blue and white paint scattered around the landscape than was absolutely necessary, and it always remained a mystery how Antoinette managed to get her right ear looking like a bit of Italian sky, for every one professed ignorance and Antoinette was apparently well protected from spatters. (It took Polly more than a week to restore the rabbit to her original appearance.)
When the early winter twilight fell and it became necessary to knock off work for the day, the blue painting was more than half done and, unless weather prevented, it was certain that the entire task would be finished by to-morrow evening. Mrs. Deane served five-o'clock tea,-only it happened to be four-o'clock tea instead,-and nine very, very hungry lads did full justice to the repast, and the little room behind the store held a merry party. Perhaps the prevailing odor of paint detracted somewhat from Mrs. Deane's and Polly's enjoyment of the refreshments, but you may be certain they made no mention of the fact.
That night the boys viewed the cloudy sky apprehensively. Laurie, who knew little about it, declared dubiously that it smelt like snow. But when morning came, although the cloudiness persisted most of the day, the weather remained kindly, with just enough frost in the air to chill feet and nip idle fingers and to give an added zest to labor. Very little time was wasted on luncheon, and at two o'clock the last slap of blue paint had been applied and the more difficult work of doing the white trim began. Fortunately, there were only eleven windows and two doors, and although ”drawing” the sashes was slow and finicking work, with nine willing hands hard at it the end came shortly after dusk, when, watched by eight impatient companions, young Haskell, one of the junior cla.s.s boys, with trembling fingers drew his brush along the last few inches of a front window, and then, because he was quite keyed up and because it was much too dark to see well, celebrated the culmination of his efforts by putting a foot squarely into a can of white paint!
When first-aid methods had been applied, he was allowed, on promise to put only one foot to the floor, to accompany the rest inside and announce to a delighted and slightly tremulous Mrs. Deane that the work was completed. There was a real celebration then, with more piping-hot tea and lots of perfectly scrumptious cream-puffs,-besides less enticing bread-and-b.u.t.ter sandwiches,-and Mrs. Deane tried hard to thank the boys and couldn't quite do it, and Polly failed almost as dismally, and Laurie made a wonderful speech that no one understood very well, except for the general meaning, and nine flushed and very happy youths cheered long and loudly for Mrs. Deane, and finally departed merrily into the winter twilight, calling back many a ”Merry Christmas”
as they went.
CHAPTER XXIII-THE SECRET Pa.s.sAGE
Christmas Day dawned clear and mild, a green Christmas if ever there was one. And yet, in spite of the absence of such traditional accompaniments as snow and ice, the spirit of the season was there in abundance. Ned and Laurie, wakening early to the sound of church bells, felt Christmasy right from the first conscious moment. When they hastened down the hall for their baths, they could hear George and Hal Goring on the floor below uniting in what they fondly believed was song. Later, at breakfast, beside a perfectly wonderful repast in which chicken and little crisp sausages and hot, crisp waffles played leading roles, the Doctor and Miss Tabitha had placed at each plate a Christmas card tied by a tiny blue ribbon to a diminutive painter's brus.h.!.+ Later on there was to be a tree in the Doctor's living-room. In fact, the tree was already there, and the boys had spent much of the preceding evening tr.i.m.m.i.n.g it and placing around its base inexpensive gifts of a joking nature for one another and the Doctor and Miss Tabitha and the two instructors who were there.
Laurie and Ned had exchanged presents with each other and had received several from home, not the least welcome of which was a check from their father. And they had bought small gifts for George and Bob. Also, though you needn't tell it around school, Laurie had purchased a most odoriferous and ornate bottle of perfume for Polly! So when, shortly after breakfast, Ned suggested that Laurie take Bob's present over to him, Laurie evinced entire willingness to perform the errand. That he carried not one gift but two in his pockets was, however, beyond Ned's knowledge. A cheerful whistling from the back of the house drew Laurie past the front entrance, and he found Bob, attired in any but festal garments, swinging open the bulkhead doors. A pair of old gray trousers and a disreputable brown sweater formed most of his costume. At sight of Laurie he gave a joyful whoop.
”Merry Christmas!” he called. ”I was going over to see you in a minute.
Thomas is in bed with a cold or something, and I'm furnace-man and general factotle-”
”Factotum, you mean,” laughed Laurie.
”All right! As you fellows say, what do I care? I don't own it. Now you're here, you can just give me a hand with this load of junk. Dad says it doesn't look s.h.i.+pshape for Christmas.” Bob indicated more than a dozen paint-cans, empty, partly empty, or unopened, and a mess of brushes, paddles, and rags that they had set there last evening. ”I suppose a lot of these might as well be thrown away, but we'll dump the whole caboodle down in the cellar for now.”
”All right,” agreed Laurie. ”First, though, here's something that Ned and I thought you might like. It isn't anything much, you know, Bob; just a-a trinket.”
”For me?” Bob took the little packet, and removed the paper and then the lid, disclosing a pair of silver cuff-links lying in a nest of cotton-wool. As Laurie said, they weren't much, but they were neat and the jeweler had made a very good job of the three plain block letters, R. D. S., that he had engraved on them. ”Gee, they're corking!”
exclaimed Bob, with unmistakable sincerity. ”I needed them, too, Nod. I lost one of a pair just the other day, and-”
”I know you did. That's why we got those.”
”Well, I'm awfully much obliged. They're great. I've got a couple of little things upstairs for you chaps. They aren't nearly so nice as these, but I'll get 'em-”
”Wait till we finish this job,” said Laurie. ”Grab a handful and come on. Is Thomas very sick?”
”I guess not,” replied Bob, as he followed the other down the steps. ”He ate some breakfast, but aunt thought he'd better stay in bed. I had a great time with the furnace this morning. Got up at half-past six and shoveled coal to beat the band!”
”Where do you want to put these?” asked Laurie.
”Anywhere, I guess. Hold on; let's dump 'em on the shelves in the closet there. Then they'll be out of the way. Some day we'll clean the cans all out, and maybe we'll get enough to paint that arbor we're going to build. Here you are.”
Bob led the way to a small room built against the rear wall of the big cellar. Designed for a preserve closet, its shelves had probably long been empty of aught save dust, and the door, wide open, hung from one hinge. It was some six feet broad and perhaps five feet deep, built of matched boards. Before Bob entered the cobwebby doorway with his load of cans, its only contents were an acc.u.mulation of empty preserve-jars in a wooden box set on the cement floor beneath a lower shelf at the back.
There were eight shelves across the rear wall, divided in the center by a vertical board into two tiers. Bob placed his load on a lower shelf and Laurie put his on the shelf above. As he drew away he noticed that the shelf appeared to have worked out from the boards at the back, and he gave it a blow on the edge with the flat of one hand. It slipped back into place, but, to his surprise, it came forward again an inch or two, and all the other shelves in that tier came with it!
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