<h2 id="c14">CHAPTER XIV. <br/><span class="small">A PLEASANT PLAN</span></h2>
<p>“The summer following our mother’s death was
hot and dry,” the frail girl continued, “and the grass
around Mr. Eastland’s shack, though tall from early
rains, was parched in August.</p>
<p>“One morning before he rode in town, our
foster-father jokingly told my brother Dean that he
would leave the place in his care. ‘Don’t ye let
anything happen to it, sonny,’ he said.</p>
<p>“Dean, who is always serious, looked up at the
old man on the mule as he replied: ‘I’ll take care
of it, Daddy Eastland, even with my life.’</p>
<p>“We thought nothing of this. My brother was a
dreamer, living, it sometimes seemed, in a world of
his own creating. I now realize that my foster-father
and I did not quite understand him.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_117">[117]</div>
<p>“It was an intensely hot day. How the grass got
on fire I do not know, but about noon I heard a cry
from Dean, who had been lying for hours on the
ground in the shade of the shack reading a book of
poetry that a traveling missionary had brought to
him. He had visited us six months before and had
promised the next time he came that he would bring
a book for my brother.</p>
<p>“When I heard Dean’s cry of alarm and saw him
leap to his feet and run toward a swiftly approaching
column of smoke, I also ran, but not being as
fleet of foot, I was soon far behind him. He had
caught up a burlap bag as he passed a shed; then,
on he raced toward the fire. I, too, paused to get
a bag, but when I started on I saw my brother suddenly
plunge forward and disappear.</p>
<p>“He had caught his foot in a briar and had fallen
into a thicket which, a moment later, with a crackle
and roar leaped into flame.</p>
<p>“His cap had slipped over his face, thank heaven,
and so his truly beautiful eyes and features were
spared, but his body was badly burned when the fire
had swept over him.</p>
<p>“The wind had veered very suddenly and turned
the flame back upon the charred land and so, there
being nothing left to burn, it was extinguished.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_118">[118]</div>
<p>“It was at that moment that Daddy Eastland returned.
He lifted my unconscious brother out of
the black, burnt thicket and carried him to the shack.</p>
<p>“‘Boy! Boy!’ he said, and I never will forget the
sob there was in his voice. ‘Why did you say ye’d
take care of the old place with your life? ’Twasn’t
worth one hair on yer head.’</p>
<p>“But Dean was not dead. Slowly, so slowly he
came back to life, but his left arm was burned to the
bone and his side beneath it. Then, because of the
pain, his muscles tightened and he could not move
his arm.</p>
<p>“We were so far from town that perhaps he did
not have just the right care. Once a month a quack
physician made the rounds of those remote farms.</p>
<p>“However, he did the best that he could, and a
year later Dean was able to walk about. How like
our mother he was, so brave and cheerful!</p>
<p>“‘I am glad that it is my left arm that will not
move, Sister,’ he often said. ‘I have a use for my
right arm.’</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_119">[119]</div>
<p>“Our foster-father, noting how it pleased the lad,
invented tasks around the farm that a one-armed
boy could do to help, but when he was fourteen years
of age I discovered what he had meant when he
said that he had a use for his right arm. He had
a little den of his own in the loft of the old barn
with a big opening that overlooked meadow lands,
a winding silver ribbon of a river and distant hills,
and there he spent hours every day writing.</p>
<p>“At last he confessed that he was trying to make
verse like that in his one greatly treasured book. It
was his joy, and he had so little that I encouraged
him, though I could not understand his poetry. I am
more like our father, who was a faithful plodding
farmer, and Dean is like our mother, who could tell
such wonderful stories out of her own head.</p>
<p>“At last, when I was eighteen years old, I told
Daddy Eastland that I wanted to go to the city to
earn my own way and send some money back for
Dean. How the lad grieved when I left, for he said
that he was the one who should go out in the world
and work for both of us, but I told him to keep on
with his writing and that maybe, some day, he would
be able to earn money with his poetry.</p>
<p>“So I came to town and began as an errand girl
in a big department store.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_120">[120]</div>
<p>“Now I earn eighteen dollars a week and I send
half of it back to the little rocky farm in New England.
Too, I send magazines and books, but now
a new problem has presented itself. Mr. Eastland
has died, and Dean is alone, and so I have sent for
him to come and live with me.</p>
<p>“How glad I shall be to see him, but I dread having
him know where I live. He will guess at once
that I chose a basement room that I might have
money to send to him.”</p>
<p>It was Miss Selenski who interrupted: “Miss
Wiggin,” she said, “while you have been talking,
I have chosen you to be my successor. Tomorrow I
am to be married, and I promised the ladies who
built the model tenements that I would find someone
fitted to take my place before I left. The pay is
better than you are getting. It is twenty-five dollars
a week, with a sunny little apartment to live in. I
want all of you girls to come to my wedding and
then, when I am gone, Miss Wiggin, you can move
right in, and you will be there to welcome that wonderful
brother of yours.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_121">[121]</div>
<p>It would be hard to imagine a happier girl than
Nell when she learned that a brighter future awaited
her than she had dared to dream. She tried to thank
her benefactor, but her sensitive lips quivered and
the girls knew that she was so overcome with emotion
that she might cry, and so Miss Selenski began
at once to tell them about her wedding plans, and
then, soon after she had finished, the girls who had
been invited for tea arrived. Miss Selenski knew
many of them, and so the conversation became general
and little Nell Wiggin was permitted to quietly
become accustomed to her wonderful good fortune
before she was again asked to join in the conversation.
Bobs walked with her to the elevated, and
merry plans she laid for the pleasant times the Vandergrifts
were to have with their new neighbors.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_122">[122]</div>
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