<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2></div>
<p>It was all still below stairs, then a soft, stealthy
silken movement, cautiously coming up the stairs.
Julia Cloud went quickly to the hall door, and
switched on the light. On the landing stood Leslie,
lovely and flushed, with her hair slightly ruffled and
her velvet evening cloak thrown back, showing the rosy
mist of her dress. She stood with one silver slipper
poised on the stairs, a sweet, guilty look on her face.</p>
<p>“O Cloudy! I thought you were asleep, and I
didn’t want to waken you,” she said, penitently; “but
you haven’t gone to bed yet, have you? I’m glad. We
wanted you to know we were home.”</p>
<p>“Is anything the matter?” Julia Cloud asked with
a stricture of emotion in her throat.</p>
<p>“No; only we got tired, and we didn’t want to
stay to their old party, anyway, and we’d rather be
home.” Leslie sprang up the stairs, and caught her
aunt in her arms with one of her sweet, violent kisses.</p>
<p>“O my dear!” was all Julia Cloud could say.
And then they heard Allison closing the door softly
below, and creaking across the floor and up the stairs.</p>
<p>“Oh, you waked her up!” he said reproachfully
as he caught sight of his sister in Julia Cloud’s arms.</p>
<p>“No, you’re wrong. She hadn’t even gone to bed
yet. I knew she wouldn’t,” said Leslie, nestling closer.
“Say, Cloudy, we’re not going to trouble you that way
again. It isn’t worth it. We don’t like their old
dancing, anyway. I couldn’t forget the way you looked
so hurt––and the things you said. Won’t you please
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_217' name='page_217'></SPAN>217</span>
come down to the fire awhile? We want to tell you
about it.”</p>
<p>Down on the couch, with Allison stirring up the
dying embers and Leslie nestled close to her, Julia Cloud
heard bits about the evening.</p>
<p>“It wasn’t bad, Cloudy, ’deed it wasn’t. They
dance a lot nicer in colleges than they do other places.
I know, for I’ve been to lots of dances, and I never let
men get too familiar. Allison taught me that when
I was little. That’s why what you said made me so
mad. I’ve always been a lot carefuller than you’d
think, and I never dance with anybody the second time
if I don’t like the way he does it the first time. And
everybody was real nice and dignified to-night, Cloudy.
The boys are all shy and bashful, anyway; only I
couldn’t forget what you had said about not liking to
have me do it; and it made everything seem so––so––well,
not nice; and I just felt uncomfortable; and one
dance I sent the boy for a glass of water for me, and I
just sat it out; and, when Allison saw me, he came
over, and said, ‘Let’s beat it!’ and so I slipped up to
the dressing-room, and got my cloak, and we just ran
away without telling anybody. Wasn’t that perfectly
dreadful? But I’ll call the girl up after a while, and
tell her we had to come home and we didn’t want to
spoil their fun telling them so.”</p>
<p>They sat for an hour talking before the fire, the
young people telling her all about their experiences of
the last few days, and letting her into their lives again
with the old sweet relation. Then they drifted back
again to the subject of dancing.</p>
<p>“I don’t give a whoop whether I dance or not,
Cloudy,” said Allison. “I never did care much about
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_218' name='page_218'></SPAN>218</span>
it, and I don’t see having my sister dance with some
fellows, either. Only it does cut you out of lots of
fun, and you get in bad with everybody if you don’t
do it. I expected we’d have to have dances here at the
house, too, sometimes; but, if you don’t like it, we
won’t; and that’s all there is to it.”</p>
<p>“Well, dear, that’s beautiful of you. Of course I
couldn’t allow you to let me upset your life and spoil
all your pleasure; but I’m wondering if we couldn’t
try an experiment. It seems to me there ought to
be things that people would enjoy as much as dancing,
and why couldn’t we find enough of them to fill up the
evenings and make them forget about the dancing?”</p>
<p>“There’ll be some that won’t come, of course,” said
Leslie; “but we should worry! They won’t be the kind
we’ll like, anyway. Jane Bristol doesn’t dance. She
told me so yesterday. She said her mother never did,
and brought her up to feel that she didn’t want
to, either.”</p>
<p>“She’s some girl,” said Allison irrelevantly. “She
entered the sophomore class with credits she got for
studying in the summer school and some night-work.
Did you know that, kid? I was in the office when she
came in for her card, and I heard the profs talking
about her and saying she had some bean. Those
chumps in the village will find out some day that the
girl they despised is worth more than the whole lot
of them put together.”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud leaned forward, and touched lightly and
affectionately the hair that waved back from the boy’s
forehead, and spoke tenderly.</p>
<p>“Dear boy, I’ll not forget your leaving your friends
and coming back to me and to the Sabbath and church
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_219' name='page_219'></SPAN>219</span>
and all that. It means a lot to me to have my children
observe those things. I hope some day you’ll do it
because you feel you want to please God instead of me.”</p>
<p>“Sure!” said Allison, trying not to look embarrassed.
“I guess maybe I care about that, too, a
little bit. To tell the truth, Cloudy, I couldn’t see staying
away from that Christian Endeavor meeting after
I’ve worked hard all the week to get people to come to
it. It didn’t seem square.”</p>
<p>The moment was tense with deep feeling, and Julia
Cloud could not bring herself to break it by words.
