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<h2> Chapter XIV. And Jill Finds It Out </h2>
<p>Jill worried about it more than he did, for she was a faithful little
friend, and it was a great trial to have Jack even suspected of doing
anything wrong. School is a child's world while he is there, and its small
affairs are very important to him, so Jill felt that the one thing to be
done was to clear away the cloud about her dear boy, and restore him to
public favor.</p>
<p>“Ed will be here Saturday night and may be he will find out, for Jack
tells him everything. I do hate to have him hectored so, for I know he is,
though he's too proud to complain,” she said, on Thursday evening, when
Frank told her some joke played upon his brother that day.</p>
<p>“I let him alone, but I see that he isn't badgered too much. That's all I
can do. If Ed had only come home last Saturday it might have done some
good, but now it will be too late; for the reports are given out
to-morrow, you know,” answered Frank, feeling a little jealous of Ed's
influence over Jack, though his own would have been as great if he had
been as gentle.</p>
<p>“Has Jerry come back?” asked Jill, who kept all her questions for Frank,
because she seldom alluded to the tender subject when with Jack.</p>
<p>“No, he's off for the summer. Got a place somewhere. Hope he'll stay there
and let Bob alone.”</p>
<p>“Where is Bob now? I don't hear much about him lately,” said Jill, who was
constantly on the lookout for “the other fellow,” since it was not Joe.</p>
<p>“Oh, he went to Captain Skinner's the first of March, chores round, and
goes to school up there. Captain is strict, and won't let Bob come to
town, except Sundays; but he don't mind it much, for he likes horses, has
nice grub, and the Hill fellows are good chaps for him to be with. So he's
all right, if he only behaves.”</p>
<p>“How far is it to Captain Skinner's?” asked Jill suddenly, having
listened, with her sharp eyes on Frank, as he tinkered away at his model,
since he was forbidden all other indulgence in his beloved pastime.</p>
<p>“It's four miles to Hill District, but the Captain lives this side of the
school-house. About three from here, I should say.”</p>
<p>“How long would it take a boy to walk up there?” went on the questioner,
with a new idea in her head.</p>
<p>“Depends on how much of a walkist he is.”</p>
<p>“Suppose he was lame and it was sloshy, and he made a call and came back.
How long would that take?” asked Jill impatiently.</p>
<p>“Well, in that case, I should say two or three hours. But it's impossible
to tell exactly, unless you know how lame the fellow was, and how long a
call he made,” said Frank, who liked to be accurate.</p>
<p>“Jack couldn't do it in less, could he?”</p>
<p>“He used to run up that hilly road for a breather, and think nothing of
it. It would be a long job for him now, poor little chap, for his leg
often troubles him, though he hates to own it.”</p>
<p>Jill lay back and laughed, a happy little laugh, as if she was pleased
about something, and Frank looked over his shoulder to ask questions in
his turn.</p>
<p>“What are you laughing at?”</p>
<p>“Can't tell.”</p>
<p>“Why do you want to know about Hill District? Are you going there?”</p>
<p>“Wish I could! I'd soon have it out of him.”</p>
<p>“Who?”</p>
<p>“Never mind. Please push up my table. I must write a letter, and I want
you to post it for me to-night, and never say a word till I give you
leave.”</p>
<p>“Oh, now <i>you</i> are going to have secrets and be mysterious, and get
into a mess, are you?” and Frank looked down at her with a suspicious air,
though he was intensely curious to know what she was about.</p>
<p>“Go away till I'm done. You will have to see the outside, but you can't
know the inside till the answer comes;” and propping herself up, Jill
wrote the following note, with some hesitation at the beginning and end,
for she did not know the gentleman she was addressing, except by sight,
and it was rather awkward:—</p>
<p>“Robert Walker.</p>
<p>“Dear Sir, I want to ask if Jack Minot came to see you last Friday
afternoon. He got into trouble being seen with Jerry Shannon. He paid him
some money. Jack won't tell, and Mr. Acton talked to him about it before
all the school. We feel bad, because we think Jack did not do wrong. I
don't know as you have anything to do with it, but I thought I'd ask.
