<h3 id="id01958" style="margin-top: 3em">CHAPTER XI</h3>
<p id="id01959" style="margin-top: 2em"><i>The Advent of Nancy and Peter</i></p>
<p id="id01960" style="margin-top: 2em">When Leslie began the actual work of closing her home, and loading what
would be wanted for the country, she found the task too big for the
time allotted, so wisely telephoned Douglas that she would be compelled
to postpone seeing him until the following day.</p>
<p id="id01961">"Leslie," laughed Douglas over the telephone, "did you ever hear of the
man who cut off his dog's tail an inch at a time, so it wouldn't hurt
so badly?"</p>
<p id="id01962">"I have heard of that particular dog."</p>
<p id="id01963">"Well this process of cutting me out of seeing you a day at a time
reminds me of 'that particular dog,' and evokes my sympathy for the
canine as never before."</p>
<p id="id01964">"It's a surprise I am getting ready for you Douglas!"</p>
<p id="id01965">"It <i>is</i> a surprise all right," answered Douglas, "and 'Bearer of<br/>
Morning,' I have got a surprise for you too."<br/></p>
<p id="id01966">"Oh goody!" cried Leslie. "I adore surprises."</p>
<p id="id01967">"You'll adore this one!"</p>
<p id="id01968">"You might give me a hint!" she suggested.</p>
<p id="id01969">"Very well!" he laughed. "Since last I saw you I have seen the
loveliest girl of my experience."</p>
<p id="id01970">"Delightful! Am I to see her also?"</p>
<p id="id01971">"Undoubtedly!" explained Douglas. "And you'll succumb to her charms
just as I did."</p>
<p id="id01972">"When may I meet her?" asked Leslie eagerly.</p>
<p id="id01973">"I can't say; but soon now."</p>
<p id="id01974">"All right!" agreed the girl. "Be ready at four tomorrow."</p>
<p id="id01975">Leslie sat in frowning thought a moment, before the telephone; then her
ever-ready laugh bubbled. "Why didn't I think of it while I was
talking?" she wondered. "Of course Mickey has taken him to visit his
Lily. I must see about that wrong back before bone and muscle harden."</p>
<p id="id01976">Then she began her task. By evening she had a gasoline stove set up,
the kitchen provisioned, her father's room ready and arrangements
sufficiently completed that she sent the car to bring him to his dinner
of cornbread and bacon under an apple tree scattering pink petals
beside the kitchen door, with every lake breeze. Then they went fishing
and landed three black bass.</p>
<p id="id01977">Douglas Bruce did not mind one day so much, but he resented two. When
he greeted Mickey that morning it was not with the usual salutation of
his friends, so the boy knew there was something not exactly right. He
was not feeling precisely jovial himself. He was under suspended
judgment. He knew that when Mr. Bruce had time to think, and talk over
the situation with Miss Winton, both of them might very probably agree
with the woman who said the law would take Lily from him and send her
to a charity home for children.</p>
<p id="id01978">Mickey, with his careful drilling on the subject, was in rebellion.
<i>How</i> could the law take Lily from him? Did the law know anything
<i>about</i> her? Was she in the <i>care</i> of the law when he found her?
Wouldn't the law have allowed her to <i>die</i> grovelling in filth and
rags, inside a few more hours? He had not infringed on the law in any
way; he had merely saved a life the law had forgotten to save. Now when
he had it in his possession and in far better condition than he found
it, how had the law <i>power</i> to step in and rob him?</p>
<p id="id01979">Mickey did not understand, while there was nothing in his heart that
could teach him. He had found her: he would keep her. The Orphans' Home
should not have her. The law should not have her. Only one possibility
had any weight with Mickey: if some one like Mr. Bruce or Miss Winton
wanted to give her a home of luxury, could provide care at once, for
which he would be forced to wait years to earn the money; if they
wanted her and the Carrel man of many miracles would come for them; did
he dare leave her lying an hour, when there was even hope she might be
on her feet? There was only one answer to that with Mickey, but it
pained his heart. So his greeting lacked its customary spontaneity.</p>
<p id="id01980">By noon Bruce was irritable, while Mickey was as nearly sullen as it
was in his nature to be. At two o'clock Bruce surrendered, summoned the
car, and started to the golf grounds. He had played three holes when he
overtook a man who said a word that arrested his attention, so both of
them stopped, and with notebooks and pencils, under the shade of a big
tree began discussing the question that meant more to Douglas than
anything save Leslie. He dismissed Mickey for the afternoon, promising
him that if he would be ready by six, he should be driven back to the
city.</p>
<p id="id01981">Mickey wanted to be alone to concentrate on his problem, but people
were everywhere and more coming by the carload. He could see no place
that was then, or would be, undisturbed. The long road with grassy
sides gave big promises of leading somewhere to the quiet retreat he
sought. Telling the driver that if he were not back by six, he would be
waiting down the road, Mickey started on foot, in thought so deep he
scarcely appreciated the grasses he trod, the perfume in his nostrils,
the concert in his ears. What did at last arouse him was the fact that
he was very thirsty. That made him realize that this was the warmest
day of the season. Instantly his mind flew to the mite of a girl, lying
so patiently, watching the clock for his coming, living for the sound
of his feet.</p>
<p id="id01982">Mickey stopped, studying the landscape. A cool gentle breeze crossed
the clover field beside the way, refreshing him in its passing. He
sucked his lungs full, then lifted his cap, shaking the hair from his
forehead. He stuffed the cap into his pocket, walking slowly along,
intending to stop at the nearest farmhouse to ask for water. But the
first home was not to Mickey's liking. He went on, passing another and
another.</p>
<p id="id01983">Then he came to land that attracted him. The fences were so straight.
The corners so clean where they were empty, so delightful where they
were filled with alder, wild plum, hawthorn; attractive locations for
the birds of the bushes that were field and orchard feeders. Then the
barn and outbuildings looked so neat and prosperous; grazing cattle in
rank meadows were so sleek; then a big white house began to peep from
the screen of vines, bushes and trees.</p>
<p id="id01984">"Well if the water here gives you fever, it will anywhere," said
Mickey, and turning in at the open gate started up a walk having flower
beds on each side. There was a wide grassy lawn where the big trees
scattered around afforded almost complete shade. Mickey never had seen
a home like it closely. He scarcely could realize that there were
places in the world where families lived alone like this. He tried to
think how he would feel if he belonged there. When he reached the place
where he saw Lily on a comfort under a big bloom-laden pear tree, his
throat grew hard, his eyes dry and his feet heavy. Then the screen to
the front door swung back as a smiling woman in a tidy gingham dress
came through and stood awaiting Mickey.</p>
<p id="id01985">"I just told Peter when he came back alone, I bet a penny you'd got off
at the wrong stop!" she cried. "I'm so glad you found your way by
yourself. But you must be tired and hot walking. Come right in and have
a glass of milk, then strip your feet and I'll ring for Junior."</p>
<p id="id01986">For one second Mickey was dazed. The next, he knew what it must mean.
These people were the kind whom God had made so big and generous they
divided home and summer with tenement children from the big city thirty
miles away. Some boy was coming for a week, maybe, into what exactly
filled Mickey's idea of Heaven, but he was not the boy.</p>
<p id="id01987">"'Most breaks my heart to tell you," he said, "but I ain't the boy
you're expecting. I'm just taking a walk and I thought maybe you'd let
me have a drink. I've wanted one past the last three houses, but none
looked as if they'd have half such good, cool water as this."</p>
<p id="id01988">"Now don't that beat the nation!" exclaimed the woman. "The Multiopolis
papers are just oozing sympathy for the poor city children who are wild
for woods and water; and when I'd got myself nerved up to try one and
thought it over till I was really anxious about it, and got my children
all worked up too, here for the second time Peter knocks off plowing
and goes to the trolley to meet one, and he doesn't come. I've got a
notion to write the editor of the <i>Herald</i> and tell him my experience.
I think it's funny! But you wanted water, come this way."</p>
<p id="id01989">Mickey followed a footpath white with pear petals around the big house
and standing beside a pump waited while the woman stepped to the back
porch for a cup. He took it, drinking slowly.</p>
<p id="id01990">"Thank you ma'am," he said as he handed it back, turning to the path.</p>
<p id="id01991">Yesterday had weakened his nerve. He was going to cry again. He took a
quick step forward, but the woman was beside him, her hand on his
shoulder.</p>
<p id="id01992">"Wait a minute," she said. "Sit on this bench under the pear tree. I
want to ask you something. Excuse me and rest until I come back."</p>
<p id="id01993">Mickey leaned against the tree, shutting his eyes, fighting with all
his might. He was too big to cry. The woman would think him a coward as
Mr. Bruce had. Then things happened as they actually do at times. The
woman hurriedly came from the door, sat on the bench beside him, and
said: "I went in there to watch you through the window, but I can't
stand this a second longer. You poor child you, now tell me right
straight what's the matter!"</p>
<p id="id01994">Mickey tried but no sound came. The woman patted his shoulder. "Now
doesn't it beat the band?" she said, to the backyard in general. "Just
a little fellow not in long trousers yet, and bearing such a burden he
can't talk. I guess maybe God has a hand in this. I'm not so sure my
boy hasn't come after all. Who are you, and where are you going? Don't
you want to send your ma word you will stay here a week with me?"</p>
<p id="id01995">Mickey lifted a bewildered face.</p>
<p id="id01996">"Why, I couldn't, lady," he said brokenly, but gaining control as he
went on. "I must work. Mr. Bruce needs me. I'm a regular plute compared
with most of the 'newsies'; you wouldn't want to do anything for me who
has so much; but if you're honestly thinking about taking a boy and he
hasn't come, how would you like to have a little girl in his place? A
little girl about <i>so</i> long, and <i>so</i> wide, with a face like Easter
church flowers, and rings of gold on her head, and who wouldn't be half
the trouble a boy would, because she hasn't ever walked, so she
couldn't get into things."</p>
<p id="id01997">"Oh my goodness! A crippled little girl?"</p>
<p id="id01998">"She isn't crippled," said Mickey. "She's as straight as you are, what
there is of her. She had so little food, and care, her back didn't seem
to stiffen, so her legs won't walk. She wouldn't be half so much
trouble as a boy. Honest, dearest lady, she wouldn't!"</p>
<p id="id01999">"Who are you?" asked the woman.</p>
<p id="id02000">Mickey produced a satisfactory pedigree, and gave unquestionable
references which she recognized, for she slowly nodded at the names of
Chaffner and Bruce.</p>
<p id="id02001">"And who is the little girl you are asking me to take?"</p>
<p id="id02002">Mickey studied the woman and then began to talk, cautiously at first.
Ashamed to admit the squalor and the awful truth of how he had found
the thing he loved, then gathering courage he began what ended in an
outpouring. The woman watched him, listening, and when Mickey had no
further word: "She is only a tiny girl?" she asked wonderingly.</p>
<p id="id02003">"The littlest girl you ever saw," said Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02004">"Perfectly helpless?" marvelled the woman.</p>
<p id="id02005">"Oh no! She can sit up and use her hands," said Mickey. "She can feed
herself, write on her slate, and learn her lessons. It's only that she
stays put. She has to be lifted if she's moved."</p>
<p id="id02006">"You lift her?" queried the woman.</p>
<p id="id02007">"Could with one hand," said Mickey tersely.</p>
<p id="id02008">"You say this young lawyer you work for, whose name I see in the
<i>Herald</i> connected with the investigation going on, is at the club
house now?" she asked.</p>
<p id="id02009">"Yes," answered Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02010">"He's coming past here this evening?" she pursued.</p>
<p id="id02011">Mickey explained.</p>
<p id="id02012">"About how much waiting on would your little girl take?" she asked next.</p>
<p id="id02013">"Well just at present, she does the waiting on me," said Mickey. "You
see, dearest lady, I have to get her washed and fix her breakfast and
her lunch beside the bed, and be downtown by seven o'clock, and I don't
get back 'til six. Then I wash her again to freshen her up and cook her
supper. Then she says her lesson, her prayers and goes to sleep. So you
see it's mostly <i>her</i> waiting on <i>me</i>. A boy couldn't be less trouble
than that, could he?"</p>
<p id="id02014">"It doesn't seem like it," said the woman, "and no matter how much
bother she was, I guess I could stand it for a week, if she's such a
little girl, and can't walk. The difficulty is this: I promised my son
Junior a boy and his heart is so set. He's wild about the city. He's
going to be gone before we know it. He doesn't seem to care for
anything we have, or do. I don't know just what he hoped to get out of
a city boy; but I promised him one. Then I felt scared and wrote Mr.
Chaffner how it was and asked him to send me a real nice boy who could
be trusted. If it were not for Junior—Mary and the Little Man would be
delighted."</p>
<p id="id02015">"Well never mind," said Mickey. "I'll go see the Nurse Lady and maybe
she can think of a plan. Anyway I don't know as it would be best for
Lily. If she came here a week, seems like it would kill me to take her
back, and I don't know how she'd bear staying alone all day, after she
had got used to company. And pretty soon now it's going to get so hot,
top floors in the city, that if she had a week like this, going back
would make her sick."</p>
<p id="id02016">"You must give me time to think," said the woman. "Peter will soon be
home to supper. I'll talk it over with him and with Junior and see what
they think. Where could you be found in Multiopolis? We drive in every
few days. We like to go ourselves, and there's no other way to satisfy
the children. They get so tired and lonesome in the country."</p>
<p id="id02017">Mickey was aghast. "They <i>do?</i> Why it doesn't seem possible! I wish I
could trade jobs with Junior for a while. What is his work?"</p>
<p id="id02018">"He drives the creamery wagon," answered the woman.</p>
<p id="id02019">"O Lord!" Mickey burst forth. "Excuse me ma'am, I mean——Oh my! Drives
a real live horse along these streets and gathers up the cream cans we
pass at the gates, and takes them to the trolley?"</p>
<p id="id02020">"Yes," she said.</p>
<p id="id02021">"And he'd give up <i>that</i> job for blacking somebody's shoes, or carrying
papers, or running errands, or being shut up all summer in a big hot
building! Oh my!"</p>
<p id="id02022">"When will you be our way again?" asked the woman. "I'll talk this over
with Peter. If we decided to try the little girl and she did the
'waiting' as you say, she couldn't be much trouble. I should think we
could manage her, and a boy too. I wish you could be the boy. I'd like
to have <i>you</i>. I've been thinking if we could get a boy to show Junior
what it is he wants to know about a city, he'd be better satisfied at
home, but I don't know. It's just possible it might make him worse. Now
such an understanding boy as you seem to be, maybe you could teach
Junior things about the city that would make him contented at <i>home</i>.
Do you think you could?"</p>
<p id="id02023">"Dearest lady, I <i>get</i> you," said Mickey. "<i>Do I think I could?</i> Well
if you really wished me to, I could take your Junior to Multiopolis
with me for a week and make him so sick he'd never want to see a city
again while his palpitator was running."</p>
<p id="id02024">"Hu'umh!" said the lady slowly, her eyes on far distance. "Let me
think! I don't know but that would be a fine thing for all of us. We
have land enough for a nice farm for both boys, and the way things look
now, land seems about as sure as anything; we could give them a farm
apiece when we are done with it, and the girl the money to take to her
home when she marries—I would love to know that Junior was going to
live on land as his father does; but all his life he's talked about
working in the city when he grows up. Hu'umh!"</p>
<p id="id02025">"Well if you want him cured of that, gimme the job," he grinned. "You
see lady, I know the city, inside out and outside in again. I been
playing the game with it since I can remember. You can't tell me
anything I don't know about the lowest, poorest side of it. Oh I could
tell you things that would make your head swim. If you want your boy
dosed just sick as a horse on what a workingman gets in Multiopolis
'tween Sunrise Alley and Biddle Boulevard, just you turn him over to me
a week. I'll fix him. I'll make the creamery job look like 'Lijah
charioteering for the angels to him, honest I will lady; and he won't
ever <i>know</i> it, either. He'll come through with a lump in his neck, and
a twist in his stummick that means home and mother. See?"</p>
<p id="id02026">The woman looked at Mickey in wide-eyed and open-mouthed amazement:<br/>
"Well if I ever!" she gasped.<br/></p>
<p id="id02027">"If you don't believe me, try it," said Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02028">"Well! Well! I'll have to think," she said. "I don't know but it would
be a good thing if it could be done."</p>
<p id="id02029">"Well don't you have any misgivings about it being done," said Mickey.
"It's being <i>done</i> every day. I know men, hundreds of them, just
scraping, and slaving and half starving to get together the dough to
pull out. I hear it on the cars, on the streets, and see it in the
papers. They're jumping their jobs and going every day, while hundreds
of Schmeltzenschimmers, O'Laughertys, Hansons, and Pietros are coming
in to take their places. Multiopolis is more than half filled with
crowd-outs from across the ocean now, instead of home folks' cradles,
as it should be. If Junior has got a hankering for Multiopolis that is
going to cut him out of owning a place like this, and bossing his own
job, dearest lady, cook him! Cook him quick!"</p>
<p id="id02030">"Would you come here?" she questioned.</p>
<p id="id02031">"Would I?" cried Mickey. "Well try me and see!"</p>
<p id="id02032">"I'm deeply interested in what you say about Junior," she said. "I'll
talk it over to-night with Peter."</p>
<p id="id02033">"Well I don't know," said Mickey. "He might put the grand kibosh on it.
Hard! But if Junior came back asking polite for his mush and milk, and
offering his Christmas pennies for the privilege of plowing, or driving
the cream wagon, believe me dear lady, then Peter would fall on your
neck and weep for joy."</p>
<p id="id02034">"Yes, in that event, he would," said the lady, "and the temptation is
so great, that I believe if you'll give me your address, I'll look you
up the next time I come to Multiopolis, which will be soon. I'd like to
see your Lily before I make any promises. If I thought I could manage,
I could bring her right out in the car. Tell me where to find you, and
I'll see what Peter thinks."</p>
<p id="id02035">Mickey grinned widely. "You ain't no suffragette lady, are you?" he
commented.</p>
<p id="id02036">"Well I don't know about that," said the lady. "There are a good many
things to think of these days."</p>
<p id="id02037">"Yes I know," said Mickey, "but as long as everything you say swings
the circle and rounds up with Peter, it's no job to guess what's most
important in your think-tank. Peter must be some pumpkins!"</p>
<p id="id02038">"Come to think of it, he is, Mickey," she said. "Come to think of it, I
do sort of revolve around Peter. We always plan together. Not that we
always <i>think</i> alike: there are some things I just <i>can't</i> make Peter
see, that I wish I <i>could;</i> but I wouldn't trade Peter——"</p>
<p id="id02039">"No I guess he's top crust," laughed Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02040">"He is so!" said the woman. "How did you say I could reach you?"</p>
<p id="id02041">"Well, the easiest way would be this. Here, I'll write the number for
you."</p>
<p id="id02042">"Fine!" said the woman. "I'll hurry through my shopping and call
you—when would it suit you best?"</p>
<p id="id02043">"Never mind me," said Mickey. "For this, I'll come when you say."</p>
<p id="id02044">"What about three in the afternoon, then?"</p>
<p id="id02045">"Sure!" cried Mickey. "Suits me splendid! Mostly quit for the day then.
But ma'am, I don't know about this. Lily isn't used to anybody but me,
she may be afraid to come with you."</p>
<p id="id02046">"And I may think I would scarcely want to try to take care of her for a
week, when I see her," said the woman.</p>
<p id="id02047">"You may think that now, but you'll change your mind when you see her,"
said Mickey. "Dearest lady, when you see a little white girl that
hasn't ever walked, smiling up at you shy and timid, you won't be any
more anxious for Orphings' Homes and Charity Palaces to swallow her up
than I am; not a bit! All I must think of is what Lily will say about
coming. She's never been out of my room since I found her, and she
hasn't seen any one but Mr. Bruce, so she'll be afraid, and worried.
<i>Seeing her</i> is all I ask of <i>you!</i> What I'm up against is what she's
going to say; and how I'm going to take her <i>back</i> after a week here,
when it will be hotter there and lonesomer than ever."</p>
<p id="id02048">"You surely give one things to think about," commented the woman.</p>
<p id="id02049">"Do I?" queried Mickey. "Well I don't know as I should. Probably with
Peter, and three children of your own, and this farm to run, you are
busy enough without spending any of your time on me."</p>
<p id="id02050">"The command in the good book is plain: 'Bear ye one another's
burdens,'" quoted the woman.</p>
<p id="id02051">"Oh yes! 'Burdens,' of course!" agreed Mickey. "But that couldn't mean
Lily, 'cause she's nothing but joy! Just pure joy! All about her is
that a fellow loves her so, that it keeps him laying awake at nights
thinking how to do what would be <i>best</i> for her. She's mine, and I'm
going to <i>keep</i> her; that's the surest thing you know. If I take you to
see Lily, and if I decide to let you have her a few days to rest her
and fresh her up, you wouldn't go and want to put her 'mong the
Orphings' Home kids, would you? You wouldn't think she ought to be took
from me and raised in a flock of every kind, from every place. Would
you lady?"</p>
<p id="id02052">"No, I wouldn't," said the lady. "I see how you feel, and I am sure I
wouldn't want that for one of mine."</p>
<p id="id02053">"Well, there's no question about her being <i>mine!</i>" said Mickey. "But I
like you so, maybe I'll let you <i>help</i> me a <i>little</i>. A big boy that
can run and play doesn't need you, dearest lady, half so much as my
little girl. Do you think he does?"</p>
<p id="id02054">"No, I think the Lord sent you straight here. If you don't stop I'll be
so worked up I can't rest. I may come to-morrow."</p>
<p id="id02055">Mickey arose, holding out his hand.</p>
<p id="id02056">"Thank you dearest lady," he said. "I must be getting out where the car
won't pass without my seeing it."</p>
<p id="id02057">"You wait at the gate a minute," she said, "I want to send in a little
basket of things to-night. I'll have it ready in a jiffy."</p>
<p id="id02058">Mickey slowly walked to the gate. When the woman came with a basket
covered with a white cloth, he thanked her again; as he took it he
rested his head against her arm, smiling up at her with his wide true
eyes.</p>
<p id="id02059">"A thing I can't understand is," he said, "why when the Lord was making
mothers, he didn't cut all of them from the same piece he did you. I'll
just walk on down the road and smell June beside this clover field. Is
it yours?"</p>
<p id="id02060">"Yes," she said.</p>
<p id="id02061">"Would you care if I'd take just a few to Lily? I know she never saw
any."</p>
<p id="id02062">"Take a bunch as big as your head if you want them."</p>
<p id="id02063">"Lily is so little, three will do her just as well; besides, she's got
to remember how we are fixed, so she needn't begin to expect things to
come her way by baskets and bunches," said Mickey. "She's bound to be
spoiled bad enough as it is. I can't see how I'm going to come out with
her, but she's mine, and I'm going to keep her."</p>
<p id="id02064">"Mickey," laughed the woman, "don't you think you swing around to Lily
just about the way I do to Peter?"</p>
<p id="id02065">"Well maybe I do," conceded Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02066">"What kind of a car did you say Mr. Bruce has?"</p>
<p id="id02067">"Oh the car is dark green, and the driver has sandy hair; and Mr.<br/>
Bruce—why you'd know him anywhere! Just look for the finest man you<br/>
ever saw, if you are out when he goes by, and that will be Mr. Douglas<br/>
Bruce."<br/></p>
<p id="id02068">"I guess I'll know him if I happen to be out."</p>
<p id="id02069">"Sure lady, you couldn't miss him," replied Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02070">Carefully holding his basket he went down the road. The woman made
supper an hour late standing beside the gate watching for a green car.
Many whirled past, then at last one with the right look came gliding
along; so she stepped out and raised her hand for a parley. The car
stopped.</p>
<p id="id02071">"Mr. Douglas Bruce?" she asked.</p>
<p id="id02072">"At your service, Madam!" he answered.</p>
<p id="id02073">"Just a word with you," she said.</p>
<p id="id02074">He arose instantly, swung open the car door, and stepping down walked
with her to the shade of a big widely branching maple. The woman looked
at him, and said flushing and half confused: "Please to excuse me for
halting you, but I had a reason. This afternoon such an attractive
little fellow stopped here to ask for a drink in passing. Now Peter and
I had decided we'd try our hand at taking a city boy for a week or so
for his vacation, and twice Peter has left his work and gone to the
trolley station to fetch him, and he failed us. I supposed Peter had
missed him, so when I saw the boy coming, just the first glimpse my
heart went right out to him——"</p>
<p id="id02075">"Very likely——" assented Mr. Bruce.</p>
<p id="id02076">"He surely is the most winning little chap I ever saw with his keen
blue eyes and that sort of light on his forehead," said the woman.</p>
<p id="id02077">"I've noticed that," put in the man.</p>
<p id="id02078">"Yes," she said, "anybody would see that almost the first thing. So I
thought he was the boy I was to mother coming, and I went right at the
job. He told me quick enough that I was mistaken, but I could see he
was in trouble. Someway I'd trust him with my character or my money,
but I got to be perfectly sure before I trust him with my children. You
see I have three, and if ever any of them go wrong, I don't want it to
be because I was <i>careless</i>. I thought I'd like to have him around
some; my oldest boy is bigger, but just about his age. He said he might
be out this way with you this summer and I wanted to ask him in, and do
what I could to entertain him; but first I wanted to inquire of you——"</p>
<p id="id02079">"I see!" said Douglas Bruce. "I haven't known Mickey so long, but owing
to the circumstances in which I met him, and the association with him
since, I feel that I know him better than I could most boys in a longer
time. The strongest thing I can say to you is this: had I a boy of my
own, I should be proud if Mickey liked him and would consider being
friends with him. He is absolutely trustworthy, that I know."</p>
<p id="id02080">"Then I won't detain your further," she said.</p>
<p id="id02081">Mickey, cheered in mind and heart, had walked ahead briskly with his
basket, while as he went he formulated his plans. He would go straight
to the Sunshine Nurse, tell her about the heat and this possible chance
to take Lily to the country for a week, and consult with her as to what
the effect of the trip might be, and what he could do with her
afterward, then he would understand better. He kept watching the clover
field beside the way. When he decided he had reached the finest, best
perfumed place, he saw a man plowing on the other side of the fence and
thought it might be Peter and that Peter would wonder what he was doing
in his field, so Mickey set the basket in a corner and advanced.</p>
<p id="id02082">He was wonderfully elated by what had happened to him and the
conclusions at which he had arrived, as he came across the deep grasses
beside the fence where the pink of wild rose and the snow of alder
commingled, where song sparrows trilled, and larks and quail were
calling. He approached smiling in utter confidence. As he looked at the
man, at his height, his strong open face, his grip on the plow, he
realized why the world of the little woman revolved around Peter.
Mickey could have conceived of few happier fates than being attached to
Peter, so he thought in amazement of the boy who wanted to leave him.
Then a slow grin spread over his face, for by this time Peter had
stopped his horses and was awaiting him with an answering smile and
hand outstretched.</p>
<p id="id02083">"Why son, I'm glad to see you!" he cried. "How did I come to miss you?<br/>
Did you get off at the wrong stop?"<br/></p>
<p id="id02084">Mickey shook his head as he took the proffered hand.</p>
<p id="id02085">"You are Peter?" he asked.</p>
<p id="id02086">"Yes, I'm Peter," confirmed the man.</p>
<p id="id02087">"Well you're making the same mistake your pleasant lady did," explained
Mickey. "She thought I was the boy who had been sent to visit you, so
she gave me the glad hand too. I wish I was in his shoes! But I'm not
your boy. Gee, your lady is a nice gentle lady."</p>
<p id="id02088">"You're all correct there," agreed Peter. "And so you are not the boy
who was to be sent us. Pshaw now! I wish you were. I'm disappointed.
I've been watching you coming down the road, and the way you held
together and stepped up so brisk and neat took my eye."</p>
<p id="id02089">"I been 'stepping up brisk and neat' to sell papers, run errands, hop
cars, dodge cars and automobiles, and climbing fire-escapes instead of
stairs, and keeping from under foot since I can remember," laughed
Mickey. "You learn on the streets of Multiopolis to step up, and watch
sharp without knowing you are doing it."</p>
<p id="id02090">"You're a newsboy?" asked Peter.</p>
<p id="id02091">"I was all my life 'til a few days ago," said Mickey. "Then I went into
the office of Mr. Douglas Bruce. He's a corporation lawyer in the
Iriquois Building."</p>
<p id="id02092">"Hum, I've been reading about him," said Peter. "If I ever have a case,<br/>
I'm going to take it to him."<br/></p>
<p id="id02093">"Well you'll have a man that will hang on and dig in and <i>sweat</i> for
you," said Mickey. "Just now he's after some of them big office-holders
who are bleeding the taxpayers of Multiopolis. Some of these days if
you watch your <i>Herald</i> sharp, you're going to see the lid fly off of
two or three things at once. He's on a hot trail now."</p>
<p id="id02094">"Why I have seen that in the papers," said Peter. "He was given the job
of finding who is robbing the city, by James Minturn; I remember his
name. And you work for him? Well, well! Sit down here and tell me about
it."</p>
<p id="id02095">"I can't now," said Mickey. "I must get back to the road. His car may
pass any minute, and I'm to be ready. Your pleasant lady said I might
take a few clover flowers to my little sick girl, and just as I came to
the finest ones in the field, I saw you so I thought maybe I'd better
tell you what I was doing before you fired me."</p>
<p id="id02096">"Take all you want," said Peter. "I'd like to send the whole field,
larks and all, to a little sick girl. I'd like especial to send her
some of these clowny bobolink fellows to puff up and spill music by the
quart for her; I guess nothing else runs so smooth except water."</p>
<p id="id02097">"I don't know what she'd say," said Mickey gazing around him. "You see
she hasn't ever walked, so all she's seen in her life has been the
worst kind of bare, dark tenement walls, 'til lately she's got a high
window where she can see sky, and a few sparrows that come for crumbs.
This!"—Mickey swept his arm toward the landscape—"I don't know what
she'd say to this!"</p>
<p id="id02098">"Pshaw, now!" cried Peter. "Why bring her out! You bring her right out!
That's what we been wanting to know. Just what a city child would
<i>think</i> of country things she'd never seen before. Bring her to see us!"</p>
<p id="id02099">"She's a little bit of a thing and she can't walk, you know," explained<br/>
Mickey.<br/></p>
<p id="id02100">"Poor little mite! That's too bad," lamented Peter. "Wonder if she
couldn't be doctored up. It's a shame she can't walk, but taking care
of her must be easy!"</p>
<p id="id02101">"Oh she takes care of herself," said Mickey. "You see she is alone all
day from six 'til six; she must take care of herself, so she studies
her lesson, and plays with her doll—I mean her Precious Child."</p>
<p id="id02102">"Too bad!" said Peter. "By jacks that's a sin! Did you happen to speak
to Ma about her?"</p>
<p id="id02103">"We did talk a little," admitted Mickey. "She was telling me of the
visitor boy who didn't come, and your son who doesn't think he'll want
to stay; so we got to talking. She said just what you did about wanting
to see how a city child who hadn't ever seen a chicken, or a cow, or
horse would act——"</p>
<p id="id02104">"Good Lord!" cried Peter. "<i>Is</i> there a child in Multiopolis who hasn't
ever seen a little chicken, or a calf?"</p>
<p id="id02105">"Hundreds of them!" said Mickey. "I've scarcely seen a cow myself. I've
seen hens and little chickens in shop windows at Easter time——"</p>
<p id="id02106">"But not in the orchard in June?" queried Peter.</p>
<p id="id02107">"No, 'not in the orchard in June!'" said Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02108">"Well, well!" marvelled Peter. "There's nothing so true as that 'one
half doesn't know how the other half lives.' I've heard that, but I
didn't quite sense it, and I don't know as I do yet. You bring her
right out!"</p>
<p id="id02109">"Your pleasant lady talked about that; but you see bringing her out and
showing her these things, and getting her used to them is <i>one</i> thing;
then taking her back to a room so hot I always sleep on the
fire-escape, and where she has to stay all day alone, is <i>another</i>. I
don't know but so long as she must go <i>back</i> to what she has now, it
would be better to <i>leave</i> her there."</p>
<p id="id02110">"Humph! I see! What a pity!" exclaimed Peter. "Well, if you'll be
coming this way again, stop and see us. I'll talk to Ma about her. We
often take a little run to Multiopolis. Junior wouldn't be satisfied
till we got a car, and I can't say we ain't enjoying it ourselves. What
was that you were saying about my boy not thinking he'll stay?"</p>
<p id="id02111">"<i>She</i> told me," said Mickey, "about the city bug he had in his system.
Why don't you swat it immediate?"</p>
<p id="id02112">"What do you mean?" inquired Peter.</p>
<p id="id02113">"Turn him over to me a week or two," suggested Mickey. "I can give him
a dose of working in a city that will send him hiking back to home and
father."</p>
<p id="id02114">"It's worth considering," said Peter.</p>
<p id="id02115">"I know that what I got of Multiopolis would make me feel like von
Hindenberg if I had the job of handling the ribbons of your creamery
wagon; and so I know about what would put sonny back on the farm,
tickled 'most to death to be here."</p>
<p id="id02116">"By gum! Well, I'll give you just one hundred dollars if you'll do it!"
exclaimed Peter. "You see my grandfather and father owned this land
before me. We've been on the plowing job so long we have it reduced to
a system, so it comes easy for me, and I take pride and pleasure in it;
I had supposed my boys would be the same. Do you really think you could
manage it?"</p>
<p id="id02117">"Sure," said Mickey. "Only, if you really mean it, not now, nor ever,
do you want son to <i>know</i> it. See! The medicine wouldn't work, if he
knew he took it."</p>
<p id="id02118">"Well I'll be jiggered!" laughed Peter. "I guess you could do it, if
you went at it right."</p>
<p id="id02119">"Well you trust me to do it right," grinned Mickey. "Loan me sonny for
a week or two, and you can have him back for keeps."</p>
<p id="id02120">"Well it's worth trying," said Peter. "Say, when will you be this way
again?"</p>
<p id="id02121">"'Most any day," said Mickey. "And your lady said she'd be in
Multiopolis soon, so we are sure to have a happy meeting before long. I
think that is Mr. Bruce's car coming. Goodbye! Be good to yourself!"</p>
<p id="id02122">With a spring from where he was standing Mickey arose in air, alighted
on the top rail of the division fence, then balancing, he raced down it
toward the road. Peter watched him in astonishment, then went back to
his plowing with many new things on his mind. Thus it happened that
after supper, when the children were in bed, and he and his wife went
to the front veranda for their usual evening visit, and talk over the
day, she had very little to tell him.</p>
<p id="id02123">As was her custom, she removed her apron, brushed her waving hair and
wore a fresh dress. She rocked gently in her wicker chair, while her
voice was moved to unusual solicitude as she spoke. Peter also had
performed a rite he spoke of as "brushing up" for evening. He believed
in the efficacy of soap and water, so his body, as well as his
clothing, was clean. He sat on the top step leaning against the pillar
where the moonlight emphasized his big frame, accented the strong lines
of his face and crowned his thick hair, as Nancy Harding thought it
should be, with glory.</p>
<p id="id02124">"Peter," she said, "did you notice anything about that boy, this
afternoon, different from other boys?"</p>
<p id="id02125">"Yes," answered Peter slowly, "I did Nancy. He didn't strike me as
being <i>one</i> boy. He has the best of three or four concealed in his lean
person."</p>
<p id="id02126">"He's had a pretty tough time, I judge," said Nancy.</p>
<p id="id02127">"Yet you never saw a boy who took your heart like he did, and neither
did I," answered Peter.</p>
<p id="id02128">Mickey holding his basket and clover flowers was waiting when the car
drew up, and to Bruce's inquiry answered that a lady where he stopped
for a drink had given him something for Lily. He left the car in the
city, sought the nurse and luckily found her at leisure. She listened
with the greatest interest to all he had to say.</p>
<p id="id02129">"It's a problem," she said, as he finished. "To take her to such a
place for a week, and then bring her back where she is, would be harder
for her than never going."</p>
<p id="id02130">"I got that figured," said Mickey; "but I've about made up my mind,
after seeing the place and thinking over the folks, that it wouldn't
<i>happen</i> that way. Once they see her, and find how little trouble she
is, they're not people who would send her back 'til it's cool, if
they'd want to then. And there's this, too: there are other folks who
would take her now, and see about her back. Have I got the right to let
it go a day, waiting to earn the money myself, when some one else,
maybe the Moonshine Lady, or Mr. Bruce, would do it <i>now</i>, and not put
her in an Orphings' Home, either?"</p>
<p id="id02131">"No Mickey, you haven't!" said the nurse.</p>
<p id="id02132">"Just the way I have it figured," said Mickey. "But she's mine, and I'm
going to <i>keep</i> her. If her back is fixed, I'm going to have it done. I
don't want any one else meddling with my family. You haven't heard
anything from the Carrel man yet?"</p>
<p id="id02133">"No," she said.</p>
<p id="id02134">"My, I wish he'd come!" cried Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02135">"So do I," said the nurse. "But so far Mickey, I think you are doing
all right. If she must be operated, she'd have to be put in condition
for it; and while I suspect I could beat you at your job, I am positive
you are far surpassing what she did have."</p>
<p id="id02136">"Well I know that too," said Mickey. "But surpassing nothing at all
isn't going either far or fast. I must do something."</p>
<p id="id02137">"If you could bring yourself to consent to giving her up——" suggested
the nurse.</p>
<p id="id02138">"Well I can't!" interposed Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02139">"Just for a while!" continued the nurse.</p>
<p id="id02140">"Not for a minute! I found her! She's mine!"</p>
<p id="id02141">"Yes, I know; but——" began the nurse.</p>
<p id="id02142">"I know too," said Mickey. "Gimme a little time." He studied the
problem till he reached his grocery. There he thriftily lifted the
cloth to peep, and with a sigh of satisfaction pursued his way.
Presently he opened his door, to be struck by a wave of hot air and to
note a flushed little face and drawn mouth as he went into Peaches'
outstretched arms. Then he delivered the carefully carried clover and
the following:</p>
<p id="id02143">"<i>I got these from a big, pink field bewildering, That God made
a-purpose for cows and childering. Her share is being consumed by the
cow, Let's go roll in ours right now.</i>"</p>
<p id="id02144">"Again!" demanded Peaches.</p>
<p id="id02145">Mickey repeated slowly.</p>
<p id="id02146">"How could we?" asked Peaches.</p>
<p id="id02147">"Easy!" said Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02148">"'Easy?'" repeated Peaches.</p>
<p id="id02149">"Just as easy!" reiterated Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02150">"Did you see it?" demanded Peaches.</p>
<p id="id02151">"Yes, I saw it to-day," said Mickey. "It's like this: you see some
folks live in houses all built together, and work at selling things to
eat, and wear, and making things, and doing other work that must be
done like doctors, and lawyers, and hospitals; <i>that's a city</i>. Then to
<i>feed them</i>, other folks live on big pieces of land; the houses are far
apart, with streets between, and beside them the big fields where the
wheat grows for our bread, and our potatoes, and the grass, and the
clover like this to feed the cows. To-day Mr. Bruce didn't play long,
so I went walking and stopped at a house for a drink, and there was the
nicest lady; we talked some and she give me our supper in that pretty
basket; and she sent you the clovers from a big pink field so sweet
smelly it would 'most make you sick; and there are trees through it,
and lots of birds sing, and there are wild roses and fringy white
flowers; and it's quiet 'cept the birds, and the roosters crowing, and
the wind comes in little perfumery blows on you, and such milk!"</p>
<p id="id02152">"Better 'an our milk?" asked Peaches.</p>
<p id="id02153">"Their milk is so rich it makes ours look like a poorhouse relation,"
scoffed Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02154">"Tell me more," demanded Peaches.</p>
<p id="id02155">"Wait 'til I get the water to wash you, you are so warm."</p>
<p id="id02156">"Yes, it's getting some hot; but 'tain't nothing like on the rags last
summer. It's like a real lady here."</p>
<p id="id02157">"A pretty warm lady, just the same," said Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02158">Then he brought water and leaving the door ajar for the first time, he
soon started a draft; that with the coming of cooler evening lowered
the child's temperature, and made her hungry. As he worked Mickey
talked. The grass, the blooming orchard, the hen and her little downy
chickens, the big cool porch, the wonderful woman and man, the boy whom
they expected and who did not come; and then cautiously, slowly, making
sure she understood, he developed his plan to take her to the country.
Peaches drew back and opened her lips. Mickey promptly laid the
washcloth over them.</p>
<p id="id02159">"Now don't begin to say you 'won't' like a silly baby," he said. "Try
it and see, then if you don't like it, you can come right back. You
want to ride in a grand automobile like a millyingaire lady, don't you?
All the swells go away to the country for the summer, you got to be a
swell lady! I ain't going to have you left way behind!"</p>
<p id="id02160">"Mickey, would you be there?" she asked.</p>
<p id="id02161">"Yes lady, I'd be right on the job!" said Mickey. "I'd be there a lot
more than I am here. You go the week they wanted that boy, and he
didn't come; then if you like it, I'll see if they won't board you, and
you can have a nice little girl to play with, and a fat, real baby, and
a boy bigger than me—and you should see Peter!"</p>
<p id="id02162">Peaches opened her lips, Mickey reapplied the cloth.</p>
<p id="id02163">"Calm down now!" he ordered. "I've decided to do it. We got to hump
ourselves. This is our <i>chance</i>. Why there's milk, and butter, and
eggs, and things to eat there like you never tasted, and to have a cool
breeze, and to lie on the grass——"</p>
<p id="id02164">"Oh Mickey, could I?" cried Peaches.</p>
<p id="id02165">"Sure silly! Why not?" said Mickey. "There's big fields of it, and the
cows don't need it all. You can lie on the grass, or the clover, and
hear the birds, and play with the children. I'll take a day and get
things started right before I leave you to come to work, like I'll have
to. When I come at night, I'll carry your outdoors; why I'll take you
down to the water and you can kick your feet in it, where it's nice and
warm; all the time you can have as many flowers as your hands will
hold; and such bird singing, why Lily Peaches O'Halloran, there are
birds as red as blood, yes ma'am, and yellow as orange peel and light
blue like this ribbon and dark blue like that—hold still 'til I fix
you—and such singing!"</p>
<p id="id02166">"Mickey, would you hold me?" wavered Peaches.</p>
<p id="id02167">"Smash anybody that lays a finger on you, unless you say so," said<br/>
Mickey promptly.<br/></p>
<p id="id02168">"And you'd stay a whole day?" she asked anxiously.</p>
<p id="id02169">"Sure!" cried Mickey.</p>
<p id="id02170">"An' if I was afraid you'd bring me back?" she went on.</p>
<p id="id02171">"Sure! Right away!" he promised.</p>
<p id="id02172">"An' they wouldn't anybody 'get' me there?"</p>
<p id="id02173">"'Way out there 'mong the clover?" scoffed Mickey. "Why it's <i>here</i>
they'll '<i>get</i>' you if they are going to. Nobody out there <i>wants</i> you,
but me."</p>
<p id="id02174">"Mickey, when will you take me?" she asked eagerly.</p>
<p id="id02175">"Before so very long," promised Mickey. "You needn't be surprised to
hear me coming with the nice lady to see you any day now, and to be
wrapped in a sheet, and put in a big car, and just scooted right out to
the very place that God made especial for little girls. To-night we put
in another blesses, Lily. We'll pray, 'Bless the nice lady who sent our
supper,' won't we?"</p>
<p id="id02176">"Yes Mickey, and 'fore you came I didn't want any supper at all, and
now I <i>do</i>," said Peaches.</p>
<p id="id02177">"You were too warm honey," said Mickey. "We'll just fix this old hot
city. We'll run right away from it. See? Now we'll have the grandest
supper we ever had."</p>
<p id="id02178">Mickey brought water, plates, and forks, and opened the basket. Peaches
bolstered with her pillows cried out and marvelled. There was a quart
bottle of milk wrapped in a wet cloth. There was a big loaf of crusty
brown country bread. There was a small blue bowl of yellow butter, a
square of honey even yellower, a box of strawberries, and some powdered
sugar, and a little heap of sliced, cold boiled ham. Mickey surveyed
the table.</p>
<p id="id02179">"Now Miss Chicken, here's how!" he warned. "I found you all warm and
feverish. If you load up with this, you'll be sick sure. You get a cup
of milk, a slice of bread and butter, some berries and a teeny piece of
meat. We can live from this a week, if the heat doesn't spoil it."</p>
<p id="id02180">"You fix me," said Peaches.</p>
<p id="id02181">Then they had such a supper as they neither one ever had known, during
which Mickey explained wheat fields and bread, bees and honey, cows and
clover, pigs and ham, as he understood them. Peaches repeated her
lesson and her prayers and then as had become her custom, demanded that
Mickey write his last verse on the slate, so she might learn and copy
it on the morrow. She was asleep before he finished. Mickey walked
softly, cleared the table, placed it before the window, and taking from
his pocket an envelope Mr. Bruce had given him drew out a sheet of
folded paper on which he wrote long and laboriously, then locking
Peaches in, he slipped down to the mail-box and posted this letter:</p>
<h5 id="id02182">DEAR MISTER CARREL:</h5>
<p id="id02183"><i>I saw in papers I sold how you put different legs on a dog. I have a
little white flowersy-girl that hasn't ever walked. It's her back. A
Nurse Lady told me at the "Star of Hope" how you came there sometimes,
and the next time you come, I guess I will let you see my little girl;
and maybe I'll have you fix her back. When you see her you will know
that to fix her back would be the biggest thing you ever did or ever
could do. I got a job that I can pay her way and mine, and save two
dollars a week for you. I couldn't pay all at once, but I could pay
steady; and if you'd lose all you have in any way, it would come in
real handy to have that much skating in steady as the clock every week
for as long as you say, and soon as I can, I'll make it more. I'd give
all I got, or ever can get, to cure Lily's back, and because you fixed
the dog, I'd like you to fix her. I do hope you will come soon, but of
course I don't wish anybody else would get sick so you'd have to. You
can ask if I am square of Mr. Douglas Bruce, Iriquois Building,
Multiopolis, Indiana, or of Mr. Chaffner, editor of the</i> Herald, <i>whose
papers I've sold since I was big enough.</i></p>
<h5 id="id02184">MICHAEL O'HALLORAN.</h5>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />