"Has she been in here?" asked d.i.c.k in astonishment.
"Yes; asking if she can sit with me," and Polly started at the look in the usually soft blue eyes.
"And you wouldn"t let her?" asked d.i.c.k, stopping short and regarding his mother curiously.
"Of course not, d.i.c.ky," she made haste to say.
"Then I think you did very wrong," declared d.i.c.k flatly.
"Oh, d.i.c.k!" exclaimed Polly in consternation.
"And you don"t act like my mother at all," said d.i.c.k, standing quite stiffly on his st.u.r.dy legs, and gazing at her with disapprobation.
"Didn"t Mrs. Chatterton save my life," he exploded, "when the real burglar was going for me? Say, didn"t she?" he cried.
"I have yet to find out that is the truth," said Mrs. Whitney, finding her voice. "Oh, d.i.c.ky," she added, hurt that he should defend another, worst of all, Mrs. Chatterton, "don"t talk about her."
"But I ought to talk about her," persisted d.i.c.k. "She saved me as much as she could. Because she won"t let anybody thank her, I like her more myself. I"m going to stay with her."
With that, he held his head high, and marched to the door.
"d.i.c.k, d.i.c.k!" called his mother, "come back, dear."
d.i.c.k slowly turned and made his way to her side, but he still regarded her with disapproval.
"d.i.c.k, I want you to go to Mrs. Chatterton"s room, and say that I am sorry I refused her offer to help, and that I would like to have her sit with me. Remember, say I am sorry I refused her offer to help, d.i.c.ky." She leaned forward and kissed her boy, her long, soft hair falling like a veil around the two faces.
d.i.c.k threw his arms around her neck.
"Now, you"re a brick!" he declared impulsively. "I"ll bring the old lady, and we"ll both sit with you."
So Polly was free to run back to Mamsie. On the way there she opened the door of Phronsie"s little room, just out of Father and Mother Fisher"s.
"How good it is that she sleeps through it all," said Polly, listening to the regular breathing. Then she stole across the room and stood beside the small bed.
"She looks just as she did the night she took her new shoes to bed,"
thought Polly; "one hand is over her head, exactly as it was then. Oh, Phronsie! to think that you"re to have no party to-morrow," and she turned off with a sigh, went out, and closed the door.
"Percy"s here--all right!" cried Jasper, running over the stairs to meet her at the top.
His eyes were gleaming with excitement, and his face was torn and bleeding.
"Are you hurt?" cried Polly, feeling as if the whole family were bound to destruction. "Oh, Jasper! did you fall?"
"Nothing but a scratch. I was fool enough to forget the ledge, and walked off for my pains"--
"Oh, Jasper!" cried Polly, with paling cheeks, "let me bathe it for you, do;" her strength began to return at the thought of action, and she sprang for a basin of water.
"Nonsense. No, Polly!" cried Jasper, with a quick hand detaining her, "it"s nothing but a mere scratch, I tell you, but I suppose it looks terribly. I"ll go and wash it off. Run and tell his mother that Percy is found."
"Is he all right?" asked Polly fearfully, holding her breath for the answer.
"Sound as a nut," declared Jasper; "we found him streaking it down the locust path; he said he was going to run off to sea."
"Run off to sea!" repeated Polly. "Oh, Jasper!"
"Well, he was so frightened, of course he didn"t know what to say,"
replied Jasper. "And ashamed, too. He didn"t care to show his head at home. I don"t know as I blame him, Polly. Well, it"s too bad about Phronsie"s party, isn"t it?" added Jasper, mopping up his face as the two went down the hall.
"Yes," said Polly with a sigh, stopping at Mrs. Whitney"s door, "but, oh! think how happy we are now that Percy is safe, Jasper."
"Still, it"s too bad for Phronsie," repeated Jasper, looking back.
But Joel flatly declared that the first one that even so much as hinted that a single item of the arrangements for Phronsie"s getting-well party should be changed, he"d make it disagreeable as only he knew how, for that one when he got up from his bed. "Yes, sir!" and he scolded, and fretted, and fussed, and laid down the law so generally to all, not excepting the doctor, that at last it was decided to let the party go on. Then he lay back against the pillows quite exhausted, but with a beatific face.
"I should think you would be tired, Joe," exclaimed Jasper, "you"ve bullied us so. Dear me! people ought to be angelic when they"re sick, at least."
"If you"d had him to take care of as I did," observed Dr. Fisher, "you"d know better; goodness me! the little brown house scarcely held him when he was getting over the measles."
"What"s the use of being sick," said Joel reflectively, turning on his pillow, "if you can"t make people stand around, I"d like to know. Now that point"s settled about Phronsie"s party, won"t you all go out? I"d like to speak to Father Fisher a moment."
"You don"t mean me, Joey?" said Mother Fisher at the head of the bed, holding her boy"s hand.
"Yes; you, too, Mamsie," said Joel, giving her an affectionate glance, "it"s something that only the doctor and I are to know."
"You"re not hurt anywhere else, are you, Joey?" asked his mother, a sudden alarm leaping to her black eyes.
"Not a scratch," said Joel promptly. "I want to see Father Fisher about something. Sometime you shall know, Mamsie." He gave her hand a sudden pressure, then let it go.
"Perhaps you would better step out, my dear," said the little doctor, nodding to his wife. So Mrs. Fisher, smothering a sigh, went out reluctantly.
"All out?" asked Joel, trying to raise his head to see for himself.
"Every soul," said Dr. Fisher.
"Well, see here, will you," said Joel, pointing to the table, the schoolbooks scattered as he had left them, "pack those things all away in the closet on the shelf, you know, and put the rubbish on the floor there, back on the table?"
Dr. Fisher could not for his life, refrain from asking curiously, as he did as requested, "Been having a pull at the books, eh, Joe?"
"Um--um--maybe," said Joel, twisting uneasily. "Well, now, come here, please, Father Fisher."
The little man turned away from the table, with its sprawling array of delightful things, to stand by the bedside.
"You must get me well as soon as you can," said Joel confidentially.
"All right; I understand," Dr. Fisher nodded professionally.
"And whatever you say, don"t let it be that I must be careful of my eyes," said Joel.
"All right; that is, if you get up quickly," agreed the doctor.