Please answer quick. Respectfully yours,</p>
<p>“Jane Pecq”</p>
<p>To make sure that her despatch was not tampered with, Jill put a great
splash of red sealing-wax on it, which gave it a very official look, and
much impressed Bob when he received it.</p>
<p>“There! Go and post it, and don't let any one see or know about it,” she
said, handing it over to Frank, who left his work with unusual alacrity to
do her errand. When his eye fell on the address, he laughed, and said in a
teasing way,—</p>
<p>“Are you and Bob such good friends that you correspond? What will Jack
say?”</p>
<p>“Don't know, and don't care! Be good, now, and let's have a little secret
as well as other folks. I'll tell you all about it when he answers,” said
Jill in her most coaxing tone.</p>
<p>“Suppose he doesn't?”</p>
<p>“Then I shall send you up to see him. I <i>must</i> know something, and I
want to do it myself, if I can.”</p>
<p>“Look here; what are you after? I do believe you think——”
Frank got no farther, for Jill gave a little scream, and stopped him by
crying eagerly, “Don't say it out loud! I really do believe it may be, and
I'm going to find out.”</p>
<p>“What made you think of him?” and Frank looked thoughtfully at the letter,
as if turning carefully over in his mind the idea that Jill's quick wits
had jumped at.</p>
<p>“Come here and I'll tell you.”</p>
<p>Holding him by one button, she whispered something in his ear that made
him exclaim, with a look at the rug,—</p>
<p>“No! did he? I declare I shouldn't wonder! It would be just like the dear
old blunder-head.”</p>
<p>“I never thought of it till you told me where Bob was, and then it all
sort of burst upon me in one minute!” cried Jill, waving her arms about to
express the intellectual explosion which had thrown light upon the
mystery, like sky-rockets in a dark night.</p>
<p>“You are as bright as a button. No time to lose; I'm off;” and off he was,
splashing through the mud to post the letter, on the back of which he
added, to make the thing sure, “Hurry up. F.M.”</p>
<p>Both felt rather guilty next day, but enjoyed themselves very much
nevertheless, and kept chuckling over the mine they were making under
Jack's unconscious feet. They hardly expected an answer at noon, as the
Hill people were not very eager for their mail, but at night Jill was sure
of a letter, and to her great delight it came. Jack brought it himself,
which added to the fun, and while she eagerly read it he sat calmly poring
over the latest number of his own private and particular “Youth's
Companion.”</p>
<p>Bob was not a “complete letter-writer” by any means, and with great labor
and much ink had produced the following brief but highly satisfactory
epistle. Not knowing how to address his fair correspondent he let it
alone, and went at once to the point in the frankest possible way:—</p>
<p>“Jack did come up Friday. Sorry he got into a mess. It was real kind of
him, and I shall pay him back soon. Jack paid Jerry for me and I made him
promise not to tell. Jerry said he'd come here and make a row if I didn't
cash up. I was afraid I'd lose the place if he did, for the Capt. is awful
strict. If Jack don't tell now, I will. I ain't mean. Glad you wrote.</p>
<p>“R.O.W.”</p>
<p>“Hurrah!” cried Jill, waving the letter over her head in great triumph.
“Call everybody and read it out,” she added, as Frank snatched it, and ran
for his mother, seeing at a glance that the news was good. Jill was so
afraid she should tell before the others came that she burst out singing
“Pretty Bobby Shafto” at the top of her voice, to Jack's great disgust,
for he considered the song very personal, as he <i>was</i> rather fond of
“combing down his yellow hair,” and Jill often plagued him by singing it
when he came in with the golden quirls very smooth and nice to hide the
scar on his forehead.</p>
<p>In about five minutes the door flew open and in came Mamma, making
straight for bewildered Jack, who thought the family had gone crazy when
his parent caught him in her arms, saying tenderly,—</p>
<p>“My good, generous boy! I knew he was right all the time!” while Frank
worked his hand up and down like a pump-handle, exclaiming heartily,—</p>
<p>“You're a trump, sir, and I'm proud of you!” Jill meantime calling out, in
wild delight,—</p>
<p>“I told you so! I told you so! I did find out; ha, ha, I did!”</p>
<p>“Come, I say! What's the matter? I'm all right. Don't squeeze the breath
out of me, please,” expostulated Jack, looking so startled and innocent,
as he struggled feebly, that they all laughed, and this plaintive protest
caused him to be released. But the next proceeding did not enlighten him
much, for Frank kept waving a very inky paper before him and ordering him
to read it, while Mamma made a charge at Jill, as if it was absolutely
necessary to hug somebody.</p>
<p>“Hullo!” said Jack, when he got the letter into his own hand and read it.
“Now who put Bob up to this? Nobody had any business to interfere—but
it's mighty good of him, anyway,” he added, as the anxious lines in his
round face smoothed themselves away, while a smile of relief told how hard
it had been for him to keep his word.</p>
<p>“I did!” cried Jill, clapping her hands, and looking so happy that he
could not have scolded her if he had wanted to.</p>
<p>“Who told you he was in the scrape?” demanded Jack, in a hurry to know all
about it now the seal was taken off his own lips.</p>
<p>“You did;” and Jill's face twinkled with naughty satisfaction, for this
was the best fun of all.</p>
<p>“I didn't! When? Where? It's a joke!”</p>
<p>“You did,” cried Jill, pointing to the rug. “You went to sleep there after
the long walk, and talked in your sleep about 'Bob' and 'All right, old
boy,' and ever so much gibberish. I didn't think about it then, but when I
heard that Bob was up there I thought may be he knew something about it,
and last night I wrote and asked him, and that's the answer, and now it <i>is</i>
all right, and you are the best boy that ever was, and I'm so glad!”</p>
<p>Here Jill paused, all out of breath, and Frank said, with an approving pat
on the head,—</p>
<p>“It won't do to have such a sharp young person round if we are going to
have secrets. You'd make a good detective, miss.”</p>
<p>“Catch me taking naps before people again;” and Jack looked rather
crestfallen that his own words had set “Fine Ear” on the track. “Never
mind, I didn't <i>mean</i> to tell, though I just ached to do it all the
time, so I haven't broken my word. I'm glad you all know, but you needn't
let it get out, for Bob is a good fellow, and it might make trouble for
him,” added Jack, anxious lest his gain should be the other's loss.</p>
<p>“I shall tell Mr. Acton myself, and the Captain, also, for I'm not going
to have my son suspected of wrong-doing when he has only tried to help a
friend, and borne enough for his sake,” said Mamma, much excited by this
discovery of generous fidelity in her boy; though when one came to look at
it calmly, one saw that it might have been done in a wiser way.</p>
<p>“Now, please, don't make a fuss about it; that would be most as bad as
having every one down on me. I can stand your praising me, but I won't be
patted on the head by anybody else;” and Jack assumed a manly air, though
his face was full of genuine boyish pleasure at being set right in the
eyes of those he loved.</p>
<p>“I'll be discreet, dear, but you owe it to yourself, as well as Bob, to
have the truth known. Both have behaved well, and no harm will come to
him, I am sure. I'll see to that myself,” said Mrs. Minot, in a tone that
set Jack's mind at rest on that point.</p>
<p>“Now do tell all about it,” cried Jill, who was pining to know the whole
story, and felt as if she had earned the right to hear it.</p>
<p>“Oh, it wasn't much. We promised Ed to stand by Bob, so I did as well as I
knew how;” and Jack seemed to think that was about all there was to say.</p>
<p>“I never saw such a fellow for keeping a promise! You stick to it through
thick and thin, no matter how silly or hard it is. You remember, mother,
last summer, how you told him not to go in a boat and he promised, the day
we went on the picnic. We rode up, but the horse ran off home, so we had
to come back by way of the river, all but Jack, and he walked every step
of five miles because he wouldn't go near a boat, though Mr. Burton was
there to take care of him. I call that rather overdoing the matter;” and
Frank looked as if he thought moderation even in virtue a good thing.</p>
<p>“And I call it a fine sample of entire obedience. He obeyed orders, and
that is what we all must do, without always seeing why, or daring to use
our own judgment. It is a great safeguard to Jack, and a very great
comfort to me; for I know that if he promises he will keep his word, no
matter what it costs him,” said Mamma warmly, as she tumbled up the quirls
with an irrepressible caress, remembering how the boy came wearily in
after all the others, without seeming for a moment to think that he could
have done anything else.</p>
<p>“Like Casabianca!” cried Jill, much impressed, for obedience was her
hardest trial.</p>
<p>“I think he was a fool to burn up,” said Frank, bound not to give in.</p>
<p>“I don't. It's a splendid piece, and every one likes to speak it, and it
was true, and it wouldn't be in all the books if he was a fool. Grown
people know what is good,” declared Jill, who liked heroic actions, and
was always hoping for a chance to distinguish herself in that way.</p>
<p>“You admire 'The Charge of the Light Brigade,' and glow all over as you
thunder it out. Yet they went gallantly to their death rather than disobey
orders. A mistake, perhaps, but it makes us thrill to hear of it; and the
same spirit keeps my Jack true as steel when once his word is passed, or
he thinks it is his duty. Don't be laughed out of it, my son, for
faithfulness in little things fits one for heroism when the great trials
come. One's conscience can hardly be too tender when honor and honesty are
concerned.”</p>
<p>“You are right, mother, and I am wrong. I beg your pardon, Jack, and you
sha'n't get ahead of me next time.”</p>
<p>Frank made his mother a little bow, gave his brother a shake of the hand,
and nodded to Jill, as if anxious to show that he was not too proud to own
up when he made a mistake.</p>
<p>“Please tell on, Jack. This is very nice, but I do want to know all about
the other,” said Jill, after a short pause.</p>
<p>“Let me see. Oh, I saw Bob at church, and he looked rather blue; so, after
Sunday School, I asked what the matter was. He said Jerry bothered him for
some money he lent him at different times when they were loafing round
together, before we took him up. He wouldn't get any wages for some time.
