<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<div class='cap'>CHRISTMAS morning when Will'm
awoke, he was as bewildered as if he
had opened his eyes in a new world. He
was in a little white bed, such as he had
never seen before, and the blankets were
blue, with a border of white bunnies around
each one. Between him and the rest of the
room was a folding screen, like a giant picture-book
cover, showing everybody in
Mother Goose's whole family. He lay
staring at it awhile, and when he recognized
Tommy Tucker and Simple Simon and
Mother Hubbard's dog, he didn't feel quite
so lost and strange as he did at first.</div>
<p>Always at the Junction he had to lie still
until Uncle Neal made the fire and the room
was warm; but here it was already warm,
and he could hear steam hissing somewhere.
It seemed to be coming from the gilt pipes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
under the window. Wondering what was
on the other side of the screen, he slid out
from under the bunny blankets and peeped
cautiously around the wall of Mother
Goose pictures. It was Libby on the other
side in another little white bed just like his.
With one spring he pounced up on top of
it, and squirmed in beside her.</p>
<p>The first moment of Libby's awakening
was as bewildering as Will'm's had been.
Then she began to have a confused recollection
of the night before. She remembered
being lifted from the pillow on the car seat,
and hugged and kissed, and having her limp,
sleepy arms thrust into elusive coat sleeves.
Somebody held her hand and hurried her
down the aisle after her father, who was
carrying Will'm, because he was so sound
asleep that they couldn't even put his overcoat
on him. It was just wrapped around
him. Then she remembered jolting across
the city in an omnibus, with her head on a
muff in a lady's lap, and of leaning against
that same lady afterwards while her clothes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>
were being unbuttoned, and her eyelids kept
falling shut. She had never been so sleepy
in her whole life, that she could remember.</p>
<p>Suddenly she sat straight up in bed and
stared at something hanging on the post
of the low footboard; a Christmas stocking
all red and silver, and for her! Even from
where she was she could read the name that
Miss Santa Claus had printed in big letters
on the scrap of paper pinned to it:
"LIBBY."</p>
<p>Only those who have thrilled with that
same speechless rapture can know a tithe
of the bliss which filled Libby's soul, as she
seized it, her first Christmas stocking, and
began to explore it with fingers trembling
in their eagerness. When down in the very
toe she found the "little shiny gold ring like
Maudie Peters's," all she had breath for was
a long indrawn "Aw-aw-aw!" of ecstasy.</p>
<p>"Oh, Will'm!" she exclaimed, when she
could find speech, "aren't you glad we
bleeved?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"But I aren't got any stocking," he said
gloomily, eyeing her enviously while she
slipped the ring on her finger and waved
her hand around to admire the effect.</p>
<p>"But you got all you asked for: the ride
on the cars," she reminded him cheerfully.
"Did you look on your post to see if there
was anything?" No, he had not looked, and
at the suggestion he sprang out of Libby's
bed like a furry white kitten in his little
teazledown nightdrawers made with feet to
them, and knelt on top of his own bunny
blankets.</p>
<p>"Oh, Libby! There <em>is</em> one. There <em>is!</em>"
he cried excitedly. "It slipped around to
the back of the post where I couldn't see it
before. There's an orange and a lantern
just like yours, and what's this? Oh,
<em>look!</em>"</p>
<p>The awesome joy of his voice made Libby
join him on the other side of the Mother
Goose screen, and she snatched the little
punch from him almost as eagerly as he had
snatched it from the stocking, to try it on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span>
the slip of paper which bore the name
"WILL'M," pinned across the toe. They
had watched the conductor using his the
previous day, and had each wished for one
to use in playing their favorite game. Clip,
it went, and their heads bumped together in
their eagerness to see the result. There in
the paper was a clear-cut hole in the shape
of a tiny star, and on the blanket where it
had fallen from the hole, was the star itself.
The punch which the conductor had used
made round holes. This was a thousand
times nicer.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus08.jpg" width-obs="388" height-obs="600" alt="Will'm on bed Libby beside him watching him punch holes" /> <span class="caption">The shower of stars falling on the blanket made her think of the star-flower</span></div>
<p>Up till this moment, in the bewilderment
of finding themselves in their new surroundings,
the children had forgotten all about
Miss Santa Claus and her story of Ina and
the swans. But now Libby looked up, as
Will'm snatched back the punch and began
clipping holes in the paper as fast as he could
clip. The shower of stars falling on the
blanket made her think of the star-flower
charm, which they had been advised to begin
using first thing in the morning. Immediately<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span>
Libby retired to her side of the screen
and began to dress.</p>
<p>"Don't you know," she reminded Will'm,
"she said that we must be particular to start
right. It's like hooking up a dress. If
you start crooked, everything will keep on
being crooked all the way down. I'm going
to get started right, for I've found it's
just as easy to be good as it is to be bad when
you once get used to trying."</p>
<p>Will'm wasn't paying attention. He
had punched the slip of paper so full of holes
it wouldn't hold another one, and now he
tried the punch on the edge of one of the
soft blankets, just to see if it would make
a blue star drop out. But the punch didn't
cut blankets as evenly as it did paper.
Only a snip of wool came loose and stuck in
the punch, and the hole almost closed up
afterward when he picked at it a little. He
didn't show it to Libby.</p>
<p>That is the last he thought of the charm
that day, for their father put his head in at
the door to call "Merry Christmas," and say<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</SPAN></span>
that he'd be in in a few minutes to help him
into his clothes, and that their mother would
come too to tie Libby's hair-ribbons and
hurry things along, because they must hustle
down to breakfast to see the grand surprise
she had for them.</p>
<p>Then Will'm hurried so fast that he was
in his clothes by the time his father came in;
he had even washed his own face and hands
after a fashion, and there was nothing to be
done for him but to brush his hair, and while
his father was doing that, he talked and
joked in such an entertaining way that
Will'm did not feel at all strange with him
as he had expected to do. But he felt
strange when presently his father exclaimed,
"<em>Here's</em> mother," and somebody put her
arms around him and kissed him and wished
him a Merry Christmas, and then did the
same to Libby.</p>
<p>She looked so smiling and home-like that
she seemed more like Miss Sally Watts or
somebody they had known at the Junction
than a stepmother. If Will'm hadn't<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span>
known that she was one, and that he was
expected to love her, he would have liked her
right away, almost as much as he did Miss
Sally. But he felt shy and uncomfortable,
and he didn't know what to call her. The
name "mama" did not belong to her. It
never could. That belonged to the beautiful
picture hanging on the wall where it
could be seen from both little beds, last thing
at night and first thing in the morning.
They had had a smaller picture just like it
at the Junction, but this was more beautiful
because it showed the soft pink in her cheeks
and the blue in her smiling eyes, and the
other was only a photograph. Will'm
knew as well as Libby did that the reason
their father had kept talking about "your
mother" all the time he was brushing his
hair, was because he wanted them to call her
that. But he <em>couldn't!</em> He didn't know
her well enough. He felt that it would
choke him to call her anything but <em>She</em> or
<em>Her</em>.</p>
<p>While his father carried him down to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
breakfast pick-a-back, <em>She</em> led Libby by the
hand, and told about finding the stockings
pinned to the car seats, and about a beautiful
girl who suddenly appeared beside her
in the aisle, and asked her to be sure to hang
them where the children could find them
first thing in the morning. Santa Claus
had asked her to be sure that they got them.
She had on a long red coat and a little fur
cap with a red feather in it. There wasn't
any time to ask her questions, for while they
were trying to waken the children and hurry
them off the train which stopped such a few
minutes, she just smiled and vanished.</p>
<p>Libby and Will'm looked at each other
and said in the same breath, "Miss Santa
Claus!" Libby would have gone on to explain
who she was, but they had reached the
dining-room door, and there in the center of
the breakfast table stood a Christmas tree,
tipped with shining tapers and every branch
a-bloom with the wonderful fruitage of
Yuletide. It was the first one they had ever
seen, all lighted and glistening, so it is no<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
wonder that its glories drove everything
else out of their thoughts. There was a tricycle
for Will'm waiting beside his chair,
with a card on it that said "With love from
father and mother." And in Libby's chair
with the same kind of a card was a doll, with
not only real hair, but real eyelashes, and a
trunk full of the most beautiful clothes that
<em>She</em> had made.</p>
<p>As it was a holiday their father could give
his entire time to making them forget that
they were miles and miles from Grandma
Neal and the Junction. So what with the
snow fort in the yard, and a big Christmas
dinner and a long sleighride afterward, they
were whirled from one exciting thing to another,
till nightfall. Even then there was
no time to grow lonely, for their father sat
in the firelight, a child on each knee, holding
them close while <em>She</em> played on the piano,
soft sweet lullabies so alluring that the
Sandman himself had to steal out to listen.</p>
<p>It was different next morning when their
father had to go back to the office, but the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span>
"hooking up" started out all right for Libby.
She remembered it while she was washing
her hands, and saw the gleam of the little
new ring on her finger. So her first shy
question when they were left alone with
<em>Her</em>, was: "Don't you want me to do
something?"</p>
<p>The desire to please was so evident that
the answer was accompanied by a quick hug
which held her close for a moment.</p>
<p>"Yes, dear, if you can just play with your
little brother and keep him contented awhile,
it will be more help than anything."</p>
<p>Libby skipped promptly away to do her
bidding. She knew that Will'm would
want to go thundering up and down the back
hall in his tricycle, playing train with the
lantern and the punch. She would far
rather devote her time to the new doll, for
she hadn't yet tried on half its wardrobe.
But Miss Santa Claus's words came back
to her very clearly: "<em>It will be like picking
a little white flower whose name is
obedience!</em>" Feeling that she was following<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span>
in the footsteps of the Princess Ina, she
threw herself into the game of Railroad
Train until Will'm found it more thrilling
than it had ever been before.</p>
<p>Later in the morning they trundled the
tricycle out into the back yard, to ride up
and down the long brick pavement which
led to the alley gate. The snow had been
swept off and the bricks were dry and clean.
They took turns riding. The tricycle was
the engine, and the one whose turn it was
to go on foot ran along behind, personating
the train.</p>
<p>They had been at this sport some time,
when they suddenly became aware that
some one was watching them. A small boy
with curious bulging eyes, and a mouth
open like a round O was peeking in at them,
between the pickets of the alley gate. He
was a boy two years bigger and older than
Will'm, but he was unkempt looking, and
his stockings wrinkled down over his shoe-tops,
and there was a ring of molasses or
jam or something around his mouth.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The discovery dampened their zest in the
game somewhat. It made Will'm, who had
never played with any one but Libby, a
trifle self-conscious. He stopped letting
off steam with his lips, and wheeling
around, trundled back to the house in
silence. Libby, too, was disconcerted.
Her car-wheels failed her. She trailed back
in his wake a little girl, instead of a noisy
train. Yet the discovery did not stop the
game altogether. At the kitchen steps they
turned as they had been doing all along and
bravely started towards the alley again.
This time the gate opened and the dirty
little boy came in. It was Benjy, known
to all the neighborhood, if not to them, for
he wandered around it like a stray cat.
Wherever he saw a door ajar he entered,
and stayed until something attracted his attention
elsewhere. He went home only
when he was sent for. If nothing of interest
pulled him the other way he went unresistingly,
if not he was dragged. Wherever
he happened to be at mealtime, he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span>
stayed, whether he was invited or not.
There was something almost spooky in
Benjy's sudden appearances, and in his all-devouring
curiosity. It wasn't the childish
normal kind that asks questions. It was
the gaping, uncanny kind that silently peers
over into your open pocketbook, or stands
looking into your mouth while you talk.</p>
<p>Older people disliked him because he
would leave his play to stand in front of
them and gape and listen, and he was always
grubby and unbuttoned. Although
he was six years old it was no concern of his
that his stockings were always turning down
over his shoe tops. If the public preferred
to see them smooth then the public must attend
to his gartersnaps.</p>
<p>The tricycle having reached the end of
the walk, came to a halt. Benjy opened the
gate, walked in and took possession. It
was from no sense of fear that Will'm
climbed down and let Benjy assume control.
It was simply that a new force had come into
his life, a strangely fascinating one. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></span>
had never had anything to do with boys before,
and this one, bigger than himself,
dominated him from the start. He found it
much more thrilling to follow his lead than
his sister's. After a few futile attempts to
keep on with the game, Libby fell out of it.
Not that Benjy objected to her. He simply
ignored her, and Will'm took his cue
from him. So she sat on the kitchen steps
and watched them, till she felt cold and
went into the house.</p>
<p>The coming of Benjy left Libby free to
turn to her own affairs, but somehow she
could not do it with quite the same zest, feeling
that she had been shouldered out of
Will'm's game by an interloper. She thoroughly
disapproved of Benjy from the first
glance. He was a trial to her orderly little
soul, and his lack of neatness added to
her resentment at being ignored. When
Will'm was called in out of the cold later
in the afternoon, Benjy followed as a matter
of course. Several times she fell upon him
and yanked him into shape with masterful<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></span>
touches which left him as neatly geared together
as Will'm always was. But by the
time he had squirmed out of her hands his
gartersnaps were out of a job again, and
his waist and little trousers were parting
company at the belt.</p>
<p>All that day he stayed on, till he was
dragged home at dusk like a lump of dough.
He didn't resist when the maid came for
him. He simply relaxed and left all the
exertion of getting home entirely to her.
When the door closed behind him Libby
drew a long breath of relief as if she had
been seven and twenty instead of just seven.
He hadn't <em>done</em> anything, but his wild suggestions
had kept Will'm on the verge of doing
things all day. He was in the act of
prying the seat off his new tricycle by
Benjy's orders when she went in and
stopped him, and she went into the nursery
just in time to keep him from doing some
unheard-of thing to the radiator, so that it
would blow off steam like a real engine.</p>
<p>Will'm had always been such a sensible<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</SPAN></span>
child, with a conscience of his own about injuring
things, that she couldn't understand
why all of a sudden he should be possessed
to do a hundred things that he ought not to
do. It was a relief to find that the spell
lifted with Benjy's removal. He came and
cuddled down beside her in the big armchair
before the fire, waiting for supper
time to come, and somehow she felt that she
had her own little brother again. He had
seemed like a stranger all day. But her
exile from his company had not been without
its compensations.</p>
<p>"I can play 'Three Blind Mice! See how
they run!'" she told him as they rocked back
and forth. "<em>She</em> taught me. She came in
while I was touching the keys just as easy,
so they hardly made a sound, and asked me
did I want to learn to play on them. And
I said oh, yes, more than anything in the
world. And she said that was exactly the
way she used to feel when she was a little
girl like me, living at the Junction. She
wore her hair in little braids like mine and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span>
tiptoed around like a little mouse when she
was in strange places, and sometimes when
she looked at me she could almost believe it
was her own little self come back again.
Then she showed me how to make my fingers
run down the keys just like the three
mice did. She's going to teach me more
every day till I can play it for father some
night. But you must cross your heart and
body not to tell 'cause I want to s'prise
him."</p>
<p>Will'm crossed as directed, and stood by
much impressed when Libby climbed up on
the piano-stool and played the seven notes
which she had learned, over and over:
"Three blind mice! See how they run!"</p>
<p>"To-morrow she's going to show me as
far as 'They all took after the farmer's
wife.' I wish it was to-morrow right now!"</p>
<p>She gave an eager little wiggle that sent
her slipping off the stool. "Oh, I <em>like</em> it
here, now," she exclaimed, reseating herself
and beginning an untiring reiteration of the
seven notes.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"So do I—some," answered Will'm. "I
like it 'count of Benjy. But I don't like
to hear so much blind mice. You make 'm
run too long." Libby felt vaguely aggrieved
by his criticism, but her pleasure in
her own performance was something too
great to forego.</p>
<p>Next morning while they were dressing,
the door opened silently and Benjy appeared
on Will'm's side of the screen. He
came so noiselessly that it gave Libby a
start when later on she was made aware of
his presence. His host, equally wordless,
was struggling with a little union-suit of
woolen underwear. He was wordless because
he was so busily occupied trying to
get into it, and the unexpected entrance
made him still more anxious to cover himself.
Grandma Neal had always helped
him with it, but he had valiantly fought off
all offers of help since coming to his new
home. This morning, slightly bothered
by the presence of his self-invited guest, he
got it so twisted that no matter how he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</SPAN></span>
turned it, one leg and one sleeve were always
wrong side out.</p>
<p>Benjy, watching with his curious bulging
eyes, and his mouth making a round open O,
was of no more help than one of those
heathen idols, who having eyes, see not, and
having hands, handle not. But he finally
made a suggestion. He was eager to begin
playing.</p>
<p>"Aw, leave 'm go. Don't try to put 'em
on."</p>
<p>It was this unexpected remark in a voice,
not her brother's, which made Libby drop
her button-hook, on the other side of the
screen.</p>
<p>"But I'll be cold," objected Will'm, staring
at the strip of wintry landscape which
showed through his window.</p>
<p>"Naw, you won't," was the confident
answer. "Your outside clothes are
thick."</p>
<p>"But I never have left them off," said
Will'm, ready to cry over the exasperating
tangle of legs and sleeves.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Libby, all dressed but buttoning her shoes,
heard Will'm being thus tempted of the Evil
One, and peeping around the giant picture-book
cover, discovered him standing in
nothing but his tiny knee breeches, preparing
to slip his Russian blouse of blue serge
over his bare back.</p>
<p>"Why, Will'm Branfield! Stop this
minute and put on your underclothes!" she
demanded. Then growing desperate as her
repeated commands were not obeyed, she
called threateningly, "If you don't put them
on this minute I'll tell on you."</p>
<p>"Huh! Who'll you tell?" jeered Benjy.
"Mr. Bramfeel's down cellar, talkin' to the
furnace man, and Will'm doesn't have to
mind <em>Her</em>. She ain't his mother."</p>
<p>The question gave Libby pause. Not
that it left her undecided about telling, but
it reminded her that she had no title to give
"Her," when she called for help. It was
like trying to open a door that had no knob,
to call into space without having any handle
of a name to take hold of first. There was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</SPAN></span>
no time to lose. Will'm was buttoning
himself up in his blouse.</p>
<p>Libby hurried to the top of the stairs and
called: "Sa-ay!" There was no answer,
so she called again, "Sa-ay!" Then at the
top of her voice, "Say! Will'm's leaving
off his flannels. Please come and make him
behave!"</p>
<p>The next instant her heart began to beat
violently, and she waited in terror to see
what was going to happen. She wished
passionately that she had not told. Suppose
she had brought down some cruel punishment
on her little brother! Her first impulse
had been to array herself on the side of
law and order, but her second was to spread
her wings like an old hen in defense of its
only chick.</p>
<p>When <em>She</em> came into the room Will'm was
backed up defiantly against the wall. She
looked so pleasant and smiling as she bent
over him in her pretty morning gown, that
it took the courage out of him. If she had
been cross he could have fought her. But<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</SPAN></span>
she just stood there looking so big and capable
and calm, taking it for granted that he
would put on his flannels as soon as she
had untwisted the funny knot they were in,
that there wasn't anything to do <em>but</em> obey.
Will'm was a reasonable child, and if they
had been alone that would have been the last
of the matter. But he resented being made
to mind before his company, and he resented
her saying to him, "Better run on home,
Benjy."</p>
<p>She might as well have told an oyster to
run on home. He gave no sign of having
heard her, and when the children went down
to breakfast, he calmly went with them.
He had had his, and would not sit down, but
stood leaning against the table, pushing the
cloth awry, watching every mouthful everybody
swallowed, until Libby saw her father
make a queer face. He said something to
<em>Her</em> in long syllabled words, so long that
only grown people could understand. And
she laughed and answered that even disagreeable
things might prove to be blessings<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></span>
in disguise, if they helped others to take
root in strange places.</p>
<p>Benjy was dragged home again before
lunch, but returned immediately after, still
chewing, and bearing traces of it on both
face and fingers. In the interval of his absence,
"Mis' Bramfeel" as he called her, had
occasion to go up-stairs. On a certain step
of the stairway when her eyes were on a level
with the nursery floor, she saw through its
open door, something white, stuffed away
back under the bureau on Will'm's side of
the room. Wondering what it could be, she
went in and poked it out with a cane which
the boys had been playing with. To her
amazement the bundle proved to be Will'm's
little white union-suit. Again Libby
waited with beating heart and clasped hands
while he was called in and buttoned firmly
into it. <em>She</em> forbade him sternly not to take
it off again till bedtime, but nothing else
happened, and Libby breathed freely once
more. Grandma Neal would have spanked
him she thought. Will'm needed spanking<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span>
now and then if one could only be sure that
it wouldn't be done too hard.</p>
<p>Mr. Branfield did not come home till late
that night. He was called out of town on
business. As soon as the telephone message
came, <em>She</em> gave the cook a holiday, and told
Libby she was going to get supper herself.
Libby could choose whatever she and Will'm
liked best, and they'd surprise him with it
after Benjy had been dragged home. So
Libby chose, and was left to keep house
while <em>She</em> hurried down to the only place in
town where she was sure of getting what
Libby had chosen, and carried it home herself,
and cooked it just as they used to cook
them at the Junction when she was a little
girl and lived there years ago. And Libby
had the best time helping. As she followed
<em>Her</em> about the kitchen she thought of the
things she intended to tell Maudie Peters
the first time they went back to the Junction
to visit.</p>
<p><em>She</em> and Libby talked a great deal about
that prospective visit, for <em>She</em> had made<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></span>
playhouses under the same old thorn-tree by
the brook where Libby's last one was. And
she had coasted down Clifford hill many a
time, and she had even sat in the third seat
from the front in the row next to the western
wall, one whole term of school. That
was Libby's own seat. No wonder she
knew just how Libby felt about everything
when she could remember so many experiences
that were like this little girl's who followed
her back and forth from table to stove,
bringing up all her own childhood before
her.</p>
<p>Will'm sniffed expectantly as he climbed
up to the supper table. A delicious and a
beloved odor had reached him. He smiled
like a full moon when his plate was put in
front of him, and his spoon went hurriedly
up to his mouth. "Oh, rabbit <em>dravy!</em>" he
sighed ecstatically.</p>
<p><em>She</em> had gone back to the kitchen for
something else, and Libby took occasion to
say reprovingly, "Yes, and <em>She</em> went a long,
long way to get that rabbit, just because I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></span>
told her you love 'm so. And <em>She</em> cooked it
herself and burned her hand a-doing it. <em>She</em>
was gathering a star-flower for you, even if
you have been bad and forgot what Miss
Santa Claus told you!"</p>
<p>When <em>She</em> came back with the rest of the
supper, Will'm stole a glance at her hands.
Sure enough, one was bound up in a handkerchief.
It had not been blistered by
nettles, but it had been blistered for him.
Hastily swallowing what was in his spoon,
he slid down from the table.</p>
<p>"Why, what's the matter, dear?" she
asked in surprise. "Don't you like it after
all?"</p>
<p>He cast one furtive, abashed look at her
as he sidled towards the door. There was
confession in that look, and penitence and
a sturdy resolve to make what atonement
he could. Then from the hall he called
back the rather enigmatical answer, "I
haven't <em>got</em> 'em on, but I'm going to <em>put</em>
'em on!" And the "rabbit dravy" waited
while he clattered up the stairs to wriggle<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></span>
out of his suit and into the flannels, which
Benjy's jeers had made him discard just
before supper, for the third time that
day.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span></p>
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