<h2>CHAPTER III</h2></div>
<p>“You haven’t asked us what we came for,” opened
up Allison as soon as everybody was served
with chicken, mashed potato, succotash, stewed
tomatoes, biscuits, pickles, and apple-sauce.</p>
<p>“I thought you came for cookies,” said Julia Cloud,
with a mischievous twinkle in her gray eyes.</p>
<p>“Hung one on me, didn’t you?” said Allison,
laughing. “But that wasn’t all. Guess again.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps you came to see me,” she suggested shyly.</p>
<p>“Right you are! But that’s not all, either. That
wouldn’t last much longer than the cookies. Guess
again.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I couldn’t!” said Julia Cloud, growing suddenly
stricken with the thought of their going. “I
give it up.”</p>
<p>“Well, then I’ll tell you. You see we’ve come East
to college, both of us. Of course I’ve had my freshman
year, but the Kid’s just entering. We haven’t
decided which college it’s to be yet, but it’s to be co-ed,
we know that much, because we’re tired of being separated.
When one hasn’t but two in the family and has
been apart for five years, one appreciates a home, I tell
you that. And so we’ve decided we want a home.
We’re not just going to college to live there in the
usual way; we’re going to take a house, live like real
folks, and go to school every day. We want a fireplace
and a cooky-jar of our own; a place to bring our friends
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_31' name='page_31'></SPAN>31</span>
and have good times. But most of all we want a
mother, and we’ve come all this way to coax you to
come and live with us, play house, you know, as you
used to do down on the mossy rocks with broken bits
of china for dishes and acorns for cups and saucers.
Play house and you be mother. Will you do it, Cloudy
Jewel? It means a whole lot to us, and we’ll try to
play fair and make you have a good time.”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud put her hand on her heart, and lifted
her bewildered eyes to the boy’s eager face.</p>
<p>“Me!” she said wonderingly. “You want <i>me</i>!”</p>
<p>“We sure do!” said Allison.</p>
<p>“Indeed we do, Cloudy, dear! That’s just
what we do want!” cried Leslie, jumping up and
running around to her aunt’s chair to embrace her
excitedly. “And you promised, you know, that you
would do what we wanted if you possibly, <i>possibly</i>
could.”</p>
<p>“You see, we put it up to our guardian about the
house,” went on Allison, “and he said the difficulty
would be to get the right kind of a housekeeper that
he could trust us with. Of course he’s way off in
California, and he has to be fussy. He’s built that way.
But we told him we didn’t want any housekeeper at all,
we wanted a mother. He said you couldn’t pick
mothers off trees, but we told him we knew where
there was one if we could only get her. So he let
us come and ask; and, if you say you’ll do it, he’s coming
down to see you and fix it up about the money part.
He said you’d have to have a regular salary or he
wouldn’t consider it, because there were things he’d
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_32' name='page_32'></SPAN>32</span>
have to insist upon that he had promised mother; and,
if there wasn’t a business arrangement about it, he
wouldn’t know what to do. Besides, he said it was
worth a lot to run a couple of rough-necks like Les and
me, and he’d make the salary all right so you could
afford to leave whatever you were doing and just
give your time to mothering us. Now it’s up to you,
Cloudy Jewel, to help us out with our proposition or
spoil everything, because we simply won’t have a housekeeper,
and we don’t know another real mother in the
whole world that hasn’t a family of her own.”</p>
<p>They both left their delicious dinner, and got
around her, coaxing and wheedling exactly as if she
had already declined, when the truth was she was too
dazed with joy to open her lips, even if they had given
her opportunity to speak.</p>
<p>It was some time before the excitement quieted
down and they gave her a chance to say she would go.
Even then she spoke the words with fear and trembling
as one might step off a commonplace threshold
into a fairy palace, not sure but it might be stepping
into space.</p>
<p>Outside the sky was still flooded with after-sunset
glory, but there was so much glory in the hearts of
the three inside the dining-room that they never noticed
it at all. It might have been raining or hailing, and
they would not have known, they were so happy.</p>
<p>Both the guests donned long gingham aprons and
wiped the dishes when the meal was over, both talking
with all their might, recalling the days of their childhood
when they had had towels pinned around them
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_33' name='page_33'></SPAN>33</span>
and been allowed to dry the cups and pans; then suddenly
jumping ahead and planning what they would
do in the dear new home of the future. They were all
three as excited about it as if they had been a bridal
couple planning for their honeymoon.</p>
<p>“We shall want five bedrooms,” said Leslie decidedly.
“I’ve thought that all out, one for each of
us and two guest-rooms, so we can have a boy and a
girl home for overnight with us as often as we want to.
And there simply must be a fireplace, or we won’t
take the house. If there isn’t the right kind of a house
in town, we’ll choose some other college. There are
plenty of colleges, but you can have only one home,
and it must be the right kind. Then of course we want
a big kitchen where we can make fudge as often as we
choose in the evenings, and a dining-room with a bay-window,
with seats and flowers and a canary. Cloudy
Jewel, you don’t mind cats, do you? I want two at
least. I’ve been crazy for a kitten all the time I was
in school, and Al wants a big collie. You won’t mind,
will you?”</p>
<p>Suddenly Julia Cloud discovered that latent in her
heart all these years there had also lain a desire for a
cat and a dog; and she lifted guilty eyes, and confessed
it. She felt a pang of remembrance as she recalled
how her mother used so often to tell her she was
nothing but an “old child.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps your guardian will not think me a proper
person to chaperon you,” she suggested in sudden alarm.</p>
<p>“Well, he’d just better not!” declared Allison,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_34' name='page_34'></SPAN>34</span>
bristling up. “I’d like to know where he could find
a better.”</p>
<p>“I’ve never been in society,” said Julia Cloud
thoughtfully. “I don’t know social ways much, and
I’ve never been considered to have any dignity or
good judgment.”</p>
<p>“That’s just why we like you,” chorused the children.
“You’ve never grown up and got dull and stiff
and poky like most grown folks.”</p>
<p>“We were so afraid,” began Leslie, putting a loving
arm about her aunt’s waist, “that you would have
changed since we were children. We talked it all
over on the way here. We had a kind of eyebrow
code by which we could let each other know what we
thought about it without your seeing us. We were to
lift one eyebrow, the right one, if we were favorably
impressed, and draw down the left if we were
disappointed. But in case we were sure both eyebrows
were to go up. And of course we were sure you
were just the same dear the minute we laid eyes on you,
and all four of our eyebrows went high as they’d go the
first instant. Didn’t you notice Allison? His eyebrows
were almost up to his hair, and they pulled his
eyes so wide open they were perfectly round like
saucers. As for me I think mine went way up under
my hair. I’m not sure if they’ve got back to their
natural place even yet!” And Leslie laid a rosy finger
over her brow, and felt anxiously along the delicate
velvety line.</p>
<p>“I shall go out and telegraph Mr. Luddington that
you are willing,” announced Allison as he hung up the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_35' name='page_35'></SPAN>35</span>
dish-towel. “He’ll get it in the morning when he
reaches Boston, and then he needn’t fuss and fume any
longer about what he’s going to do with us. Besides,
I like to have the bargain clinched somehow, and a
telegram will do it.” Allison slammed out of the house
noisily to the extreme confusion of Mrs. Ambrose
Perkins, who hadn’t been able to eat her supper properly
for watching the house to see what would happen
next. Who could that young man be?</p>
<p>She simply couldn’t get a clew; for, when she went
over for the soda, though she knocked several times,
and heard voices up-stairs, and altogether unseemly
laughter for a house where there had just been a
funeral, not a soul came to the door! Could it be that
Julia Cloud heard her and stayed up-stairs on purpose?
She felt that as the nearest neighbor and a great friend,
of Ellen’s it would be rather expected of her to find out
what was going on. She resolutely refrained from
lighting the parlor lamp, and took up her station at the
dark window to watch; but, although she sat there
until after ten o’clock, she was utterly unable to find
out anything except that the household across the way
stayed up very late and there were lights in both front
rooms again. She felt that if nothing developed by
morning she would just have to get Ambrose to hitch,
up and drive out to Ellen’s. Ellen ought to know.</p>
<p>But Julia Cloud was serenely unconscious of this
espionage. She had entered an Eden of bliss, and was
too happy to care about anything else.</p>
<p>Seated on the big old couch in the parlor with a
child on either side of her, a hand in each of hers,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_36' name='page_36'></SPAN>36</span>
often a head on each shoulder nestling down, they
talked. Planned and talked. Now the brother would
break in with some tale of his school-days; now the
sister would add a bit of reminiscence, just as if they
had been storing it all up to tell her. The joyous happiness
of them all seemed like heaven dropped down
to earth. It was as she had sometimes dreamed mothers
might talk with their own children. And God had
granted this unspeakable gift to her! Was it real?
