<h2>CHAPTER X</h2></div>
<p>They were all very weary, and slept well that
night; but, strange to say, Allison, who was
the sleepy-head, awoke first, and was out looking
the town over before the others had thought
of awaking. He came back to breakfast eager
and impatient.</p>
<p>“We don’t need to go any farther,” he declared.
“It’s a peach of a place. There’s a creek that reaches
up in the woods for miles; and they have canoes and
skating and a swimming-hole; and there are tennis-courts
everywhere; and it’s only eleven miles from
the city. I say we just camp here, and not bother about
going on to the other place. I’m satisfied. If that
house is big enough, it’s just the thing.”</p>
<p>“But have you been to the college?”</p>
<p>“No, but I asked about it. They have intercollegiate
games and frats, and I guess it’s all right. It
has a peach of a campus, too, and a Carnegie library
with chimes–––”</p>
<p>“Well, but, dear, you aren’t going to college just
for those things.”</p>
<p>“Oh, the college’ll be all right. Guardy wouldn’t
have suggested it if it wasn’t. But we’ll go up there this
morning and look around.”</p>
<p>“Now, children, don’t get your heart set on it before
you know all about it. You know that house may be
quite impossible.”</p>
<p>“Now, Cloudy!” put in Leslie. “You know Allison
told you you were a good sport. You mustn’t begin by
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_116' name='page_116'></SPAN>116</span>
preaching before you find out. If it isn’t all right, why,
of course we don’t want it; so let’s have the fun of
thinking it is till we prove it isn’t––or it is.”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud looked into the laughing, happy eyes,
and yielded with a smile.</p>
<p>“Of course,” she said, “that’s reasonable. I’m
agreed to that. But there’s one thing: you know we’re
bound to go on to the other college, because Mr.
Luddington expects us; and we can come back here
again if we like this better.”</p>
<p>“Oh, we can wire him to come here,” said Leslie.
“Now, let’s go! First to that house, please, because
I’m so afraid somebody will buy it before we get the
option on it. I’ve heard that houses are very scarce
in the East just now, and people are snapping them up.
I read that on the back of that old man’s paper at the
next table to ours this morning.”</p>
<p>All three of them having the hearts of children,
they went at once to hunt up the agent before ever
they got even a glimpse of the halls of learning standing
brave and fair on the hillside in the morning sunshine.
“Because there are plenty more colleges,” said Leslie;
“but there is only one home for us, and I believe we’ve
found it, if it looks half as pretty in the daylight as
it did at night.”</p>
<p>It took only a few minutes to find the agent and get
the key of the house, and presently they were standing
on the terrace gazing with delight at the house.</p>
<p>It was indeed a lovely little dwelling. It was built
of stone, and then painted white, but the roof and
gables were tiled with great pink tiles, giving an odd
little foreign look to it, something like Anne Hathaway’s
cottage in general contour, Leslie declared.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_117' name='page_117'></SPAN>117</span></div>
<p>The top of the terrace was pink-tiled, too, and all
the porches were paved with tiles. The house itself
seemed filled with windows all around. Allison unlocked
the door, and they exclaimed with pleasure as
he threw it wide open and they stepped in. The sunshine
was flooding the great living-room from every
direction, it seemed. To begin with, the room was
very large, and gave the effect of being a sun-parlor
because of its white panelled walls and its many windows.
Straight across from the front door on the
opposite side of the room opened a small hallway or
passage with stairs leading up to a platform where
more windows shed a beautiful light down the stairs on
walls papered with strange tropical birds in delicate
old-fashioned tracery.</p>
<p>To the right through a wide white arch from the
living-room was a charming white dining-room with
little, high, leaded-paned windows over the spot for the
sideboard and long windows in front.</p>
<p>To the left was an enormous stone fireplace with
high mantel-shelf of stone and the chimney above.
The fire-opening was wide enough for an old Yule log,
and on either side of it were double glass doors opening
into a long porch room, which also had a fireplace on the
opposite side of the chimney, and was completely shut
in by long casement windows.</p>
<p>Up-stairs there were four large bedrooms and a
little hall room that could be used for a sewing-room
or den, or an extra bedroom, besides a neat little maid’s
room in a notch on the half-way landing, and two bathrooms,
white-tiled and delightful, tucked away in between
things. Then Leslie opened a glass door in the
very prettiest room of all, which she and Allison immediately
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_118' name='page_118'></SPAN>118</span>
decided must belong to their aunt, and exclaimed
in delight; for here nestled between the gables,
with a tiled wall all about it, was a delightful housetop
or uncovered porch, so situated among the trees that
it was entirely shut in from the world.</p>
<p>It was perfect! They stood and looked at one
another in delight, and for the time the college was
forgotten. Then Allison dashed away, and came back
eagerly almost immediately.</p>
<p>“There’s a garage!” he said, “just behind the
kitchen, a regular robin’s nest of a one, white with
pink tiles just like the house, and a pebbled drive. Say,
it must be some fool of a guy that would sell this. Isn’t
it just a crackerjack?”</p>
<p>“My dear,” put in Julia Cloud, “it can’t help being
very expensive–––”</p>
<p>“Now, Cloudy, remember!” said Leslie, holding
up her finger in mock rebuke. “Just wait and see!