The Captain keeps him short on purpose, I guess, and won't let him come
down town except on Sundays. He didn't want any one to know about it, for
fear he'd lose his place. So I promised I wouldn't tell. Then I was afraid
Jerry would go and make a fuss, and Bob would run off, or do something
desperate, being worried, and I said I'd pay it for him, if I could. So he
went home pretty jolly, and I scratched 'round for the money. Got it, too,
and wasn't I glad?”</p>
<p>Jack paused to rub his hands, and Frank said, with more than usual
respect,</p>
<p>“Couldn't you get hold of Jerry in any other place, and out of school
time? That did the mischief, thanks to Joe. I thrashed him, Jill—did
I mention it?”</p>
<p>“I couldn't get all my money till Friday morning, and I knew Jerry was off
at night. I looked for him before school, and at noon, but couldn't find
him, so afternoon recess was my last chance. I was bound to do it and I
didn't mean to break the rule, but Jerry was just going into the shop, so
I pelted after him, and as it was private business we went to the
billiard-room. I declare I never was so relieved as when I handed over
that money, and made him say it was all right, and he wouldn't go near
Bob. He's off, so my mind is easy, and Bob will be so grateful I can keep
him steady, perhaps. That will be worth two seventy-five, I think,” said
Jack heartily.</p>
<p>“You should have come to me,” began Frank.</p>
<p>“And got laughed at—no, thank you,” interrupted Jack, recollecting
several philanthropic little enterprises which were nipped in the bud for
want of co-operation.</p>
<p>“To me, then,” said his mother. “It would have saved so much trouble.”</p>
<p>“I thought of it, but Bob didn't want the big fellows to know for fear
they'd be down on him, so I thought he might not like me to tell grown
people. I don't mind the fuss now, and Bob is as kind as he can be. Wanted
to give me his big knife, but I wouldn't take it. I'd rather have this,”
and Jack put the letter in his pocket with a slap outside, as if it warmed
the cockles of his heart to have it there.</p>
<p>“Well, it seems rather like a tempest in a teapot, now it is all over, but
I do admire your pluck, little boy, in holding out so well when every one
was scolding at you, and you in the right all the time,” said Frank, glad
to praise, now that he honestly could, after his wholesale condemnation.</p>
<p>“That is what pulled me through, I suppose. I used to think if I <i>had</i>
done anything wrong, that I couldn't stand the snubbing a day. I should
have told right off, and had it over. Now, I guess I'll have a good report
if you do tell Mr. Acton,” said Jack, looking at his mother so wistfully,
that she resolved to slip away that very evening, and make sure that the
thing was done.</p>
<p>“That will make you happier than anything else, won't it?” asked Jill,
eager to have him rewarded after his trials.</p>
<p>“There's one thing I like better, though I'd be very sorry to lose my
report. It's the fun of telling Ed I tried to do as he wanted us to, and
seeing how pleased he'll be,” added Jack, rather bashfully, for the boys
laughed at him sometimes for his love of this friend.</p>
<p>“I know he won't be any happier about it than someone else, who stood by
you all through, and set her bright wits to work till the trouble was all
cleared away,” said Mrs. Minot, looking at Jill's contented face, as she
lay smiling on them all.</p>
<p>Jack understood, and, hopping across the room, gave both the thin hands a
hearty shake; then, not finding any words quite cordial enough in which to
thank this faithful little sister, he stooped down and kissed her
gratefully.</p>
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