Would it last? Or was she only dreaming? Once
it vaguely passed through her mind that she would
not be sure of the reality of the whole
thing until she had seen Ellen. If she could talk
with Ellen about it, tell her what she was going to
do, show her the children, and then come back and
find it all the same, it would last. But somehow she
shrank unspeakably from seeing Ellen. She could not
get away from the feeling that Ellen would dispel it
all; that someway, somehow, she would succeed in
breaking up all the bright plans and scattering them
like soap-bubbles in the wind.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, it was a very beautiful illusion, if
illusion it was; and one to be prolonged as late
as possible.</p>
<p>She was horrified when at last she heard the rebuking
strokes of the town clock, ten! eleven! <i>twelve!</i></p>
<p>She started to her feet ashamed.</p>
<p>And even then they would not let her go to bed
at once. She must turn out the lights, and sit in the
hall between their rooms as she did long ago, and tell
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_37' name='page_37'></SPAN>37</span>
the story of “The Little Rid Hin” just as she had told
it night after night when they were children.</p>
<p>It was characteristic of the unfailing youth of the
woman that she entered into the play with zest. Attired
in a long kimono, with her beautiful white hair in two
long silver braids down over her shoulders, she sat in
the dark and told the story with the same vivid language;
and then she stole on tiptoe first to the sister’s
bedside, to tuck her in and kiss her softly, and then
to the brother’s; and at each bedside a young, strong
arm reached out and drew her face down, whispering
“Good-night” with a kiss and “I love you, Cloudy
Jewel,” in tender, thrilling tones.</p>
<p>The two big children were asleep at last, and Julia
Cloud stole to her own bed to lie in a tumult of wonder
and joy, and finally sink into a light slumber, wherein
she dreamed that she had fallen heir to a rose-garden,
and all the roses were alive and could talk; until Ellen
came driving up in her Ford and ran right over them,
crushing them down and cutting their heads off with a
long, sharp whip she carried that somehow turned
out to be made of words strung together with biting
sarcasm.</p>
<p>She awoke in the broad morning sunlight to find
both children done up in bath-robes and slippers, sitting
one each side of her on the bed, laughing at her and
tickling her chin with a feather from the seam of
the pillow.</p>
<p>“Now, Cloudy Jewel, you’ve just got to begin
to make plans!” announced Leslie, curling up in a ball
at her feet and looking very business-like with her
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_38' name='page_38'></SPAN>38</span>
fluffy curls around her face like a golden fleece.
“There isn’t much time, and Guardy Lud will be down
upon us by to-morrow or the next day at least.”</p>
<p>“Guardy Lud!” exclaimed Julia Cloud bewildered.
“Who is that?”</p>
<p>“That’s our pet name for Mr. Luddington,” explained
Leslie, wrinkling up her nose in a grin of merriment.
“Isn’t it cute? Wait till you see him, and
you’ll see how it fits. He’s round and bald with a
shiny red nose, and spectacles; and he doesn’t mind
our kidding at all. He’d have made a lovely father if
he wasn’t married, but he has a horrid wife. We
don’t like her at all. She’s like a frilly piece of French
china with too much decoration; and she’s always sick
and nervous; and she jumps, and says ‘Oh, mercy!’
every time we do the least little thing. She doesn’t
like us any better than we like her. Her name is
Alida, and Allison says we’re always trying to ‘elude’
her. The only good thing she ever did was to advise
Guardy Lud to let us come East to college. She wanted
to get us as far away from her as possible. And it certainly
was mutual.”</p>
<p>“There, now, Leslie, you’re chattering again,”
broke in Allison, looking very tall and efficient in his
blue bath-robe. “You said you would talk business,
and not bleat.”</p>
<p>“Well, so I am,” pouted Leslie. “I guess Cloudy
has got to understand about our family.”</p>
<p>“Well, now let’s get down to business,” said her
brother. “Cloudy, what have you got to do before
you leave? You know it isn’t very long before the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_39' name='page_39'></SPAN>39</span>
colleges open, and we’ve got to start out and hunt a
home right away. Do you have to pack up here
or anything?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t know!” gasped Julia Cloud, looking
around half frightened. “I suppose I ought to ask
Ellen. She will be very much opposed to anything
I do, but I suppose she ought to be told first.”</p>
<p>Allison frowned.</p>
<p>“Gee whiz! I don’t see why Aunt Ellen has to butt
into our affairs. She’s got her own home and family,
and she never did like us very much. I remember hearing
her tell Grandma that we were a regular nuisance,
and she would be glad when we were gone back
to California.”</p>
<p>“That was because you hid behind the sofa when
Uncle Herbert was courting her, and kidded them,”
giggled Leslie.</p>
<p>A stray little twinkle of a dimple peeped out by the
corner of Julia Cloud’s mouth. It hadn’t been out for
a number of years, and she knew she ought not to laugh
at such pranks now; but it was so funny to think of
Herbert Robinson being kidded in the midst of
his courting!</p>
<p>The dimple started the lights dancing in Leslie’s
eyes.</p>
<p>“There! now you dear old Jewel, you know you
don’t want to talk to Aunt Ellen about us. She’ll just
mess things all up. Let’s just <i>do</i> things, and get
’em all fixed up, and then tell her when it’s too late
for her to make a fuss,” gurgled Leslie down close to
Julia’s ear, finishing up with a delicious bear-hug.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_40' name='page_40'></SPAN>40</span></div>
<p>“I suppose she’ll be mortally offended,” murmured
Julia Cloud in troubled hesitancy.</p>
<p>“Well, suppose she is; she’ll get over it, won’t
she?” growled Allison. “And anyhow you’re old
enough to manage your own affairs, Cloudy Jewel. I
guess you’re older than she is, aren’t you? I guess
you’ve got a right to do as you please, haven’t you?
And you <i>do</i> want to go with us, don’t you?” His
voice was anxious.</p>
<p>“I certainly do, dear boy,” said Julia Cloud eagerly;
“but you know your guardian may not approve at all
when he sees what a foolish ‘young’ aunt I am, allowing
you to sit up late and talk fairy stories all the time.”</p>
<p>They smothered her in kisses, compliments, and
assurances; and it was some time before the conversation
swung around again to the important subject of
the morning.</p>
<p>“You don’t have to do anything to the house but
just shut it up, do you?” asked Allison, looking
anxiously about in a helpless, mannish way. “Because,
if you do, we ought to be getting to work.”</p>
<p>“There’s a man over at Harmony Village that
wanted to rent a house here,” said Julia Cloud thoughtfully.
“I might write a letter to him. I don’t know
whether he’s found anything or not. He’s the new
superintendent of the high school. But it’s time we got
dressed and had breakfast.”</p>
<p>“Write to him nothing!” said Allison eagerly.
“I’ll get the car, and we’ll drive over to Harmony
in no time, and get the thing fixed up. Hustle there,
Leslie, and get yourself togged up. We don’t need
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_41' name='page_41'></SPAN>41</span>
to wait for breakfast; we can eat cookies. Hurry
everybody!” And he slammed over to his own room
and began to stir about noisily.</p>
<p>Julia Cloud arose and made a hasty toilet, with a
bright spot of excitement on each cheek; but she had no
time to think what Ellen would say, for she meant that
these children should have a real old-time breakfast
before they began the day; and now that she was up
her little round black clock on the bureau told her that
it was high time the day had begun. She looked fearfully
out of the window, half expecting to see Ellen’s
Ford bobbing down the hill already, and then hurried
down to the kitchen. Allison soon came down, calling
out to her to be ready when he came back with the car;
but the delicious odors that had already begun to float
out from the old kitchen made him lenient toward the
idea of breakfast; and, when he came back with the full
cut-out roaring the announcement of his arrival to
the Perkinses, he was quite ready to wait a few minutes
and eat some of Julia Cloud’s flapjacks and sausages
with maple-syrup and apple-sauce.</p>
<p>Julia Cloud herself ate little. She was in a tremor
of delightful uncertainty and dread. Ought she to go
ahead this way and manage her own affairs, leaving
her own sister out of the question? But then, if she
consulted with Ellen that meant consulting with
Herbert; for Herbert ran his wife most thoroughly,
and Herbert could make things very unpleasant when
he took the trouble.</p>
<p>So, when the children, unable at last to eat any
more, pleaded with her to leave the dishes and go to see
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_42' name='page_42'></SPAN>42</span>
the man about the house at once, she gave one swift,
apprehensive glance about, and assented. If Ellen
should come to the house while they were away, and
should look in at the window and see the breakfast
dishes standing! It would be appalling! But, as the
children said, why worry? Somehow she felt like a
little schoolgirl playing hookey as she carefully drew
down the dining-room and kitchen window-shades
that looked on the back porch, and locked the front
door behind her. Well, perhaps she had earned the
right to take this bit of a holiday, and wash her dishes
when she liked. Anyhow, hadn’t God sent these blessed
children to her in answer to her earnest prayer that He
would show her what to do and save her if possible
from having to spend the remainder of her days under
Herbert Robinson’s roof? Well, then she would just
accept it that way and be grateful, at least until He
showed her otherwise. So she drew a long breath of
delight, and climbed into the luxurious back seat of
the great blue car, utterly oblivious of the prying eyes
behind the parlor shade across the way.</p>
<hr class='toprule' />
<div class='chsp'>
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_43' name='page_43'></SPAN>43</span>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_IV' id='CHAPTER_IV'></SPAN>
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