<h3>TOM GRAY</h3>
<p>The company which met around the breakfast table, next morning, was
entirely restored to its old gayety. There was not one member of the
house party, including Mrs. Gray herself, who did not feel unbounded
relief that the place was so well rid of Tom Gray.</p>
<p>David was glad there had been no arrest, and that the mistress of the
house had with so much dignity and spirit turned out the culprit. It
would have been a bad business, testifying in court against Mrs. Gray's
nephew when he had been visiting in her house.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Gray," suggested Grace, "if you haven't made any plans this
morning for us, I think we had better spend an hour or so rehearsing our
surprise."</p>
<p>"Very well, my dear, you may spend as much time as you like at it; but
if I peep over the transom, or listen through a crack in the door, you
mustn't scold. I don't know that I can wait much longer to find out what
it is."</p>
<p>"No, no! You're not to come near the third story," protested Grace. "We
shall nail down the transom and stuff the keyhole with soap if you do."</p>
<p>"I never could stand suspense," exclaimed the old lady, shaking her head
until her lace breakfast cap, with its little bows of lavender ribbon,
quivered all over. "I fear I shall be tempted to break into the room
before Christmas night and unearth the whole business. But tell me this
much. Who is in the surprise?"</p>
<p>"All of us," declared Nora. "But now we'll have to get somebody to take
the place of——"</p>
<p>She paused and blushed scarlet.</p>
<p>"Mr. Thomas Gray," announced the old butler at the door, with a peculiar
expression on his countenance.</p>
<p>There was a dead silence. Mrs. Gray sat as if turned to stone, while
David half rose from his seat and Hippy seized a bread and butter knife
to plunge into the heart of his enemy, if necessary.</p>
<p>"Aunt Rose," cried a voice outside, "aren't you glad to see me?"</p>
<p>A broad-shouldered, well-built young man walked into the room and kissed
the old lady right in the mouth, before she could say a word. He had a
sunburned, wholesome face, kindly gray eyes, light-brown hair, and wore
a heavy suit of rough, blue cloth. He carried no cane; neither were his
shoes pointed at the toes, and there wasn't a tinge of English in his
accent except that his enunciation was unusually good.</p>
<p>Mrs. Gray rose from her chair and examined the young man long and
carefully.</p>
<p>"The very image of your uncle," she cried at last, and gave him a good
hug. "The very image, my dear Tom. Your old aunty has been a most
egregious fool. Why didn't you come last night?"</p>
<p>"Didn't you get my telegram? I sent it in good time. I was delayed and
had to take the night train up. I am awfully sorry if it inconvenienced
you."</p>
<p>"You haven't inconvenienced me, my boy, except for a slight loss of
sleep, and a fright and a narrow of escape from losing the family
silver, which David and Grace, here, prevented."</p>
<p>Then Mrs. Gray sat down and burst out laughing. The others joined in and
for a few minutes the breakfast table was in an uproar.</p>
<p>The real Tom Gray, who was the image of his uncle's portrait over the
sideboard, looked from one to another of the strange faces and then
began to laugh too, since it seemed to be the proper thing to do. He had
one of those delightful, hearty laughs that ring out in a whole roomful
of voices. When Mrs. Gray heard it she stopped short, patting her nephew
on the cheek; for he was sitting beside her now in a place hastily
arranged by the butler.</p>
<p>"Exactly your uncle's laugh. It's good to hear it again. You're a Gray,
every inch of you; and, thank God, you're a fine fellow! If you had come
down here with an English accent and no 'h's' and a monocle, I should
have shut the door in your face. I should, indeed."</p>
<p>"Who, me?" demanded her nephew, forgetting his grammar in his surprise
at such a state of affairs. "Not me, dear aunt. America's good enough
for me. I've had lots of good times with my English cousins, but
America's my home and country."</p>
<p>"Hurrah!" cried Hippy, dashing around the table and seizing the young
man's hand. "We're glad to know you. We're proud and happy to make your
acquaintance."</p>
<p>There was such an uproar of fun and laughter at this that Tom Gray began
at last to see that something had really happened, and that his sudden
and unheralded appearance had brought immense relief to the assembled
company.</p>
<p>"Don't you think it's time somebody put me on?" he asked finally when
the noise had quieted down a little.</p>
<p>"Tom," replied his aunt, "did you tell anyone you were coming to Oakdale
for Christmas to visit me!"</p>
<p>"Why, yes," answered Tom after a moment's thought. "I believe I did. In
fact I know I did. I was staying for a week in New York, with an English
friend, Arthur Butler. I told him all about it. It was on his account
that I stayed over one night. I sent the telegram by his servant,
Richards."</p>
<p>"Ah, ha!" cried Mrs. Gray. "And pray tell us what that wretch of a
servant looked like."</p>
<p>Tom laughed.</p>
<p>"Richards is quite an unusual fellow, a good servant I believe, but
rather effeminate and a kind of a dandy——"</p>
<p>"That's the man!"</p>
<p>"He's the one!"</p>
<p>"The very fellow!"</p>
<p>Half a dozen voices interrupted at once.</p>
<p>Then Mrs. Gray explained the rather serious adventure of the night
before. She ended by saying:</p>
<p>"I never, in my heart of hearts, really believed he was you, Tom, dear."</p>
<p>"The scoundrel!" exclaimed the young man. "Can't we set the police on
him?"</p>
<p>"The police in Oakdale are slow, Tom," replied his aunt. "Slow from lack
of occupation. Robbers do not flock here in great numbers."</p>
<p>"At least, I'll telegraph to Arthur Butler," said Tom, "and warn him.
They may catch him from that end."</p>
<p>The telegram was accordingly sent. Likewise the police were notified,
but Richards, who turned out to be a well-known English crook, made good
his escape and was heard from no more.</p>
<p>It did not take our young people long to make the acquaintance of the
real Tom Gray, nor to decide he was a fine fellow and one they could
admit to their circle without regret.</p>
<p>"He's like a breath of fresh air," thought Grace, and indeed it was
disclosed later that he intended to study forestry because he loved the
country and the open air, and spent all his vacations camping out and
taking long walking trips. But there was nothing of the gypsy in him. He
was full of energy and ambition and infused such a wholesome vigor into
whatever he did that the young people felt a new enthusiasm in his
presence.</p>
<p>"I propose to celebrate the return of the real Tom Gray," announced Mrs.
Gray, "by sending my boys and girls off on a sleighing party this
afternoon. The big old sleigh holds exactly eight. Reddy, you may drive,
since the roads are so familiar to you. You must all be back at six
o'clock, for, remember, to-night we decorate the Christmas tree and
every girl freshman in Oakdale High School must have a present on it."</p>
<p>Just after lunch, therefore, after a hard morning's work over Mrs.
Gray's "surprise," the young people bundled into the big side-seated
sleigh, and tucked the buffalo robes tightly around them. The horses
snorted in the crisp, dry air; there was a jingle of merry sleigh bells
as off they started down the street toward the open country.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Jingle bells, jingle bells,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Jingle all the way.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Oh, what fun 'tis to ride<br/></span>
<span class="i0">In a one-horse open sleigh.<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>they sang as they bowled over the well-beaten track; and Tom Gray
breathed a sigh of pure delight.</p>
<p>"Isn't this great!" he exclaimed. "Wouldn't you rather do this than
write an essay or study Latin prose composition?"</p>
<p>"Next to riding in an airship and skating, it's the finest thing I know
of," answered David.</p>
<p>"Have you ever ridden in an airship?" demanded Tom.</p>
<p>"No, but I intend to," replied the other; for David had never for a
moment relinquished his pet scheme, but worked on his experiments
whenever he had a spare moment; little dreaming that one day he was to
become the talk of the town.</p>
<p>As the sleigh passed the Nesbit house, Miriam and some of her friends
were just entering her front gate. She saw the party and a shadow of
black jealousy darkened her face.</p>
<p>"Why don't we do the same thing?" she exclaimed aloud, and in another
twenty minutes she had bundled her own guests into the Nesbit sleigh,
while she herself took the reins and guided the pair of spirited black
horses.</p>
<p>"Miriam, I do wish you would let one of the boys drive," said her
mother, who had come to the door to see her off.</p>
<p>"I prefer to do the driving, mother," replied the spoiled girl, and with
a crack of the whip, the second sleighful was off after the first. It
was not long before the Nesbit sleigh had met and passed the other,
which was not going at a very great rate of speed. Mrs. Gray's carriage
horses were much older and more staid than Miriam's pair of young
blacks.</p>
<p>"Who is the girl in front?" asked Tom, as the sleigh flashed past.</p>
<p>"My sister," answered David shortly.</p>
<p>"She must be a pretty good driver," observed Tom.</p>
<p>David made no reply. He knew perfectly well that Miriam was not strong
enough to hold in the black team, once the horses got the upper hand;
but he hoped one of the boys would take the reins if they showed any
symptoms of running away.</p>
<p>The early twilight was just falling when the Gray house party came to a
narrow, rickety old bridge spanning the bed of a creek. Here they
stopped the horses for a time, while Grace and Hippy gathered some
branches of evergreen growing on the edge of a wood, just over the
bridge.</p>
<p>Suddenly the stillness was broken by the sound of bells ringing so
violently that it seemed as if all Bedlam had broken loose. Around a
curve and down the road in front of them loomed Miriam's blacks, making
straight for the other group. They were going like the wind, and the
empty sleigh, lying on its side, was clattering behind them.</p>
<p>"Jump, girls!" cried Tom, while with the other boys he started to cross
the bridge to intercept the horses.</p>
<p>If Grace had paused to reflect she might never have attempted
accomplishing the daring deed that suggested itself to her. Quickly
snatching off her scarlet cape, she dashed into the middle of the road,
waving it before her. Perhaps the horses also thought Bedlam had been
let loose. At sight of the terrifying apparition, they slackened up,
snorted and reared backward.</p>
<p>"She is a brave girl," thought Tom Gray, as he leaped at the nearest
rearing, plunging animal, while David seized the other. Far down the
road came the sound of a faint halloo.</p>
<p>"I'll pick up the others. I suppose they are in a drift," said Reddy, as
he drove off and in a few minutes returned carrying Miriam and her
party. Miriam herself looked white and frightened, although she
pretended to treat the affair lightly.</p>
<p>"A rabbit scared the horses," was all she said. "I'll let one of the
boys drive us home."</p>
<p>"Indeed, I shan't go back in that sleigh," cried Julia Crosby.</p>
<p>"Perhaps you'll accept a ride in the freshman sleigh, Miss Crosby,"
suggested Nora; and the other girl, somewhat ashamed, was obliged to
place herself at the mercy of her enemies.</p>
<p>"All of you girls get into Mrs. Gray's sleigh," commanded David, "and
Tom and I will drive the other sleigh back." No one ever cared to
disobey David when he spoke in this tone. Even his wilful sister took
her seat between Grace and Anne without a word and never spoke during
the entire drive back, except to say good night at her own front gate.</p>
<p>But Grace could not refrain from one sharp little thrust.</p>
<p>"You seem to be unlucky with sleighs and sleds both, Miriam," she said.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
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