"Yes, all melt into water. He has to stay out where it"s cold. Play with him out here, Trouble."

So Trouble did, making a lot of s...o...b..a.l.l.s which he piled around the feet of his man, so that they might be ready in case the snow man himself wanted to throw them.

Then Teddy and Janet went coasting just before supper, coming home with red cheeks and sparkling eyes, for it was cold and they had played hard.

"Well, Trouble, is the snow man all right?" asked Ted, as he and Jan sat down to supper a little later.

[Ill.u.s.tration: HE WAS ALTOGETHER A VERY STYLISH SNOW MAN. _Page 82_]

"Iss. Big snow man in yard," answered Baby William.

"He"ll take care of your little snow man all night," added Janet. "Then your little snow man won"t be afraid to stay out in the dark, Trouble."

"Trouble"s snow man not be in dark," was the answer. "He gone bed.

Trouble"s snow man gone bed."

"What does he mean?" asked Ted.

"Oh, I presume he"s just pretending that he put his snow man to bed in a drift of snow," said Mrs. Martin. "The poor child is so sleepy from having played out all the afternoon that he can"t keep his eyes open.

I"ll put you to bed right after supper, Trouble."

"Trouble go to bed--snow man go to bed," murmured Baby William. He was very sleepy, so much so that his head nodded even while he was eating the last of his bread and milk. And then his mother carried him off to his room.

Ted and Janet sat up a little later to talk to their father, as they generally did.

"Did you hear any more from Grandpa Martin?" asked Ted, after he had finished studying his school lesson for the next day.

"What about?" asked Mr. Martin.

"About the big snowstorm that"s coming."

"Oh, you mean about what the hermit said," laughed his father. "No, we haven"t had any more letters from grandpa."

"But we will have enough to eat even if we are snowed in, won"t we?" Jan queried.

"Oh, yes, I guess so," answered Daddy Martin. "Don"t worry about that."

"Can those hermits really tell when there"s going to be a big storm with lots of snow?" asked Ted.

"Well, sometimes," admitted Mr. Martin. "Men who live in the woods or mountains all their lives know more about the weather than those of us who live in houses in towns or cities most of the time. Sometimes the hermits and woodsmen can tell by the way the squirrels and other animals act and store away food, whether or not it is going to be a hard winter.

But don"t worry about being snowed in. If we are we"ll make the best of it."

A little later Ted and Jan, still thinking what would happen if a storm should come heavy enough to cover the house, started for their bedrooms.

As Janet undressed and turned back the covers of her bed she gave a scream.

"What"s the matter?" asked her mother from the hall.

"Maybe she saw a baby mouse!" laughed Ted.

"Oh, no. Mother! Daddy! Come quick!" cried Jan. "There"s somebody in my bed!"

Mrs. Martin ran into her little girl"s room, and there, on the white sheet, half covered, she saw a strange bedfellow.

CHAPTER VIII

THE LAME BOY

"Oh, what is it? What is it?" cried Jan, backing into the farthest corner of her room. "What"s in my bed?"

"It"s a man!" cried Ted, who had run in from his room. "Oh, Daddy, there"s a man in Jan"s bed!" he shouted down the stairs.

"It can"t be--it isn"t large enough for a man!" said Mrs. Martin, who was going toward the gas jet to turn it higher.

Her husband dropped the paper he had been reading as the children were getting ready for bed, and came racing up the stairs. Into Jan"s room he went, and, as he entered, Mrs. Martin turned the light on so that it shone more brightly.

Daddy Martin gave one look into Jan"s bed and then began to laugh.

"Oh, Daddy! what is it?" cried the little girl. "Is it a man in my bed?"

"Yes," answered her father, still laughing. "But it"s a very little man, and he couldn"t hurt anybody."

"Not if he was a--a burglar?" asked Ted in a whisper.

"No; for he"s only a snow man!" laughed Mr. Martin.

"A _snow_ man!" exclaimed Mrs. Martin.

"A snow man in my bed!" gasped Jan. "How did he get there?"

By this time so much noise had been made that Trouble, in his mother"s room, was awakened. He came toddling into Jan"s room, rubbing his sleepy eyes and holding up his little nightdress so he would not stumble over it.

"Dis mornin"?" he asked, blinking at the bright lights.

"No, it isn"t morning, Trouble," answered his mother with a laugh. "But I guess Jan will have to sleep in your bed and you"ll have to come in with me. The snow man has melted, making a little puddle of water and her sheets are all wet. She can"t sleep in that bed."

They all gathered around to look at the strange sight in Jan"s bed. As her mother had said, the snow man, which was about two feet long, had melted. One of his legs was half gone, an ear had slid off and his nose was quite flat, while one of the pieces of coal that had pretended to be an eye had dropped out and was resting on his left shoulder.

"Dat _my_ snow man!" announced Trouble, after a look. "Me put him s"eepin"s in Jan"s bed!"

"You did?" cried Mother Martin. "Well, it"s a good thing you told us, for I was going to ask Ted if he had done it as a joke."

"No"m, Mother; I didn"t do it!" declared Ted.

"And it is the little snow man we helped Trouble make," added Jan, as she took another look. "I couldn"t see good at first "cause it was so dark in my room. But it"s Trouble"s snow man."

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