<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
<div class='cap'>IT was several days before Will'm lost
that haunting fear of having displeased
the great power up the chimney past all forgiveness.
It began to leave him gradually
as Libby grew more and more sure of her
own state of favor. She was so good in
school now that even the teacher said nobody
could be better, no matter how hard
he tried. She stayed every day to help
clean the blackboards and collect the pencils.
She never missed a syllable nor stepped
off the line in spelling class, nor asked for a
drink in lesson time. And she and Maudie
Peters had made it up between them not to
whisper a single word until after Christmas.
She was sure now that even if Santa Claus
had overheard Will'm, her explanation that
he was too little to know any better had
made it all right.</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It is probable, too, that Will'm's state of
body helped his state of mind, for about this
time his cold was well enough for him to
play out of doors, and the thought of stars
and angels and silver bells began to be agreeable
again. They gave him that big, warm
feeling inside again; the Christmas feeling
of good-will to everybody.</p>
<p>One morning he was sitting up on a post
of the side yard fence, when the passenger
train Number Four came rushing in to the
station, and was switched back on a side
track right across the road from him. It
was behind time and had to wait there for
orders or till the Western Flyer passed it,
or for some such reason. It was a happy
morning for Will'm. There was nothing he
enjoyed so much as having one of these long
Pullman trains stop where he could watch it.
Night after night he and Libby had flattened
their faces against the sitting-room
window to watch the seven o'clock limited
pass by. Through its brilliantly lighted
windows they loved to see the passengers at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
dinner. The white tables with their gleam
of glass and shine of silver and glow of
shaded lights seemed wonderful to them.
More wonderful still was it to be eating as
unconcernedly as if one were at home, with
the train jiggling the tables while it leaped
across the country at its highest speed. The
people who could do such things must be
wonderful too.</p>
<p>There were times when passengers
flattening <em>their</em> faces against the glass to see
why the train had stopped, caught the gleam
of a cheerful home window across the road,
and holding shielding hands at either side
of their eyes, as they peered through the
darkness, smiled to discover those two eager
little watchers, who counted the stopping
of the Pullman at this Junction as the
greatest event of the day.</p>
<p>Will'm and Libby knew nearly every engineer
and conductor on the road by sight,
and had their own names for them. The
engineer on this morning train they called
Mr. Smiley, because he always had a cheerful<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
grin for them, and sometimes a wave of
his big grimy hand. This time Mr. Smiley
was too busy and too provoked by the delay
to pay any attention to the small boy perched
on the fence post. Some of the passengers
finding that they might have to wait half an
hour or more began to climb out and walk
up and down the road past him. Several
of them attracted by the wares in the window
of the little notion shop which had once
been a parlor, sauntered in and came out
again, eating some of Grandma Neal's
doughnuts. Presently Will'm noticed that
everybody who passed a certain sleeping
coach, stooped down and looked under it.
He felt impelled to look under it himself
and discover why. So he climbed down
from the post and trudged along the road,
kicking the rocks out of his way with stubby
little shoes already scuffed from much previous
kicking. At the same moment the
steward of the dining-car stepped down from
the vestibuled platform, and strolled towards
him, with his hands in his trousers' pockets.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Hullo, son!" he remarked good-humoredly
in passing, giving an amused
glance at the solemn child stuffed into a gray
sweater and blue mittens, with a toboggan
cap pulled down over his soft bobbed hair.
Usually Will'm responded to such greetings.
So many people came into the shop
that he was not often abashed by strangers.
But this time he was so busy looking at something
that dangled from the steward's vest
pocket that he failed to say "Hullo" back at
him. It was what seemed to be the smallest
gold watch he had ever seen, and it impressed
him as very queer that the man
should wear it on the outside of his pocket
instead of the inside. He stopped still in
the road and stared at it until the man
passed him, then he turned and followed him
slowly at a distance.</p>
<p>A few rods further on, the steward stooped
and looked under the coach, and spoke to a
man who was out of sight, but who was hammering
on the other side. A voice called
back something about a hot-box and cutting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
out that coach, and reminded of his original
purpose, Will'm followed on and looked,
likewise. Although he squatted down and
looked for a long time he couldn't see a
single box, only the legs of the man who was
hammering on the other side. But just as
he straightened up again he caught the
gleam of something round and shiningly
golden, something no bigger than a quarter,
lying almost between his feet. It was a
tiny baby watch like the one that swung
from the steward's vest pocket.</p>
<p>Thrilled by the discovery, Will'm picked
it up and fondled it with both little blue mittens.
