<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br/> <small><i>Enter Bob.</i></small></h2>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="drop-cap" src="images/drop-n.jpg" width-obs="174" height-obs="171" alt="N" /></div>
<p class="drop-capi">NEXT morning consternation reigned in the nursery, for nurse
coming in early to light the wood fire, found the electric
lights burning, everything overturned, and the whole place
looking as if it had been visited by a cyclone.</p>
<p>All the toys were lying about wherever they had happened to drop
when surprised in their antics by Sally’s sudden awakening. Nurse’s
work basket lay overturned on the floor with all its contents spilled out
and her favorite tomato pincushion piteously emptying forth its sawdust
vitals through a yawning rent in its side.</p>
<p>A basket of waxen fruits, perpetrated by Sally’s grandmother
in her youth, had been thrown down from the shelf, and all
the beautiful peaches and pears and apples lay ruined on the carpet
mixed with the fragments of the glass shade that had covered
them.</p>
<p>Most deplorable of all, nurse’s best bonnet had been dragged from its
box and the gorgeous bunch of grapes that adorned its brim had been
torn off and lay crushed and mangled on the floor.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Everything bore the mark of rapacious little teeth. Therefore nurse’s
theory favored rats, and mamma shuddered at the mere thought of such
dreadful little creatures being so close to her darling.</p>
<p>Such a thing had never before occurred in the annals of the nursery.
Nurse wept over her bonnet and Sally over the ruined fruit which
had been one of her chief treasures. She hated, oh, how she hated
those dreadful marauding rats, who had done such damage with
their sharp little teeth. Supposing that they had attacked Peter Pan
and his beloved family? The thought was too terrible for words. She
immediately resolved that in the future, Rough House, the beautiful
Scotch collie, should sleep in the nursery, a plan that mamma entirely
approved.</p>
<p>Never for one moment did Sally suspect Peter Pan, sitting so calmly
in the bosom of his family, of being the author of the tragedy.</p>
<p>She had taken off his pajamas and dressed him for the day in a
smart white sweater with leggings to match, and a beautiful white toboggan
cap with a pink tassel that hung down at one side. To be sure, the
tendency of the tassel was rather to make things topheavy on its own
particular side, so that the toboggan cap was somewhat inclined to tilt
rakishly over one eye.</p>
<p>This, however, was arranged by Sally with many a loving pat, and
she gathered him affectionately in her arms, fancying that a queer expression<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>
flashed into his bright black eyes as she and the nurse discussed
the feasibility of allowing Rough House to sleep in the nursery.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus031.jpg" width-obs="341" height-obs="477" alt="Sally sitting on a chaise holding a bear" /></div>
<p>Nurse had been very
much disturbed by the fact
that she had found the
night light extinguished,
although the little vessel
in which the wick floated
was nearly half full of oil.</p>
<p>Rats could never have
done a thing like that, she
said to herself, neither
could they have turned on
the electric lights, nor
yet scattered all the toys
about the nursery floor in
the grotesque confusion in
which they had been found.
However, she kept her
ideas to herself, for the
subject of ghosts and fairies
was a strictly forbidden one in the nursery.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Only Sally herself might have explained the matter of the electric
lights, but she intuitively felt that for Peter Pan’s sake she must never,
never mention anything that she had heard or seen without his permission;
and somehow she felt pretty sure that this he would be rather unwilling
to grant.</p>
<p>In point of fact the little girl was rather beginning to wonder if it
had not all been a dream.</p>
<p>However, she did not allow the matter to trouble her gay little brain,
and was the picture of delighted happiness when an hour later, accompanied
by mamma and nurse, she stepped into the big motor car and
rolled away down town to the shopping district, carrying Peter Pan, who
wore an altogether angelic expression, and nobody in the world would
ever have suspected that the demure rascal, although somewhat disturbed
at the fuss caused by his escapade of the night before, was even then planning
some new performance for the ensuing evening.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus033.jpg" width-obs="177" height-obs="227" alt="a bear sitting" /></div>
<p>This shopping trip was instituted chiefly for the benefit of nurse,
who was delighted with the gift of a new bonnet that fairly bristled with
grapes, while Sally was overjoyed with a beautiful set of library furniture
for the doll’s house. After this the little girl was lifted to the loftiest
pinnacle of enjoyment by luncheon at one of the fine cafés.
Mamma allowed her to select the dishes she liked best, although
nurse was rather inclined to shake her head over a combination of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
oysters, chicken salad, eclairs and <i>café parfait</i>, she herself being
more inclined for beefsteak and baked potato. But mamma laughingly
declared that it would do no harm for once and Sally enjoyed
the menu to its fullest extent, now and then pretending to feed
the Teddy bear, who sat up stiffly in a chair by himself, with a biscuit
between his paws. After the jolly luncheon another surprise was in
store for Sally—a matinee of Buster Brown, over which the child was
enraptured. But I regret to say that the play supplied Peter Pan’s already
fertile brain with several ideas which he could very well have
done without.</p>
<p>It was very close to dinner time when the
very happy if very tired little girl trotted upstairs
to the nursery hugging Peter Pan to her
heart, and rather wondering to hear voices
through the half closed door. Then as she entered
a sort of whirlwind punctuated by kisses
enveloped her, and after the first breathless moment
she could only cry out, “Oh Bob! I’m so
glad!” and sure enough Bob it was, come back
somewhat unexpected from Florida, where he had gone to spend part
of the winter with the two pretty aunties whose absence had made
a great gap in Sally’s small social circle.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus034.jpg" width-obs="496" height-obs="612" alt="bears all gathered around Sally" /> <div class="caption">The new Teddy Bears proved a great acquisition</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>They were all there, and all wanting to hug Sally at once and indeed
the dinner bell was ringing before nurse was able to carry her off
to be made fresh and pretty for the evening meal.</p>
<p>How good it was to see Bob’s dear brown face and to hear him telling
of the fine times they had had down in the beautiful land where
it is always summer. Sally could scarcely wait until dinner was ended
and ate little herself, but she greatly enjoyed watching Bob while he
satisfied the hearty appetite that rightfully belonged to a little man of
twelve.</p>
<p>As soon as the meal was ended, the children hurried upstairs and
Sally introduced her brother to Peter Pan and his family.</p>
<p>Bob thought the bears a great acquisition and then the two children,
curled upon the hearth rug before the crackling and snapping grate
fire, toasted marshmallows and popped chestnuts which they could not
eat, but which, although they did not know it, were destined for the delectation
of the Teddy bears later on.</p>
<p>For these rascals, as soon as the children had been tucked up in
bed, came hopping and skipping with eagerness and greedily gobbled up
the last crumb, and then held a council of war which resulted in a
scheme that they were not, however, able to carry out at once, owing to
other plans now being formulated by Papa Doctor.</p>
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