And, anyhow, you don’t know Guardy Lud. If he
could see us located in a peach of a home like this,
he’d go back to his growley old dear of a wife with
happy tears rolling down his nice old cheeks. Allison,
you go talk to that agent, and you give him a hundred
dollars if you’ve got it left––here, I guess I’ve got some,
too––just to bind the bargain till Guardy gets here.
And say, you go see if you can’t get Guardy on the
’phone. I don’t want to go a step farther. Couldn’t
you be happy here, Cloudy, with that fireplace, and
that prayer meeting to go to? I wouldn’t mind going
with you sometimes when I didn’t have to study.”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud stooped, and kissed the eager face, and
whispered, “Very happy, darling!”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_119' name='page_119'></SPAN>119</span></div>
<p>And then they went to the agent again and
the telephone.</p>
<p>“Guardy Lud” proved himself quite equal to the
occasion by agreeing to come on at once and approve
their choice, and promised to be there before evening.</p>
<p>“I knew he would,” said Leslie happily, as they
seated themselves in the car again for the pleasant run
to the college.</p>
<p>They found the dean in his office, and Allison was
taken with him at once.</p>
<p>“He isn’t much like that musty little guy in the
other college. He looked like a wet hen!” growled
Allison in a low tone to his sister and aunt, while the
dean was out in the hall talking to a student. “I like
him, don’t you?” and Julia Cloud sat wondering what
the boy’s standards could be that he could judge
so suddenly and enthusiastically. Yet she had to admit
herself that she liked this man, tall and grave with
a pleasant twinkle hidden away in his wine-brown eyes
and around the corners of his firm mouth. She felt
satisfied that here was a man who would be both wise
and just.</p>
<p>They made the rounds of the college buildings
and campus with growing enthusiasm, and then drove
back to the inn to lunch with hearty appetites.</p>
<p>“Let’s go down to the house, and measure things,
and look around once more,” proposed Leslie. “Then
we can come back and wait here for Guardy. We
mustn’t be away when he arrives, for he’ll want to get
everything fixed up and get away. I know him.
Allison, did you get a time-table?”</p>
<p>Allison produced one from his coat-pocket, and
they studied the trains, and decided that there was no
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_120' name='page_120'></SPAN>120</span>
possibility of the arrival of their guardian until three
o’clock, and probably not until five.</p>
<p>“That’s all right,” said Leslie. “Cloudy and I’ll
stay here from three to five, and you can meet the
trains; but first I want the dimensions of those rooms,
so Cloudy and I can plan. We’ve got a whole lot to
do before college opens, and we can’t spare a minute.
O Cloudy! I’m so happy! Isn’t that house just
a duck?”</p>
<p>They went to the village store, bought a foot-rule,
a yardstick, and a tape-measure, and repaired to the
house. Allison took the foot-rule by masculine right;
Julia Cloud said she felt more at home with the tape-measure;
and Leslie preferred the yardstick. With
pencil and paper they went to work, making a diagram
of each room, with spaces between windows and doors
for furniture, taking it room by room.</p>
<p>“We’ve got to know about length of curtains, and
whether furniture will fit in,” declared Leslie wisely.
