<h3>JERRY'S WISH COMES TRUE</h3>
<p>Jerry would, of course, never know how very hard Mr. John had had to
work to make her "wish" come true. Ever afterwards she preferred to
think that it was just standing on the Wishing-rock and wishing and
wishing!</p>
<p>She had noticed, however, and had been a little curious, that every time
Mr. John had come to Sunnyside he and her mother had talked and talked
together in low tones so that, even when she was near them, she could
not hear one word of what they were saying, and that, after these talks,
her mother had been very pale and had, again and again, for no
particular reason, hugged her very close and kissed her with what Jerry
called a "sad" kiss.</p>
<p>Then one afternoon Mrs. Allan had come with John Westley, and her
mother, to her disgust, had sent her down to the Notch with a message
for old Mrs. Teed that had not seemed a <i>bit</i> important. After her
return John Westley had invited her to take him and Bigboy and Pepperpot
to the Witches' Glade because, he said, he "had something to tell her!"</p>
<p>It was a glorious afternoon. August was painting with her vivid coloring
the mountain slopes and valleys; over everything was a soft glow. It was
reflected on Jerry's eager face.</p>
<p>John Westley pointed down into the valley where Jerry's "shining" road
ran off out of sight. They could see an automobile, like a speck, moving
swiftly along it.</p>
<p>"Your road, down there, goes off the other side of the mountain and on
and on and after a very long way—takes me back home. I'm going on
Thursday."</p>
<p>Jerry turned a disappointed face. Each day of John Westley's two weeks
near Miller's Notch had brought immeasurable pleasure and excitement
into her life.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Allan is going to drive back with me—she lived in my town, you
know. She hasn't been home for months and I shall enjoy her company."</p>
<p>Jerry was staring at the distant road. After awhile the specks that were
automobiles and that she liked to watch would become fewer and fewer;
the days would grow colder, school would begin, the snow would come and
choke the trails and she and Sweetheart and Little-Dad would be shut in
at Sunnyside for weeks and weeks. Her face clouded.</p>
<p>"And now listen very carefully, Jerry, and hold on to my arm so that you
won't fall off from the mountain! <i>You</i> are going with us!"</p>
<p>Jerry <i>did</i> hold on to his arm with a grip that hurt. She stared, with
round, wondering eyes.</p>
<p>He laughed at her unbelief. "Your wish is coming true! You're going to
ride along that road yonder, in my automobile, which ought to get here
to-morrow, straight around to the other side of the mountain, and on and
on—then you're going to stay all winter with my own nieces and go to
school with them——"</p>
<p>Jerry's breath came in an excited gasp.</p>
<p>"Oh, it <i>can't</i>—be—true! Mother'd <i>never</i> let me."</p>
<p>"It <i>is</i> true! Mothers are always willing to do the things that are
going to be best for their girls. Mrs. Allan and I have persuaded
her——"</p>
<p>But Jerry, with a "whoop," was racing down the trail, Bigboy and
Pepperpot at her heels. She vaulted the little gate leading into the
garden and swept like a small whirlwind upon her mother, sitting in the
willow rocker on the porch. With a violent hug she tried to express the
madness of her joy and so completely was her face hidden on her mother's
shoulder that she did not see the quick tears that blinded her mother's
eyes.</p>
<p>That was on Monday—there were only three days to get her small wardrobe
ready and packed and to ask the thousand questions concerning the
Westley girls (Graham was utterly forgotten) and the school. Then there
were wonderful, long talks with mother, sitting close by her side, one
hand tight in hers—solemn talks that were to linger in Jerry's heart
all her life.</p>
<p>"I don't ever want to do anything, Mumsey Sweetheart, that'd make you
the least little, <i>little</i> bit unhappy!" Jerry had said after one of
these talks, suddenly pressing her mother's hand close to her cheek.</p>
<p>On Wednesday afternoon she declared to Mr. John, when he drove over from
Cobble, that she was "ready." She said it a little breathlessly—no
Crusader of old, starting forth upon his holy way, felt any more
exaltation of spirit than did Jerry!</p>
<p>"I've packed and I've mended my coat and I've finished mother's comfy
jacket that I began winter before last and I've said good-by to Rose and
poor old Jimmy Chubb, who's awfully envious, 'cause he wanted to go to
Troy to work in his uncle's store and he says it makes him mad to have a
girl see the world 'fore he does, but I told him he ought to keep on at
school, even if it was only Miller's Notch. And I've cleaned
Little-Dad's pipes. And I've promised Bigboy and Pepperpot and Dormouse
that they may all sleep on my bed to-night. I'm afraid Pepperpot—he's
so sensitive—is going to miss me dreadfully!" Jerry tried to frown away
the thought; she did not want it to intrude upon her joy.</p>
<p>That last evening she sat quietly on the porch with one hand in her
mother's and the other in Little-Dad's. Not one of them seemed to want
to talk; Jerry was too excited and her mother knew that she could not
keep a tremble from her voice. At nine o'clock Jerry declared that she'd
just <i>have</i> to go to bed so that the morning would come quicker. She
kissed them both, kissed her mother again and again, then marched off
with her pets at her heels.</p>
<p>Far into the night her mother sat alone on the edge of the porch,
staring at the stars through a mist of tears and praying—first that the
Heavenly Father would protect her little Jerry always and always, and
then that He would give her strength to let the child go on the morrow.</p>
<p>When the parting came everyone tried to be very busy and very merry, to
cover the heartache that was under it all; John Westley fussed with the
covers and the cushions in the big car and had his chauffeur pack and
repack the bags. Mrs. Allan and Mrs. Travis discussed the lunch that had
been stowed away in the tonneau, as though the whole thing was only a
day's picnic. Jerry, a funny little figure in her coat that was too
small and a fall hat that Mrs. Chubb had made over from one of her
mother's, was, with careful impartiality, bestowing final caresses upon
Bigboy, Pepperpot, Silverheels, and her father and mother alike. Then,
at the last moment, she almost strangled her mother with a sweep of her
strong young arms.</p>
<p>"Mumsey Sweetheart, if you want me <i>dreadfully</i>—you'll send for me,"
she whispered, stricken for a moment by the realization that the parting
was for a very long time.</p>
<p>Then, though her heart was almost breaking within her, Mrs. Travis
managed to laugh lightly.</p>
<p>"Need you—of course we won't need you! Climb in, darling," and she
almost lifted the girl into the tonneau, where Mrs. Allan was already
comfortably fixed.</p>
<p>But at this moment Bigboy tried to leap into the car. When Dr. Travis
gripped his collar he let out a long, protesting howl.</p>
<p>"Oh, Bigboy—he <i>knows</i>! Let me say good-by again," cried Jerry, jumping
out and, to everyone's amusement, embracing the dog.</p>
<p>"You must be a good dog and take very good care of my Sweetheart and
Little-Dad," she whispered. Then, standing, she looked around.</p>
<p>"Where's Pepperpot?" she asked anxiously. The little dog had
disappeared.</p>
<p>"He'll think that I love Bigboy more than I do him," she explained, as
she climbed back in.</p>
<p>The car started down the rough road. Jerry turned to wave; as long as
she could see her mother and father she kept her little white
handkerchief fluttering. Then she faced resolutely forward.</p>
<p>"You know," she explained to John Westley, with shining eyes, "when
you've been wishing and wishing for something, you must enjoy it as hard
as you can."</p>
<p>Even the familiar buildings of the Notch seemed different now to Jerry,
as she flew past them, and she kept finding new things all along the
way. Then, as they turned from the rough country road into her "shining"
road, which was, of course, the macadam highway, she looked back and up
toward Kettle to see if she could catch a glimpse of Sunnyside or the
Witches' Glade and the Wishing-rock. They were lost in a blaze of green
and purple and brown.</p>
<p>"Isn't it <i>funny</i>? If I was up there watching I'd see you moving like a
speck! And in a moment you'd disappear around the corner. And now <i>I'm</i>
the speck and—I don't know when we reach the corner. But I'm—<i>going</i>,
anyway!"</p>
<p>Then upon her happy meditations came a sudden, startling interruption in
the shape of a small dog that leaped out from the dense undergrowth at
the side of the road and hailed the automobile with a sharp bark.</p>
<p>"<i>Pepperpot!</i>" cried Jerry, springing to her feet.</p>
<p>The chauffeur had brought the car to a sudden stop to avoid hitting the
dog. At the sound of Jerry's voice the little animal made a joyous leap
into the car.</p>
<p>"He came on <i>ahead</i>—through the Divide! <i>Oh</i>—the darling," and Jerry
hugged her pet proudly.</p>
<p>John Westley looked at Penelope Allan and she looked at him and the
chauffeur looked at them both—all with the same question. In Jerry's
mind, however, there was no doubt.</p>
<p>"He'll <i>have</i> to go with us, Mr. John, because I know he'd just die of a
broken heart if I—took him back!"</p>
<p>Then, startled by John Westley's hesitation, she added convincingly,
"He's awfully good and never bothers anyone and keeps as still as can be
when I tell him to and I'll—I'll——"</p>
<p>No one could have resisted the appeal in her voice.</p>
<p>"Very well, Jerry—Pepperpot shall go, too."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI</h2>
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