Part 23 (1/2)
”We won,” said Silvey happily, as they stopped in front of his house.
”Come on, now, all together!”
They broke into the ”Tigers'” exultant war cry, which is very much the same as that of the football team to which you belonged as a boy:
Sis-boom-bah!
Sis-boom-bah!
”Tigers,” ”Tigers,”
Rah, rah, rah!
Then they left for their several homes, too worn out to do anything but rest.
Up in his room John threw himself on the bed with a sigh. His injured leg hurt terribly--but they'd won. Pity Louise had missed the defeat of the ”Jeffersons.” Why did women folks always have to go shopping, anyway? Only spent a lot of money on hats and other foolishness.
He turned over wearily and found the yellow pig bank leering at him from the bureau with hungry, malignant eyes. Where was that apportioned two dollars which he was to earn by the end of the week? Four days had already elapsed, and the beast's interior was as empty as it had been on the toy-shop shelf. Why had he bought those lemon drops on Monday? And the marbles and his rubber spear top? Was there anything left after the s.h.i.+n-guard purchase? He sat up on the edge of the bed and rummaged in his pockets. One lonely penny remained from his weekly allowance of a quarter.
He dropped the coin into the long slot and shook the pig disgustedly.
Two dollars could never be earned by Sat.u.r.day night. Not even if three lawns were to be cut, and a half-dozen errands run for the neighbors. He slammed the big china animal back on the bureau and went down to supper.
The lonely copper had seemed to make the beast sound more hollow than ever as it rattled against the unglazed interior.
That night the wind veered to the south, and Friday proved to be mild and sunny, save for a touch of autumnal haze in the air. But not even this freakish return of summer could rouse him from the grumpy mood which held over from the night before.
He scanned the front yards on the street as he sulked along to school.
How slowly gra.s.s grew in the fall! Not a lawn needed tr.i.m.m.i.n.g, and as for freeing them from leaves, the nearly denuded boughs made such operations unnecessary. Coin of the realm seemed further away than ever.
In the afternoon, the haze thickened and hinted of rain. As he and Louise sauntered homeward, a drop of water spattered on her cheek.
Another hit him on the nose, and it was but a short time before the cement sidewalks were covered with rapidly merging mosaics of a darker hue.
What luck! Dimes and even quarters, quickly and easily earned, were within his grasp. He left Louise at the apartment entrance and dashed into his own front hall in great excitement.
”I've got the umbrellas,” he shouted, as he struggled into his raincoat.
”I'm going out with them.”
”Don't take my good one,” Mrs. Fletcher cautioned. But he was beyond earshot, best umbrella and all, before the words were out of her mouth.
Down the water-glazed street he ran, its dust now laid by the refres.h.i.+ng, pounding torrent, past the barrier of the railroad ticket office, thanks to the friendly agent, and up the worn steps to the station platform. Other boys were there, each with two or three umbrellas, who viewed the newcomer with disfavor. Ere long, each suburban train from town would discharge its quota of daintily dressed shoppers, pallid office clerks and stenographers and prosperous business men. Not one of them would carry protection from the soaking rain, and compet.i.tion between the juvenile vendors threatened to become acute.
A lean, light suburban engine pulled in amid a cloud of escaping steam and a hissing of airbrakes. John spied a tall slender woman in a car doorway arranging a paper over her hat, and raced along beside the platform until it came to a halt.
”Umbrella home, lady?”
She nodded. ”To the hotel.”
Behind her loomed a tall, slightly bowed, black-haired lawyer whom John had seen on the long, wooden veranda of that subst.i.tute for home more times than he could count on his ten fingers. He, too, took advantage of a rented shelter. Together the couple made their way down the dripping steps while John followed exultantly. Two at once--and the hotel but a scant block and a half away! At the broad entrance, they paused.
”How much do I owe you, little boy?” asked the lady, with a smile.
”Dime,” was the laconic answer. Another train was due in ten minutes and there was no time to waste. She opened a dainty leather purse, while the lawyer paid his debt from a pocketful of small change. Twenty cents at once. That _was_ luck. A moment later John was sprinting back at top speed.