She brought the boy’s hand up to her lips, and pressed
it close; and then just as she was about to speak the
telephone rang sharply again and again.</p>
<p>Allison sprang up, and went to answer.</p>
<p>“Hello. Yes. Oh! Miss Bristol! What? Are
you sure? I’ll be there at once. Lock yourself in your
room till I get there.”</p>
<p>He hung up the receiver excitedly.</p>
<p>“Call up the fire department quick, Leslie! Tell
them to hurry. There’s some one breaking into the
Johnson house, and Jane Bristol is there alone with the
children. It’s Park Avenue, you know. Hustle!”</p>
<p>He was out the door before they could exclaim,
and Leslie hastened to the telephone.</p>
<p>“He went without his overcoat,” said Julia Cloud,
hurrying to the closet for it. “It will be very cold
riding. He ought to have it.”</p>
<p>Leslie hung up the receiver, and flung her velvet
cloak about her hurriedly, grabbing the overcoat.</p>
<p>“Give it to me, Cloudy; I’m going with him!” she
cried, and dashed out the door as the car slid out
of the garage.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_220' name='page_220'></SPAN>220</span></div>
<p>“O Leslie! Child! You <i>oughtn’t</i> to go!” she
cried, rushing to the door; but Leslie was already climbing
into the car, moving as it was.</p>
<p>“It’s all right, Cloudy!” she called. “There’s
a revolver in the car, you know!” and the car whirled
away down the street.</p>
<p>Julia Cloud stood gasping after them; the horrible
thought of a revolver in the car did not cheer her as
Leslie had evidently hoped it would. What children
they were, after all, plunging her from one trouble
into another, yet what dear, tender-hearted, loving
children! She went in, and found a heavy cloak, and
went out again to listen. Then it came to her that
perhaps Leslie had not made the operator understand;
so she went back to the telephone to try to find out
whether any one had been sent. Suppose those children
should try to face a burglar alone! There might be
more than one for aught they knew. Oh, Leslie <i>should
not</i> have gone! A terrible anxiety took possession
of her, and she tried to pray as she worked the telephone
hook up and down and waited for the operator. Then
into the quiet of the night there came the loud clang
of the fire-bell, and a moment later hurried calls and
voices in the distance, sounding through the front door
that Julia Cloud had left open. For an instant she was
relieved, and then she reflected that this might be a fire
somewhere else, and not the call for the Johnson house
at all; so she kept on trying to call the operator. At
last a snappy voice snarled into her ear. “We don’t
tell where the fire is; we’re not allowed any more,” and
snap! The operator was gone again.</p>
<p>“But I don’t want to know where the fire is!”
called Julia Cloud in dismay. “I want to ask
a question.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_221' name='page_221'></SPAN>221</span></div>
<p>No answer came, and the dim buzz of the wire
sounded emptily back to her anxious ear. At last she
gave it up, and went out to the street to look up and
down. If she only knew which way was Park Avenue!
She could hear the engine now, clattering along with
the hook and ladder behind; and dark, hurrying forms
crossed the street just beyond the next corner, but no
one came by. She hurried out to the corner, and
called to a boy who was passing; and he yelled out:
“Don’t know, lady. Up Park Avenue somewhere.”
Then the street grew very quiet again, and all the noise
centred away in the distance. A shot rang out, and
voices shouted, and her heart beat so loud she could
hear it. She hurried back to the house again, and tried
to get the telephone operator; but nothing came of it,
and for the next twenty minutes she vibrated between
the street and the telephone, and wondered whether she
ought not to wake up Cherry and do something else.</p>
<p>It seemed perfectly terrible to think of those two
children handling a burglar alone––and yet what could
she do?</p>
<p>Pretty soon, however, she heard the fire-engine
returning, with the crowd, and she hurried down to
the corner to find out.</p>
<p>“It wasn’t no fire at all, lady,” answered a boy
whom she questioned. “It was just two men breakin’
into a house, but they ketched ’em both an’ are takin’
’em down to the lockup. No, lady, there wasn’t nobody
killed. There was some shootin’, sure! A girl done it!
Some college girl in a car. She see the guy comin’ to
make a get-away in her car, see? And she let go at
him, and picked him off the first call, got him through
the knee; an’ by that time the fire comp’ny got there,
and cinched ’em both. She’s some girl, she is!”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_222' name='page_222'></SPAN>222</span></div>
<p>Julia Cloud felt her head whirling, and hurried back
to the house to sit down. She was trembling from
head to foot. Was it Leslie who had shot the burglar?
Leslie, her little pink-and-silver butterfly, who seemed
so much like a baby yet in many ways? Oh, what a
horrible danger she had escaped! If she had escaped.
Perhaps the boy did not know. Oh, if they would but
come! It seemed hours since they had left. The midnight
train was just pulling into the station! How
exasperating that the telephone did not respond!
Something must be out of order with it. Hark! Was
that the car? It surely was!</p>
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<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XIX' id='CHAPTER_XIX'></SPAN>
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