It didn't tick when he held it to his
ear, and he couldn't open it, but he was sure
that Uncle Neal could open it and start it
to going, and he was sure that it was the
littlest watch in the world. It never occurred
to him that finding it hadn't made it
his own to have and to carry home, just like
the rainbow-lined mussel shells that he sometimes
picked up on the creek bank, or the silver
dime he had once found in a wagon rut.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus03.jpg" width-obs="395" height-obs="600" alt="Willi'm handing watch to steward" /> <span class="caption">"Here!" he said</span></div>
<p>Then he looked up to see the steward
strolling back towards him again, his hands
still in his trousers' pockets. But this time
no fascinating baby watch bobbed back and
forth against his vest as he walked, and
Will'm knew with a sudden stab of disappointment
that was as bad as earache, that
the watch he was fondling could never be
his to carry home and show proudly to
Uncle Neal. It belonged to the man.</p>
<p>"Here!" he said, holding it out in the blue
mitten.</p>
<p>"Well, I vow!" exclaimed the steward,
looking down at his watchfob, and then
snatching the little disk of gold from the
outstretched hand. "I wouldn't have lost
that for hardly anything. It must have
come loose when I stooped to look under the
car. I think more of that than almost anything
I've got. See?"</p>
<p>And then Will'm saw that it was not a
watch, but a little locket made to hang from
a bar that was fastened to a wide black ribbon
fob. The man pulled out the fob, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>
there on the other end, where it had been
in his pocket all the time, was a big watch,
as big as Will'm's fist. The locket flew
open when he touched a spring, and there
were two pictures inside. One of a lady and
one of a jolly, fat-cheeked baby.</p>
<p>"Well, little man!" exclaimed the steward,
with a hearty clap on the shoulder that
nearly upset him. "You don't know how
big a favor you've done me by finding that
locket. You're just about the nicest boy
I've come across yet. I'll have to tell
Santa Claus about you. What's your
name?"</p>
<p>Will'm told him and pointed across to the
shop, when asked where he lived. At the
steward's high praise Will'm was ready to
take the Sky Road himself, when he heard
that he was to be reported to the Master of
the Reindeer as the nicest boy the steward
had come across. His disappointment vanished
so quickly that he even forgot that he
had been disappointed, and when the steward
caught him under the arms and swung<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
him up the steps, saying something about
finding an orange, he was thrilled with a wild
brave sense of adventure.</p>
<p>Discovering that Will'm had never been
on a Pullman since he could remember, the
steward took him through the diner to the
kitchen, showing him all the sights and explaining
all the mysteries. It was as good
as a show to watch the child's face. He had
never dreamed that such roasting and broiling
went on in the narrow space of the car
kitchen, or that such quantities of eatables
were stored away in the mammoth refrigerators
which stood almost touching the red
hot ranges. Big shining fish from far-off
waters, such as the Junction had never
heard of, lay blocked in ice in one compartment.
Ripe red strawberries lay in another,
although it was mid December, and in
Will'm's part of the world strawberries were
not to be thought of before the first of June.
There were more eggs than all the hens at
the Junction could lay in a week, and a
white-capped, white-jacketed colored-man<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span>
was beating up a dozen or so into a white
mountain of meringue, which the passengers
would eat by and by in the shape of
some strange, delicious dessert, sitting at
those fascinating tables he had passed on his
way in.</p>
<p>A quarter of an hour later when Will'm
found himself on the ground again, gazing
after the departing train, he was a trifle
dazed with all he had seen and heard. But
three things were clear in his mind. That
he held in one hand a great yellow orange,
in the other a box of prize pop-corn, and in
his heart the precious assurance that Santa
Claus would be told by one in high authority
that he was a good boy.</p>
<p>So elated was he by this last fact, that he
decided on the way home to send a letter up
the chimney on his own account, especially
as he knew now exactly what to ask for.
He had been a bit hazy on the question before.
Now he knew beyond all doubt that
what he wanted more than anything in the
wide world, was <em>a ride on a Pullman car</em>.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span>
He wanted to sit at one of those tables, and
eat things that had been cooked in that mysterious
kitchen, at the same time that he was
flying along through the night on the wings
of a mighty dragon breathing out smoke and
fire as it flew.</p>
<p>He went in to the house by way of the
shop so that he might make the bell go ting-a-ling.
It was so delightfully like the bells
on the camels, also like the bells on the
sleigh which would be coming before so very
long to bring him what he wanted.</p>
<p>Miss Sally Watts was sitting behind the
counter, crocheting. To his question of
"Where's Dranma?" she answered without
looking up.</p>
<p>"She and Mr. Neal have driven over to
Westfield. They have some business at the
court house. She said you're not to go
off the place again till she gets back. I was
to tell you when you came in. She looked
everywhere to find you before she left, because
she's going to be gone till late in the
afternoon. Where you been, anyhow?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Will'm told her. Miss Sally was a
neighbor who often helped in the shop at
times like this, and he was always glad when
such times came. It was easy to tell Miss
Sally things, and presently when a few direct
questions disclosed the fact that Miss
Sally "bleeved" as he did, he asked her another
question, which had been puzzling him
ever since he had decided to ask for a ride
on the train.</p>
<p>"How can Santa put a <em>ride</em> in a <em>stocking?</em>"</p>
<p>"I don't know," answered Miss Sally, still
intent on her crocheting. "But then I don't
really see how he can put anything in; sleds
or dolls or anything of the sort. He's a
mighty mysterious man to me. But then,
probably he wouldn't try to put the <em>ride</em> in
a stocking. He'd send the ticket or the
money to buy it with. And he <em>might</em> give
it to you beforehand, and not wait for stocking-hanging
time, knowing how much you
want it."</p>
<p>All this from Miss Sally because Mrs.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span>
Neal had just told her that the children were
to be sent to their father the day before
Christmas, and that they were to go on a
Pullman car, because the ordinary coaches
did not go straight through. The children
were too small to risk changing cars, and
he was too busy to come for them.</p>
<p>Will'm stayed in the shop the rest of the
morning, for Miss Sally echoing the sentiment
of everybody at the Junction, felt sorry
for the poor little fellow who was soon to be
sent away to a stepmother, and felt that it
was her duty to do what she could toward
making his world as pleasant as possible for
him, while she had the opportunity.</p>
<p>Together they ate the lunch which had
been left on the pantry shelves for them.
Will'm helped set it out on the table. Then
he went back into the shop with Miss Sally.
But his endless questions "got on her
nerves" after awhile, she said, and she suddenly
ceased to be the good company that
she had been all morning. She mended the
fire in the sitting-room and told Will'm he'd<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span>
better play in there till Libby came home.
It was an endless afternoon, so long that
after he had done everything that he could
think of to pass the time, he decided he'd
write his own letter and send it up the chimney
himself. He couldn't possibly wait for
Libby to come home and do it. He'd write
a picture letter. It was easier to read pictures
than print, anyhow. At least for
him. He slipped back into the shop long
enough to get paper and a pencil from the
old secretary in the corner, and then lying
on his stomach on the hearth-rug with his
heels in the air, he began drawing his favorite
sketch, a train of cars.</p>
<p>All that can be said of the picture is that
one could recognize what it was meant for.
The wheels were wobbly and no two of the
same size, the windows zigzagged in uneven
lines and were of varied shapes. The cow-catcher
looked as if it could toss anything it
might pick up high enough to join the cow
that jumped over the moon. But it was
unmistakably a train, and the long line of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span>
smoke pouring back over it from the tipsy
smoke-stack showed that it was going at
the top of its speed. Despite the straggling
scratchy lines any art critic must acknowledge
that it had in it that intangible quality
known as life and "go."</p>
<p>It puzzled Will'm at first to know how to
introduce himself into the picture so as to
show that he was the one wanting a ride.
Finally on top of one of the cars he drew a
figure supposed to represent a boy, and after
long thought, drew one just like it, except
that the second figure wore a skirt. He
didn't want to take the ride alone. He'd
be almost afraid to go without Libby, and he
knew very well that she'd like to go. She'd
often played "S'posen" they were riding
away off to the other side of the world on
one of those trains which they watched
nightly pass the sitting-room window.</p>
<p>He wished he could spell his name and
hers. He knew only the letters with which
each began, and he wasn't sure of either
unless he could see the picture on the other<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span>
side of the building block on which it was
printed. The box of blocks was in the
sitting-room closet. He brought it out,
emptied it on the rug and searched until he
found the block bearing the picture of a lion.
That was the king of beasts, and the L on
the other side which stood for Lion, stood
also for Libby. Very slowly and painstakingly
he copied the letter on his drawing,
placing it directly across the girl's skirt so
that there could be no mistake. Then he
pawed over the blocks till he found the one
with the picture of a whale. That was the
king of fishes, and the W on the other side
which stood for Whale, stood also for William.
He tried putting the W across the
boy, but as each leg was represented by one
straight line only, bent at right angles at the
bottom to make a foot, the result was confusing.
He rubbed out the legs, made them
anew, and put the W over the boy's head,
drawing a thin line from the end of the W to
the crossed scratches representing fingers.
That plainly showed that the Boy and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</SPAN></span>
W were one and the same, although it gave
to the unenlightened the idea that the picture
had something to do with flying a kite.
Then he rubbed out the L on Libby's skirt
and placed it over her head, likewise connecting
her letter with her fingers.</p>
<p>The rubbing-out process gave a smudgy
effect. Will'm was not satisfied with the
result, and like a true artist who counts all
labor as naught, which helps him towards
that perfection which is his ideal, he laid
aside the drawing as unworthy and began
another.</p>
<p>The second was better. He accomplished
it with a more certain touch and with
no smudges, and filled with the joy of a
creator, sat and looked at it a few minutes
before starting it on its flight up the flue
towards the Sky Road.</p>
<p>The great moment was over. He had
just drawn back from watching it start
when Libby came in. She came primly and
quietly this time. She had waited to leave
her overshoes on the porch, her lunch basket<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</SPAN></span>
in the kitchen, her wraps in the entry. The
white ruffled apron which she had worn all
day was scarcely mussed. The bows on
her narrow braids stuck out stiffly and
properly. Her shoes were tied and the laces
tucked in. She walked on tiptoe, and
every movement showed that she was keeping
up the reputation she had earned of being
"so good that nobody could be any better,
no matter how hard he tried." She
had been that good for over a week.</p>
<p>Will'm ran to get the orange which had
been given him that morning. He had been
saving it for this moment of division. He
had already opened the pop-corn box and
found the prize, a little china cup no larger
than a thimble, and had used it at lunch,
dipping a sip at a time from his glass of milk.</p>
<p>The interest with which she listened to
his account of finding the locket and being
taken aboard the train made him feel like a
hero. He hastened to increase her respect.</p>
<p>"Nen the man said that I was about the
nicest little boy he ever saw and he would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span>
tell Santa Claus so. An' I knew everything
was all right so I've just sended a letter up
to tell him to please give me a ride on the
Pullman train."</p>
<p>Libby smiled in an amused, big-sister sort
of way, asking how Will'm supposed anybody
could read his letters. He couldn't
write anything but scratches.</p>
<p>"But it was a picture letter!" Will'm explained
triumphantly. "Anybody can read
picture letters." Then he proceeded to tell
what he had made and how he had marked
it with the initials of the Lion and the
Whale.</p>
<p>To his intense surprise Libby looked first
startled, then troubled, then despairing.
His heart seemed to drop down into his
shoes when she exclaimed in a tragic tone:</p>
<p>"Well, Will'm Branfield! If you
haven't gone and done it! I don't know
what ever <em>is</em> going to happen to us <em>now!</em>"</p>
<p>Then she explained. <em>She</em> had already
written a letter for him, with Susie Peters's
help, asking in writing what she had asked<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span>
before by word of mouth, that he be forgiven,
and requesting that he might not find
his stocking empty on Christmas morning.
As to what should be in it, she had left that
to Santa's generosity, because Will'm had
never said what he wanted.</p>
<p>"And now," she added reproachfully,
"I've <em>told</em> you that we oughtn't to ask for
more than one thing apiece, 'cause this is
the first time he's ever been to this house,
and it doesn't seem polite to ask for so much
from a stranger."</p>
<p>Will'm defended himself, his chin tilted
at an angle that should have been a warning
to one who could read such danger signals.</p>
<p>"I only asked for one thing for me and
one for you."</p>
<p>"Yes, but don't you see, <em>I</em> had already
asked for something for each of us, so that
makes two things apiece," was the almost
tearful answer.</p>
<p>"Well, <em>I</em> aren't to blame," persisted
Will'm, "you didn't tell me what you'd
done."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"But you ought to have waited and asked
me before you sent it," insisted Libby.</p>
<p>"I oughtn't!"</p>
<p>"You <em>ought</em>, I say!" This with a stamp
of her foot for emphasis.</p>
<p>"I oughtn't, Miss Smarty!" This time
a saucy little tongue thrust itself out at her
from Will'm's mouth, and his face was
screwed into the ugliest twist he could make.</p>
<p>Again he had the shock of a great surprise,
when Libby did not answer with a
worse face. Instead she lifted her head a
little, and said in a voice almost honey-sweet,
but so loud that it seemed intended for other
ears than Will'm's, "Very well, have your
own way, brother, but Santa Claus knows
that <em>I</em> didn't want to be greedy and ask for
two things!"</p>
<p>William answered in what was fairly a
shout, "An' he knows that <em>I</em> didn't,
<em>neether!</em>"</p>
<p>The shout was followed by a whisper:
"Say, Libby, do you s'pose he heard that?"</p>
<p>Libby's answer was a convincing nod.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />