So David took the one that the foreman pointed at, and he laid it down as well as he could, close up to the last one which the shingle man had put on, and with its thick edge at the blue line.
It took him some time, because he had never laid shingles before; but the shingle man had only to change it a tiny bit, and then he drove in two nails about halfway up toward the thin edge.
And David took another shingle which the foreman pointed at, and he fitted it in its place a little more quickly, and the shingle man didn"t have to change that one at all, but drove the nails with hardly more than two blows of his hammer.
So David kept on laying shingles, and the shingle man nailed them.
At first the foreman pointed to the right shingles; but, after a while, he didn"t point, but David chose them himself.
And they finished that row, and they began the next.
"I"m afraid, Davie," the foreman said, "that we"ll have to go down now. Aren"t you ready to go?"
David was getting a little bit tired, for the shingle man nailed his shingles before he could wink, and he felt hurried all the time.
So he said that he was ready, and the foreman took him under his arm and carried him down the ladder that way.
"Good-bye," he called to the shingle men as he was going down.
"Good-bye," the shingle men called to David. "We"re much obliged."
"You"re welcome," David called back to the shingle men.
Then he was set down on the ground, and he was rather glad to feel the ground again.
And his cat came running, with her bushy tail straight up in the air, and David started off.
"Where are you going so fast?" the foreman asked.
David stopped for a moment.
"I"ve got to go home now."
"To tell your mother that you"ve been shingling?"
David nodded, and he smiled shyly.
"Well, good-bye, Davie," the foreman said.
"Good-bye," said David.
And he turned again and ran to his cart, and he took up the handle.
And he started walking as fast as he could, dragging his cart, with his shovel and his hoe rattling in the bottom, and his cat ran on ahead; and she ran right up the front steps and in at the door, and David came after.
But he left his cart in the path.
And that"s all of the shingle story.
VII
THE PLUMBER STORY
Once upon a time there was a little boy, and he was almost five years old, and his name was David. And there weren"t any other children near for him to play with, so he used to play happily all by himself.
He had his cat and his cart and his shovel and his hoe, and he always wore his overalls when he was playing.
They were building a new house in the field next to David"s house, and it was all done on the outside, but it wasn"t painted.
And the men were working inside, for David could hear the hammering, and sometimes he could hear them sawing.
One morning, after breakfast, David went to his mother and said that the foreman wanted him to come to the new house that morning, for the plumbers would be there.
He didn"t know what plumbers were.
"What are plumbers, mother?"
"They are men who mend the pipes, dear," his mother answered.
"What pipes?" he asked. "Are the pipes broken?"
His mother laughed. "Well, I suppose they put in the water pipes, and the bathtubs and the basins and the hot-water boiler and all those things."
David nodded, and let his mother kiss him, and then he went out.
And his cat was there, waiting for him, and his cart was there, with his shovel and his hoe in the bottom of it. And he stooped down and took hold of the handle of his cart, and he trudged to the new house, dragging his cart.
The mortar man had gone some time before, and there wasn"t any sand-pile, but the foreman saw him coming.
"h.e.l.lo, Davie," he called.
"h.e.l.lo," David called back.
"You"re just in time to go into the house with me," the foreman said.
So David dropped the handle of his cart and the foreman took hold of his hand, and they went up the steps and into the house.
The part.i.tion walls between the rooms weren"t all done, and David could see right through them in some places into the next room.
And the foreman and David went through the place that would be the front hall when it was done, with the front stairs going up out of it; and some carpenters were working there now and there was a great mess.
"What are the carpenters doing?" David asked.
"They"re nailing on laths, Davie," the foreman answered. "Laths, you see, are the little thin sticks that go on the up-and-down sticks of the walls, and the plaster goes on them and squeezes between them.