“I’ve thought it all out nights in the sleeper on the
way over here. Just think! Isn’t it going to be fun
furnishing the whole house? You know, Cloudy, I
didn’t have hardly anything sent, because it really wasn’t
worth while. We sort of wanted to leave the house at
home just as it was when Mamma was living, to come
back to sometimes; and so we let it to an old gentleman,
a friend of Grandfather’s and Guardy’s, who has
only himself and his wife and servants, and will take
beautiful care of it. But I went around and picked
out anything I wanted, rugs and pictures and some
bric-à-brac, and a few bits of old mahogany that I
love, just small things that would pack easily. Guardy
said we might buy our own things. He set a limit
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_121' name='page_121'></SPAN>121</span>
on our spending, of course; but he said it would be
good experience for us to learn how to buy wisely
inside a certain sum.”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud went around like one in a dream with
her new tape-measure, setting down careful figures, and
feeling like a child playing dolls again. It was almost
three o’clock when they finally finished their measurements,
and Allison hurried them back to the inn, and
repaired to the station to meet trains.</p>
<p>Leslie made her aunt lie down on the bed, supposedly
for a nap; but no one could have taken a nap
even if he had wanted to––which Julia Cloud did not––with
an eager, excited girl sitting beside the bed,
just fluttering with ideas about couches and pillows
and furniture and curtains.</p>
<p>“We’ll have a great deep couch, with air-cushions
on the seat and back, and put it in the middle of the
living-room facing the fireplace, won’t we, Cloudy?
And what color do you think would be pretty for the
cushions? I guess blue, deep, dark-blue brocaded velvet,
or something soft that will tone well with the
mahogany woodwork. I love mahogany in a white
room, don’t you, Cloudy? And I had a great big
blue Chinese rug sent over that I think will do nicely
for there. You like blue, don’t you, Cloudy?” she
finished anxiously. “Because I want to have you
like it more even than we do.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I love it!” gasped Julia Cloud, trying to set
her mind to revel in extravagant desires without compunction.
She was not used to considering life in terms
of Chinese rugs or mahogany and brocade velvet.</p>
<p>“I’d like the curtains next the windows to be all
alike all over the house, wouldn’t you? Just sheer,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_122' name='page_122'></SPAN>122</span>
soft, creamy white. And then inner curtains of Chinese
silk or something like that. We’d want blue in the
living-room, of course, if we had the blue rugs and
couch, and oh! old rose, I guess, in the dining-room,
or perhaps mahogany color or tan. Green for that sun-porch
room! That’s it, and lots of willow chairs and
tables! And rush mats on the tiled floor! Oh! Aren’t
we having fun, Cloudy, dear? Now, I’ll write out a
list of things we have to buy while you take a nap.”</p>
<p>And so it went on the whole afternoon, until the
sound of a distant whistle warned them that the five-o’clock
train was coming in and they must be prepared
to meet Mr. Luddington.</p>
<p>According to programme they hurried into their
wraps, and went down to the piazza, to wait for the
car. None too soon, for Allison was already driving
around the curve in front of the door, and Mr.
Luddington sat beside him, radiating satisfaction.
Anything that pleased his adorable wards pleased him,
but this especially so, for he was in a hurry to respond
to the many telegrams summoning him home to California,
and the quicker this little household was settled,
the sooner he might leave them.</p>
<p>They drove at once, of course, to the house, Allison
and Leslie talking fast and eagerly every minute of the
way, their eyes bright and their faces beautiful with
enthusiasm; and Mr. Luddington could only sit and
listen, and smile over their heads at Julia Cloud, who
was smiling also, and who in her new silvery garments
looked to him all the more a lady and fit to play mother
to his wards.</p>
<p>“Well, now, now, now!” said Guardy Lud after
they had gone carefully over every room and were
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_123' name='page_123'></SPAN>123</span>
coming down-stairs again. “This is great! This certainly
is great. I couldn’t have had it better if I’d made
it to order, could I? And I certainly wish you were
settled here, and I could stay long enough to take breakfast
with you and enjoy some more of your excellent
buckwheat cakes, Miss Cloud.” He turned with a gallant
bow to Julia. “I hope you’ll teach my little girl
here to bake them just like that, so she can make me
some when she comes back to California to visit
us again.”</p>
<p>They rode him around the town, through the college
grounds, and then back to the inn for dinner.
That evening they spent in discussion and business
plans for the winter. The next morning they took
Mr. Luddington up to the college, where he made final
arrangements for the young people to be entered as
students, and afterwards drove to the city. Mr.
Luddington had one or two friends there to whom he
wished to introduce them, that they might have some
one near at hand to call upon in a time of need. He
also took them all to a bank, and arranged their bank
accounts so that they might draw what they needed at
any time. After lunch he went with them to several
of the largest stores, and opened a charge account for
them. Then, with a warm hand-shake for Julia Cloud
and an emotional good-by for the young people, he left
them to rush for his train.</p>
<p>“We might stay in town to-night, and be ready to
shop early in the morning,” proposed Leslie.</p>
<p>“No,” said Allison decidedly. “Cloudy looks worn
to a frazzle, and I’m sick to death of the city. Let’s
beat it back to where they have good air. We can go
right to bed after dinner, and get up good and early,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_124' name='page_124'></SPAN>124</span>
and be here as soon as the stores are open. They
don’t open till nine o’clock. I saw the signs on the
doors everywhere.”</p>
<p>So back they went for a good night’s rest, and were
up and at it early in the morning, scarcely noticing the
way they rode, so interested were they in deciding how
many chairs and beds and tables they needed to buy.</p>
<p>“Let’s get the curtains first, and then we can have
the windows washed, and put them right up,” said
Leslie, “and nobody can see in. I’m crazy to be shut
into our own house, and feel that it belongs to us.
We can select them while Allison’s gone to see what’s
the matter with his engine.”</p>
<p>But, when Julia Cloud heard the stupendous price
that was asked for ready-made curtains or curtains
made to order, with fixtures and installation, she exclaimed
in horror:</p>
<p>“Leslie! This is foolish. We can easily make
them ourselves, and put them up for less than half the
price. If I had only brought my sewing-machine! But
it was all out of repair.”</p>
<p>“Could we really make them ourselves, Cloudy?
Wouldn’t that be fun? We’ll get a sewing-machine,
of course. We’ll need it for other things, too, sometimes,
won’t we? Of course we’ll get one. We’ll buy
that next. Now, how many yards of each of these
do we need?”</p>
<p>In a few minutes the salesman had figured out
how much was needed, counted the number of fixtures
for doorways and windows, and arranged to send the
package down to the car at a certain time later in the
morning. Then they went at once and bought a sewing-machine,
one that Julia Cloud knew all about and said
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_125' name='page_125'></SPAN>125</span>
was the best and lightest on the market. Leslie was
as pleased with the idea of learning to run it as if it
had been a new toy and she a child.</p>
<p>“We’ll have it sent right to the little new house,
and then we can go there evenings after we are through
shopping, and sew. You can cut, and I can put in the
hems, if you think I can do them well enough. We
must get scissors and thread, a lot of it, and silk to
match the colored curtains, too.”</p>
<p>They took the rooms one at a time, and furnished
them, Allison joining them, and taking as much interest
in the design of the furniture as if he had been a young
bridegroom just setting up housekeeping for himself.</p>
<p>They had set aside a certain sum for each room so
that they would not overstep their guardian’s limit,
and with Julia Cloud to put on the brakes, and suggest
simplicity, and decide what was in good taste for such
a small village house, they easily came within the generous
limit allowed them.</p>
<p>It was a great game for Julia Cloud to come out
of her simple country life and plunge into this wholesale
beautiful buying untroubled by a continual feeling
that she must select the very cheapest without regard to
taste or desire. It was wonderful; but it was wearying
in spite of the delight, and so the little house was not
all furnished in a day.</p>
<p>“Well, the living-room’s done, anyway, and the
willow set for the porch room!” sighed Leslie, leaning
back with a fling of weariness. “Now to-morrow we’ll
do the dining-room.”</p>
<p>“To-morrow’s Sunday, Les; the stores aren’t open.
Use your bean a little, child.”</p>
<p>“Sunday!”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_126' name='page_126'></SPAN>126</span></div>
<p>Leslie’s beautiful face drew itself into a snarl of
impatience, the first, really, that Julia Cloud had seen.</p>
<p>“Oh, darn!” said Leslie’s pretty lips. “Isn’t that
too horrid? I forgot all about it. I wonder what they
have to have Sunday for, anyway. It’s just a dull
old bore!”</p>
<p>“O Leslie, darling!” said Julia Cloud, aghast,
something in her heart growing suddenly heavy and
sinking her down, down, so that she felt as if she
could hardly hold her head up another minute.</p>
<p>“Well, Cloudy, dear, don’t you think it’s a bore
yourself, truly? Come, now, own up. And I’m sure
I don’t see what’s the use of it, do you? One can’t do
a thing that’s nice. But I’ll tell you what we can
do!” her eyes growing bright with eagerness again.
“We’ll measure and cut all the curtains, and turn the
hems up. And, Allison, you can put up the fixtures.
If only the machine could have been sent up to-day,
we could have had the curtains all done, couldn’t
we, Cloudy?”</p>
<p>But Julia Cloud’s lips were white and trembling,
and her sweet eyes had suddenly gone dark with trouble
and apprehension.</p>
<p>“O Leslie, darling child!” she gasped again.
“You don’t mean you would work on the Sabbath
day!”</p>
<p>“Why, why not, Cloudy, dear? Is there anything
wrong about that?”</p>
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<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XI' id='CHAPTER_XI'></SPAN>
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