Part 35 (2/2)
”She's so easily flichtered now,” Gavinia told Tommy in the kitchen, ”that for fear o' starting her I never whistle at my work without telling her I'm to do't, and if I fall on the stair, my first thought is to jump up and cry, 'It was just me tum'ling.' And now I believe this brute'll be the death o' her.”
”But what can he do to her?”
”I dinna ken, but she's greeting sair, and yon can hear how he's rampaging up and down the blue-and-white room. Listen to his thrawn feet! He's raging because she's so long in coming down, and come she daurna. Oh, the poor crittur!”
Now, Tommy was very fond of his old school-mistress, and he began to be unhappy with Gavinia.
”She hasna a man-body in the world to take care o' her,” sobbed the girl.
”Has she no?” cried Tommy, fiercely, and under one of the impulses that so easily mastered him he marched into the blue-and-white room.
”Well, my young friend, and what may you want?” asked Mr. McLean, impatiently.
Tommy sat down and folded his arms. ”I'm going to sit here and see what you do to Miss Ailie,” he said, determinedly.
Mr. McLean said ”Oh!” and then seemed favorably impressed, for he added quietly: ”She is a friend of yours, is she? Well, I have no intention of hurting her.”
”You had better no,” replied Tommy, stoutly.
”Did she send you here?”
”No; I came mysel'.”
”To protect her?”
There was the irony in it that so puts up a boy's dander. ”Dinna think,”
said Tommy, hotly, ”that I'm fleid at you, though I have no beard--at least, I hinna it wi' me.”
At this unexpected conclusion a smile crossed Mr. McLean's face, but was gone in an instant. ”I wish you had laughed,” said Tommy, on the watch; ”once a body laughs he canna be angry no more,” which was pretty good even for Tommy. It made Mr. McLean ask him why he was so fond of Miss Ailie.
”I'm the only man-body she has,” he answered.
”Oh? But why are you her man-body?”
The boy could think of no better reason than this: ”Because--because she's so sair in need o' are.” (There were moments when one liked Tommy.)
Mr. McLean turned to the window, and perhaps forgot that he was not alone. ”Well, what are you thinking about so deeply?” he asked by and by.
”I was trying to think o' something that would gar you laugh,” answered Tommy, very earnestly, and was surprised to see that he had nearly done it.
The blue and white note-book was lying on the floor where Miss Ailie had dropped it. Often in Tommy's presence she had consulted this work, and certainly its effect on her was the reverse of laughter; but once he had seen Dr. McQueen pick it up and roar over every page. With an inspiration Tommy handed the book to Mr. McLean. ”It made the doctor laugh,” he said persuasively.
”Go away,” said Ivie, impatiently; ”I am in no mood for laughing.”
”I tell you what,” answered Tommy, ”I'll go, if you promise to look at it,” and to be rid of him the man agreed. For the next quarter of an hour Tommy and Gavinia were very near the door of the blue-and-white room, Tommy whispering dejectedly, ”I hear no laughing,” and Gavinia replying, ”But he has quieted down.”
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