<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
<div class='cap'>IN the story it was six long years before
the Princess Ina completed her task, but
less than a week went by before Libby was
convinced that the charm was a potent one,
and that Miss Santa Claus had spoken
truly. But there was one thing she could
not understand. In the story, one found
the star-flowers only among nettles and
briars, and gathered them to the accompaniment
of scratches and stings. Yet she was
finding it not only a pleasure to obey this
new authority but a tingling happiness to do
anything for her which would call forth
some smile of approval or a caress.</div>
<p>Still, she saw that the story way was the
true way in Will'm's case, for so many things
that he was told to do, made him feel all
"cross and scratchy and hot." They interfered
with his play or clashed with the ideas<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
he imbibed from Benjy. Some of Benjy's
ideas were as "catching" and distorting as
the mumps.</p>
<p>The conductor's punch did not long continue
to be the daily reminder to Will'm that
Libby's ring was to her, for it mysteriously
disappeared one day, and was lost for
months. It disappeared the very day that
a row of little star-shaped holes was found
along the edge of the expensive Holland
window-shade in the front window of the
parlor. Benjy had suggested punching
them. He wanted a lot of little stars to
paste all over their shoes. Why he wanted
them nobody but he could understand.</p>
<p>But the punch served its purpose, for the
Holland shade was not taken down on account
of the holes, and whenever the row
of little stars met Molly Branfield's eyes,
they reminded her of the day when Libby
threw herself into her arms, calling her
"Mother" for the first time, and sobbing
out the story of Ina and the swans. Distressed
by Will'm's wickedness, Libby<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span>
begged her not to stop loving him even if
he did keep on being naughty, and to try
the charm on him which would change him
into a real little son. Many a time in the
months which followed, the row of little
holes brought a smile of tolerant tenderness,
when she was puzzling over ways to deal
with the stubbornness of the small boy who
resented her authority. She knew that it
was not because he was bad that he resented
it, but because, as Libby suggested, he had
"started out wrong in his hooking-up."
Many a time Libby was moved to say
mournfully, "Oh, if he'd just remembered
what Miss Santa Claus told him, this never
would have happened!"</p>
<p>It was not every day, however, that this
crookedness was apparent. Often from
daylight till dark he went happily from one
thing to another, without a single incident
to mar the peacefulness of the hours. He
liked the new home with its banisters to slide
down, and its many windows looking out on
streets where something interesting was always<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</SPAN></span>
happening. He liked to water the
flowers in the dining-room windows. It
made him feel that he was helping make a
spot of summertime in the world, when all
out of doors was white with snow. One of
the pots of flowers was his, a rose-geranium.
Even before the wee buds began to swell, it
was a thing of joy, for he had only to rub
his fingers over a leaf to make it send forth
a smell so good that one longed to eat it.</p>
<p>He liked the race down the hall every
evening trying to beat Libby to the door to
open it for their father. Now that he was
acquainted with him again, it seemed the
very nicest thing in the world to have a big
jolly father who could swing him up on his
shoulder and play circus tricks with him just
like an acrobat, and who knew fully as much
as the president of the United States.</p>
<p>And Will'm liked the time which often
came before that race down the hall—the
wait in the firelight, while <em>She</em> played on the
piano and he and Libby sang with her.
There was one song about the farmer feeding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
his flocks, "with a quack, quack here,
and a gobble, gobble there," that he liked
especially. Whenever they came to the
chorus of the flocks and the herds it was
such fun to make all the barnyard noises.
Sometimes with their lusty mooing and lowing
the noise would be so great that they
would fail to hear the latchkey turn in the
door, and first thing they knew there their
father would be in the room mooing with
them, in a deep voice that thrilled them like
a bass drum.</p>
<p>Libby entered school after the holidays,
and Benjy started back on his second half-year,
but he did not go regularly. Many a
day when he should have been in his classes,
he was playing War in the Branfield attic,
or Circus in the nursery. It was always on
those days that the crookedness of Will'm
was more manifest, and for that reason, a
great effort was made periodically to get
rid of Benjy. But it seemed a hopeless
task. He might be set bodily out of doors
and told to go home, but even locks and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span>
bolts could not keep him out. He oozed
in again somewhere, just like smoke. Repeated
telephone messages to his mother had
no effect. She seemed as indifferent to his
being a nuisance to the neighbors as he was
to his gartersnaps being unfastened. Several
times, thinking to escape him when he
had announced his intention the night before
of coming early, Mrs. Branfield took
Will'm down town with her, shopping.
But he trailed them around the streets just
like a little dog till he found them, and attached
himself as joyously as if they had
whistled to him. And he looked even
worse than an unwashed, uncombed little
terrier, for he was always unbuttoned and
ungartered besides.</p>
<p>Upon these appearances, Will'm, who a
moment before had been the most interested
and interesting of companions, pointing at
the shop windows and asking questions in
a high, happy little voice, would pull loose
from his companion's hand and fall back beside
Benjy. The worst of it was that the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span>
unwelcome visitor rarely did anything that
could be pointed out to Will'm as an offense.
It was simply that his presence had
a subtle, moving quality like yeast, which
started fermentation in the Branfield household
whenever he dropped into it.</p>
<p>Fortunately, when summer came, Benjy's
mother departed to the seashore, taking him
with her, and Will'm made the acquaintance
of the children on the next block. There
were several boys his own size who swarmed
in the Branfield yard continually. He had
a tent for one thing, which was an unusual
attraction, and a slide. Up to a reasonable
point he had access to a cooky jar and an
apple barrel. Often, little tarts found their
way to the tent on mornings when "the
gang" proposed playing elsewhere, and
often the long hot afternoons were livened
with pitchers of lemonade in which ice
clinked invitingly; a nice big chunk apiece,
which lasted till the lemonade was gone, and
could be used afterward in a sort of game.
You dropped them on the ground to see who<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span>
could pick his up and hold it the longest with
his bare toes.</p>
<p>Will'm had a birthday about this time,
with five candles on his cake and five boys,
besides Libby, to share the feast. He loved
all these things. He was proud of having
treats to offer the boys which they could not
find in any other yard on that street, and in
time he began to love the hand which dealt
them out. He might have done so sooner
if Libby had not been so aggravating about
it. She always took occasion to tell him
afterward that such kindnesses were the
little golden star-flowers mother was gathering
for him, and that he ought to be ashamed
to do even the littlest thing she told him not
to, when she was so good to him.</p>
<p>Unfortunately Libby had overheard her
mother speak of her as a real little comfort
in the way she tried to uphold her authority
and help her manage Will'm. The remark
made her doubly zealous and her efforts, in
consequence, doubly offensive to Will'm.
He was learning early that a saint is one<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span>
of the most exasperating people in the world
to live with. Even when they don't <em>say</em>
anything, they can make you feel the contrast
sometimes so strongly that you <em>want</em>
to be bad on purpose, just because they are
the way they are.</p>
<p>Libby's little ring still turned her waking
thoughts in the direction of Ina and the
swans, and her morning remarks usually
pointed the same way. The cherry-red
stocking with its tinsel fringe hung from the
side of her mirror, the most cherished ornament
in the room, and a daily reminder of
Miss Santa Claus, who was forever enshrined
in her little heart as one of the dearest
memories of her life. She felt that she
owed everything to Miss Santa Claus. But
for her she might have started out crooked,
and might never have found her way to the
mother-love which had grown to be such a
precious thing to her that she could not bear
for Will'm not to share it fully with her.</p>
<p>He learned to fight that summer, and
nothing made him quite so furious as to have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span>
Libby interfere when he had some boy down,
and by sheer force of will it seemed, since
her three years' advantage in age gave her
little in strength, pull him off his adversary,
flapping and scratching like a little game-cock.
Sometimes it made him so angry that
he wanted to tear her in pieces. The worst
of it was, that <em>She</em> always took Libby's part
on such occasions, and never seemed to understand
that it was necessary for him to do
these things. She always looked so sorry
and worried when he was dragged into the
house, roaring and resentful.</p>
<p>Gradually as summer wore on into the
autumn, it began to make him feel uncomfortable
when he saw that sorry, worried
look. It hurt him worse than when she sent
him to his room or tied him to the table leg
for punishment. And one night when he
had openly defied her and been impudent,
she did not say anything, but she did not kiss
him good-night as usual. That hurt him
worst of all. He lay awake a long time
thinking about it. Part of the time he was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span>
crying softly, but he had his face snuggled
close down in the pillow so that Libby
couldn't hear him.</p>
<p>He wished with all his heart that she
was his own, real mother. He felt that he
needed one. He needed one who could <em>understand</em>
and who had a <em>right</em> to punish him.
It was because she hadn't that right that he
resented her authority. All the boys said
she hadn't. If she did no more than call
from the window: "Don't do that, Will'm,"
they'd say in an undertone, "You don't
have to pay any attention to <em>her!</em>" They
seemed to think it was all right for their
mothers to slap them and scold them and
cuff them on the ears. He'd seen it done.
He wouldn't care how much he was slapped
and cuffed, if only somebody who was his
truly <em>own</em> did it. Somebody who loved
him. A queer little feeling had been creeping
up in his heart for some time. Very
often when <em>She</em> spoke to Libby she called
her "little daughter" and she and Libby
seemed to belong to each other in a way that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span>
shut Will'm out and gave him a lonesome
left-in-the-cold feeling. Will'm was a reasonable
child, and he was just, and up
there in the dark where he could be honest
with himself, he had to acknowledge that
it was his own fault that she hadn't kissed
him good-night. It was his fault because,
having started out crooked, he didn't seem
to be able to do anything but to go on
crooked to the end. He couldn't tell her,
but he wished, oh, how he wished, that <em>She</em>
could know how he felt, and know that he
was crying up there in the dark about it.
He wished he could go back to the Junction
and be Grandma Neal's little boy. She always
kissed him good-night, even on days
when she had to switch him with a peach-tree
switch. When he was a little bigger
he would just run off and go back to
Grandma Neal.</p>
<p>But next morning he was glad that he was
not living at the Junction, for he started to
kindergarten, and a world of new interests
opened up before him. Benjy came back to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span>
town that week, but he did not find quite
the same tractable follower. Will'm had
learned how to play with other boys, and
how to make other boys do <em>his</em> bidding, so he
did not always allow Benjy to dictate. Still
the leaven of an uneasy presence began
working again, and worked on till it was
suddenly counteracted by the coming of another
Christmas season.</p>
<p>Both Libby and Will'm began to feel its
approach when it was still a month off.
They felt it in the mysterious thrills that began
to stir the household as sap, rising in a
tree, thrills it with stirrings of spring.
There were secrets and whisperings.
There was counting of pennies and planning
of ways to earn more, for they were wiser
about Christmas this year. They knew that
there are three kinds of presents. There
is the kind that Santa Claus puts into your
stocking, just because he <em>is</em> Santa Claus,
and the Sky Road leads from his Kingdom
of Giving straight to the kingdom of little
hearts who love and believe in him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Then there's the kind that you give to the
people you love, just because you love them,
and you put your name on those. And
third, there's the kind that you give secretly,
in the name of Santa Claus, just to
help him out if he is extra busy and should
happen to send you word that he needs your
services.</p>
<p>Libby and Will'm received no such
messages, being so small, but their father
had one. He sent a load of coal and some
rent money to a man who had lost a month's
wages on account of sickness in his family,
and it must have been a very happy and delightful
feeling that Santa Claus gave their
father for doing it, for his voice sounded
that way afterward when he said, "After
all, Molly, that's the best kind of giving.
We ought to do more of it and less of the
other."</p>
<p>When it came to the first kind of presents,
neither Libby nor Will'm made a
choice. They sent their names and addresses
up the chimney so that the reindeer<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span>
might be guided to the right roof-top, and
left the rest to the generosity of the reindeer's
wise master to surprise them as he
saw fit. They were almost sure that the
things they daily expressed a wish for would
come by the way of the Christmas tree as
the doll and the tricycle had the year before,
"with the love of father and mother."</p>
<p>But when it came to the second kind of
presents, they had much to consider. They
wanted to give to the family and each other,
and the cook and their teachers, and the children
they played with most and half a dozen
people at the Junction. The visit which
they had planned all year was to be a certainty
now. The day after Christmas the
entire family was to go for a week's visit, to
Grandma and Uncle Neal.</p>
<p>That last week the children went around
the house in one continual thrill of anticipation.
Such delicious odors of popcorn and
boiling candy, of cake and mincemeat in the
making floated up from the kitchen! Such
rustling of tissue paper and scent of sachets<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span>
as met one on the opening of bureau drawers!
And such rapt moments of gift-making
when Libby sewed with patient, learning
fingers, and Will'm pasted paper
chains and wove paper baskets, as he had
been taught in kindergarten!</p>
<p>One day the conductor's punch suddenly
reappeared, and he seized it with a whoop
of joy. Now all his creations could be
doubly beautiful since they could be star-bordered.
As he punched and punched and
the tiny stars fell in a shower, the story of
Ina and the swans stirred in his memory,
with all the glamour it had worn when he
first heard it over his dish of strawberries.
Down in his secret soul he determined to do
what he wished he had done a year earlier,
to begin to follow the example of Ina.</p>
<p>The family could not fail to notice the
almost angelic behavior which began that
day. They thought it was because of the
watching eye he feared up the chimney, but
no one referred to the change. He used to
sit in front of the fire sometimes, just as he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</SPAN></span>
had done at the Junction, rocking and singing,
his soft bobbed hair flapping over his
ears every time the rockers tilted forward.
But he was not singing with any thought
that he might be overheard and written
down as a good little boy. He was singing
just because the story of the Camels
and the Star was so very sweet, and the mere
thought of angels and silver bells and the
glittering Sky Road brought a tingling joy.
But more than all he was singing because
he had begun to weave the big beautiful
mantle whose name is Love, and the curious
little left-out-in-the-cold feeling was
gone.</p>
<p>Christmas eve came at last. When the
twilight was just beginning to fall, Libby
brought down the stockings which were to
be hung on each side of the sitting-room
fireplace. It would be nearly an hour before
their father could come home to drive
the nails on which they were to hang, but
they wanted everything ready for him.
Will'm went out to the tool-chest on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</SPAN></span>
screened porch to get the hammer. It took
him a long time to find it.</p>
<p>Libby waited impatiently a few moments,
supposing he had stopped to taste something
in the kitchen. She was about to run out
and warn him not to nip the edges from
some tempting bit of pastry, as he had been
known to do, but remembering how very
hard he had been trying to be good all week,
she decided he could be trusted.</p>
<p>With the stockings thrown over one arm
she stood in front of the piano, idly striking
the keys while she waited. She had learned
to play several tunes during the year, and
now that she was eight years old, she was
going to have real lessons after the holidays
and learn to read music. How much she
had learned since the first time her little fingers
were guided over the keys. She struck
those earliest-learned notes again: "Three
blind mice! See how they run!" She could
play the whole thing now, faster than flying.
She ran down the keys, over and over again.</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus09.jpg" width-obs="390" height-obs="600" alt="the fight" /> <span class="caption">"Take it back!"</span></div>
<p>When for about the twentieth time "they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</SPAN></span>
all took after the farmer's wife," she stopped
short, both hands lifted from the keys to
listen. Her face blanched until even her
lips were pale. Such a sound of awful
battle was coming from the back yard!
Recognizing Will'm's voice she ran out
through the kitchen to the yard.</p>
<p>"It's that everlastin' Benjy, again!"
called the cook as Libby darted out the door
to rescue Will'm from she knew not what.</p>
<p>But it was Benjy who needed rescuing
this time. Will'm sat on top, so mighty in
his wrath and fury that he loomed up fearsomely
to the bigger boy beneath him, whose
body he bestrode and whose face he was battering
with hard and relentless little fists.
Both boys were blubbering and crying, but
Will'm was roaring between blows, "Take
it back! Take it back!"</p>
<p>Whatever it was, Benjy took it back just
as Libby appeared, and being allowed to
stagger up, started for the street, loudly
boo-hooing at every step, as he found his way
homeward, for once of his own volition.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</SPAN></span>
The cries had startled Libby but they were
as nothing to the sight that met her eyes
when she led Will'm, so blinded by his own
tears that he needed her guidance, to the
light of the kitchen door. What she saw
sent her screaming into the house, with
agonized calls for "mother." She still held
on to Will'm's hand, pulling him along after
her.</p>
<p>From forehead to chin, one side of his face
was scratched as if a young tiger cat had set
his claws in it. A knot was swelling rapidly
on his upper lip, and one hand was covered
with blood. Mrs. Branfield gave a gasp as
she came running in answer to Libby's
calls. "Why, you poor child!" she cried,
gathering him up to her and sitting down in
the big rocker with him in her lap. "What
happened? What's the matter?"</p>
<p>He was sobbing so convulsively now, with
long choking gasps, that he couldn't answer.
She saw that his face was only
scratched, but snatched up his hand to examine
the extent of its injuries. As he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</SPAN></span>
looked at it too, the power of speech came
back to him, in a degree.</p>
<p>"That isn't m-my b-blood!" he sobbed.
"It's <em>B-Benjy's</em> blood!"</p>
<p>"Oh, Will'm!" mourned Libby. "On
Christmas eve, just when you've been trying
so hard to be good, too!"</p>
<p>She picked up the stockings which she had
dropped on running out of the house, and
laid his over the back of a chair, as if she
realized the hopelessness of hanging it up
now, after he had acted so. At that, almost
a spasm of sobs shook him. He didn't need
anybody to remind him of all he had forfeited
and all he had failed in. That was
what he was crying about. He didn't mind
the smarting of his face or the throbbing of
his swollen lip. He was crying to think that
the struggle of the last week was all for
naught. He was all crooked with <em>Her</em>
again. <em>She</em> didn't want him to fight and
she'd never understand that this time he just
<em>had</em> to.</p>
<p>The arms that held him were pressing for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</SPAN></span>
an answer. "Tell me how it happened,
dear."</p>
<p>Between gulps it came.</p>
<p>"Benjy said for me to come on—and go
to the grocery with him! And I said—that
my—my mother—didn't want me to!"</p>
<p>"Yes," encouragingly, as he choked and
stopped. He had never called her that before.</p>
<p>"And Benjy said like he always does, that
you w-wasn't my m-m-mother anyhow.
And I said you <em>was!</em> If he didn't take it
back I—<em>I'd beat him up!</em>"</p>
<p>Libby was crying too, now, from sympathy.
He'd been told so many times he must
not fight that she was afraid he would have
to be punished for such a bad fight as this.
To be punished on Christmas eve was just
<em>too</em> awful! She stole an anxious glance towards
the chimney, then toward her mother.</p>
<p>But her mother was hugging him tight
and kissing him wherever she could find a
place on his poor little face that wasn't
scratched or swollen, and she was saying in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</SPAN></span>
a voice that made a lump come into Libby's
throat, it was so loving and tender,</p>
<p>"My dear little boy, if that's why you
fought him I'm <em>glad</em> you did it, for you've
proved now that you <em>are</em> my little son, my
very own!"</p>
<p>Then she laughed, although she had tears
in her eyes herself, and said, "That poor
little cheek shows just what fierce nettles
and briars you've been through for me, but
you brought it, didn't you! The most
precious star-flower in all the world to
me!"</p>
<p>The surprise of it stopped his tears. She
<em>understood!</em> He could not yet stop the
sobbing. That kept on, doing itself. But
a feeling, warm and tender that he could not
explain, seemed to cover him "from wing-tip
to wing-tip!" A bloody little hand stole
up around her neck and held her tight. She
<em>was</em> his mother, because she <em>understood!</em> It
was all right between them now. It would
<em>always</em> be all right, no matter what Benjy
and the rest of the world might say. He'd<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</SPAN></span>
<em>beat up anybody</em> that dared to say they
didn't belong to each other, and she <em>wanted</em>
him to do it!</p>
<p>Presently she led him up-stairs to put
some healing lotion on his face, and wash
away the blood of Benjy.</p>
<p>Libby, in the deep calm that followed the
excitement of so many conflicting emotions,
sat down in the big rocking chair to wait for
her father. Her fear for Will'm had been
so strong, her relief at the happy outcome
so great, that she felt all shaken up.
A long, long time she sat there, thinking.
There was only one more thing needed to
make her happiness complete, and that was
to have Miss Santa Claus know that the
charm had worked out true at last. She felt
that they owed her that much—to let her
know. Presently she slipped out of the
chair and knelt in front of the fire so close
that it almost singed her.</p>
<p>"Are you listening up there?" she called
softly. "'Cause if you are, <em>please</em> tell Miss
Santa Claus that everything turned out just<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</SPAN></span>
as she said it would. I'll be <em>so</em> much
obliged."</p>
<p>Then she scudded back to her chair to
listen for her father's latchkey in the door,
and her mother's and Will'm's voices coming
down the stairs, a happier sound than even
the sound of the silver bells, that by and by
would come jingling down the Sky Road.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />