"No, not a bit," declared d.i.c.k, shaking his brown poll. "I"m glad I didn"t crack the gla.s.s."

"That heavy plate?" cried Polly, looking over at the cheval-gla.s.s with a shiver.

Phronsie deserted the fascinating bird, and began to smooth d.i.c.k"s head with both hands.

"Do let me bathe it," she begged. "I"ll get the Pond"s Extract."

"No, I won"t," said d.i.c.k. "It smells awfully, and I"ve had so much of it for my leg. I"m all right, Phronsie. See his wings now--he"s stretching."

But Phronsie was not to be diverted from her purpose.

"I"ll get bay rum," she said. "May I?"

d.i.c.k made a wry face. "Worse and worse."

"Cologne, then."

"No, I hate it."

"He doesn"t want it bathed, Phronsie dear," said Polly. "Boys like to get hurt, you know. "Tisn"t manly to be fixed up."

Phronsie gave a sigh, which so went to d.i.c.k"s heart, that he said, "All right, bring on some water if you want to. But don"t get any brown paper; I had enough of that when I was a boy."

And at the end of that exciting day, the secret came out, after all, in rather a tame fashion. Dr. Fisher and Jasper met Polly in an angle of the hall, as she was running upstairs after dinner for her schoolbooks.

"Polly," asked the little doctor, putting both hands on her shoulders, and looking into the brown eyes, "should you be willing to go abroad with your mother and Phronsie, Mr. King and Jasper?"

"Oh!" Polly gasped. "But you?" came in a later breath, "we couldn"t leave you," she cried loyally.

"Well, I suppose I should go along too," said the little doctor, enjoying her face.

"Why, Jasper Elyot King!" cried Polly, slipping out from under the doctor"s palms, and seizing the two hands extended, she began to spin around as in the olden days, "did you ever, ever hear of anything so perfectly magnificent! But Ben and Joel and Davie!" and she paused on the edge of another pirouette.

Dr. Fisher made haste to answer, "Polly, Mrs. Whitney will take care of them." And Jasper led her off into the dance again.

"How can we ever leave the boys! Oh! I don"t see," cried Polly, a bit reproachfully, her hair blown over her rosy cheeks. As they danced lightly down the long hall, Dr. Fisher leaned against a pillar, and watched them.

"Have to," said Jasper, guiding his partner deftly in the intricacies of the chairs and statuary. "That"s a good spin, Polly," he said, as they brought up by the little doctor"s side.

"Lovely!" said Polly, pushing back her locks from the sparkling eyes.

"I"m almost tempted to dance myself," said Dr. Fisher. "If I wasn"t such an old fellow, I"d try; that is, if anybody asked me."

"I will," said Polly, laughing. "Come, Papa Fisher," holding out her hand, "do give me the honor."

"All right," said Dr. Fisher bravely. So Jasper took the deserted post by the pillar, and whistled a Strauss waltz. Thereupon a most extraordinary hopping up and down the hall was commenced, the two figures bobbing like a pair of corks on a quivering water-surface.

The doors opened, and several faces appeared, amongst the number Mrs.

Fisher"s.

"I couldn"t help it," said the little doctor, coming up red and animated, and wiping his forehead. His spectacles had fallen off long since, and he had let them go. "It looked so nice to see Jasper and Polly, I thought I"d try it. I didn"t suppose I"d get on so well; I really believe I can dance."

"Humph!" laughed Mr. King, "it looks like it. Just see Polly."

"Oh, Papa Fisher!" cried Polly with a merry peal in which Jasper, unpuckering his lips from the Strauss effort, had joined, "we must have looked"--Here she went off again.

"Yes," said Jasper, "you did. That"s just it, Polly, you did. Lucky you two caperers didn"t break anything."

"Well, if you"ve got through laughing," observed Dr. Fisher, "I"ll remark that the secret is out."

"Do you like it, Polly?" asked Mr. King, holding out his hand. "Say, my girl?" And then before she could answer, he went on, "You see, we can"t do anything without a doctor on our travels. Now Providence has given us one, though rather an obstinate specimen," he pointed to Father Fisher. "And he wants to see the hospitals, and you want to study a bit of music, and your mother wants rest, and Jasper and Phronsie and I want fun, so we"re going, that"s all."

"When?" demanded Polly breathlessly.

"In a month."

XXI

THE WHITNEYS" LITTLE PLAN

"I think it"s a mean shame," cried Joel, on a high vindictive key.

"You"ve had burglars here twice, and I haven"t been home."

"You speak as if we appointed the meeting, Joe," said Ben with a laugh.

"Well, it"s mean, anyway," cried Joel, with a flash of his black eyes.

"Now there won"t any come again in an age."

"Goodness, I hope not," e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Mr. King, lowering his newspaper to peer over its top.

"I"d have floored him," declared Joel, striking out splendidly from the shoulder, "if I"d only have been here."

"All very well," said Percy negligently, "but you weren"t here," and he laughed softly.

"Do you mean to say that I couldn"t have handled the burglar?" demanded Joel belligerently, and advancing on Percy, "say? Because if you do, why, I"ll try a bout with you."

"I didn"t say anything what you could or couldn"t do. I said you weren"t here, and you weren"t. That"s enough," and Percy turned his back on him, thrust his hands in the pockets of his morning jacket and stalked to the window.

Van opened his mouth to speak, then thought better of it, and gave a low whistle. Joel, finding no enthusiasm for tales of his fighting prowess, ran off to interview d.i.c.k on the old topic of the burglary and to obtain another close account of its details.

"To think Phronsie saw the other burglar five years ago, and now d.i.c.k was on hand for this one--those two babies," he fumed, "and none of us men around."

"Percy," said Van, "come out in the hall, will you?"

"What do you want?" asked Percy lazily.

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