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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Dandelion Cottage, by Carroll Watson Rankin
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dandelion Cottage
+
+Author: Carroll Watson Rankin
+
+Illustrator: Mary Stevens
+
+Release Date: October 28, 2011 [EBook #37871]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DANDELION COTTAGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Betsie Bush, Matthew Wheaton
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Dandelion Cottage
+
+ CARROLL WATSON RANKIN
+
+
+ _Illustrated by Mary Stevens_
+
+ JOHN M. LONGYEAR RESEARCH LIBRARY
+
+ Marquette, Michigan
+
+ 1977
+
+
+ _First published in 1904_
+
+ THE MARQUETTE COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
+ 213 North Front Street
+ Marquette, Michigan 49855
+
+ FOURTH EDITION
+
+ First Printing, February 1977
+
+ Printed in the USA by
+ THE BOOK CONCERN, INC.
+ Hancock, Michigan
+
+
+ _To_
+ RHODA, FRANCES, AND ELEANOR
+
+ _whose lively interest made the writing
+ of this little book a joyful task._
+
+
+
+
+ THE PERSONS OF THE STORY
+
+
+ BETTIE TUCKER:}
+ JEANIE MAPES:} _The Dandelion Cottagers_
+ MABEL BENNETT:}
+ MARJORY VALE:}
+ THE TUCKER FAMILY: _Mostly boys_
+ THE MAPES FAMILY: _Two parents, two boys_
+ DR. AND MRS. BENNETT: _Merely Parents_
+ AUNTY JANE: _A Parental Substitute_
+ MRS. CRANE: _The Pleasantest Neighbor_
+ MR. BLACK: _The Senior Warden_
+ MR. DOWNING: _The Junior Warden_
+ MISS BLOSSOM: _The Lodger_
+ MR. BLOSSOM: _The Organ Tuner_
+ GRANDMA PIKE: _Another Neighbor_
+ MR. AND MRS. MILLIGAN:}
+ LAURA MILLIGAN:}
+ THE MILLIGAN BOY AND} _The Unpleasantest Neighbors_
+ THE MILLIGAN BABY:}
+ THE MILLIGAN DOG:}
+
+
+
+
+ Contents
+
+
+ 1. _Mr. Black's Terms_
+ 2. _Paying the Rent_
+ 3. _The Tenants Take Possession_
+ 4. _Furnishing the Cottage_
+ 5. _Poverty in the Cottage_
+ 6. _A Lodger to the Rescue_
+ 7. _The Girls Disclose a Plan_
+ 8. _An Unexpected Crop of Dandelions_
+ 9. _Changes and Plans_
+ 10. _The Milligans_
+ 11. _An Embarrassing Visitor_
+ 12. _A Lively Afternoon_
+ 13. _The Junior Warden_
+ 14. _An Unexpected Letter_
+ 15. _An Obdurate Landlord_
+ 16. _Mabel Plans a Surprise_
+ 17. _Several Surprises Take Effect_
+ 18. _A Hurried Retreat_
+ 19. _The Response to Mabel's Telegram_
+ 20. _The Odd Behavior of the Grown-ups_
+ 21. _The Dinner_
+
+
+
+
+Dandelion Cottage
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 1
+
+Mr. Black's Terms
+
+
+The little square cottage was unoccupied. It had stood for many years on
+the parish property, having indeed been built long before the parish
+bought the land for church purposes. It was easy to see how Dandelion
+Cottage came by its name at first, for growing all about it were great,
+fluffy, golden dandelions; but afterwards there was another good reason
+why the name was appropriate, as you will discover shortly.
+
+The cottage stood almost directly behind the big stone church in
+Lakeville, a thriving Northern Michigan town, and did not show very
+plainly from the street because it was so small by contrast with
+everything else near it. This was fortunate, because, after the Tuckers
+had moved into the big new rectory, the smaller house looked decidedly
+forlorn and deserted.
+
+"We'll leave it just where it stands," the church wardens had said, many
+years previously. "It's precisely the right size for Doctor and Mrs.
+Gunn, for they would rather have a small house than a large one. When
+they leave us and we are selecting another clergyman, we'll try to get
+one with a small family."
+
+This plan worked beautifully for a number of years. It succeeded so
+well, in fact, that the vestry finally forgot to be cautious, and when
+at last it secured the services of Dr. Tucker, the church had grown so
+used to clergymen with small families that the vestrymen engaged the new
+minister without remembering to ask if his family would fit Dandelion
+Cottage.
+
+But when Dr. Tucker and Mrs. Tucker and eight little Tuckers, some on
+foot and some in baby carriages, arrived, the vestrymen regretted this
+oversight. They could see at a glance that the tiny cottage could never
+hold them all.
+
+"We'll just have to build a rectory on the other lot," said Mr. Black,
+the senior warden. "That's all there is about it. The cottage is all out
+of repair, anyway. It wasn't well built in the first place, and the last
+three clergymen have complained bitterly of the inconvenience of having
+to hold up umbrellas in the different rooms every time it rained. Their
+wives objected to the wall paper and to being obliged to keep the
+potatoes in the bedroom closet. It's really time we had a new rectory."
+
+"It certainly is," returned the junior warden, "and we'll all have to
+take turns entertaining all the little Tuckers that there isn't room for
+in the cottage while the new house is getting built."
+
+Seven of the eight little Tuckers were boys. If it hadn't been for
+Bettie they would _all_ have been boys, but Bettie saved the day. She
+was a slender twelve-year-old little Bettie, with big brown eyes, a mop
+of short brown curls, and such odd clothes. Busy Mrs. Tucker was so in
+the habit of making boys' garments that she could not help giving a
+boyish cut even to Bettie's dresses. There were always sailor collars to
+the waists, and the skirts were invariably kilted. Besides this, the
+little girl wore boys' shoes.
+
+"You see," explained Bettie, who was a cheerful little body, "Tommy has
+to take them next, and of course it wouldn't pay to buy shoes for just
+one girl."
+
+The little Tuckers were not the only children in the neighborhood.
+Bettie found a bosom friend in Dr. Bennett's Mabel, who lived next door
+to the rectory, another in Jeanie Mapes, who lived across the street,
+and still another in Marjory Vale, whose home was next door to Dandelion
+Cottage.
+
+Jean, as her little friends best liked to call her, was a sweet-faced,
+gentle-voiced girl of fourteen. Mothers of other small girls were always
+glad to see their own more scatterbrained daughters tucked under Jean's
+loving wing, for thoroughly-nice Jean, without being in the least
+priggish, was considered a safe and desirable companion. It doesn't
+_always_ follow that children like the persons it is considered best for
+them to like, but in Jean's case both parents and daughters agreed that
+Jean was not only safe but delightful--the charming daughter of a
+charming mother.
+
+Marjory, a year younger and nearly a head shorter than Jean, often
+seemed older. Outwardly, she was a sedate small person, slight,
+blue-eyed, graceful, and very fair. Her manners at times were very
+pleasing, her self-possession almost remarkable; this was the result of
+careful training by a conscientious, but at that time sadly
+unappreciated, maiden aunt who was Marjory's sole guardian. There were
+moments, however, when Marjory, who was less sedate than she appeared,
+forgot to be polite. At such times, her ways were apt to be less
+pleasing than those of either Bettie or Jean, because her wit was
+nimbler, her tongue sharper, and her heart a trifle less tender. Her
+mother had died when Marjory was only a few weeks old, her father had
+lived only two years longer, and the rather solitary little girl had
+missed much of the warm family affection that had fallen to the lot of
+her three more fortunate friends. Those who knew her well found much in
+her to like, but among her schoolmates there were girls who said that
+Marjory was "stuck-up," affected, and "too smart."
+
+Mabel, the fourth in this little quartet of friends, was eleven, large
+for her age and young for her years, always an unfortunate combination
+of circumstances. She was intensely human and therefore liable to err,
+and, it may be said, she very seldom missed an opportunity. In school
+she read with a tremendous amount of expression but mispronounced half
+the words; when questions were asked, she waved her hand triumphantly
+aloft and gave anything but the right answer; she had a surprising stock
+of energy, but most of it was misdirected. Warm-hearted, generous,
+heedless, hot-tempered, and always blundering, she was something of a
+trial at home and abroad; yet no one could help loving her, for
+everybody realized that she would grow up some day into a really fine
+woman, and that all that was needed in the meantime was considerable
+patience. Rearing Mabel was not unlike the task of bringing up a St.
+Bernard puppy. Mrs. Bennett was decidedly glad to note the growing
+friendship among the four girls, for she hoped that Mabel would in time
+grow dignified and sweet like Jean, thoughtful and tender like Bettie,
+graceful and prettily mannered like Marjory. But this happy result had
+yet to be achieved.
+
+The little one-story cottage, too much out of repair to be rented, stood
+empty and neglected. To most persons it was an unattractive spot if not
+actually an eyesore. The steps sagged in a dispirited way, some of the
+windows were broken, and the fence, in sympathy perhaps with the house,
+had shed its pickets and leaned inward with a discouraged, hopeless air.
+
+But Bettie looked at the little cottage longingly--she could gaze right
+down upon it from the back bedroom window--a great many times a day. It
+didn't seem a bit too big for a playhouse. Indeed, it seemed a great
+pity that such a delightful little building should go unoccupied when
+Bettie and her homeless dolls were simply suffering for just such a
+shelter.
+
+"Wouldn't it be nice," said Bettie, one day in the early spring, "if we
+four girls could have Dandelion Cottage for our very own?"
+
+"Wouldn't it be sweet," mimicked Marjory, "if we could have the moon and
+about twenty stars to play jacks with?"
+
+"The cottage isn't _quite_ so far away," said Jean. "It _would_ be just
+lovely to have it, for we never have a place to play in comfortably."
+
+"We're generally disturbing grown-ups, I notice," said Marjory,
+comically imitating her Aunty Jane's severest manner. "A little less
+noise, if you please. Is it really necessary to laugh so much and so
+often?"
+
+"Even Mother gets tired of us sometimes," confided Jean. "There are days
+when no one seems to want all of us at once."
+
+"I know it," said Bettie, pathetically, "but it's worse for me than it
+is for the rest of you. You have your rooms and nobody to meddle with
+your things. I no sooner get my dolls nicely settled in one corner than
+I have to move them into another, because the babies poke their eyes
+out. It's dreadful, too, to have to live with so many boys. I fixed up
+the cunningest playhouse under the clothes-reel last week, but the very
+minute it was finished Rob came home with a horrid porcupine and I had
+to move out in a hurry."
+
+"Perhaps," suggested Marjory, "we could rent the cottage."
+
+"Who'd pay the rent?" demanded Mabel. "My allowance is five cents a week
+and I have to pay a fine of one cent every time I'm late to meals."
+
+"How much do you have left?" asked Jeanie, laughing.
+
+"Not a cent. I was seven cents in debt at the end of last week."
+
+"I get two cents a hundred for digging dandelions," said Marjory, "but
+it takes just forever to dig them, and ugh! I just hate it."
+
+"I never have any money at all," sighed Bettie. "You see there are so
+many of us."
+
+"Let's go peek in at the windows," suggested Mabel, springing up from
+the grass. "That much won't cost us anything at any rate."
+
+Away scampered the four girls, taking a short cut through Bettie's back
+yard.
+
+The cottage had been vacant for more than a year and had not improved in
+appearance. Rampant vines clambered over the windows and nowhere else in
+town were there such luxurious weeds as grew in the cottage yard.
+Nowhere else were there such mammoth dandelions or such prickly burrs.
+The girls waded fearlessly through them, parted the vines, and, pressing
+their noses against the glass, peered into the cottage parlor.
+
+"What a nice, square little room!" said Marjory.
+
+"I don't think the paper is very pretty," said Mabel.
+
+"We could cover most of the spots with pictures," suggested practical
+Marjory.
+
+"It looks to me sort of spidery," said Mabel, who was always somewhat
+pessimistic. "Probably there's rats, too."
+
+"I know how to stop up rat holes," said Bettie, who had not lived with
+seven brothers without acquiring a number of useful accomplishments.
+"I'm not afraid of spiders--that is, not so _very_ much."
+
+"What are you doing here?" demanded a gruff voice so suddenly that
+everybody jumped.
+
+The startled girls wheeled about. There stood Bettie's most devoted
+friend, the senior warden.
+
+"Oh!" cried Bettie, "it's only Mr. Black."
+
+"Were you looking for something?" asked Mr. Black.
+
+"Yes," said Bettie. "We're looking for a house. We'd like to rent this
+one, only we haven't a scrap of money."
+
+"And what in the name of common sense would you do with it?"
+
+"We want it for our dolls," said Bettie, turning a pair of big pleading
+brown eyes upon Mr. Black. "You see, we haven't any place to play.
+Marjory's Aunty Jane won't let her cut papers in the house, so she can't
+have any paper dolls, and I can't play any place because I have so many
+brothers. They tomahawk all my dolls when they play Indian, shoot them
+with beans when they play soldiers, and drown them all when they play
+shipwreck. Don't you think we might be allowed to use the cottage if
+we'd promise to be very careful and not do any damage?"
+
+"We'd clean it up," offered Marjory, as an inducement.
+
+"We'd mend the rat holes," offered Jean, looking hopefully at Bettie.
+
+"Would you dig the weeds?" demanded Mr. Black.
+
+There was a deep silence. The girls looked at the sea of dandelions and
+then at one another.
+
+"Yes," said Marjory, finally breaking the silence. "We'd even dig the
+weeds."
+
+"Yes," echoed the others. "We'd even dig the weeds--and there's just
+millions of 'em."
+
+"Good!" said Mr. Black. "Now, we'll all sit down on the steps and I'll
+tell you what we'll do. It happens that the Village Improvement Society
+has just notified the vestry that the weeds on this lot must be removed
+before they go to seed--the neighbors have complained about them. It
+would cost the parish several dollars to hire a man to do the work, and
+we're short of funds just now. Now, if you four girls will pull up every
+weed in this place before the end of next week you shall have the use of
+the cottage for all the rest of the summer in return for your services.
+How does that strike you?"
+
+"Oh!" cried Bettie, throwing her arms about Mr. Black's neck. "Do let
+me hug you. Oh, I'm glad--glad!"
+
+"There, there!" cried stout Mr. Black, shaking Bettie off and dropping
+her where the dandelions grew thickest. "I didn't say I was to be
+strangled as part of the bargain. You'd better save your muscle for the
+dandelions. Remember, you've got to pay your rent in advance. I shan't
+hand over the key until the last weed is dug."
+
+"We'll begin this minute!" cried enthusiastic Mabel. "I'm going straight
+home for a knife."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 2
+
+Paying the Rent
+
+
+"This is a whopping big yard," said Mabel, looking disconsolately at two
+dandelions and one burdock in the bottom of a bushel basket. "There
+doesn't seem to be any place to begin."
+
+"I'm going to weed out a place big enough to sit in," announced Bettie.
+"Then I'll make it bigger and bigger all around me in every direction
+until it joins the clearing next to mine."
+
+"I'm a soldier," said Marjory, brandishing a trowel, "vanquishing my
+enemies. You know in books the hero always battles single-handed with
+about a million foes and always kills them all and everybody lives happy
+ever after--zip! There goes one!"
+
+"I'm a pioneer," said Jean, slashing away at a huge, tough burdock. "I'm
+chopping down the forest primeval to make a potato patch. The dandelions
+are skulking Indians, and I'm capturing them to put in my bushel-basket
+prison."
+
+"I'm just digging weeds," said prosaic Mabel, "and I don't like it."
+
+"Neither does anybody else," said Marjory, "but I guess having the
+cottage will be worth it. Just pretend it's something else and then you
+won't mind it so much. Play you're digging for diamonds."
+
+"I can't," returned Mabel, hopelessly. "I haven't any imagination. This
+is just plain dirt and I can't make myself believe it's anything else."
+
+By supper time the cottage yard presented a decidedly disreputable
+appearance. Before the weeds had been disturbed they stood upright,
+presenting an even surface of green with a light crest of dandelion
+gold. But now it was different. Although the number of weeds was not
+greatly decreased, the yard looked as if, indeed, a battle had been
+fought there. Mr. Black, passing by on his way to town, began to wonder
+if he had been quite wise in turning it over to the girls.
+
+At four o'clock the following morning, sleepy Bettie tumbled out of bed
+and into her clothes. Then she slipped quietly downstairs, out of doors,
+through the convenient hole in the back fence, and into the cottage
+yard. She had been digging for more than an hour when Jean, rubbing a
+pair of sleepy eyes, put in her appearance.
+
+"Oh!" cried Jean, disappointedly. "I meant to have a huge bare field to
+show you when you came, and here you are ahead of me. What a lot you've
+done!"
+
+"Yes," assented Bettie, happily. "There's room for me and my basket,
+too, in my patch. I'll have to go home after a while to help dress the
+children."
+
+Young though she was--she was only twelve--Bettie was a most helpful
+young person. It is hard to imagine what Mrs. Tucker would have done
+without her cheerful little daughter. Bettie always spoke of the boys as
+"the children," and she helped her mother darn their stockings, sew on
+their buttons, and sort out their collars. The care of the family baby,
+too, fell to her lot.
+
+The boys were good boys, but they were boys. They were willing to do
+errands or pile wood or carry out ashes, but none of them ever thought
+of doing one of these things without first being told--sometimes they
+had to be told a great many times. It was different with Bettie. If Tom
+ate crackers on the front porch, it was Bettie who ran for the broom to
+brush up the crumbs. If the second-baby-but-one needed his face
+washed--and it seemed to Bettie that there never was a time when he
+_didn't_ need it washed--it was Bettie who attended to it. If the cat
+looked hungry, it was Bettie who gave her a saucer of milk. Dick's
+rabbits and Rob's porcupine would have starved if Bettie had not fed
+them, and Donald's dog knew that if no one else remembered his bone kind
+Bettie would bear it in mind.
+
+The boys' legs were round and sturdy, but Bettie's were very much like
+pipe stems.
+
+"I don't have time to get fat," Bettie would say. "But you don't need to
+worry about me. I think I'm the healthiest person in the house. At least
+I'm the only one that hasn't had to have breakfast in bed this week."
+
+Neither Marjory nor Mabel appeared during the morning to dig their share
+of the weeds, but when school was out that afternoon they were all on
+hand with their baskets.
+
+"I had to stay," said Mabel, who was the last to arrive. "I missed two
+words in spelling."
+
+"What were they?" asked Marjory.
+
+"'Parachute' and 'dandelion.' I hate dandelions, anyway. I don't know
+what parachutes are, but if they're any sort of weeds I hate them, too."
+
+The girls laughed. Mabel always looked on the gloomiest side of things
+and always grumbled. She seemed to thrive on it, however, for she was
+built very much like a barrel and her cheeks were like a pair of round
+red apples. She was always honest, if a little too frank in expressing
+her opinions, and the girls liked her in spite of her blunt ways. She
+was the youngest of the quartet, being only eleven.
+
+"There doesn't seem to be much grass left after the weeds are out," said
+Bettie, surveying the bare, sandy patch she had made.
+
+"This has _always_ been a weedy old place," replied Jean. "I think the
+whole neighborhood will feel obliged to us if we ever get the lot
+cleared. Perhaps our landlord will plant grass seed. It would be fine to
+have a lawn."
+
+"Perhaps," said Marjory, "he'll let us have some flower beds. Wouldn't
+it be lovely to have nasturtiums running right up the sides of the
+house?"
+
+"They'd be lovely among the vines," agreed Bettie. "I've some poppy
+seeds that we might plant in a long narrow bed by the fence."
+
+"There are hundreds of little pansy plants coming up all over our yard,"
+said Jean. "We might make a little round bed of them right here where
+I'm sitting. What are you going to plant in _your_ bed, Mabel?"
+
+"Butter-beans," said that practical young person, promptly.
+
+"Well," said Bettie, with a long sigh, "we'll have to work faster than
+this or summer will be over before we have a chance to plant _anything_.
+This is the biggest _little_ yard I ever did see."
+
+For a time there was silence. Marjory, the soldier, fell upon her foes
+with renewed vigor, and soon had an entire regiment in durance vile.
+Jean, the pioneer, fell upon the forest with so much energy that its
+speedy extermination was threatened. Mabel seized upon the biggest and
+toughest burdock she could find and pulled with both hands and all her
+might, until, with a sharp crack, the root suddenly parted and Mabel,
+very much to her own surprise, turned a back somersault and landed in
+Bettie's basket.
+
+"Hi there!" cried a voice from the road. "How are you youngsters getting
+along?"
+
+The girls jumped to their feet--all but Mabel, who was still wedged
+tightly in Bettie's basket. There was Mr. Black, with his elbows on the
+fence, and with him was the president of the Village Improvement
+Society; both were smiling broadly.
+
+"Sick of your bargain?" asked Mr. Black.
+
+The four girls shook their heads emphatically.
+
+"Hard work?"
+
+Four heads bobbed up and down.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Black, encouragingly, "you've made considerable headway
+today."
+
+"Where are you putting the weeds?" asked the president of the Village
+Improvement Society.
+
+"On the back porch in a piano box," said Bettie. "We had a big pile of
+them last night, but they shrank like everything before morning. If they
+do that _every_ time, it won't be necessary for Mabel to jump on them to
+press them down."
+
+"Let me know when you have a wagon load," said Mr. Black. "I'll have
+them hauled away for you."
+
+For the rest of the week the girls worked early and late. They began
+almost at daylight, and the mosquitoes found them still digging at dusk.
+
+By Thursday night, only scattered patches of weeds remained. The little
+diggers could hardly tear themselves away when they could no longer find
+the weeds because of the gathering darkness. Now that the task was so
+nearly completed it seemed such a waste of time to eat and sleep.
+
+Bettie was up earlier than ever the next morning, and with one of the
+boys' spades had loosened the soil around some of the very worst patches
+before any of the other girls appeared.
+
+By five o'clock that night the last weed was dug. Conscientious Bettie
+went around the yard a dozen times, but however hard she might search,
+not a single remaining weed could she discover.
+
+"Good work," said Jean, balancing her empty basket on her head.
+
+"It seems too good to be true," said Bettie, "but think of it,
+girls--the rent is paid! It's 'most time for Mr. Black to go by. Let's
+watch for him from the doorstep--our own precious doorstep."
+
+"It needs scrubbing," said Mabel. "Besides, it isn't ours, yet. Perhaps
+Mr. Black has changed his mind. Some grown-up folks have awfully
+changeable minds."
+
+"Oh!" gasped Marjory. "Wouldn't it be perfectly dreadful if he had!"
+
+It seemed to the little girls, torn between doubt and expectation, that
+Mr. Black was strangely indifferent to the calls of hunger that night.
+Was he never going home to dinner? Was he _never_ coming?
+
+"Perhaps," suggested Jean, "he has gone out of town."
+
+"Or forgotten us," said Marjory.
+
+"Or died," said Mabel, dolefully.
+
+"No--no," cried Bettie. "There he is; he's coming around the corner
+now--I can see him. Let's run to meet him."
+
+The girls scampered down the street. Bettie seized one hand, Mabel the
+other, Marjory and Jean danced along ahead of him, and everybody talked
+at once. Thus escorted, Mr. Black approached the cottage lot.
+
+"Well, I declare," said Mr. Black. "You haven't left so much as a blade
+of grass. Do you think you could sow some grass seed if I have the
+ground made ready for it?"
+
+The girls thought they could. Bettie timidly suggested nasturtiums.
+
+"Flower beds too? Why, of course," said Mr. Black. "Vegetables as well
+if you like. You can have a regular farm and grow fairy beanstalks and
+Cinderella pumpkins if you want to. And now, since the rent seems to be
+paid, I suppose there is nothing left for me to do but to hand over the
+key. Here it is, Mistress Bettie, and I'm sure I couldn't have a nicer
+lot of tenants."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 3
+
+The Tenants Take Possession
+
+
+"Our own house--think of it!" cried Bettie, turning the key. "Push,
+somebody; the door sticks. There! It's open."
+
+"Ugh!" said Mabel, drawing back hastily. "It's awfully dark and stuffy
+in there. I guess I won't go in just yet--it smells so dead-ratty."
+
+"It's been shut up so long," explained Jean. "Wait. I'll pull some of
+the vines back from this window. There! Can you see better?"
+
+"Lots," said Bettie. "This is the parlor, girls--but, oh, what raggedy
+paper. We'll need lots of pictures to cover all the holes and spots."
+
+"We'd better clean it all first," advised sensible Jean. "The windows
+are covered with dust and the floor is just black."
+
+"This," said Marjory, opening a door, "must be the dining-room. Oh! What
+a cunning little corner cupboard--just the place for our dishes."
+
+"You mean it would be if we had any," said Mabel. "Mine are all
+smashed."
+
+"Pooh!" said Jean. "We don't mean doll things--we want real, grown-up
+ones. Why, what a cunning little bedroom!"
+
+"There's one off the parlor, too," said Marjory, "and it's even
+cunninger than this."
+
+"My! what a horrid place!" exclaimed Mabel, poking an inquisitive nose
+into another unexplored room, and as hastily withdrawing that offended
+feature. "Mercy, I'm all over spider webs."
+
+"That's the kitchen," explained Bettie. "Most of the plaster has fallen
+down and it's rained in a good deal. But here's a good stovepipe hole,
+and such a cunning cupboard built into the wall. What have _you_ found,
+Jean?"
+
+"Just a pantry," said Jean, holding up a pair of black hands, "and lots
+of dust. There isn't a clean spot in the house."
+
+"So much the better," said Bettie, whose clouds always had a silver
+lining. "We'll have just that much more fun cleaning up. I'll tell you
+what let's do--and we've all day tomorrow to do it in. We'll just
+regularly clean house--I've _always_ wanted to clean house."
+
+"Me too," cried Mabel, enthusiastically. "We'll bring just oceans of
+water--"
+
+"There's water here," interrupted Jean, turning a faucet. "Water and a
+pretty good sink. The water runs out all right."
+
+"That's good," said Bettie. "We must each bring a broom, and soap--"
+
+"And rags," suggested Jean.
+
+"And papers for the shelves," added Marjory.
+
+"And wear our oldest clothes," said Bettie.
+
+"Oo-ow, wow!" squealed Mabel.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked the girls, rushing into the pantry.
+
+"Spiders and mice," said Mabel. "I just poked my head into the cupboard
+and a mouse jumped out. I'm all spider-webby again, too."
+
+"Well, there won't be any spiders by tomorrow night," said Bettie,
+consolingly, "or any mice either, if somebody will bring a cat. Now
+let's go home to supper--I'm hungry as a bear."
+
+"Everybody remember to wear her oldest clothes," admonished Jean, "and
+to bring a broom."
+
+"I'll tie the key to a string and wear it around my neck night and day,"
+said Bettie, locking the door carefully when the girls were outside.
+"Aren't we going to have a perfectly glorious summer?"
+
+When Mr. Black, on the way to his office the next morning, met his four
+little friends, he did not recognize them. Jean, who was fourteen, and
+tall for her age, wore one of her mother's calico wrappers tied in at
+the waist by the strings of the cook's biggest apron. Marjory, in the
+much shrunken gown of a previous summer, had her golden curls tucked
+away under the housemaid's sweeping cap. Bettie appeared in her very
+oldest skirt surmounted by an exceedingly ragged jacket and cap
+discarded by one of her brothers; while Mabel, with her usual
+enthusiasm, looked like a veritable rag-bag. When Bettie had unlocked
+the door--she had slept all night with the key in her hand to make
+certain that it would not escape--the girls filed in.
+
+"I know how to handle a broom as well as anybody," said Mabel, giving a
+mighty sweep and raising such a cloud of dust that the four
+housecleaners were obliged to flee out of doors to keep from
+strangling.
+
+"Phew!" said Jean, when she had stopped coughing. "I guess we'll have to
+take it out with a shovel. The dust must be an inch thick."
+
+"Wait," cried Marjory, darting off, "I'll get Aunty's sprinkling can;
+then the stuff won't fly so."
+
+After that the sweeping certainly went better. Then came the dusting.
+
+"It really looks very well," said Bettie, surveying the result with her
+head on one side and an air of housewifely wisdom that would have been
+more impressive if her nose hadn't been perfectly black with soot. "It
+certainly does look better, but I'm afraid you girls have most of the
+dust on your faces. I don't see how you managed to do it. Just look at
+Mabel."
+
+"Just look at yourself!" retorted Mabel, indignantly. "You've got the
+dirtiest face I _ever_ saw."
+
+"Never mind," said Jean, gently. "I guess we're all about alike. I've
+wiped all the dust off the walls of this parlor. Now I'm going to wash
+the windows and the woodwork, and after that I'm going to scrub the
+floor."
+
+"Do you know how to scrub?" asked Marjory.
+
+"No, but I guess I can learn. There! Doesn't that pane look as if a
+really-truly housemaid had washed it?"
+
+"Oh, Mabel! Do look out!" cried Marjory.
+
+But the warning came too late. Mabel stepped on the slippery bar of
+soap and sat down hard in a pan of water, splashing it in every
+direction. For a moment Mabel looked decidedly cross, but when she got
+up and looked at the tin basin, she began to laugh.
+
+"That's a funny way to empty a basin, isn't it?" she said. "There isn't
+a drop of water left in it."
+
+"Well, don't try it again," said Jean. "That's Mrs. Tucker's basin and
+you've smashed it flat. You should learn to sit down less suddenly."
+
+"And," said Marjory, "to be more careful in your choice of seats--we'll
+have to take up a collection and buy Mrs. Tucker a new basin, or she'll
+be afraid to lend us anything more."
+
+The girls ran home at noon for a hasty luncheon. Rested and refreshed,
+they all returned promptly to their housecleaning.
+
+Nobody wanted to brush out the kitchen cupboard. It was not only dusty,
+but full of spider webs, and worst of all, the spiders themselves seemed
+very much at home. The girls left the back door open, hoping that the
+spiders would run out of their own accord. Apparently, however, the
+spiders felt no need of fresh air. Bettie, without a word to anyone, ran
+home, returning a moment later with her brother Bob's old tame crow
+blinking solemnly from her shoulder. She placed the great, black bird on
+the cupboard shelf and in a very few moments every spider had vanished
+down his greedy throat.
+
+"He just loves them," said Bettie.
+
+"How funny!" said Mabel. "Who ever heard of getting a crow to help clean
+house? I wish he could scrub floors as well as he clears out cupboards."
+
+The scrubbing, indeed, looked anything but an inviting task. Jean
+succeeded fairly well with the parlor floor, though she declared when
+that was finished that her wrists were so tired that she couldn't hold
+the scrubbing-brush another moment. Marjory and Bettie together scrubbed
+the floor of the tiny dining-room. Mabel made a brilliant success of one
+of the little bedrooms, but only, the other girls said, by accidentally
+tipping over a pail of clean water upon it, thereby rinsing off a thick
+layer of soap. Then Jean, having rested for a little while, finished the
+remaining bedroom and Marjory scoured the pantry shelves.
+
+The kitchen floor was rough and very dirty. Nobody wanted the task of
+scrubbing it. The tired girls leaned against the wall and looked at the
+floor and then at one another.
+
+"Let's leave it until Monday," said Mabel, who looked very much as if
+the others had scrubbed the floor with her. "I've had all the
+housecleaning I want for _one_ day."
+
+"Oh, no," pleaded Bettie. "Everything else is done. Just think how
+lovely it would be to go home tonight with all the disagreeable part
+finished! We could begin to move in Monday if we only had the house all
+clean."
+
+"Couldn't we cover the dirtiest places with pieces of old carpet?"
+demanded Mabel.
+
+"Oh, what dreadful housekeeping that would be!" said Marjory.
+
+"Yes," said Jean, "we must have every bit of it nice. Perhaps if we sit
+on the doorstep and rest for a few moments we'll feel more like
+scrubbing."
+
+The tired girls sat in a row on the edge of the low porch. They were all
+rather glad that the next day would be Sunday, for between the
+dandelions and the dust they had had a very busy week.
+
+"Why!" said Bettie, suddenly brightening. "We're going to have a
+visitor, I do believe."
+
+"Hi there!" said Mr. Black, turning in at the gate. "I smell soap.
+Housecleaning all done?"
+
+"All," said Bettie, wearily, "except the kitchen floor, and, oh! we're
+_so_ tired. I'm afraid we'll have to leave it until Monday, but we just
+hate to."
+
+"Too tired to eat peanuts?" asked Mr. Black, handing Bettie a huge paper
+bag. "Stay right here on the doorstep, all of you, and eat every one of
+these nuts. I'll look around and see what you've been doing--I'm sure
+there _can't_ be much dirt left inside when there's so much on your
+faces."
+
+It seemed a pity that Mr. Black, who liked little girls so well, should
+have no children of his own. A great many years before Bettie's people
+had moved to Lakeville, he had had one sister; and at another almost
+equally remote period he had possessed one little daughter, a slender,
+narrow-chested little maid, with great, pathetic brown eyes, so like
+Bettie's that Mr. Black was startled when Dr. Tucker's little daughter
+had first smiled at him from the Tucker doorway, for the senior warden's
+little girl had lived to be only six years old. This, of course, was the
+secret of Mr. Black's affection for Bettie.
+
+Mr. Black, who was a moderately stout, gray-haired man of fifty-five,
+with kind, dark eyes and a strong, rugged, smooth-shaven countenance,
+had a great deal of money, a beautiful home perched on the brow of a
+green hill overlooking the lake, and a silk hat. This last made a great
+impression on the children, for silk hats were seldom worn in Lakeville.
+Mr. Black looked very nice indeed in his, when he wore it to church
+Sunday morning, but Bettie felt more at home with him when he sat
+bareheaded on the rectory porch, with his short, crisp, thick gray hair
+tossed by the south wind.
+
+Besides these possessions, Mr. Black owned a garden on the sheltered
+hillside where wonderful roses grew as they would grow nowhere else in
+Lakeville. This was fortunate because Mr. Black loved roses, and spent
+much time poking about among them with trowel and pruning shears. Then,
+there were shelves upon shelves of books in the big, dingy library,
+which was the one room that the owner of the large house really lived
+in. A public-spirited man, Mr. Black had a wide circle of acquaintances
+and a few warm friends; but with all his possessions, and in spite of a
+jovial, cheerful manner in company, his dark, rather stern face, as
+Bettie had very quickly discovered, was sad when he sat alone in his pew
+in church. He had really nothing in the world to love but his books and
+his roses. It was evident, to anyone who had time to think about it,
+that kind Mr. Black, whose wife had died so many years before that only
+the oldest townspeople could remember that he had had a wife, was, in
+spite of his comfortable circumstances, a very lonely man, and that, as
+he grew older, he felt his loneliness more keenly. There were others
+besides Bettie who realized this, but it was not an easy matter to offer
+sympathy to Mr. Black--there was a dignity about him that repelled
+anything that looked like pity. Bettie was the one person who succeeded,
+without giving offense, in doing this difficult thing, but Bettie did it
+unconsciously, without in the least knowing that she _had_ accomplished
+it, and this, of course, was another reason for the strong friendship
+between Mr. Black and her.
+
+The girls found the peanuts decidedly refreshing; their unusual exercise
+had given them astonishing appetites.
+
+"I wonder," said Bettie, some ten minutes later, when the paper bag was
+almost empty, "what Mr. Black is doing in there."
+
+"I think, from the swishing, swushing sounds I hear," said Jean, "that
+Mr. Black must be scrubbing the kitchen."
+
+"What!" gasped the girls.
+
+"Come and see," said Jean, stealing in on tiptoe.
+
+There, sure enough, was stout Mr. Black dipping a broom every now and
+then into a pail of soapy water and vigorously sweeping the floor with
+it.
+
+"I _think_," whispered Mabel, ruefully, "that that's Mother's best
+broom."
+
+"Never mind," consoled Jean. "You can take mine home if you think she'll
+care. It's really mine because I bought it when we had that broom drill
+in the sixth grade. It's been hanging on my wall ever since."
+
+"Hi there!" exclaimed Mr. Black, who, looking up suddenly, had
+discovered the smiling girls in the doorway. "You didn't know I could
+scrub, did you?"
+
+Mr. Black, quite regardless of his spotless cuffs and his polished
+shoes, drew a bucket of fresh water and dashed it over the floor,
+sweeping the flood out of doors and down the back steps.
+
+"There," said Mr. Black, standing the broom in the corner, "if there's a
+cleaner house in town than this, I don't know where you'll find it. In
+return for scrubbing this kitchen, of course, I shall expect you to
+invite me to dinner when you get to housekeeping."
+
+"We will! We do!" shouted the girls. "And we'll cook every single thing
+ourselves."
+
+"I don't know that I'll insist on _that_," returned Mr. Black,
+teasingly, "but I shan't let you forget about the dinner."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 4
+
+Furnishing the Cottage
+
+
+After tea that Saturday night four tired but spotlessly clean little
+girls sat on Jean's doorstep, making plans for the coming week.
+
+"What are you going to do for a stove?" asked Mrs. Mapes.
+
+"I have a toy one," replied Mabel, "but it has only one leg and it
+always smokes. Besides, I can't find it."
+
+"I have a little box stove that the boys used to have in their camp,"
+said Mrs. Mapes. "It has three good legs and it doesn't smoke at all. If
+you want it, and if you'll promise to be very careful about your fire,
+I'll have one of the boys set it up for you."
+
+"That would be lovely," said Bettie, gratefully. "Mamma has given me
+four saucers and a syrup jug, and I have a few pieces left of quite a
+large-sized doll's tea set."
+
+"We have an old rug," said Marjory, "that I'm almost sure I can have for
+the parlor floor, and I have two small rocking chairs of my own."
+
+"There's a lot of old things in our garret," said Mabel; "three-legged
+tables, and chairs with the seats worn out. I know Mother'll let us take
+them."
+
+"Well," said Bettie, "take everything you have to the cottage Monday
+afternoon after school. Bring all the pictures you can to cover the
+walls, and--"
+
+"Hark!" said Mrs. Mapes. "I think somebody is calling Bettie."
+
+"Oh, my!" said Bettie, springing to her feet. "This is bath night and I
+promised to bathe the twins. I must go this minute."
+
+"I think Bettie is sweet," said Jean. "Mr. Black would never have given
+us the cottage if he hadn't been so fond of Bettie; but she doesn't put
+on any airs at all. She makes us feel as if it belonged to all of us."
+
+"Bettie _is_ a sweet little girl," said Mrs. Mapes, "but she's far too
+energetic for such a little body. You mustn't let her do _all_ the
+work."
+
+"Oh, we don't!" exclaimed Mabel, grandly. "Why, what are you laughing
+at, Marjory?"
+
+"Oh, nothing," said Marjory. "I just happened to remember how you
+scrubbed that bedroom floor."
+
+From four to six on Monday afternoon, the little housekeepers, heavily
+burdened each time with their goods and chattels, made many small
+journeys between their homes and Dandelion Cottage. The parlor was soon
+piled high with furniture that was all more or less battered.
+
+"Dear me," said Jean, pausing at the door with an armful of carpet. "How
+am I ever to get in? Hadn't we better straighten out what we have before
+we bring anything more?"
+
+"Yes," said Bettie. "I wouldn't be surprised if we had almost enough for
+two houses. I'm sure I've seen six clocks."
+
+"That's only one for each room," said Mabel. "Besides, none of the four
+that _I_ brought will go."
+
+"Neither will my two," said Marjory, giggling.
+
+"We might call this 'The House of the Tickless Clocks,'" suggested Jean.
+
+"Or of the grindless coffee-mill," giggled Marjory.
+
+"Or of the talkless telephone," added Mabel. "I brought over an old
+telephone box so we could pretend we had a telephone."
+
+There were still several things lacking when the children had found
+places for all their crippled belongings. They had no couch for the sofa
+pillows Mabel had brought, but Bettie converted two wooden boxes and a
+long board into an admirable cozy corner. She even upholstered this
+sadly misnamed piece of furniture with the burlaps and excelsior that
+had been packed about her father's new desk, but it still needed a
+cover. The windows lacked curtains, the girls had only one fork, and
+their cupboard was so distressingly empty that it rivaled Mother
+Hubbard's.
+
+They had planned to eat and even sleep at the cottage during vacation,
+which was still some weeks distant; but, as they had no beds and no
+provisions, and as their parents said quite emphatically that they could
+_not_ stay away from home at night, part of this plan had to be given
+up.
+
+Most of the grown-ups, however, were greatly pleased with the cottage
+plan. Marjory's Aunty Jane, who was nervous and disliked having children
+running in and out of her spotlessly neat house, was glad to have
+Marjory happy with her little friends, provided they were all perfectly
+safe--and out of earshot. Overworked Mrs. Tucker found it a great relief
+to have careful Bettie take two or three of the smallest children
+entirely off her hands for several hours each day. When these infants,
+divided as equally as possible among the four girls, were not needed
+indoors to serve as playthings, they rolled about contentedly inside the
+cottage fence. Mabel's mother did not hesitate to say that she, for one,
+was thankful enough that Mr. Black had given the girls a place to play
+in. With Mabel engaged elsewhere, it was possible, Mrs. Bennett said, to
+keep her own house quite respectably neat. Mrs. Mapes, indeed, missed
+quiet, orderly Jean; but she would not mention it for fear of spoiling
+her tender-hearted little daughter's pleasure, and it did not occur to
+modest Jean that she was of sufficient consequence to be missed by her
+mother or anyone else.
+
+The neighbors, finding that the long-deserted cottage was again
+occupied, began to be curious about the occupants. One day Mrs.
+Bartholomew Crane, who lived almost directly opposite the cottage, found
+herself so devoured by kindly curiosity that she could stand it no
+longer. Intending to be neighborly, for Mrs. Crane was always neighborly
+in the best sense of the word, she put on her one good dress and started
+across the street to call on the newcomers.
+
+It was really a great undertaking for Mrs. Crane to pay visits, for she
+was a stout, slow-moving person, and, owing to the antiquity and
+consequent tenderness of her best garments, it was an even greater
+undertaking for the good woman to make a visiting costume. Her best
+black silk, for instance, had to be neatly mended with court-plaster
+when all other remedies had failed, and her old, thread-lace collars had
+been darned until their original floral patterns had given place to a
+mosaic of spider webs. Mrs. Crane's motives, however, were far better
+than her clothes. Years before, when she was newly married, she had
+lived for months a stranger in a strange town, where it was no unusual
+occurrence to live for years in ignorance of one's next-door neighbor's
+very name. During those unhappy months poor Mrs. Crane, sociable by
+nature yet sadly afflicted with shyness, had suffered keenly from
+loneliness and homesickness. She had vowed then that no other stranger
+should suffer as she had suffered, if it were in her power to prevent
+it; so, in spite of increasing difficulties, kind Mrs. Crane
+conscientiously called on each newcomer. In many cases, hers was the
+first welcome to be extended to persons settling in Lakeville, and
+although these visits were prompted by single-minded generosity, it was
+natural that she should, at the same time, make many friends. These,
+however, were seldom lasting ones, for many persons, whose business kept
+them in Lakeville for perhaps only a few months, afterwards moved away
+and drifted quietly out of Mrs. Crane's life.
+
+That afternoon the four girls realized for the first time that Dandelion
+Cottage was provided with a doorbell. In response to its lively
+jingling, Mabel dropped the potato she was peeling with neatness but
+hardly with dispatch, and hurried to the door.
+
+"Is your moth--Is the lady of the house at home?" asked Mrs. Crane.
+
+"Yes'm, all of us are--there's four," stammered Mabel, who wasn't quite
+sure of her ability to entertain a grown-up caller. "Please walk in. Oh!
+don't sit down in that one, please! There's only two legs on that chair,
+and it always goes down flat."
+
+"Dear me," said Mrs. Crane, moving toward the cozy corner, "I shouldn't
+have suspected it."
+
+"Oh, you can't sit _there_, either," exclaimed Mabel. "You see, that's
+the Tucker baby taking his nap."
+
+"My land!" said stout Mrs. Crane. "I thought it was one of those
+new-fashioned roll pillows."
+
+"_This_ chair," said Mabel, dragging one in from the dining room, "is
+the safest one we have in the house, but you must be careful to sit
+right down square in the middle of it because it slides out from under
+you if you sit too hard on the front edge. If you'll excuse me just a
+minute I'll go call the others--they're making a vegetable garden in the
+back yard."
+
+"Well, I declare!" said Mrs. Crane, when she had recognized the four
+young housekeepers and had heard all about the housekeeping. "It seems
+as if I ought to be able to find something in the way of furniture for
+you. I have a single iron bedstead I'm willing to lend you, and maybe I
+can find you some other things."
+
+"Thank you very much," said Bettie, politely.
+
+"I hope," said Mrs. Crane, pleasantly, "that you'll be very neighborly
+and come over to see me whenever you feel like it, for I'm always
+alone."
+
+"Thank you," said Jean, speaking for the household. "We'd just love to."
+
+"Haven't you _any_ children?" asked Bettie, sympathetically.
+
+"Not one," replied Mrs. Crane. "I've never had any but I've always loved
+children."
+
+"But I'm _sure_ you have a lot of grandchildren," said Mabel,
+consolingly. "You look so nice and grandmothery."
+
+"No," said Mrs. Crane, not appearing so sorrowful as Mabel had supposed
+an utterly grandchildless person _would_ look, "I've never possessed any
+grandchildren either."
+
+"But," queried Mabel, who was sometimes almost too inquisitive, "haven't
+you any relatives, husbands, or _anybody_, in all the world?"
+
+Many months afterward the girls were suddenly reminded of Mrs. Crane's
+odd, contradictory reply:
+
+"No--Yes--that is, no. None to speak of, I mean. Do you girls sleep
+here, too?"
+
+"No" said Jean. "We want to, awfully, but our mothers won't let us. You
+see, we sleep so soundly that they're all afraid we might get the house
+afire, burn up, and never know a thing about it."
+
+"They're quite right," said Mrs. Crane. "I suppose they like to have you
+at home once in a while."
+
+"Oh, they do have us," replied Bettie. "We eat and sleep at home and
+they have us all day Sundays. When they want any of us other times, all
+they have to do is to open a back window and call--Dear me, Mrs. Crane,
+I'll have to ask you to excuse me this very minute--There's somebody
+calling me now."
+
+Other visitors, including the girls' parents, called at the cottage and
+seemed to enjoy it very much indeed. The visitors were always greatly
+interested and everybody wanted to help. One brought a little table that
+really stood up very well if kept against the wall, another found
+curtains for all the windows--a little ragged, to be sure, but still
+curtains. Grandma Pike, who had a wonderful garden, was so delighted
+with everything that she gave the girls a crimson petunia growing in a
+red tomato can, and a great many neat little homemade packets of flower
+seeds. Rob said they might have even his porcupine if they could get it
+out from under the rectory porch.
+
+By the end of the week the cottage presented quite a lived-in
+appearance. Bright pictures covered the dingy paper, and, thanks to
+numerous donations, the rooms looked very well furnished. No one would
+have suspected that the chairs were untrustworthy, the tables crippled,
+and the clocks devoid of works. The cottage seemed cozy and pleasant,
+and the girls kept it in apple-pie order.
+
+Out of doors, the grass was beginning to show and little green specks
+dotted the flower beds. Other green specks in crooked rows staggered
+across the vegetable garden.
+
+The four mothers, satisfied that their little daughters were safe in
+Dandelion Cottage, left them in undisturbed possession.
+
+"I declare," said Mrs. Mapes one day, "the only time I see Jean,
+nowadays, is when she's asleep. All the rest of the time she's in school
+or at the cottage."
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Bennett, "when I miss my scissors or any of my dishes
+or anything else, I always have to go to the cottage and get out a
+search warrant. Mabel has carried off a wagonload of things, but I don't
+know _when_ our own house has been so peaceful."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 5
+
+Poverty in the Cottage
+
+
+"There's no use talking," said Jean, one day, as the girls sat at their
+dining-room table eating very smoky toast and drinking the weakest of
+cocoa, "we'll have to get some provisions of our own before long if
+we're going to invite Mr. Black to dinner as we promised. The cupboard's
+perfectly empty and Bridget says I can't take another scrap of bread or
+one more potato out of the house this week."
+
+"Aunty Jane says there'll be trouble," said Marjory, "if I don't keep
+out of her ice box, so I guess I can't bring any more milk. When she
+says there'll be trouble, there usually is, if I'm not pretty careful.
+But dear me, it _is_ such fun to cook our own meals on that dear little
+box-stove, even if most of the things do taste pretty awful."
+
+"I wish," said Mabel, mournfully, "that somebody would give us a hen, so
+we could make omelets."
+
+"Who ever made omelets out of a hen?" asked Jean, laughing.
+
+"I meant out of the eggs, of course," said Mabel, with dignity. "Hens
+lay eggs, don't they? If we count on five or six eggs a day--"
+
+"The goose that laid the golden egg laid only one a day," said Marjory.
+"It seems to me that six is a good many."
+
+"I wasn't talking about geese," said Mabel, "but about just plain
+everyday hens."
+
+"Six-every-day hens, you mean, don't you?" asked Marjory, teasingly.
+"You'd better wish for a cow, too, while you're about it."
+
+"Yes," said Bettie, "we certainly need one, for I'm not to ask for
+butter more than twice a week. Mother says she'll be in the poorhouse
+before summer's over if she has to provide butter for _two_ families."
+
+"I just tell you what it is, girls," said Jean, nibbling her cindery
+crust, "we'll just have to earn some money if we're to give Mr. Black
+any kind of a dinner."
+
+Mabel, who always accepted new ideas with enthusiasm, slipped quietly
+into the kitchen, took a solitary lemon from the cupboard, cut it in
+half, and squeezed the juice into a broken-nosed pitcher. This done, she
+added a little sugar and a great deal of water to the lemon juice,
+slipped quietly out of the back door, ran around the house and in at the
+front door, taking a small table from the front room. This she carried
+out of doors to the corner of the lot facing the street, where she
+established her lemonade stand.
+
+She was almost immediately successful, for the day was warm, and Mrs.
+Bartholomew Crane, who was entertaining two visitors on her front porch,
+was glad of an opportunity to offer her guests something in the way of
+refreshment. The cottage boasted only one glass that did not leak, but
+Mabel cheerfully made three trips across the street with it--it did not
+occur to any of them until too late it would have been easier to carry
+the pitcher across in the first place. The lemonade was decidedly weak,
+but the visitors were too polite to say so. On her return, a thirsty
+small boy offered Mabel a nickel for all that was left in the pitcher,
+and Mabel, after a moment's hesitation, accepted the offer.
+
+"You're getting a bargain," said Mabel. "There's as much as a glass and
+three quarters there, besides all the lemon."
+
+"Did you get a whole pitcherful out of one lemon?" asked the boy. "You'd
+be able to make circus lemonade all right."
+
+Before the other girls had had time to discover what had become of her,
+the proprietor of the lemonade stand marched into the cottage and
+proudly displayed four shining nickels and the empty pitcher.
+
+"Why, where in the world did you get all that?" cried Marjory. "Surely
+you never earned it by being on time for meals--you've been late three
+times a day ever since we got the cottage."
+
+"Sold lemonade," said Mabel. "Our troubles are over, girls. I'm going to
+buy _two_ lemons tomorrow and sell twice as much."
+
+"Good!" cried Bettie, "I'll help. The boys have promised to bring me a
+lot of arbutus tonight--they went to the woods this morning. I'll tie it
+in bunches and perhaps we can sell that, too."
+
+"Wouldn't it be splendid if we could have Mr. Black here to dinner next
+Saturday?" said Jean. "I'll never be satisfied until we've kept that
+promise, but I don't suppose we could possibly get enough things
+together by that time."
+
+"I have a sample can of baking powder," offered Marjory, hopefully.
+"I'll bring it over next time I come."
+
+"What's the good?" asked matter-of-fact Mabel. "We can't feed Mr. Black
+on just plain baking powder, and we haven't any biscuits to raise with
+it."
+
+"Dear me," said Jean, "I wish we hadn't been so extravagant at first. If
+we hadn't had so many tea parties last week, we might get enough flour
+and things at home. Mother says it's too expensive having all her
+groceries carried off."
+
+"Never mind," consoled Mabel, confidently. "We'll be buying our own
+groceries by this time tomorrow with the money we make selling lemonade.
+A boy said my lemonade was quite as good as you can buy at the circus."
+
+Unfortunately, however, it rained the next day and the next, so lemonade
+was out of the question. By the time it cleared, Bettie's neat little
+bunches of arbutus were no longer fresh, and careless Mabel had
+forgotten where she had put the money. She mentioned no fewer than
+twenty-two places where the four precious nickels might be, but none of
+them happened to be the right one.
+
+"Mercy me," said Bettie, "it's dreadful to be so poor! I'm afraid we'll
+have to invite Mr. Black to one of our bread-and-sugar tea-parties,
+after all."
+
+"No," said Jean, firmly. "We've just got to give him a regular
+seven-course dinner--he has 'em every day at home. We'll have to put it
+off until we can do it in style."
+
+"By and by," said Mabel, "we'll have beans and radishes and things in
+our own garden, and we can go to the woods for berries."
+
+"Perhaps," said Bettie, hopefully, "one of the boys might catch a
+fish--Rob _almost_ did, once."
+
+"I suppose I could ask Aunty Jane for a potato once in a while," said
+Marjory, "but I'll have to give her time to forget about last month's
+grocery bill--she says we never before used so many eggs in one month
+and I guess Maggie _did_ give me a good many. Potatoes will keep, you
+know. We can save 'em until we have enough for a meal."
+
+"While we're about it," said Bettie, "I think we'd better have Mrs.
+Crane to dinner, too. She's such a nice old lady and she's been awfully
+good to us."
+
+"She's not very well off," agreed Mabel, "and probably a real,
+first-class dinner would taste good to her."
+
+"But," pleaded Bettie, "don't let's ask her until we're sure of the
+date. As it is, I can't sleep nights for thinking of how Mr. Black must
+feel. He'll think we don't want him."
+
+"You'd better explain to him," suggested Jean, "that it isn't convenient
+to have him just yet, but that we're going to just as soon as ever we
+can. We mustn't tell him why, because it would be just like him to send
+the provisions here himself, and then it wouldn't really be _our_
+party."
+
+In spite of all the girls' plans, however, by the end of the week the
+cottage larder was still distressingly empty. Marjory had, indeed,
+industriously collected potatoes, only to have them carried off by an
+equally industrious rat; and Mabel's four nickels still remained
+missing. Things in the vegetable garden seemed singularly backward,
+possibly because the four eager gardeners kept digging them up to see if
+they were growing. Their parents and Marjory's Aunty Jane were firmer
+than ever in their refusal to part with any more staple groceries.
+
+Perhaps if the girls had explained why they wanted the things, their
+relatives would have been more generous; but girllike, the four
+poverty-stricken young housekeepers made a deep mystery of their dinner
+plan. It was their most cherished secret, and when they met each morning
+they always said, mysteriously, "Good morning--remember M. B. D.," which
+meant, of course, "Mr. Black's Dinner."
+
+Mr. Black, indeed, never went by without referring to the girls'
+promise.
+
+"When," he would ask, "is that dinner party coming off? It's a long time
+since I've been invited to a first-class dinner, cooked by four
+accomplished young ladies, and I'm getting hungrier every minute. When
+I get up in the morning I always say: 'Now I won't eat much breakfast
+because I've got to save room for that dinner'--and then, after all, I
+don't get invited."
+
+The situation was growing really embarrassing. The girls began to feel
+that keeping house, not to mention giving dinner parties, with no income
+whatever, was anything but a joke.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 6
+
+A Lodger to the Rescue
+
+
+Grass was beginning to grow on the tiny lawn, all sorts of thrifty young
+seedlings were popping up in the flower beds, and Jean's pansies were
+actually beginning to blossom. The girls had trained the rampant
+Virginia creeper away from the windows and had coaxed it to climb the
+porch pillars. From the outside, no one would have suspected that
+Dandelion Cottage was not occupied by a regular grown-up family. Book
+agents and peddlers offered their wares at the front door, and appeared
+very much crestfallen when Bettie, or one of the others, explained that
+the neatly kept little cottage was just a playhouse. Handbills and
+sample packages of yeast cakes were left on the doorstep, and once a
+brand-new postman actually dropped a letter into the letter-box; Mabel
+carried it afterward to Mrs. Bartholomew Crane, to whom it rightfully
+belonged.
+
+One afternoon, when Jean was rearranging the dining-room pictures--they
+had to be rearranged very frequently--and when Mabel and Marjory were
+busy putting fresh papers on the pantry shelves, there was a ring at the
+doorbell.
+
+Bettie, who had been dusting the parlor, pushed the chairs into place,
+threw her duster into the dining-room and ran to the door. A
+lady--Bettie described her afterwards as a "middle-aged young lady with
+the sweetest dimple"--stood on the doorstep.
+
+"Is your mother at home?" asked the lady, smiling pleasantly at Bettie,
+who liked the stranger at once.
+
+"She--she doesn't live here," said Bettie, taken by surprise.
+
+"Perhaps you can tell me what I want to know. I'm a stranger in town and
+I want to rent a room in this neighborhood. I am to have my meals at
+Mrs. Baker's, but she hasn't any place for me to sleep. I don't want
+anything very expensive, but of course I'd be willing to pay a fair
+price. Do you know of anybody with rooms to rent? I'm to be in town for
+three weeks."
+
+Bettie shook her head, reflectively. "No, I don't believe I do,
+unless--"
+
+Bettie paused to look inquiringly at Jean, who, framed by the
+dining-room doorway, was nodding her head vigorously.
+
+"Perhaps Jean does," finished Bettie.
+
+"Are you _very_ particular," asked Jean, coming forward, "about what
+kind of room it is?"
+
+"Why, not so very," returned the guest. "I'm afraid I couldn't afford a
+very grand one."
+
+"Are you very timid?" asked Bettie, who had suddenly guessed what Jean
+had in mind. "I mean are you afraid of burglars and mice and things like
+that?"
+
+"Why, most persons are, I imagine," said the young woman, whose eyes
+were twinkling pleasantly. "Are there a great many mice and burglars in
+this neighborhood?"
+
+"Mice," said Jean, "but not burglars. It's a _very_ honest neighborhood.
+I think I have an idea, but you see there are four of us and I'll have
+to consult the others about it, too. Sit here, please, in the cozy
+corner--it's the safest piece of furniture we have. Now if you'll
+excuse us just a minute we'll go to the kitchen and talk it over."
+
+"Certainly," murmured the lady, who looked a trifle embarrassed at
+encountering the gaze of the forty-two staring dolls that sat all around
+the parlor with their backs against the baseboard. "I hope I haven't
+interrupted a party."
+
+"Not at all," assured Bettie, with her best company manner.
+
+"Girls," said Jean, when she and Bettie were in the kitchen with the
+door carefully closed behind them, "would you be willing to rent the
+front bedroom to a clean, nice-looking lady if she'd be willing to take
+it? She wants to pay for a room, she says, and she _looks_ very polite
+and pleasant, doesn't she, Bettie?"
+
+"Yes," corroborated Bettie, "I like her. She has kind of twinkling brown
+eyes and such nice dimples."
+
+"You see," explained Jean, "the money would pay for Mr. Black's dinner."
+
+"Why, so it would," cried Marjory. "Let's do it."
+
+"Yes," echoed Mabel, "for goodness' sake, let's do it. It's only three
+weeks, anyway, and what's three weeks!"
+
+"How would it be," asked Marjory, cautiously, "to take her on approval?
+Aunty Jane always has hats and things sent on approval, so she can send
+them back if they don't fit."
+
+"Splendid!" cried Mabel. "If she doesn't fit Dandelion Cottage, she
+can't stay."
+
+"Oh," gurgled Marjory, "_what_ a dinner we'll give Mr. Black and Mrs.
+Crane! We'll have ice cream and--"
+
+"Huh!" said Mabel, "most likely she won't take the room at all. Anyhow,
+probably she's got tired of waiting and has gone."
+
+"We'll go and see," said Jean. "Come on, everybody."
+
+The lady, however, still sat on the hard, lumpy cozy corner, with her
+toes just touching the ground.
+
+"Well," said she, smiling at the flock of girls, "how about the idea?"
+
+The other three looked expectantly at Jean; Mabel nudged her elbow and
+Bettie nodded at her.
+
+"_You_ talk," said Marjory; "you're the oldest."
+
+"It's like this," explained Jean. "This house isn't good enough to rent
+to grown-ups because it's all out of repair, so they've lent it to us
+for the summer for a playhouse. The back of it leaks dreadfully when it
+rains, and the plaster is all down in the kitchen, but the front bedroom
+is really very nice--if you don't mind having four kinds of carpet on
+the floor. This is a very safe neighborhood, no tramps or anything like
+that, and if you're not an awfully timid person, perhaps you wouldn't
+mind staying alone at night."
+
+"If you did," added Bettie, "probably one of us could sleep in the other
+room unless it happened to rain--it rains right down on the bed."
+
+"Could I go upstairs to look at the room?" asked the young woman.
+
+"There isn't any upstairs," said Bettie, pulling back a curtain; "the
+room's right here."
+
+"Why! What a dear little room--all white and blue!"
+
+"I hope you don't mind having children around," said Marjory, somewhat
+anxiously. "You see, we'd have to play in the rest of the house."
+
+"Of course," added Jean, hastily, "if you had company you could use the
+parlor--"
+
+"And the front steps," said Bettie.
+
+"I'm very fond of children," said the young lady, "and I don't expect to
+have any company but you because I don't know anybody here. I shall be
+away every day until about five o'clock because I am here with my father
+who is tuning church organs, and I have to help him. I strike the notes
+while he works behind the organ. He has a room at Mrs. Baker's, but she
+didn't have any place to put me. I think I should like this little room
+very much indeed. Now, how much are you going to charge me for it?"
+
+Jean looked at Bettie, and Bettie looked at the other two.
+
+"I don't know," said Jean, at last.
+
+"Neither do I," said Bettie.
+
+"Would--would a dollar a week be too much?" asked Marjory.
+
+"It wouldn't be enough," said the young woman, promptly. "My father pays
+five for the room _he_ has, but it's really a larger room than he
+wanted. I should be very glad to give you two dollars and a half a
+week--I'm sure I couldn't find a furnished room anywhere for less than
+that. Can I move in tonight? I've nothing but a small trunk."
+
+"Ye-es," said Bettie, looking inquiringly at Jean. "I _think_ we could
+get it ready by seven o'clock. It's all perfectly clean, but you see
+we'll have to change things around a little and fix up the washstand."
+
+"I'm sure," said the visitor, turning to depart, "that it all looks
+quite lovely just as it is. You may expect me at seven."
+
+"Well," exclaimed Marjory, when the door had closed behind their
+pleasant visitor, "isn't this too grand for words! It's just like
+finding a bush with pennies growing on it, or a pot of gold at the end
+of the rainbow. Two and a half a week! That's--let me see. Why! that's
+seven dollars and a half! We can buy Mr. Black's dinner and have enough
+money left to live on for a long time afterwards."
+
+"Mercy!" cried Mabel. "We never said a word to her about taking her on
+approval. We didn't even ask her name."
+
+"Pshaw!" said Jean. "She's all right. She couldn't be disagreeable if
+she wanted to with that dimple and those sparkles in her eyes; but,
+girls, we've a tremendous lot to do."
+
+"Yes," said Mabel. "If she'd known that the pillows under those ruffled
+shams were just flour sacks stuffed with excelsior, she wouldn't have
+thought everything so lovely. Girls, what in the world are we to do for
+sheets? We haven't even one."
+
+"And blankets?" said Marjory.
+
+"And quilts?" said Bettie. "That old white spread is every bit of
+bedclothes we own. I was _so_ afraid she'd turn the cover down and see
+that everything else was just pieces of burlap."
+
+"It's a good thing the mattress is all right," said Marjory. "But there
+isn't any bottom to the water pitcher, and the basin leaks like
+anything."
+
+"We'll just have to go home," said Jean, "and tell our mothers all about
+it. We'll have to borrow what we need. We must get a lamp too, and some
+oil, because there isn't any other way of lighting the house."
+
+The four girls ran first of all to Bettie's house with their surprising
+news.
+
+"But, Bettie," said Mrs. Tucker, when her little daughter, helped by
+the other three, had explained the situation, "are you _sure_ she's
+nice? I'm afraid you've been a little rash."
+
+"Just as nice as can be," assured Bettie.
+
+"Yes," said Dr. Tucker, "I guess it's all right. I know the organ
+tuner--I used to see him twice a year when we lived in Ohio. His name is
+Blossom and he's a very fine old fellow. I met his daughter this
+afternoon when they were examining the church organ, and she seemed a
+pleasant, well-educated young woman--I believe he said she teaches a
+kindergarten during the winter. The girls haven't made any mistake this
+time."
+
+"Then we must make her comfortable," said Mrs. Tucker. "You may take
+sheets and pillow-cases from the linen closet, Bettie, and you must see
+that she has everything she needs."
+
+Excited Bettie danced off to the linen closet and the others ran home to
+tell the good news.
+
+"I've filled a lamp for you, Bettie," said Mrs. Tucker, meeting Bettie,
+with her arms full of sheets at the bottom of the stairs. "Here's a box
+of matches, too."
+
+When Bettie was returning with her spoils to Dandelion Cottage she
+almost bumped into Mabel, whom she met at the gate with a pillow under
+each arm, a folded patchwork quilt balanced unsteadily on her head, and
+her chubby hands clasped about a big brass lamp.
+
+"The pillows are off my own bed," said Mabel. "Mother wasn't home, but
+she wouldn't care, anyway."
+
+"But can you sleep without them?"
+
+"Oh, I'll take home one of the excelsior ones," said Mabel. "I can sleep
+on anything."
+
+Jean came in a moment later with a pile of blankets and quilts. She,
+too, had a lamp, packed carefully in a big basket that hung from her
+arm. Marjory followed almost at her heels with more bedding, towels, a
+fourth lamp, and two candlesticks.
+
+"Well," laughed Bettie, when all the lamps and candles were placed in a
+row on the dining-room table, "I guess Miss Blossom will have almost
+light enough. Here are four big lamps and two candles--"
+
+"I've six more candles in my blouse," said Mabel, laughing and fishing
+them out one at a time. "I thought they'd do for the blue candlesticks
+Mrs. Crane gave us for the bedroom."
+
+"Isn't it fortunate," said Jean, who was thumping the mattress
+vigorously, "that we put the best bed in this room? Beds are such hard
+things to move."
+
+"Ye-es," said Bettie, rather doubtfully, "but I think we'd better tell
+Miss Blossom not to be surprised if the slats fall out once in a while
+during the night. You know they always do if you happen to turn over
+too suddenly."
+
+"We must warn her about the chairs, too," said Marjory. "They're none of
+them really very safe."
+
+"I guess," said Jean, "I'd better bring over the rocking chair from my
+own room, but I'm afraid she'll just have to grin and bear the slats,
+because they _will_ fall out in spite of anything I can do."
+
+By seven o'clock the room was invitingly comfortable. The washstand,
+which was really only a wooden box thinly disguised by a muslin curtain
+gathered across the front and sides, was supplied with a sound basin, a
+whole pitcher, numerous towels, and four kinds of soap--the girls had
+all thought of soap. They were unable to decide which kind the lodger
+would like best, so they laid Bettie's clear amber cake of glycerine
+soap, Jean's scentless white castile, Marjory's square of green cucumber
+soap, and Mabel's highly perfumed oval pink cake, in a rainbow row on
+the washstand.
+
+The bed, bountifully supplied with coverings--had Dandelion Cottage been
+suddenly transported to Alaska the lodger would still have had blankets
+to spare, so generously had her enthusiastic landladies provided--looked
+very comfortable indeed. At half-past seven when the lodger arrived with
+apologies for being late because the drayman who was to move her trunk
+had been slow, the cottage, for the first time since the girls had
+occupied it, was brilliantly lighted.
+
+"We thought," explained Bettie, "that you might feel less frightened in
+a strange place if you had plenty of light, though we didn't really mean
+to have so many lamps--we each supposed we were bringing the only one.
+Anyway, we don't know which one burns best."
+
+"If they should _all_ go out," said Mabel, earnestly, "there are candles
+and matches on the little shelf above the bed."
+
+When the lodger had been warned about the loose slats and the
+untrustworthiness of the chairs, the girls said good-night.
+
+"You needn't go on _my_ account," said Miss Blossom. "It's pleasant to
+have you here--still, I'm not afraid to stay alone. You must always do
+just as you like about staying, you know; I shouldn't like to think that
+I was driving you out of this dear little house, for it was nice of you
+to let me come. I think I was very fortunate in finding a room so near
+Mrs. Baker's."
+
+"Thank you," said Jean, "but we always have to be home before dark
+unless we have permission to stay any place."
+
+"I _have_ to go," confided Mabel, "because I was so excited that I
+forgot to eat my supper."
+
+"So did I," said Marjory, frankly, "and I'm just as hungry as a bear."
+
+"Everybody come home with me," said Jean. "We always have dinner later
+than you do and the things can't be _very_ cold."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 7
+
+The Girls Disclose a Plan
+
+
+"Did you sleep well, Miss Blossom?" asked Bettie, shyly waylaying the
+lodger who was on her way to breakfast.
+
+"Ye-es," said Miss Blossom, smiling brightly, "though in spite of your
+warning and all my care, the bottom dropped out of my bed and landed the
+mattress on the floor. But no harm was done. As soon as I discovered
+that I was not falling down an elevator shaft, I went to sleep again. I
+think if I had a few nails and some little blocks of wood I could fix
+those slats so they'd stay in better; you see they're not quite long
+enough for the bed."
+
+"I'll find some for you," said Bettie. "You'll find them on the parlor
+table when you get back."
+
+Before the week was over, the girls had discovered that their new friend
+was in every way a most delightful person. She proved surprisingly
+skillful with hammer and nails, and besides mending the bed she soon had
+several of the chairs quite firm on their legs.
+
+"Why," cried Bettie one day as she delightedly inspected an old black
+walnut rocker that had always collapsed at the slightest touch, "this
+old chair is almost strong enough to _walk_! I'm so glad you've made so
+many of them safe, because, when Mrs. Bartholomew Crane comes to see us,
+she's always afraid to sit down. She's such a nice neighbor that we'd
+like to make her comfortable."
+
+"We do have the loveliest friends," said Jean, with a contented sigh.
+"It's hard to tell which is the nicest one."
+
+"But the dearest _two_," exclaimed Marjory, discriminating nicely, "are
+Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane--except you, of course, Miss Blossom."
+
+"Somehow," added Bettie, "we always think of those two in one breath,
+like Dombey and Son, or Jack and Jill."
+
+"But they couldn't be farther apart _really_," declared Jean. "They're
+both nice, both are kind of old, both are dark and rather stout, but
+except for that they're altogether different. Mr. Black has everything
+in the world that anybody could want, and Mrs. Crane hasn't much of
+anything. Mr. Black is invited to banquets and things and rides in
+carriages and--"
+
+"Has a silk hat," Mabel broke in.
+
+"And Mrs. Crane," continued Jean, paying no attention to the
+interruption, "can't even afford to ride in the street car--I've heard
+her say so."
+
+"I wish," groaned generous Mabel, with deep contrition, "that I'd never
+taken a cent for that lemonade I sold her last spring. If I'd dreamed
+how good and how poor she was, I wouldn't have. She might have had
+_four_ rides with that money."
+
+"_I_ wish," said Jean, "we could do something perfectly grand and
+beautiful for Mrs. Crane. She's always doing the kindest little things
+for other people."
+
+"Well," demanded Marjory, "aren't we going to have her here to dinner,
+too, when we have Mr. Black? Please don't tell anybody, Miss
+Blossom--it's to be a surprise."
+
+"Still, just a dinner doesn't seem to be enough," said Jean, who, with
+her chin in her hand, seemed to be thinking deeply. "Of course it
+helps, but I'd rather save her life or do something like that."
+
+"Little things count for a great deal in this world, sometimes," said
+Miss Blossom, leaning down to brush her cheek softly against Jean's.
+"It's generally wiser to leave the big things until one is big enough to
+handle them."
+
+"Mrs. Crane _is_ pretty big," offered matter-of-fact Mabel.
+
+"Oh, dear," laughed Miss Blossom, "that wasn't at all what I meant."
+
+"Mr. Black," said Bettie, dreamily, "has enough _things_, but I don't
+believe he really cares about anything in the world but his roses. His
+face is different when he talks about them, kind of soft all about the
+corners and not so--not so--"
+
+"Daniel Webstery," supplied Jean, understandingly.
+
+"It must be pretty lonely for him without any family," agreed Miss
+Blossom. "I don't know what would become of Father if he didn't have me
+to keep him cheered up--we're wonderful chums, Father and I."
+
+"Oh", mourned tender-hearted Bettie, "I _wish_ I could make Mrs. Crane
+rich enough so she wouldn't need to mend all the time, and that I could
+provide Mr. Black with some really truly relatives to love him the way
+you love your father."
+
+"Oh, Bettie! Bettie!" cried Mabel, suddenly beginning, in her
+excitement, to bounce up and down on the one chair that possessed
+springs. "I know exactly how we could help them both. We could beg seven
+or eight children from the orphan asylum--they're _glad_ to give 'em
+away--and let Mrs. Crane sell 'em to Mr. Black for--for ten dollars
+apiece."
+
+Such a storm of merriment followed this simple solution of the problem
+that Mabel for the moment looked quite crushed. Her chair, incidentally,
+was crushed too, for Mabel's final bounce proved too much for its frail
+constitution; its four legs spread suddenly and lowered the surprised
+Mabel gently to the floor. Everybody laughed again, Mabel as heartily as
+anyone, and, for a time, the sorrows of Mrs. Crane and Mr. Black were
+forgotten.
+
+The dinner party, however, still remained uppermost in all their plans.
+Mabel was in favor of giving it at once, but the other girls were more
+cautious, so the little mistresses of Dandelion Cottage finally decided
+to postpone the party until after Miss Blossom had paid her rent in
+full.
+
+"You see," explained cautious Marjory, one day when the girls were
+alone, "she might get called away suddenly before the three weeks are
+up, and if we spent more money than we _have_ it wouldn't be very
+comfortable. Besides, I've never seen seven dollars and a half all at
+once, and I'd like to."
+
+But the dinner plan was no longer the profound secret that it had been
+at first, for when the young housekeepers had told their mothers about
+their lodger, they had been obliged to tell them also what they intended
+to do with the money. In the excitement of the moment, they had all
+neglected to mention Mrs. Crane, but later, when they made good this
+omission, their news was received in a most perplexing fashion. The
+girls were greatly puzzled, but they did not happen to compare notes
+until after something that happened at the dinner party had reminded
+them of their parents' incomprehensible behavior.
+
+"Mamma," said Bettie, one evening at supper time, soon after Miss
+Blossom's arrival, "I forgot to tell you that we're going to ask Mrs.
+Crane, too, when we have Mr. Black to dinner. It's to be a surprise for
+both of them."
+
+"What!" gasped Mrs. Tucker, dropping her muffin, and looking not at
+Bettie, but at Dr. Tucker. "Surely not Mrs. Crane and Mr. Black, too!
+You don't mean both at the same time!"
+
+"Why, yes, Mamma," said Bettie. "It wouldn't cost any more."
+
+Then the little girl looked with astonishment first at her father and
+then at her mother, for Dr. Tucker, with a warning finger against his
+lips, was shaking his head just as hard as he could at Mrs. Tucker, who
+looked the very picture of amazement.
+
+"Why," asked Bettie, "what's the matter? Don't you think it's a good
+plan? Isn't it the right thing to do?"
+
+"Yes," said Dr. Tucker, still looking at Bettie's mother, who was
+nodding her approval, "I shouldn't be surprised if it might prove a
+_very_ good thing to do. Your idea of making it a surprise to both of
+them is a good one, too. I should keep it the darkest kind of secret
+until the very last moment, if I were you."
+
+"Yes," agreed Mrs. Tucker, "I should certainly keep it a secret."
+
+Jean, too, happened to mention the matter at home and with very much the
+same result. Mr. Mapes looked at Mrs. Mapes with something in his eye
+that very closely resembled an amused twinkle, and Jean was almost
+certain that there was an answering twinkle in her mother's eye.
+
+"What's the joke?" asked Jean.
+
+"I couldn't think of spoiling it by telling," said Mrs. Mapes. "If
+there's anything I can do to help you with your dinner party I shall be
+delighted to do it."
+
+"Oh, will you?" cried Jean. "When I told you about it last week I
+thought, somehow, that you weren't very much interested."
+
+"I'm very much interested indeed," returned Mrs. Mapes. "I hope you'll
+be able to keep the surprise part of it a secret to the very last
+moment. That's always the best part of a dinner party, you know."
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Mapes, "if you know who the other guests are to be, it
+always takes away part of the pleasure."
+
+When Marjory told the news, her Aunty Jane, who seldom smiled and who
+usually appeared to care very little about the doings in Dandelion
+Cottage, greatly surprised her niece by suddenly displaying as many as
+seven upper teeth; she showed, too, such flattering interest in the
+coming event that Marjory plucked up courage to ask for potatoes and
+other provisions that might prove useful.
+
+"When you've decided what day you're going to have your party," said
+Aunty Jane, with astonishing good nature, "I'll give or lend you
+anything you want, provided you don't tell either of your guests who the
+other one is to be."
+
+When Mabel told about the plan, she too was very much perplexed at the
+way her news was received. Her parents, after one speaking glance at
+each other, leaned back in their chairs and laughed until the tears
+rolled down their cheeks. But they, too, heartily approved of the dinner
+party and advised strict secrecy regarding the guests.
+
+School was out, and, as Bettie said, every day was Saturday, but the
+days were slipping away altogether too rapidly. The lawn, by this time,
+was covered with what Mabel called "real grass," great bunches of Jean's
+sweetest purple pansies had to be picked every morning so they wouldn't
+go to seed, and the long bed by the fence threatened to burst at any
+moment into blossom. Even the much-disturbed vegetable garden was doing
+so nicely that it was possible to tell the lettuce from the radish
+plants.
+
+Two of Miss Blossom's three weeks had gone. She herself was to leave
+town the following Thursday, and the dinner party was to take place the
+day after; but even the thought of the great event failed to keep the
+little cottagers quite cheerful, for they hated to think of losing their
+lovely lodger. Whenever this charming young person was not busy at one
+or another of the various churches with her father, she was playing with
+the children. "Just exactly," said Bettie, "as if she were just twelve
+years old, too." Her clever fingers made dresses for each of the four
+biggest dolls, and such cunning baby bonnets for each of the four
+littlest ones.
+
+Best of all, she taught the girls how to do a great many things. She
+showed them how to turn the narrowest of hems, how to gather a ruffle
+neatly, and how to take the tiniest of stitches. Bettie, who had to
+help with the weekly darning, and Marjory, who had to mend her own
+stockings, actually found it pleasant work after Miss Blossom had shown
+them several different ways of weaving the threads.
+
+"I just wish," cried Mabel, one day, in a burst of gratitude, "that
+you'd fall ill, or something so we could do something for _you_. You're
+just lovely to _us_."
+
+"Thank you, Mabel," said Miss Blossom, with eyes that twinkled
+delightedly, "I'm sure you'd take beautiful care of me--I'm almost
+tempted to try it. Shall I have measles, or just plain smallpox?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 8
+
+An Unexpected Crop of Dandelions
+
+
+In spite of the prospect of losing her, the last week of Miss Blossom's
+stay was a delightful one to the girls because so many pleasant things
+happened. The best of all concerned the cottage dining-room.
+
+This room had proved the hardest spot in the house to make attractive,
+for it seemed to resist all efforts to make a well-furnished room of it.
+Most of the faded paper was loose and much of it had dropped off in
+patches during the time that the cottage was vacant, showing the ugly,
+dark, painted wall underneath. It was only too evident that the pictures
+that the girls had fastened up carefully with pins had been put up for
+purposes of concealment, the ceiling was stained and dingy, and the rug
+was far too small to cover the floor where some industrious former
+occupant had daubed paint of various gaudy hues while trying, perhaps,
+to find the right shade for the woodwork.
+
+Moreover, what little furniture there was in the dining-room showed very
+plainly that it had not been intended originally for dining-room use;
+the buffet, in particular, proclaimed loudly in big black letters that
+it was nothing but a soap box, and Bettie's best efforts could not make
+anything else of it. Now that the day for the long-postponed dinner
+party was actually set, the girls' attention was more than ever directed
+toward the forlorn appearance of the little dining-room.
+
+"Dear me," said Bettie, one day when the five friends, seated around the
+table, were cutting out pictures for a wonderful scrap-book for the
+little lame boy whom Miss Blossom had discovered living near one of the
+churches, "I do wish this dining-room didn't look so sort of bedroomy."
+
+"Yes," said Jean, "I've tried putting the buffet in every corner and
+all around the walls, and it _won't_ look like anything but a wooden
+box."
+
+"I tried covering it with a gathered curtain," said Mabel, "but that
+made it look so like a washstand that I took it off again."
+
+"Why," exclaimed Miss Blossom, "you've given me a beautiful idea! I
+believe we could make a splendid sideboard out of that piano box that's
+so in our way on the back porch. We'd just have to saw the ends down a
+little, nail on some boards, paint it some plain, dark color, and spread
+a towel over the top, and we'd have a beautiful Flemish oak sideboard.
+I'll buy the can of paint."
+
+"I'll do the painting," said Jean. "I helped Mother paint our kitchen
+floor, so I know a little about it."
+
+"That would be lovely. I've been thinking, too, that it would be a good
+idea to fix a little shelf under this window to hold your petunia and
+these two geraniums that are suffering so for sunshine. I think I could
+make it from the boards in that soap box."
+
+"Oh, thank you!" cried Bettie. "I don't believe there's _anything_ you
+don't know how to do."
+
+The piano box, transformed by Miss Blossom and the four girls into a
+very good imitation of a Flemish oak sideboard, did indeed make such an
+imposing piece of furniture that the rest of the room looked shabbier
+than ever by contrast.
+
+"I'm afraid," said Miss Blossom, surveying the effect with an air of
+comical dismay, "that the rest of our dining-room really looks worse
+than it did before; it's like trying to wear a new hat with an old gown.
+But I'm proud of our handiwork."
+
+"Yes," said Jean, "it's a great deal more like a sideboard than it is
+like a piano box."
+
+"It's the sideboardiest sideboard I ever saw," said Mabel, "but it's
+certainly too fine for this room."
+
+"Never mind," said cheerful Bettie. "We'll let Mr. Black sit so he can
+see the sideboard, and we'll have Mrs. Crane face the geraniums on that
+cunning shelf. If their eyes begin to wander around the room we'll just
+call their attention to the things we want them to see. When Mamma
+entertains the sewing society she always invites the first one that
+comes to sit in the chair over the hole in the sitting-room rug so the
+others won't notice it. If we catch Mr. Black looking at the ceiling
+we'll say: 'Oh, Mr. Black, did you notice the flowers on the
+sideboard?'"
+
+Everybody laughed at Bettie's comical idea. This desperate measure,
+however, was not needed, for one afternoon, the day after the sideboard
+was finished, something happened, something lovelier than the girls had
+ever even dreamed _could_ happen.
+
+It was only three o'clock, yet there was Miss Blossom coming home two
+whole hours earlier than usual; her white-haired father was with her
+and under his arm in a long parcel were seven rolls of wall paper.
+
+"My contribution to the cottage," said Mr. Blossom, laying the bundle at
+Bettie's feet and smiling pleasantly at the row of girls on the
+doorstep.
+
+"It's paper for the dining-room," explained Miss Blossom. "We happened
+to pass a store, on our way to work this noon, where they were
+advertising a sale of odd rolls of very nice paper at only five cents a
+roll. There were two rolls that were just right for the ceiling, and
+five rolls for the side wall. It seemed just exactly the right thing for
+Dandelion Cottage, so we couldn't help buying it."
+
+"It would have been wicked," said Mr. Blossom, cutting the string about
+the bundle, "not to buy such suitable paper at such a ridiculous price."
+
+"Oh! oh!" cried the delighted girls, as Mr. Blossom held up a roll for
+inspection. "It might have been made for this house!"
+
+"Dandelion blossoms in yellow, with such lovely soft green leaves," said
+Bettie, "and such a lovely, light, creamy background. Oh! what's that?"
+
+"That's the border," replied Miss Blossom. "See how graceful the pattern
+is, and how saucily those dandelions hold their heads. Show them the
+ceiling paper, Father."
+
+"Oh!" cried Mabel, "just picked-off dandelions scattered all over an
+ocean of milk--how pretty!"
+
+"We'll have the Village Improvement Society after us," laughed Marjory.
+"They don't allow a dandelion to show its head."
+
+"I love dandelions," said Miss Blossom; "real ones, I mean; they're such
+gay, cheerful things and such a beautiful color."
+
+"I love them, too," said Jean, "because, you know, they paid our rent
+for us."
+
+"But," said Mabel, "I'm thankful we haven't got to dig all these
+dandelions."
+
+"Now," said Miss Blossom, "we must go right to work. If everybody will
+help, Father and I will put it on for you. You needn't be afraid to
+trust us, because last spring we papered our two biggest rooms, and they
+really looked _almost_ professional except for one strip that Father got
+upside-down; but your dining-room will be in no danger on that score,
+for Father never makes the same mistake twice. Jean, you and Mabel can
+move all the furniture except the table and sideboard into the
+kitchen--we'll have to stand on the table. Bettie, take down all the
+pictures. Father, you can be trimming the ceiling paper here on the
+sideboard while Marjory starts a fire in the kitchen stove so I can have
+hot water for my paste. We'll have our wall covered with dandelions in
+just no time!"
+
+"Now," said Mr. Blossom, when the furniture was out and the pictures
+were all down, "we must dig the soil up well or our dandelions won't
+grow. Everybody must tear as much as she can of this old paper off the
+wall; it's so ragged it comes off very easily."
+
+"The roof used to leak," said Bettie, "but my brother Rob unrolled some
+tin cans and nailed them over the place where the truly shingles are
+gone, and it never leaked a mite the last four times it rained."
+
+"The plaster seems fairly good," said Mr. Blossom. "I could mend these
+holes with a little plaster of Paris if some obliging young lady would
+run with this dime to the drugstore for ten cents' worth."
+
+"I'll go," said Mabel. "I don't think I like peeling walls."
+
+"Mabel," said Miss Blossom, "isn't really fond of work, though I notice
+that she usually does her share."
+
+Everybody helped to mend the cracks, and everybody watched with
+breathless interest to see the first long strip, upheld by Mr. Blossom
+and guided by Miss Blossom and the cottage broom, go into place.
+
+"Wouldn't it be awful," whispered Mabel, "if it shouldn't stick?"
+
+But it did stick, smooth and flat, and the paper was even prettier on
+the wall than it had been in the roll.
+
+"A side strip next, Father, so we can see how it's going to look,"
+pleaded Miss Blossom. "Remember, we're just children."
+
+At five o'clock, when half of the ceiling and one side of the wall were
+finished, the front door was opened abruptly.
+
+"Hi there!" said Mr. Black, putting his head in at the dining-room door.
+"Why don't you listen when I ring your bell? Is that dinner of mine
+ready? I'm losing a pound a day."
+
+"No," said Bettie, jumping down from her perch on the sideboard, "but it
+will be next Friday. We're getting it ready just as fast as ever we can.
+We're even papering the dining-room for the occasion."
+
+"Well," said Mr. Black, "I just stopped in to say that unless you could
+give me that dinner this very minute, I shall have to go hungry for the
+next five weeks."
+
+"Oh!" cried Bettie, in dismay, "why?"
+
+"Because I'm going to Washington tonight by the six o'clock train and I
+shall be gone a whole month--perhaps longer."
+
+"Oh, dear," cried Bettie, "we just _couldn't_ have you tonight. We're
+papering the dining-room, and besides we haven't a single thing to eat
+but some stale cake that Mrs. Pike gave us."
+
+"I strongly suspect," said Mr. Black, smiling over Bettie's head at Mr.
+Blossom, "that you don't really _want_ me to dinner."
+
+"Oh, we do, we do," assured Bettie, earnestly, "but we just _can't_ have
+company tonight. If you'll just let us know exactly when you're coming
+home, you'll find a beautiful dinner ready for you."
+
+"All right," said Mr. Black, "I'll telegraph. I'll say: 'My dear Miss
+Bettykins, of Dandelion Cottage: It will give me great pleasure to dine
+with you tomorrow--or would you rather have me say the day after
+tomorrow?--evening. Yours most devotedly and-so-forth.'"
+
+"Yes, yes," cried Bettie, "that will be all right, but you must give us
+three days to get ready in."
+
+After all, however, it was Mabel that sent the telegram, and it was a
+very different one.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 9
+
+Changes and Plans
+
+
+When the little dining-room was finished it was quite the prettiest room
+in the house, for the friendly Blossoms had painted the battered
+woodwork a delicate green to match the leaves in the paper; and by
+mixing what was left of the green paint with the remaining color left
+from the sideboard, clever Miss Blossom obtained a shade that was
+exactly right for as much of the floor as the rug did not cover. Of
+course all the neighbors and all the girls' relatives had to come in
+afterwards to see what Bettie called "the very dandelioniest room in
+Dandelion Cottage."
+
+It seemed to the girls that the time fairly galloped from Monday to
+Thursday. They were heartily sorry when the moment came for them to lose
+their pleasant lodger. They went to the train to see the last of her and
+to assure her for the thousandth time that they should never forget her.
+Mabel sobbed audibly at the moment of parting, and large tears were
+rolling down silent Bettie's cheeks. Even the seven dollars and fifty
+cents that the girls had handled with such delight that morning paled
+into insignificance beside the fact that the train was actually whisking
+their beloved Miss Blossom away from them. When she had paid for her
+lodging she advised her four landladies to deposit the money in the bank
+until time for the dinner party, and the girls did so, but even the
+importance of owning a bank account failed to console them for their
+loss. The train out of sight, the sober little procession wended its way
+to Dandelion Cottage but the cozy little house seemed strangely silent
+and deserted when Bettie unlocked the door. Mabel, who had wept stormily
+all the way home, sat down heavily on the doorstep and wept afresh.
+
+Pinned to a pillow on the parlor couch, Jean discovered a little folded
+square of paper addressed to Bettie, who was drumming a sad little tune
+on the window pane.
+
+"Why, Bettie," cried Jean, "this looks like a note for you from Miss
+Blossom! Do read it and tell us what she says."
+
+"It says," read Bettie: "'My dearest of Betties: Thank you for being so
+nice to me. There's a telephone message for you.'"
+
+"I wonder what it means," said Marjory.
+
+Bettie ran to the talkless telephone, slipped her hand inside the little
+door at the top, and found a small square parcel wrapped in tissue
+paper, tied with a pink ribbon, and addressed to Miss Bettie Tucker,
+Dandelion Cottage. Bettie hastily undid the wrappings and squealed with
+delight when she saw the lovely little handkerchief, bordered delicately
+with lace, that Miss Blossom herself had made for her. There was a
+daintily embroidered "B" in the corner to make it Bettie's very own.
+
+Marjory happened upon Jean's note peeping out from under a book on the
+parlor table. It said: "Dear Jean: Don't you think it's time for you to
+look at the kitchen clock?"
+
+Of course everybody rushed to the kitchen to see Jean take from inside
+the case of the tickless clock a lovely handkerchief just like Bettie's
+except that it was marked with "J."
+
+Marjory's note, which she presently found growing on the crimson
+petunia, sent her flying to the grindless coffee-mill, where she too
+found a similar gift.
+
+"Well," said Mabel, who was now fairly cheerful, "I wonder if she forgot
+all about _me_."
+
+For several anxious moments the girls searched eagerly in Mabel's behalf
+but no note was visible.
+
+"I can't think where it could be," said housewifely Jean, stooping to
+pick up a bit of string from the dining-room rug, and winding it into a
+little ball. "I've looked in every room and--Why! what a long string! I
+wonder where it's all coming from."
+
+"Under the rug," said Marjory, making a dive for the bit of paper that
+dangled from the end of the string. "Here's your note, Mabel."
+
+"I think," Miss Blossom had written, "that there must be a mouse in the
+pantry mousetrap by this time."
+
+"Yes!" shouted Mabel, a moment later. "A lovely lace-edged mouse with an
+'M' on it--no, it's 'M B'--a really truly monogram, the very first
+monogram I ever had."
+
+"Why, so it is," said Marjory. "I suppose she did that so we could tell
+them apart, because if she'd put M on both of them we wouldn't have
+known which was which."
+
+"Why," cried Jean, "it's nearly an hour since the train left. Wasn't it
+sweet of her to think of keeping us interested so we shouldn't be quite
+so lonesome?"
+
+"Yes," said Bettie, "it was even nicer than our lovely presents, but it
+was just like her."
+
+"Oh, dear," said Mabel, again on the verge of tears, "I wish she might
+have stayed forever. What's the use of getting lovely new friends if you
+have to go and lose them the very next minute? She was just the nicest
+grown-up little girl there ever was, and I'll never see--see her any--"
+
+"Look out, Mabel," warned Marjory, "if you cry on that handkerchief
+you'll spoil that monogram. Miss Blossom didn't intend these for
+crying-handkerchiefs--one good-sized tear would soak them."
+
+Miss Blossom was not the only friend the girls were fated to lose that
+week. Grandma Pike, as everybody called the pleasant little old lady,
+was their next-door neighbor on the west side, and the cottagers were
+very fond of her. No one dreamed that Mrs. Pike would ever think of
+going to another town to live; but about ten days before Miss Blossom
+departed, the cheery old lady had quite taken everybody's breath away by
+announcing that she was going west, just as soon as she could get her
+things packed, to live with her married daughter.
+
+When the girls heard that Grandma Pike was going away they were very
+much surprised and not at all pleased at the idea of losing one of their
+most delightful neighbors. At Miss Blossom's suggestion, they had spent
+several evenings working on a parting gift for their elderly friend. The
+gift, a wonderful linen traveling case with places in it to carry
+everything a traveler would be likely to need, was finished at
+last--with so many persons working on it, it was hard to keep all the
+pieces together--and the girls carried it to Grandma Pike, who seemed
+very much pleased.
+
+"Well, well," said the delighted old lady, unrolling the parcel, "if you
+haven't gone and made me a grand slipper-bag! I'll think of you, now,
+every time I put on my slippers."
+
+"No, no," protested Jean. "It's a traveling case with places in it for
+'most everything _but_ slippers."
+
+"We all sewed on it," explained Mabel. "Those little bits of stitches
+that you can't see at all are Bettie's. Jean did all this
+feather-stitching, and Marjory hemmed all the binding. Miss Blossom
+basted it together so it wouldn't be crooked."
+
+"What did _you_ do, Mabel?" asked Grandma Pike, smiling over her
+spectacles.
+
+"I took out the basting threads and embroidered these letters on the
+pockets."
+
+"What does this 'P' stand for?"
+
+"Pins," said Mabel. "You see it was sort of an accident. I started to
+embroider the word soap on this little pocket, but when I got the S O A
+done, there wasn't any room left for the P, so I just put it on the
+_next_ pocket. I knew that if I explained that it was the end of 'Soap'
+and the beginning of 'Pins' you'd remember not to get your pins and soap
+mixed up."
+
+During the lonely days immediately following Miss Blossom's departure,
+Mrs. Bartholomew Crane proved a great solace. The girls had somewhat
+neglected her during the preceding busy weeks; but with Miss Blossom
+gone, the cottagers became conscious of an aching void that new wall
+paper and lace handkerchiefs and a bank account could not quite fill; so
+presently they resumed their former habit of trotting across the street
+many times a day to visit good-natured Mrs. Crane.
+
+Mrs. Crane's house was very small and looked rather gloomy from the
+outside because the paint had long ago peeled off and the weatherbeaten
+boards had grown black with age; but inside it was cheerfulness
+personified. First, there was Mrs. Crane herself, fairly radiating
+comfort. Then there was a bright rag carpet on the floor, a glowing red
+cloth on the little table, a lively yellow canary named Dicksy in one
+window, and a gorgeous red-and-crimson but very bad-tempered parrot in
+the other. There were only three rooms downstairs and two bed-chambers
+upstairs. Mrs. Crane's own room opened off the little parlor, and
+visitors could see the high feather bed always as smooth and rounded on
+top as one of Mrs. Crane's big loaves of light bread. The privileged
+girls were never tired of examining the good woman's patchwork quilts,
+made many years ago of minute, quaint, old-fashioned scraps of calico.
+
+Even the garden seemed to differ from other gardens, for every inch of
+it except the patch of green grass under the solitary cherry tree was
+given over to flowers, many of them as quaint and old-fashioned as the
+bits of calico in the quilts, and to vegetables that ripened a week
+earlier for Mrs. Crane than similar varieties did for anyone else. Yet
+the garden was so little, and the variety so great, that Mrs. Crane
+never had enough of any one thing to sell. She owned her little home,
+but very little else. The two upstairs rooms were rented to lodgers, and
+she knitted stockings and mittens to sell because she could knit without
+using her eyes, which, like so many soft, bright, black eyes, were far
+from strong; but the little income so gained was barely enough to keep
+stout, warm-hearted, overgenerous Mrs. Crane supplied with food and
+fuel. The neighbors often wondered what would become of the good, lonely
+woman if she lost her lodgers, if her eyes failed completely, or if she
+should fall ill. Everybody agreed that Mrs. Crane should have been a
+wealthy woman instead of a poor one, because she would undoubtedly have
+done so much good with her money. Mabel had heard her father say that
+there was a good-sized mortgage on the place, and Dr. Bennett had
+instantly added: "Now, don't you say anything about that, Mabel." But
+ever after that, Mabel had kept her eyes open during her visits to Mrs.
+Crane, hoping to get a glimpse of the dreadful large-sized thing that
+was not to be mentioned.
+
+On one occasion she thought she saw light. Mrs. Crane had expressed a
+fear that a wandering polecat had made a home under her woodshed.
+
+"Is mortgage another name for polecat?" Mabel had asked a little later.
+
+"No," imaginative Jean had replied. "A mortgage is more like a great,
+lean, hungry, gray wolf waiting just around the corner to eat you up.
+Don't ever use the word before Mrs. Crane; she has one."
+
+"Where does she keep it?" demanded Mabel, agog with interest.
+
+"I promised not to talk about it," said Jean, "and I won't."
+
+Miss Blossom had been gone only two days when something happened to Mrs.
+Crane. It was none of the things that the neighbors had expected to
+happen, but for a little while it looked almost as serious. Bettie,
+running across the street right after breakfast one morning, with a
+bunch of fresh chickweed for the yellow canary and a cracker for cross
+Polly, found Mrs. Crane, usually the most cheerful person imaginable,
+sitting in her kitchen with a swollen, crimson foot in a pail of
+lukewarm water, and groaning dismally.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Crane!" cried surprised Bettie. "What in the world is the
+matter? Are--are you coming down with anything?"
+
+"I've already come," moaned Mrs. Crane, grimly. "I was out in my back
+yard in my thin old slippers early this morning putting hellebore on my
+currant bushes, and I stepped down hard on the teeth of the rake that
+I'd dropped on the grass. There's two great holes in my foot. How I'm
+ever going to do things I don't know, for 'twas all I could do to crawl
+into the house on my hands and knees."
+
+"Isn't there something I can do for you?" asked Bettie, sympathetically.
+
+"Could you get a stick of wood from the shed and make me a cup of tea?
+Maybe I'd feel braver if I wasn't so empty."
+
+"Of course I could," said Bettie, cheerily.
+
+"I tell you what it is," confided Mrs. Crane. "It's real nice and
+independent living all alone as long as you're strong and well, but just
+the minute anything happens, there you are like a Robinson Crusoe, cast
+away on a desert isle. I began to think nobody would _ever_ come."
+
+"Can't I do something more for you?" asked Bettie, poking scraps of
+paper under the kettle to bring it to a boil. "Don't you want Dr.
+Bennett to look at your foot? Hadn't I better get him?"
+
+"Yes, do," said Mrs. Crane, "and then come back. I can't bear to think
+of staying here alone."
+
+For the next four days there was a deep depression in the middle of Mrs.
+Crane's puffy feather bed, for the injured foot was badly swollen and
+Mrs. Crane was far too heavy to go hopping about on the other one. At
+first, her usually hopeful countenance wore a strained, anxious
+expression, quite pathetic to see.
+
+"Now don't you worry one bit," said comforting little Bettie. "We'll
+take turns staying with you; we'll feed Polly and Dicksy, and I believe
+every friend you have is going to offer to make broth. Mother's making
+some this minute."
+
+"But there's the lodgers," groaned Mrs. Crane, "both as particular as a
+pair of old maids in a glass case. Mr. Barlow wants his bedclothes
+tucked in all around so tight that a body'd think he was afraid of
+rolling out of bed nights, and Mr. Bailey won't have his tucked in at
+all--says he likes 'em 'floating round loose and airy.' Do you suppose
+you girls can make those two beds and not get those two lodgers mixed
+up? I declare, I'm so absent-minded myself that I've had to climb those
+narrow stairs many a day to make sure I'd done it right."
+
+"Don't be afraid," said Jean, who had joined Bettie. "Marjory's Aunty
+Jane has taught her to make beds beautifully, and I have a good memory.
+Between us we'll manage splendidly."
+
+"But there's my garden," mourned the usually busy woman, who found it
+hard to lie still with folded hands in a world that seemed to be
+constantly needing her. "Dear me! I don't see how I'm going to spare
+myself for a whole week just when everything is growing so fast."
+
+"We'll tend to the garden, too," promised Bettie.
+
+"Yes, indeed we will," echoed Mabel. "We'll water everything and weed--"
+
+"No, you won't," said Mrs. Crane, quickly. "You can do all the watering
+you like, but if I catch any of you weeding, there'll be trouble."
+
+The young cottagers were even better than their promises, for they took
+excellent care of Mrs. Crane, the lodgers, the parrot, the canary, and
+the garden, until the injured foot was well again; but while doing all
+this they learned something that distressed them very much, indeed. Of
+course they had always known in a general way that their friend was far
+from being wealthy, but they had not guessed how touchingly poor she
+really was. But now they saw that her cupboard was very scantily filled,
+that her clothing was very much patched and mended, her shoes
+distressingly worn out, and that even her dish-towels were neatly
+darned.
+
+"But we won't talk about it to people," said fine-minded Jean. "Perhaps
+she wouldn't like to have everybody know."
+
+Even Jean, however, did not guess what a comfort proud Mrs. Crane had
+found it to have her warm-hearted little friends stand between her
+poverty and the sometimes-too-prying eyes of a grown-up world.
+
+Unobservant though they had seemed, the girls did not forget about the
+Mother-Hubbardlike state of Mrs. Crane's cupboard. After that one of
+their finest castles in Spain always had Mrs. Crane, who would have made
+such a delightful mother and who had never had any children, enthroned
+as its gracious mistress. When they had time to think about it at all,
+it always grieved them to think of their generous-natured,
+no-longer-young friend dreading a poverty-stricken, loveless, and
+perhaps homeless old age; for this, they had discovered, was precisely
+what Mrs. Crane was doing.
+
+"If she were a little, thin, active old lady, with bobbing white curls
+like Grandma Pike," said Jean, "lots of people would have a corner for
+her; but poor Mrs. Crane takes up so much room and is so heavy and slow
+that she's going to be hard to take care of when she gets old. Oh, _why_
+couldn't she have had just one strong, kind son to take care of her?"
+
+"When I'm married," offered Mabel, generously, "I'll take her to live
+with me. I won't _have_ any husband if he doesn't promise to take Mrs.
+Crane, too."
+
+"You shan't have her," declared Jean. "I want her myself."
+
+"She's already promised to me," said Bettie, triumphantly. "We're going
+to keep house together some place, and I'm going to be an old-maid
+kindergarten teacher."
+
+"I don't think that's fair, Bettie Tucker," said Marjory, earnestly. "I
+don't see how my children are to have any grandmother if she doesn't
+live with _me_. Imagine the poor little things with Aunty Jane for a
+grandmother!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 10
+
+The Milligans
+
+
+To the moment of Grandma Pike's departure, all their neighbors had been
+so pleasant that the girls were deceived into thinking that neighbors
+were never anything _but_ pleasant. Although they felt not the slightest
+misgiving as to their future neighbors, they had hated to lose dear old
+Grandma Pike, who had always been as good to them as if she had really
+been their grandmother, and whose parting gifts--sundry odds and ends
+of dishes, old magazines, and broken parcels of provisions--gave them
+occupation for many delightful days. In spite of the lasting pleasure of
+this unexpected donation, however, they could not help feeling that,
+with Mr. Black away, Miss Blossom gone, Mrs. Pike living in another
+town, and only disabled Mrs. Crane left, they were losing friends with
+alarming rapidity. Grief for the departed, however, did not prevent
+their taking an active interest in the persons who were to occupy the
+house next door, which Mrs. Pike's departure had left vacant.
+
+"I wonder," said Marjory, pulling the curtain back to get a better view
+of the empty house, "what the new people will be like. It's exciting,
+isn't it, to have something happening in this quiet neighborhood? What
+did Grandma Pike say the name was?"
+
+"Milligan," replied Bettie.
+
+"Kind of nice name, isn't it?" asked Jean.
+
+"Yes," agreed Mabel, brightening suddenly. "I made up a long, long rhyme
+about it last night before I went to sleep. Want to hear it?"
+
+"Of course."
+
+"This one really rhymes," explained Mabel, importantly. Her verses
+sometimes lacked that desirable quality, so when they did rhyme Mabel
+always liked to mention it. "Here it is:
+
+ "As soon as a man named Milligan
+ Got well he always fell ill again--ill again--ill--
+
+"Dear me, I can't remember how it went. There was a lot more, but I've
+forgotten the rest."
+
+"It's a great pity," said Marjory, drily, "that you didn't forget _all_
+of it, because if there's really a Mr. Milligan, and I ever see him,
+I'll think of that rhyme and I won't be able to keep my face straight."
+
+"We must be very polite to the Milligans," said considerate Bettie, "and
+call on them as soon as they come. Mother always calls on new people;
+she says it makes folks feel more comfortable to be welcomed into the
+neighborhood."
+
+"Mrs. Crane does it, too. We're the nearest, perhaps we ought to be the
+first."
+
+"I think," suggested Jean thoughtfully, "we'd better wait until they're
+nicely settled; they might not like visitors too soon. You know _we_
+didn't."
+
+"They're going to move in today," said Mabel. "Goodness! I wish they'd
+hurry and come; I'm so excited that I keep dusting the same shelf over
+and over again. I'm just wild to see them!"
+
+It was sweeping-day at the cottage when the Milligans' furniture began
+to arrive, but it looked very much as if the sweeping would last for at
+least _two_ days because the girls were unable to get very far away from
+the windows that faced west. These were the bedroom windows, and, as
+there were only two of them, there were usually two heads at each
+window.
+
+"There comes the first load," announced Marjory, at last. "There's a
+high-chair on the very top, so there must be a baby."
+
+"I'm so glad," said Bettie. "I just love a baby."
+
+Two men unpacked the Milligans' furniture in the Milligans' front yard,
+and each load seemed more interesting than the one before it. It was
+such fun to guess what the big, clumsy parcels contained, particularly
+when the contents proved to be quite different from what the girls
+expected.
+
+"Somehow, I don't think they're going to be very nice people," said
+Mabel. "I b'lieve we're going to be disappointed in 'em."
+
+"Why, Mabel," objected Jean, "we don't know a thing about them yet."
+
+"Yes, I do too. Their things--look--they don't look _ladylike_."
+
+"Oh, Mabel," laughed Marjory, "you're so funny."
+
+"Perhaps," offered Jean, "the Milligans are poor and the children have
+spoiled things."
+
+"No," insisted Mabel. "They've got some of the newest and shiningest
+furniture I ever saw, but I b'lieve it's imitation."
+
+"Oh, Mabel," laughed Jean, "I hope you won't watch the loads when _I_
+move. For a girl that's slept for three weeks on an imitation pillow,
+you're pretty critical."
+
+Presently the Milligans themselves arrived. Mabel happened to be
+counting the buds on the poppy plants when they came.
+
+"Girls!" she cried, rushing into the cottage with the news. "They've
+come. I saw them all. There's a Mr. Milligan, a Mrs. Milligan, a girl, a
+boy, a baby, and a dog. The girl's the oldest. She's just about my
+size--I mean height--and she has straight, light hair. The baby walks,
+and none of them are so very good-looking."
+
+It did not take the newcomers long to discover that their next-door
+neighbors were four little girls. Mrs. Milligan found it out that very
+afternoon when she went to the back door to borrow tea. Bettie
+explained, very politely, that Dandelion Cottage was only a playhouse,
+and that their tea-caddy contained nothing but glass beads. When Mrs.
+Milligan returned to her own house, she told her own family about it.
+
+"You might as well run over and play with them, Laura," she said. "Take
+the baby with you, too. He's a dreadful nuisance under my feet. That'll
+be a real nice place for you both to play all summer."
+
+The girls received their visitors pleasantly; almost, indeed, with
+enthusiasm; but after a very few moments, they began to eye the baby
+with apprehension. He refused to make friends with them but wandered
+about rather lawlessly and handled their treasures roughly. Laura paid
+no attention to him but talked to the girls. She seemed a bright girl
+and not at all bashful, and she used a great many slang phrases that
+sounded new and, it must be confessed, rather attractive to the girls.
+
+"Oh, land, yes," she said, "we came here from Chicago where we had all
+kinds of money, and clothes to burn--we lived in a beautiful flat. Pa
+just came here to oblige Mr. Williams--he's going to clerk in Williams's
+store. Come over and see me--we'll be real friendly and have lots of
+good times together--I can put you up to lots of dodges. Say, this is a
+dandy place to play in--I'm coming over often."
+
+Jean looked in silence at Bettie, Bettie at Mabel, and Mabel at Marjory.
+Surely such an outburst of cordiality deserved a fitting response, but
+no one seemed to be able to make it.
+
+"Do," said Jean, finally, but rather feebly, "we'd be pleased to have
+you."
+
+Except for a few lively but good-natured squabbles between Marjory, who
+was something of a tease, and Mabel, who was Marjory's favorite victim,
+the little mistresses of Dandelion Cottage had always played together in
+perfect harmony; but with the coming of the Milligans everything was
+changed.
+
+To start with, between the Milligan baby and the Milligan dog, the girls
+knew no peace. Mrs. Milligan was right when she said that the baby was a
+nuisance, for it would have been hard to find a more troublesome
+three-year-old. He pulled down everything he could reach, broke the
+girls' best dishes, wiped their precious petunia and the geraniums
+completely out of existence, and roared with a deep bass voice if anyone
+attempted to interfere with him. The dog carried mud into the neat
+little cottage, scratched up the garden, and growled if the girls tried
+to drive him out.
+
+"Well," said Mabel, disconsolately, in one of the rare moments when the
+girls were alone, "I _could_ stand the baby and the dog. But I _can't_
+stand Laura!"
+
+"Laura certainly likes to boss," said Bettie, who looked pale and
+worried. "I don't just see what we're going to do about it. I try to be
+nice to her, but I _can't_ like her. Mother says we must be polite to
+her, but I don't believe Mother knows just what a queer girl she is--you
+see she's always as quiet as can be when there are grown people around."
+
+"Yes," agreed Mabel, "her company manners are so much properer than mine
+that Mother says she wishes I were more like her."
+
+"Well," said Marjory, uncompromisingly, "I'm mighty glad you're not.
+Your manners aren't particularly good, but you haven't two sets. I
+think Laura's the most disagreeable girl I ever knew. Just as she fools
+you into almost liking her, she turns around and scratches you."
+
+"Perhaps," said Jean, "if her people were nicer--By the way, Mother says
+that after this we must keep the windows shut while Mr. Milligan is
+splitting wood in his back yard so we can't hear the awful things he
+says, and that if we hear Mr. and Mrs. Milligan quarreling again we
+mustn't listen."
+
+"Listen!" exclaimed Mabel. "We don't _need_ to listen. Their voices keep
+getting louder and louder until it seems as if they were right in this
+house."
+
+"Of course," said Marjory, "it can't be pleasant for Laura at home, but,
+dear me, it isn't pleasant for _us_ with her over here."
+
+Badly-brought-up Laura was certainly not a pleasant playmate. She wanted
+to lead in everything and was amiable only when she was having her own
+way. She was not satisfied with the way the cottage was arranged but
+rearranged it to suit herself. She told the girls that their garments
+were countrified, and laughed scornfully at Bettie's boyish frocks and
+heavy shoes. She ridiculed rotund Mabel for being fat, and said that
+Marjory's nose turned up and that Jean's rather large mouth was a good
+opening for a young dentist. Before the first week was fairly over, the
+four girls--who had lived so happily before her arrival--were grieved,
+indignant, or downright angry three-fourths of the time.
+
+Laura had one habit that annoyed the girls excessively, although at
+first they had found it rather amusing. Later, however, owing perhaps to
+a certain rasping quality in Laura's voice, it grew very tiresome. She
+transposed the initials of their names. For instance, Bettie Tucker
+became Tettie Bucker, Jeanie Mapes became Meanie Japes, while Mabel
+became Babel Mennett. It was particularly distressing to have Laura
+speak familiarly in her sharp, half-scornful tones, of their dear,
+departed Miss Blossom, whose name was Gertrude, as Bertie Glossom. Mr.
+Peter Black, of course, became Beter Plack, and Mrs. Bartholomew Crane
+was Mrs. Cartholomew Brane, to lawless young Laura.
+
+"I don't think it's exactly respectful to do that to grown-up people's
+names," protested Bettie, one day.
+
+"Pooh!" said Laura. "Mrs. Cartholomew Brane looks just like an old
+washtub, she's so fat--who'd be respectful to a washtub? There goes
+Toctor Ducker, Tettie Bucker. Huh! I'd hate to be a parson's
+daughter--they're always as poor as church mice. What did you say your
+mother's first name is?"
+
+"I didn't say and I'm not going to," returned Bettie.
+
+"Well, anyhow, her bonnet went out of style four years ago. I should
+think the parish'd take up a subscription and get her a new one."
+
+"I wish, Laura," said exasperated Jean, another day, "that you wouldn't
+meddle with our things. This bedroom is mine and Bettie's, and the other
+one is Mabel's and Marjory's. We wouldn't _think_ of looking into each
+other's private treasure boxes. I've seen you open mine half a dozen
+times this week. The things are all keepsakes and I'd rather not have
+them handled."
+
+"Huh! I guess I'll handle 'em if I want to. My mother can't keep me out
+of her bureau drawers, and I don't think you're so very much smarter."
+
+A day or two later, the girls of Dandelion Cottage were invited to a
+party in another portion of the town. The invitations were left at their
+own cottage door and the delighted girls began at once to make plans for
+the party.
+
+"Let's carry our new handkerchiefs," suggested Jean, going to her
+treasure box. "I believe I'll take mine home with me--I dreamed last
+night that the cottage was on fire and that mine got burned. Besides,
+I'll have to get dressed at home for the party and it would be handier
+to have it there."
+
+"Guess I will, too," said Bettie.
+
+"Great idea," said Marjory, taking her own box from its shelf. "I never
+should have thought of anything so bright. Let's all write to Miss
+Blossom and tell her that we carried our--Why! mine isn't in my box!"
+
+"Neither is mine," cried Mabel, who had turned quite pale at the
+discovery. "It was there this morning. Girls, did any of you touch our
+handkerchiefs?"
+
+"Of course we didn't," said Jean. "See, here's mine with 'J' on it, and
+there are no others in my box."
+
+"Of course not," echoed Laura.
+
+"Mine's here, all right," said Bettie, who had been struggling with her
+box, which opened hard. "Are you sure you left them in your boxes?"
+
+"Certain sure," replied Mabel. "I saw it this morning."
+
+"So did I see mine," asserted Marjory. "After I'd shown it to Aunty Jane
+I brought it back to put in my treasure box."
+
+"Laura," asked Jean, "was Marjory's handkerchief in her box when you
+looked in it this morning? I heard the cover make that funny little
+clicking noise that it always makes, and just a minute afterward you
+came out of her room."
+
+"I--I don't know," stammered Laura. "I didn't see it--I never touched
+her old box. If you say I did, I'll go right home and tell my mother you
+called me a thief. I'm going now, anyway."
+
+The girls were in the dining-room just outside of the back bedroom
+door. As Laura was brushing past Jean, the opening of the new girl's
+blouse caught in such a fashion on the corner of the sideboard that the
+garment, which fastened in front, came unbuttoned from top to bottom.
+From its bulging front dropped Bettie's bead chain, various articles of
+doll's clothing, and the two missing handkerchiefs.
+
+"They're mine!" cried Laura, making a dive for the things.
+
+"They're not any such thing!" cried indignant Jean. "I made that doll's
+dress myself, and I know the lace on those handkerchiefs."
+
+"They're my mother's," protested Laura. "I took 'em out of her drawer."
+
+"They're not," contradicted Mabel, prying Laura's fingers apart and
+forcing her to drop one of the crumpled handkerchiefs. "Look at that
+monogram--'M B' for Mabel Bennett."
+
+"It's no such thing," lied Laura, stoutly. "It stands for Bertha
+Milligan and that's my mother's name."
+
+"Give me that other handkerchief this instant," demanded Jean, giving
+Laura a slight shake. "If you don't, we'll take it away from you."
+
+"Take the old rag," said Laura. "My mother gives away better
+handkerchiefs than these to beggars. I just took 'em anyway to scare
+Varjory Male and Babel Mennett, the silly babies."
+
+After this enlightening experience, the girls never for a moment left
+their unwelcome visitor alone in any of the rooms of Dandelion Cottage.
+They stood her for almost a week longer, principally because there
+seemed to be no way of getting rid of her. Mabel, indeed, had several
+lively quarrels with her during that time, because quick-tempered Mabel,
+always strictly truthful herself, could not tolerate deceit in anyone
+else, and she had, of course, lost all faith in Laura.
+
+The end came suddenly one Friday afternoon. Miss Blossom had sent to the
+girls, by mail, a photograph of her own charming self, and nothing that
+the cottage contained was more precious. After one of the usual tiffs
+with Mabel, high-handed Laura spitefully scratched a disfiguring
+mustache right across the beautiful face, ruining the priceless treasure
+beyond repair.
+
+Even Laura looked slightly dismayed at the result of her spiteful work.
+The others for a moment were too horror-stricken for words. Then Mabel,
+with blazing eyes, sprang to her feet and flung the cottage door wide
+open.
+
+"You go home, Laura Milligan!" she cried. "Don't you ever dare to come
+inside this house again!"
+
+"Yes, go," cried mild Bettie, for once thoroughly roused. "We've tried
+to be nice to you and there hasn't been a single day that you haven't
+been rude and horrid. Go home this minute. We're done with you."
+
+"I won't go until I'm good and ready," retorted Laura, tearing the
+disfigured photograph in two and scornfully tossing the pieces into a
+corner. "Such a fuss about a skinny old maid's picture."
+
+"You shan't stay one instant longer!" cried indignant Jean, stepping
+determinedly behind Laura, placing her hands on the girl's shoulders,
+and making a sudden run for the door. "There! You're out. Don't you ever
+attempt to come in again."
+
+Bettie, grasping the situation and the Milligan baby at the same time,
+promptly set the boy outside. She had handled him with the utmost
+gentleness, but he always roared if anyone touched him, and he roared
+now.
+
+"Yah!" yelled Laura, "I'll tell my mother you pinched him--slapped him,
+too."
+
+"Sapped him, too," wailed the baby.
+
+"Well," said Jean, turning the key in the lock, "we'll have to keep the
+door locked after this. Mercy! I never behaved so dreadfully to anybody
+before and I hope I'll never have to again."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 11
+
+An Embarrassing Visitor
+
+
+Up to the time of the unpleasantness with Laura, the girls had unlocked
+the cottage in the morning and had left it unlocked until they were
+ready to go home at night, for the girls spent all their waking hours at
+Dandelion Cottage. Bettie, indeed, had the care of the youngest two
+Tucker babies, but they were good little creatures and when the girls
+played with their dolls they were glad to include the two placid babies,
+just as if they too were dolls. The littlest baby, in particular, made
+a remarkably comfortable plaything, for it was all one to him whether he
+slept in Jean's biggest doll's cradle, or in the middle of the
+dining-room table, as long as he was permitted to sleep sixteen hours
+out of the twenty-four. When he wasn't asleep, he sucked his thumb
+contentedly, crowed happily on one of the cottage beds, or rolled
+cheerfully about on the cottage floor. The older baby, too, obligingly
+stayed wherever the girls happened to put him. After this experience
+with the Tucker infants, the Milligan baby had proved a great
+disappointment to the girls, for they had hoped to use him, too, as an
+animated doll; but he had refused steadfastly to make friends even with
+Bettie, whose way with babies was something beautiful to see.
+
+The girls were all required to do their own mending, but they found it
+no hardship to do their darning on their own doorstep on sunny days, or
+around the dining-room table if the north wind happened to be blowing,
+for they always had so many interesting things to talk about.
+
+During the daytime, the cottage was never left entirely alone. It was
+occupied even at mealtimes because the four families dined and supped at
+different hours; for instance, Marjory's Aunty Jane always liked her tea
+at half-past five, but Jean's people did not dine until seven. Owing to
+the impossibility of capturing all the boys at one time, supper at the
+Tucker house was a movable feast, so Bettie usually ate whenever she
+found it most convenient. As for Mabel, it is doubtful if she knew the
+exact hours for meals at the Bennett house because she was invariably
+late. After the handkerchief episode, the girls planned that one or
+another of them should always be in the cottage from the time that it
+was opened in the morning until it was again locked for the night. The
+morning after the later quarrel, however, the girls met by previous
+arrangement on Mabel's doorstep, went in a body to the cottage, and,
+after they were all inside, carefully locked the door.
+
+"We'll be on the safe side, anyway," said Jean. "Though I shouldn't
+think that Laura would ever want to come near the place again."
+
+"Oh, she'll come fast enough," said Mabel. "She's cheeky enough for
+anything. Do you s'pose she told her mother about it? She said she was
+going to."
+
+"Pshaw!" said Marjory. "She was always threatening to tell her mother,
+but nothing ever came of it. If she'd told her mother half the things
+she _said_ she was going to, she wouldn't have had time to eat or
+sleep."
+
+It was hopeless, the girls had decided, to attempt to mend the ruined
+photograph, so, at Bettie's suggestion, they had sorrowfully cut it into
+four pieces of equal size, which they divided between them. They had
+just laid the precious fragments tenderly away in their treasure boxes
+when the doorbell rang with such a loud, prolonged, jangling peal that
+everybody jumped.
+
+"Laura!" exclaimed the four girls.
+
+"No," said Jean, cautiously drawing back the curtain of the front window
+and peeping out. "It's Mrs. Milligan!"
+
+"Goodness!" whispered Marjory, "there's no knowing what Laura told
+her--she never _did_ tell anything straight."
+
+"Let's keep still," said Mabel. "Perhaps she'll think there's nobody
+home."
+
+"No hope of that," said Jean. "She saw us come in. But, pshaw! she can't
+hurt us anyway."
+
+"No," said Marjory. "What's the use of being afraid? _We_ didn't do
+anything to be ashamed of. Aunty Jane says we should have turned Laura
+out the day she took the handkerchiefs."
+
+"I'm not exactly afraid," said Bettie, "but I don't like Mrs. Milligan.
+Still, we'll have to let her in, I suppose."
+
+A second vigorous peal at the bell warned them that their visitor was
+getting impatient.
+
+"You're the biggest and the most dignified," said Marjory, giving Jean a
+shove. "_You_ go."
+
+"Don't ask her in if you can help it," warned Bettie, in a pleading
+whisper. "The doorbell sounds as if she didn't like us very well."
+
+But the visitor did not wait to be asked to come in. The moment Jean
+turned the key the door was flung open and Mrs. Milligan brushed past
+the astonished quartet and sailed into the parlor, where she seated
+herself bolt upright on the cozy corner.
+
+"I'd like to know," demanded Mrs. Milligan, in a hard, cold tone that
+fell unpleasantly on the cottagers' ears, "if you consider it ladylike
+for four great overgrown girls to pitch into one poor innocent little
+child and a helpless baby? Your conduct yesterday was simply
+_outrageous_. You might have injured those children for life, or even
+broken the baby's back."
+
+"Broken the baby's back!" gasped Bettie, in honest amazement. "Why, I
+simply lifted him with my two hands and set him just outside the door. I
+never was rough with _any_ baby in all my life!"
+
+"I happen to know, on excellent authority," said Mrs. Milligan, "that
+you slapped both of those helpless children and threw them down the
+front steps. Laura was so excited about it that she couldn't sleep, and
+the poor baby cried half the night--we fear that he's injured
+internally."
+
+"Nobody _here_ injured him," said Mabel. "He always cries all the time,
+anyhow."
+
+"We _did_ put them out and for a very good reason," said Jean, speaking
+as respectfully as she could, "but we certainly didn't hurt either of
+them. I'm sorry if the baby isn't well, but I know it isn't our fault."
+
+"Laura walked down the steps," said Bettie, "and the baby turned over
+and slid down on his stomach the way he always does."
+
+"I should think that a _minister's_ daughter," said Mrs. Milligan, with
+a withering glance at poor shrinking Bettie, "would scorn to tell such
+lies."
+
+Bettie, who had never before been accused of untruthfulness, looked the
+picture of conscious guilt; a tide of crimson flooded her cheeks and she
+fingered the buttons on her blouse nervously. She was too dumbfounded to
+speak a word in her own defense. Mabel, however, was only too ready.
+
+"Bettie never told a lie in her life," cried the indignant little girl.
+"It was your own Laura that told stories if anybody did--and I guess
+somebody did, all right. Laura _never_ tells the truth; she doesn't know
+how to."
+
+"I have implicit confidence in Laura," returned Mrs. Milligan, frowning
+at Mabel. "I believe every word she says."
+
+"Well," retorted dauntless Mabel, "that's more than the rest of us do.
+We kept count one day and she told seventy-two fibs that we _know_ of."
+
+"Oh, Mabel, do hush," pleaded scandalized Bettie.
+
+"Hush nothing," said Mabel, not to be deterred. "I'm only telling the
+truth. Laura took our handkerchiefs and then fibbed about it, and we've
+missed a dozen things since that she probably carried off and--"
+
+"Mabel, Mabel!" warned Jean, pressing her hand over Mabel's too reckless
+lips. "Don't you know that we decided not to say a word about those
+other things? They didn't amount to anything, and we'd rather have peace
+than to make a fuss about them."
+
+"I can see very plainly," said Mrs. Milligan, with cold disapproval,
+"that you're not at all the proper sort of children for my little Laura
+to play with. I forbid you to speak to her again; I don't care to have
+her associate with you. I can believe all she says about you, for I've
+never been treated so rudely in my life."
+
+"Apologize, Mabel," whispered Jean, whose arm was still about the
+younger girl's neck.
+
+"If I was rude," said candid Mabel, "I beg your pardon. I didn't _mean_
+to be impolite, but every word I said about Laura was true."
+
+"I shall not accept your apology," said Mrs. Milligan, rising to depart,
+"until you've sent a written apology to Laura and have retracted
+everything you've said about her, besides."
+
+"It'll never be accepted then," said quick-tempered Mabel, "for we
+haven't done anything to apologize for."
+
+"No, Mrs. Milligan," said Jean, in her even, pleasant voice. "No apology
+to Laura can ever come from us. We stood her just as long as we could,
+and then we turned her out just as kindly as anyone could have done it.
+I told Mother all about it last night and she agreed that there wasn't
+anything else we _could_ have done."
+
+"So did Mamma," said Bettie.
+
+"So did Aunty Jane."
+
+"Well," said Mrs. Milligan, pausing on the porch, "I'd thank you young
+gossips to keep your tongues and your hands off my children in the
+future."
+
+Jean closed the door and the four girls looked at one another in
+silence. None of their own relatives were at all like Mrs. Milligan and
+they didn't know just what to make of their unpleasant experience. At
+last, Marjory gave a long sigh.
+
+"Well," said she, "I came awfully near telling her when she forbade our
+playing with Laura that my Aunty Jane has forbidden _me_ to even speak
+to her poor abused Laura."
+
+"As for me," said Mabel, with lofty scorn, "I don't _need_ to be
+forbidden."
+
+"Come, girls," said Jean, "I'm sorry it had to happen, but I'm glad the
+matter's ended. Let's not talk about it any more. Let's have one of our
+own good old happy days--the kind we had before Laura came."
+
+"I'll tell you what we'll do," said Bettie. "We'll each write out a bill
+of fare for Mr. Black's dinner party, and we'll see how many different
+things we can think of. In that way, we'll be sure not to forget
+anything."
+
+"But the Milligans," breathed Marjory, promptly seeing through Bettie's
+tactful scheme.
+
+The Milligan matter, however, was not by any means ended. It was true
+that the girls paid no further attention to Laura, but this did not
+deter that rather vindictive young person from annoying the little
+cottagers in every way that she possibly could, although she was afraid
+to work openly.
+
+As Laura knew, the girls took great pride in their little garden.
+Bettie's good-natured big brother Rob had offered to take care of their
+tiny lawn, and he kept it smooth and even. The round pansy bed daily
+yielded handfuls of great purple, white, or golden blossoms; the thrifty
+nasturtiums were beginning to bloom with creditable freedom; and many of
+the different, prettily foliaged little plants in the long bed near the
+Milligans' fence were opening their first curious, many-colored flowers.
+
+Some of the vegetables were positively getting radishes and carrots on
+their roots, as Bettie put it. The pride of the vegetable garden,
+however, was a huge, rampant vine that threatened to take possession of
+the entire yard. There was just the one plant; no one knew where the
+seed came from or how it had managed to get itself planted, but there it
+was, close beside the back fence. For want of a better name, the girls
+called it "The Accident," and they expected wonderful things from it
+when the great yellow trumpet-shaped flowers should give place to fruit,
+although they didn't know in the least what kind of crop to look for.
+But this made it all the more delightful.
+
+"Perhaps it'll be pumpkins," said Jean. "I guess I'd better hunt up a
+recipe for pumpkin pie, so's to be ready when the time comes."
+
+"Or those funny, pale green squashes that are scalloped all around the
+edge like a dish," said Marjory.
+
+"Or cucumbers," said Bettie. "I took Mrs. Crane a leaf, one day, and she
+said it _might_ be cucumbers."
+
+"Or watermelons," said Mabel. "Um-m! wouldn't it be grand if it should
+happen to be watermelons?"
+
+"What I'm wondering is," said Jean, "whether there's any danger of the
+vine's going around the house and taking possession of the front yard,
+too. I could almost believe that this was a seedling of Jack's beanstalk
+except that it runs on the ground instead of up."
+
+"If it tries to go around the corner," laughed Bettie, "we'll train it
+up the back of the house. Wouldn't it be fun to have pumpkins, or
+squashes, or cucumbers, or melons, or maybe all of them at once, growing
+on our roof?"
+
+The day after Mrs. Milligan's visit, Laura, who was not invited to the
+party, and who found time heavy on her hands, watched the girls, after
+stopping for Marjory, set out in their pretty summer dresses to spend
+the afternoon at a young friend's house. Laura gazed after them
+enviously. There was no reason why she should have been invited, for she
+had never met the little girl who was giving the party, but she didn't
+think of that. Instead, she foolishly laid the unintentional slight at
+the little cottagers' door.
+
+Mrs. Milligan was sewing on the doorstep and had given Laura a
+dish-towel to hem. Saying something about hunting for a thimble, Laura
+went to the kitchen, took the bread-knife from the table drawer, stole
+quietly out of the back door, and slipped between the bars of the back
+fence. Reaching the splendid vine that the girls loved so dearly, she
+parted the huge, rough leaves until she found the spot where the vine
+started from the ground. First looking about cautiously to make certain
+that no one was in sight, spiteful Laura drew the knife back and forth
+across the thick stem until, with a sudden, sharp crack, the sturdy vine
+parted from its root.
+
+Two minutes later, Laura, looking the picture of propriety, sat on the
+Milligans' doorstep hemming her dish-towel.
+
+Of course, when the girls made their next daily excursion about their
+garden they were almost broken-hearted at finding their beloved vine
+flat on the ground, all withered and dead.
+
+"Oh," mourned Marjory, "now we'll never know _what_ 'The Accident' was
+going to bear, pumpkins or squashes or--"
+
+"Yes," said Mabel, who was blinking hard to keep the tears back, "that's
+the hardest part of it, it was cut off in its p-prime--Oh, dear, I guess
+I'm g-going to cry."
+
+"What _could_ have done it?" asked Bettie, who was not far from
+following Mabel's example. "Has anyone stepped on it?"
+
+"Perhaps a potato bug ate it off," suggested Jean.
+
+"A two-legged potato bug, I guess," said Marjory, who had been examining
+the ground carefully. "See, here are small sharp heel prints close to
+the root."
+
+"Whose handkerchief is this?" asked Mabel, picking up a small tightly
+crumpled ball and unrolling it gingerly. "There's a name on it but my
+eyes are so teary I can't make it out."
+
+"It looks like Milligan," said Bettie, turning it over, "but we can't
+tell how long it's been here."
+
+"Horrid as she is," said charitable Jean, "it doesn't seem as if even
+Laura would do such a mean thing. I can't believe it of her."
+
+"_I_ can," said Mabel. "If _she_ had a squash vine, or a pumpkin vine,
+I'd go straight over and spoil it this minute."
+
+"No, no," said Jean, "we mustn't be horrid just because other folks are.
+We won't pay any attention to her--we'll just be patient."
+
+The girls found four small, green, egglike objects growing on the
+withered vine; they cut them off and these, too, were laid tenderly away
+in their treasure boxes.
+
+"When we get old," said Mabel, tearfully, "we'll take 'em out and tell
+our grandchildren all about 'The Accident.'"
+
+But even this prospect did not quite console the girls for the loss of
+their treasure.
+
+For the next few days, Laura remained contented with doing on the sly
+whatever she could to annoy the girls. One evening, when the girls had
+gone home for the night and while her mother was away from home, Laura
+threw a brick at one of the cottage windows, breaking a pane of glass.
+Reaching in through the hole, she scattered handfuls of sand on the
+clean floor that the girls had scrubbed that morning. Another night she
+emptied a basketful of potato parings on their neat front porch and
+daubed molasses on their doorknob--mean little tricks prompted by a mean
+little nature.
+
+It wasn't much fun, however, to annoy persons who refused to show any
+sign of being annoyed, and Laura presently changed her tactics. Taking a
+large bone from the pantry one day, when the girls were sitting on their
+doorstep, she first showed it to Towser, the Milligan dog, and then
+threw it over the fence into the very middle of the pansy bed. Of
+course, the big clumsy dog bounded over the low fence after the bone,
+crushing many of the delicate pansy plants. After that at regular
+intervals, Laura threw sticks and other bones into the other beds with
+very much the same result.
+
+The next time Rob cut the grass he noticed the untidy appearance of the
+beds and asked the reason. The girls explained.
+
+"I'll shoot that dog if you say so," offered Rob, with honest
+indignation.
+
+"No, no," said Bettie, "it isn't the _dog's_ fault."
+
+"No," said Jean, "we're not sure that the dog isn't the least
+objectionable member of the Milligan family."
+
+"How would it do if I licked the boy?" asked Rob.
+
+"It wouldn't do at all," replied Bettie. "He works somewhere in the
+daytime and never even looks in this direction when he's home. He's
+afraid of girls."
+
+"Then I guess you'll have to grin and bear it," said Rob, moving off
+with the lawn-mower, "since neither of my remedies seems to fit the
+case."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 12
+
+A Lively Afternoon
+
+
+It happened one day that Mrs. Milligan was obliged to spend a long
+afternoon at the dentist's, leaving Laura in charge of the house.
+Unfortunately it happened, too, that this was the day when the sewing
+society met, and Mrs. Tucker had asked Bettie to stay home for the
+afternoon because the next-to-the-youngest baby was ill with a croupy
+cold and could not go out of doors to the cottage. Devoted Jean offered
+to stay with her beloved Bettie, who gladly accepted the offer. Before
+going to Bettie's, however, Jean ran over to Dandelion Cottage to tell
+the other girls about it.
+
+"Mabel," asked Jean, a little doubtfully, "are you quite sure you'll be
+able to turn a deaf ear if Laura should happen to bother you? I'm half
+afraid to leave you two girls here alone."
+
+"You needn't be," said Mabel. "I wouldn't associate with Laura if I were
+paid for it. She isn't my kind."
+
+"No," said Marjory, "you needn't worry a mite. We're going to sit on the
+doorstep and read a perfectly lovely book that Aunty Jane found at the
+library--it's one that she liked when _she_ was a little girl. We're
+going to take turns reading it aloud."
+
+"Well, that certainly ought to keep you out of mischief. You'll be safe
+enough if you stick to your book. If anything _should_ happen, just
+remember that I'm at Bettie's."
+
+"Yes, Grandma," said Marjory, with a comical grimace.
+
+Jean laughed, ran around the house, and squeezed through the hole in the
+back fence.
+
+Half an hour later, lonely Laura, discovering the girls on their
+doorstep, amused herself by sicking the dog at them. Towser, however,
+merely growled lazily for a few moments and then went to sleep in the
+sunshine--he, at least, cherished no particular grudge against the
+girls and probably by that time he recognized them as neighbors.
+
+Then Laura perched herself on one of the square posts of the dividing
+fence and began to sing--in her high, rasping, exasperating voice--a
+song that was almost too personal to be pleasant. It had taken Laura
+almost two hours to compose it, some days before, and fully another hour
+to commit it to memory, but she sang it now in an offhand, haphazard way
+that led the girls to suppose that she was making it up as she went
+along. It ran thus:
+
+ There's a lanky girl named Jean,
+ Who's altogether too lean.
+ Her mouth is too big,
+ And she wears a wig,
+ And her eyes are bright sea-green.
+
+Of course it was quite impossible to read even a thrillingly interesting
+book with rude Laura making such a disturbance. If the girls had been
+wise, they would have gone into the house and closed the door, leaving
+Laura without an audience; but they were _not_ wise and they _were_
+curious. They couldn't help waiting to hear what Laura was going to sing
+about the rest of them, and they did not need to wait long; Laura
+promptly obliged them with the second verse:
+
+ There's another named Marjory Vale,
+ Who's about the size of a snail.
+ Her teeth are light blue--
+ She hasn't but two--
+ And her hair is much too pale.
+
+Laura had, in several instances, sacrificed truth for the sake of rhyme,
+but enough remained to injure the vanity of the subjects of her song
+very sharply. Marjory breathed quickly for a moment and flushed pink but
+gave no audible sign that she had heard. Laura, somewhat disappointed,
+proceeded:
+
+ There's a silly young lass called Bet,
+ Thinks she's ev'rybody's sweet pet.
+ She slapped my brother,
+ Fibbed to my mother--
+ I know what _she's_ going to get.
+
+Mabel snorted indignantly over this injustice to her beloved Bettie and
+started to rise, but Marjory promptly seized her skirt and dragged her
+down. Laura, however, saw the movement and was correspondingly elated.
+It showed in her voice:
+
+ But the worst of the lot is Mabel,
+ She eats all the pie she's able.
+ She's round as a ball,
+ Has no waist at all,
+ And her manners are bad at the table.
+
+Marjory giggled. She had no thought of being disloyal, but this verse
+was certainly a close fit.
+
+"You just let me go," muttered Mabel, crimson with resentment and
+struggling to break away from Marjory's restraining hand. "I'll push her
+off that post."
+
+"Hush!" said diplomatic Marjory, "perhaps there's more to the song."
+
+But there wasn't. Laura began at the beginning and sang all the verses
+again, giving particular emphasis to the ones concerning Mabel and
+Marjory. This, of course, grew decidedly monotonous; the girls got tired
+of the constant repetition of the silly song long before Laura did.
+There was something about the song, too, that caught and held their
+attention. Irresistibly attracted, held by an exasperating fascination,
+neither girl could help waiting for her own special verse. But while
+this was going on, Mabel, with a finger in the ear nearest Laura, was
+industriously scribbling something on a scrap of paper.
+
+As everybody knows, the poetic muse doesn't always work when it is most
+needed, and Mabel was sadly handicapped at that moment. She was not
+satisfied with her hasty scrawl but, in the circumstances, it was the
+best she could do. Suddenly, before Marjory realized what was about to
+happen, Mabel was shouting back, to an air quite as objectionable as
+the one Laura was singing:
+
+ There's a very rude girl named Laura,
+ Whose ways fill all with horror.
+ She's all the things she says _we_ are;
+ All know this to their sorrow.
+
+"Yah! yah!" retorted quick-witted Laura. "There isn't a rhyme in your
+old song. If I couldn't rhyme better 'n that, I'd learn how. Come over
+and I'll teach you!"
+
+For an instant, Mabel looked decidedly crushed--_no_ poet likes his
+rhymes disparaged. Laura, noting Mabel's crestfallen attitude, went into
+gales of mocking laughter and when Mabel looked at Marjory for sympathy
+Marjory's face was wreathed in smiles. It was too much; Mabel hated to
+be laughed at.
+
+"I _can_ rhyme," cried Mabel, springing to her feet and giving vent to
+all her grievances at once. "My table manners _are_ good. I'm _not_ fat.
+I've got just as much waist as _you_ have."
+
+"You've got more," shrieked delighted Laura.
+
+Faithless Marjory, struck by this indubitable truth, laughed outright.
+
+"You--you can't make Indian-bead chains," sputtered Mabel, trying hard
+to find something crushing to say. "You can't make pancakes. You can't
+drive nails."
+
+"Yah," retorted Laura, who was right in her element, "you can't throw
+straight."
+
+"Neither can you."
+
+"I can! If I could find anything to throw I'd prove it."
+
+Just at this unfortunate moment, a grocery-man arrived at the Milligan
+house with a basketful of beautiful scarlet tomatoes. In another second,
+Laura, anxious to prove her ability, had jumped from the fence, seized
+the basket and, with unerring aim, was delightedly pelting her
+astonished enemy with the gorgeous fruit. Mabel caught one full in the
+chest, and as she turned to flee, another landed square in the middle of
+her light-blue gingham back; Marjory's shoulder stopped a third before
+the girls retreated to the house, leaving Laura, a picturesque figure on
+the high post, shouting derisively:
+
+"Proved it, didn't I? Ki! I proved it."
+
+Marjory, pleading that discretion was the better part of valor, begged
+Mabel to stay indoors; but Mabel, who had received, and undoubtedly
+deserved, the worst of the encounter, was for instant revenge. Rushing
+to the kitchen she seized the pan of hard little green apples that
+Grandma Pike had bequeathed the girls and flew with them to the porch.
+
+Mabel's first shot took Laura by surprise and landed squarely between
+her shoulders. Mabel was surprised, too, because throwing straight was
+not one of her accomplishments. She hadn't hoped to do more than
+frighten her exasperating little neighbor.
+
+Elated by this success, Mabel threw her second apple, which, alas, flew
+wide of its mark and caught poor unprepared Mr. Milligan, who was coming
+in at his own gate, just under the jaw, striking in such a fashion that
+it made the astonished man suddenly bite his tongue.
+
+Nobody likes to bite his tongue. Naturally Mr. Milligan was indignant;
+indeed, he had every reason to be, for Mabel's conduct was disgraceful
+and the little apple was very hard. Entirely overlooking the fact that
+Laura, who had failed to notice her father's untimely arrival, was still
+vigorously pelting Mabel, who stood as if petrified on the cottage steps
+and was making no effort to dodge the flying scarlet fruit, Mr. Milligan
+shouted:
+
+"Look here, you young imps, I'll see that you're turned out of that
+cottage for this outrage. We've stood just about enough abuse from you.
+I don't intend to put up with any more of it."
+
+Then, suddenly discovering what Laura, who had turned around in dismay
+at the sound of her father's voice, was doing, angry Mr. Milligan
+dragged his suddenly crestfallen daughter from the fence, boxed her ears
+soundly, and carried what was left of the tomatoes into the house; for
+that particular basket of fruit had been sent from very far south and
+express charges had swelled the price of the unseasonable dainty to a
+very considerable sum.
+
+Marjory, in the cottage kitchen, was alternately scolding and laughing
+at woebegone Mabel when Jean and Bettie, released from their charge, ran
+back to Dandelion Cottage. Mabel, crying with indignation, sat on the
+kitchen stove rubbing her eyes with a pair of grimy fists--Mabel's hands
+always gathered dust.
+
+"Oh, Mabel! how _could_ you!" groaned Jean, when Marjory had told the
+afternoon's story. "I'll never dare to leave you here again without some
+sensible person to look after you. Don't you _see_ you've been
+almost--yes, quite--as bad as Laura?"
+
+"I don't care," sobbed unrepentant Mabel. "If you'd heard those
+verses--and--and Marjory _laughed_ at me."
+
+"Couldn't help it," giggled Marjory, who was perched on the corner of
+the kitchen table.
+
+"But surely," reproached gentle-mannered Jean, "it wasn't necessary to
+throw things."
+
+"I guess," said Mabel, suddenly sitting up very straight and disclosing
+a puffy, tear-stained countenance that moved Marjory to fresh giggles,
+"if you'd felt those icy cold tomatoes go plump in your eye and every
+place on your very newest dress, _you'd_ have been pretty mad, too.
+Look at me! I was too surprised to move after I'd hit Mr. Milligan--I
+never saw him coming at all--and I guess every tomato Laura threw hit me
+some place."
+
+"Yes," confirmed Marjory, "I'll say that much for Laura. She can
+certainly throw straighter than any girl I ever knew--she throws just
+like a boy."
+
+Jean, still worried and disapproving, could not help laughing, for
+Laura's plump target showed only too good evidence of Laura's skill.
+Mabel's new light-blue gingham showed a round scarlet spot where each
+juicy missile had landed; and besides this, there were wide muddy
+circles where her tears had left highwater marks about each eye.
+
+"But, dear me," said Jean, growing sober again, "think how low-down and
+horrid it will sound when we tell about it at home. Suppose it should
+get into the papers! Apples and tomatoes! If boys had done it it would
+have sounded bad enough, but for _girls_ to do such a thing! Oh, dear, I
+_do_ wish I'd been here to stop it!"
+
+"To stop the tomatoes, you mean," said Mabel. "You couldn't have stopped
+anything else, for I just _had_ to do something or burst. I've felt all
+the week just like something sizzling in a bottle and waiting to have
+the cork pulled! I'll _never_ be able to do my suffering in silence the
+way you and Bettie do. Oh, girls, I feel just loads better."
+
+"Well, you may _feel_ better," said irrepressible Marjory, "but you
+certainly look a lot worse. With those muddy rings on your face you look
+just like a little owl that isn't very wise."
+
+"Oh, dear," mourned Bettie, "if Miss Blossom had only stayed we wouldn't
+have had all this trouble with those people."
+
+"No," said Marjory, shrewdly, "Miss Blossom would probably have made
+Laura over into a very good imitation of an honest citizen. I don't
+think, though, that even Miss Blossom could make Laura anything more
+than an imitation, because--well, because she's Laura. It's different
+with Mabel--"
+
+Mabel looked up expectantly, and Marjory, who was in a teasing mood,
+continued.
+
+"Yes," said she, encouragingly, "Miss Blossom _might_ have succeeded in
+making a nice, polite girl out of Mabel if she'd only had time--"
+
+"How much time?" demanded Mabel, with sudden suspicion.
+
+"Oh, about a thousand years," replied Marjory, skipping prudently behind
+tall Jean.
+
+"Never mind, Mabel," said Bettie, who always sided with the oppressed,
+slipping a thin arm about Mabel's plump shoulders. "We like you pretty
+well, anyway, and you've certainly had an awful time."
+
+"Do you think," asked Mabel, with sudden concern, "that Mr. Milligan
+_could_ get us turned out of the cottage? You know he threatened to."
+
+"No," said Bettie. "The cottage is church property and no one could do
+anything about it with Mr. Black away because he's the senior warden.
+Father said only this morning that there was all sorts of church
+business waiting for him."
+
+"Well," said Mabel, with a sigh of relief, "Mr. Black wouldn't turn us
+out, so we're perfectly safe. Guess I'll go out on the porch and sing my
+Milligan song again."
+
+"I guess you won't," said Jean. "There's a very good tub in the Bennett
+house and I'd advise you to go home and take a bath in it--you look as
+if you needed _two_ baths and a shampoo. Besides, it's almost supper
+time."
+
+Laura's version of the story, unfortunately, differed materially from
+the truth. There was no gainsaying the tomatoes--Mr. Milligan had seen
+those with his own eyes; but Laura claimed that she had been compelled
+to use those expensive vegetables as a means of self-defense. According
+to Laura, whose imagination was as well trained as her arm, she had been
+the innocent victim of all sorts of persecution at the hands of the
+four girls. They had called her a thief and had insulted not only her
+but all the other Milligans. Mabel, she declared, had opened hostilities
+that afternoon by throwing stones, and poor, abused Laura had only used
+the tomatoes as a last resort. The apple that struck Mr. Milligan was,
+she maintained, the very last of about four dozen.
+
+Had the Milligans not been prejudiced, they might easily have learned
+how far from the truth this assertion was, for the porch of Dandelion
+Cottage was still bespattered with tomatoes, whereas in the Milligan
+yard there were no traces of the recent encounter. This, to be sure, was
+no particular credit to Mabel for there _might_ have been had Mr.
+Milligan delayed his coming by a very few minutes, since Mabel's pan
+still contained seven hard little apples and Mabel still longed to use
+them.
+
+The Milligans, however, _were_ prejudiced. Although Laura was often rude
+and disagreeable at home, she was the only little girl the Milligans
+had; in any quarrel with outsiders they naturally sided with their own
+flesh and blood, and, in spite of the tomatoes, they did so now. In her
+mother Laura found a staunch champion.
+
+"I won't have those stuck-up little imps there another week," said Mrs.
+Milligan. "If you don't see that they're turned out, James, I will."
+
+"They stick out their tongues at me every time they see me," fibbed
+Laura, whose own tongue was the only one that had been used for
+sticking-out purposes. "They said Ma was no lady, and--"
+
+"I'm going to complain of them this very night," said Mrs. Milligan,
+with quick resentment. "I'll show 'em whether I'm a lady or not."
+
+"Who'll you complain to?" asked Laura, hopefully.
+
+"The church warden, of course. These cottages both belong to the
+church."
+
+"Mr. Black is the girls' best friend," said Laura. "He wouldn't believe
+anything against them--besides, he's away."
+
+"Mr. Downing isn't," said Mr. Milligan. "I paid him the rent last week.
+We'll threaten to leave if he doesn't turn them out. He's a sharp
+businessman and he wouldn't lose the rent of this house for the sake of
+letting a lot of children use that cottage. I'll see him tomorrow."
+
+"No," said Mrs. Milligan, "just leave the matter to me. _I'll_ talk to
+Mr. Downing."
+
+"Suit yourself," said Mr. Milligan, glad perhaps to shirk a disagreeable
+task.
+
+After supper that evening, Mrs. Milligan put on her best hat and went to
+Mr. Downing's house, which was only about three blocks from her own. The
+evening was warm and she found Mr. and Mrs. Downing seated on their
+front porch. Mrs. Milligan accepted their invitation to take a chair and
+began at once to explain the reason for her visit.
+
+The angry woman's tale lost nothing in the telling; indeed, it was not
+hard to discover how Laura came by her habit of exaggerating. When Mrs.
+Milligan went home half an hour later, Mr. Downing was convinced that
+the church property was in dangerous hands. He couldn't see what Mr.
+Black had been thinking of to allow careless, impudent children who
+played with matches, drove nails in the cottage plaster, and insulted
+innocent neighbors, to occupy Dandelion Cottage.
+
+"Somehow," said Mrs. Downing, when the visitor had departed, "I don't
+like that woman. She isn't quite a lady."
+
+"Nonsense, my dear," said Mr. Downing. "If only _half_ the things she
+hints at are true, there would be reason enough for closing the cottage.
+The place itself doesn't amount to much, I've been told, but a fire
+started there would damage thousands of dollars' worth of property.
+Besides, there's the rent from the house those people are in--we don't
+want to lose that, you know."
+
+"Still, there are always tenants--"
+
+"Not at this time of the year. I'll look into the matter as soon as I
+can find time."
+
+"Remember," said Mrs. Downing, thinking of Mrs. Milligan's rasping
+tones, "that there are two sides to every story."
+
+"My dear," said Mr. Downing, complacently, "I shall listen with the
+strictest impartiality to both sides."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 13
+
+The Junior Warden
+
+
+By nine o'clock the next morning, the girls were all at the cottage as
+usual. Mrs. Mapes had given them materials for a simple cake and Jean
+and Bettie were in the kitchen making it. Marjory, singing as she
+worked, was running her Aunty Jane's carpet-sweeper noisily over the
+parlor rug, while Mabel, whistling an accompaniment to Marjory's song,
+was dusting the sideboard; at all times the cottage furniture received
+so much unnecessary dusting that it would not have been at all
+surprising if it had worn thin in spots.
+
+When the doorbell rang suddenly and sharply, Marjory's tune stopped
+short, high in air, and Mabel ran to the window.
+
+"It's a man," announced Mabel.
+
+"Mr. Milligan?" asked Marjory, anxiously.
+
+"He's moved so I can't tell."
+
+"Try the other window," urged Marjory, impatiently.
+
+"It doesn't look like Mr. Milligan's legs--I can't see the rest of him.
+They look neat and--and expensive."
+
+"Probably it's just an agent; they're kind of thick lately. You go to
+the door and tell him we're just pretend people, while I'm putting the
+sweeper out of sight."
+
+"Good morning," said Mr. Downing. "Are you--Why! this is a very cozy
+little place. I had no idea that it was so comfortable. May I come in?"
+
+"Ye-es," returned Mabel, eyeing him doubtfully, "but I think you're
+probably making a mistake. You see, we're not really-truly people."
+
+"Indeed!" said Mr. Downing, with an amused glance at plump Mabel. "Is it
+possible you're a ghost?"
+
+"I mean," explained Mabel, "we're just children and this is only a
+playhouse, not a real one. If you have anything to sell, or are looking
+for a boarding place, or want to take our census--"
+
+"No," said Mr. Downing, "I don't want either your dollars or your
+senses. My name is Downing and I'm not selling anything. I called on
+business. Who is the head of this--this ghostly corporation?"
+
+"It has four," said Mabel. "I'll get the rest."
+
+Bettie and Jean, with grown-up gingham aprons tied about their necks,
+followed Mabel to the parlor. Mr. Downing had seated himself in one of
+the chairs and the girls sat facing him in a bright-eyed row on the
+couch. Their countenances were so eager and expectant that Mr. Downing
+found it hard to begin.
+
+"I've come in," he said, "to talk over a little matter of business with
+you. I understand that you've been having trouble with your
+neighbors--exchanging compliments--"
+
+"No," said honest Mabel, turning crimson, "it was apples and tomatoes.
+The Milligans are the most troublesome neighbors we've ever had."
+
+"So-o?" said the visitor, raising his eyebrows in genuine surprise.
+"Why, I understood that it was quite the other way round. I'd like to
+hear your version of the difficulty."
+
+Jean and Bettie, with occasional assistance from Marjory and much
+prompting from Mabel, told him all about it. During the recital Mr.
+Downing's attention seemed to wander, for his eyes took in every detail
+of the neat sitting-room, strayed to the prettily papered dining-room,
+and even rested lingeringly upon the one visible corner of the dainty
+blue bedroom. Bettie had neglected to close the door between the kitchen
+and the dining-room, which proved unfortunate, because the tiny scrap of
+butter that Jean had left melting in a very small pan on the kitchen
+stove, got too hot and with threatening, hissing noises began to give
+forth clouds of thick, disagreeable smoke. Jean, the first of the girls
+to notice it, flew to the kitchen, snatched a lid from the stove, and,
+with a newspaper for a holder, swept the burning butter, pan and all,
+into the fire. Then the paper in Jean's hand caught fire, and for the
+instant before she stuffed it into the stove and clapped the lid into
+place, fierce red flames leaped high.
+
+To the visitor, prepared by Mrs. Milligan for just such doings, it
+looked for a moment as if all the rear end of the cottage were in
+flames; but Jean returned to her place on the couch with an air of what
+looked to Mr. Downing very much like almost criminal unconcern. How was
+Mr. Downing, who did no cooking, to know that paper placed on a
+cake-baking fire _always_ flares up in an alarming fashion without doing
+any real harm? He didn't know, and the incident decided the matter he
+was turning over in his mind. The girls had found it a little hard to
+tell their story, for it was plain that their visitor was using his eyes
+rather than his ears; moreover, they were not at all certain that he had
+any right to demand the facts in the case. When the story was finished,
+Mr. Downing looked at the row of interested faces and cleared his
+throat; but, for some reason, the words he had meant to speak refused to
+come. He hadn't supposed that the evicting of unsatisfactory tenants
+would prove such an unpleasant task. The tenants, all at once, seemed
+part of the house, and the man realized suddenly that the losing of the
+cottage was likely to prove a severe blow to the four little
+housekeepers. Perhaps it was disconcerting to see the expression of
+puzzled anxiety that had crept into Bettie's great brown eyes, into
+Jean's hazel ones, into Marjory's gray and Mabel's blue ones. At any
+rate, Mr. Downing decided to be well out of the way when the blow should
+fall; he realized that it would prove a trying ordeal to face all those
+young eyes filled with indignation and probably with tears.
+
+"Ah-hum," said Mr. Downing, rising to take his leave. "I'm much obliged
+to you young ladies. Hum--the number of this house is what, if you
+please?"
+
+"Number 224," said Bettie, whose mind worked quickly.
+
+"Hum," said Mr. Downing, writing it on the envelope he had taken from
+his pocket, and moving rather abruptly toward the door, as if desirous
+to escape as speedily as possible with the knowledge he had gleaned.
+"Thank you very much. I bid you all good morning."
+
+"Now what in the world did that man want?" demanded Mabel, before the
+front door had fairly closed. "Do you s'pose he's some kind of a lawyer,
+or--" and Mabel turned pale at the thought--"a policeman disguised as
+a--a human being? Do you suppose the Milligans are going to get us
+arrested for just two apples--and--and a little poetry?"
+
+"More probably," suggested Jean, "he's a burglar. Didn't you notice the
+way he looked around at everything? I could see that he sort of lost
+interest after while--as if he had concluded that we hadn't anything
+worth stealing."
+
+"Nonsense!" said Bettie. "I don't know what he does for a living, but he
+can't be a burglar. He hasn't lived here very long, but he goes to our
+church and comes to our house to vestry meetings. Sometimes on warm
+Sundays when there's nobody else to do it, he passes the plate."
+
+"Well," said Mabel, "I hope he isn't a policeman weekdays."
+
+"It's more likely," said Marjory, "that he does reporting for the
+papers. The time Aunty Jane was in that railroad accident, a reporter
+came to our house to interview her, and he asked questions just as that
+Mr. Downing--was that his name?--did. He took the number of the house,
+too."
+
+"Oh, mercy!" gasped Mabel, turning suddenly from white to a deep
+crimson. "If those green apples get into the paper, I'll be too ashamed
+to live! Oh, _girls_! Couldn't we stop him--couldn't we--couldn't we pay
+him something _not_ to?"
+
+"It's probably in by now," said Marjory, teasingly. "They do it by
+telegraph, you know."
+
+"He _couldn't_ have been a reporter," protested Mabel. "Reporters are
+always young and very active so they can catch lots of scoons--no,
+scoots."
+
+"Scoops," corrected Jean.
+
+"Well, scoops. He was kind of slow and a little bit bald-headed on
+top--I noticed it when he stooped for his hat."
+
+"Well, anyway," comforted Jean, "let's not worry about it. Let's rebuild
+our fire--of course it's out by now--and finish our cake."
+
+In spite of the cake's turning out much better than anyone could have
+expected, with so many agitated cooks taking turns stirring it, there
+was something wrong with the day. The girls were filled with uneasy
+forebodings and could settle down to nothing. Marjory felt no desire to
+sing, and even the cake seemed to have lost something of its flavor.
+Moreover, when they had stood for a moment on their doorstep to see the
+new steam road-roller go puffing by, Laura had tossed her head
+triumphantly and shouted tauntingly: "_I_ know something _I_ shan't
+tell!" After that, the girls could not help wondering if Laura really
+did know something--some dreadful thing that concerned them vitally and
+was likely to burst upon them at any moment.
+
+For the first time in the history of their housekeeping, they could find
+nothing that they really wanted to do. During the afternoon they had
+several little disagreements with each other. Mild Jean spoke sharply to
+Marjory, and even sweet-tempered Bettie was drawn into a lively dispute
+with Mabel. Moreover, all three of the older girls were inclined to
+blame Mabel for her fracas with the Milligans; and the culprit, ashamed
+one moment and defiant the next, was in a most unhappy frame of mind.
+Altogether, the day was a failure and the four friends parted coldly at
+least an hour before the usual time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 14
+
+An Unexpected Letter
+
+
+The next morning, Jean, with three large bananas as a peace offering,
+was the first to arrive at Dandelion Cottage. Jean, a wise young person
+for her years, had decided that a little hard work would clear the
+atmosphere, so, finding no one else in the house, she made a fire in the
+stove, put on the kettle, put up the leaf of the kitchen table, and
+began to take all the dishes from the pantry shelves. Dishwashing in the
+cottage was always far more enjoyable than this despised occupation
+usually is elsewhere, owing to the astonishing assortment of crockery
+the girls had accumulated. No two of the dishes--with the exception of a
+pair of plates bearing life-sized portraits of "The frog that would
+a-wooing go, whether his mother would let him or no"--bore the same
+pattern. There was a bewildering diversity, too, in the sizes and shapes
+of the cups and saucers, and an alarming variety in the matter of color.
+But, as the girls had declared gleefully a dozen times or more, it would
+be possible to set the table for seven courses when the time should come
+for Mr. Black's and Mrs. Crane's dinner party, because so many of the
+things almost matched if they didn't quite. Jean was thinking of this as
+she lifted the dishes from the shelf to the table, and lovingly arranged
+them in pairs, the pink sugar bowl beside the blue cream-pitcher, the
+yellow coffee cup beside the dull red Japanese tea cup, and the
+"Love-the-Giver" mug beside the "For my Little Friend" oatmeal bowl. She
+had just taken down the big, dusty, cracked pitcher that matched nothing
+else--which perhaps was the reason that it had remained high on the
+shelf since the day Mabel had used it for her lemonade--when the
+doorbell rang.
+
+Hastily wiping her dusty hands, Jean ran to the door. No one was there,
+but the postman was climbing the steps of the next house, so Jean
+slipped her fingers expectantly into the little, rusty iron letter-box.
+Perhaps there was something from Miss Blossom, who sometimes showed that
+she had not forgotten her little landladies.
+
+Sure enough, there was a large white letter, not from Miss Blossom to be
+sure, but from somebody. To the young cottagers, letters were always
+joyous happenings; they had no debts, consequently they were
+unacquainted with bills. With this auspicious beginning, for of course
+the coming of a totally unexpected letter was an auspicious beginning,
+it was surely going to be a cheerful, perhaps even a delightful, day.
+Jean hummed happily as she laid the unopened letter on the dining-room
+table, for of course a letter somewhat oddly addressed to "The Four
+Young Ladies at 224 Fremont Street, City," could be opened only when all
+four were present. When Marjory and Bettie came in, they fell upon the
+letter and examined every portion of the envelope, but neither girl
+could imagine who had sent it. It was impossible to wait for Mabel, who
+was always late, so Bettie obligingly ran to get her. Even so there was
+still a considerable wait while Mabel laced her shoes; but presently
+Bettie returned, with Mabel, still nibbling very-much-buttered toast, at
+her heels.
+
+"You open it, Jean," panted Bettie. "You can read writing better than we
+can."
+
+"Hurry," urged Mabel, who could keep other persons waiting much more
+easily than she herself could wait.
+
+"Here's a fork to open it with," said Marjory. "I can't find the
+scissors. Hurry up; maybe it's a party and we'll have to R. S. V. P.
+right away."
+
+"Oh, goody! If it is," squealed Mabel, "I can wear my new tan Oxfords."
+
+"It's from Yours respectably--no, Yours regretfully, John W. Downing,"
+announced Jean. "The man that was here yesterday, you know."
+
+"Read it, read it," pleaded the others, crowding so close that Jean had
+to lift the letter above their heads in order to see it at all. "Do
+hurry up, we're crazy to hear it."
+
+ "My Dear Young Ladies," read Jean in a voice that started
+ bravely but grew fainter with every line. "It is with sincere
+ regret that I write to inform you that it no longer suits the
+ convenience of the vestrymen to have you occupy the church
+ cottage on Fremont Street. It is to be rented as soon as a few
+ necessary repairs can be made, and in the meantime you will
+ oblige us greatly by moving out at once. Please deliver the key
+ at your earliest convenience to me at either my house or this
+ office.
+
+ "Yours regretfully,
+
+ "JOHN W. DOWNING."
+
+For as much as two minutes no one said a word. Jean had laid the open
+letter on the table. Marjory and Bettie with their arms tightly locked,
+as if both felt the need of support, reread the closely written page in
+silence. When they reached the end, they pushed it toward Mabel.
+
+"What does it mean in plain English?" asked Mabel, hoping that both her
+eyes and her ears had deceived her.
+
+"That somebody else is to have the cottage," said Jean, "and that in the
+meantime we're to move."
+
+"In the meantime!" blurted Mabel, with swift wrath. "I should say it
+_was_ the meantime--the very meanest time anybody ever heard of. I'd
+just like to know what right 'Yours-respectably-John-W.-Downing' has to
+turn us out of our own house. I guess we paid our rent--I guess there's
+blisters on me yet--I guess I dug dandelions--I guess I--"
+
+But here Mabel's indignation turned to grief, and with one of her very
+best howls and a torrent of tears she buried her face in Jean's apron.
+
+"Bettie," asked Jean with her arms about Mabel, "do you think it would
+do any good to ask your father about it? He's the minister, you know,
+and he might explain to Mr. Downing that we were promised the cottage
+for all summer."
+
+"Papa went away this morning and won't be home for ten days. He has
+exchanged with somebody for the next two Sundays."
+
+"My pa-pa-papa's away, too," sobbed Mabel, "or he'd tell that vile Mr.
+Downing that it was all the Mill-ill-igans' fault. _They're_ the folks
+that ought to be turned out, and I just wuh-wuh-wish they--they had
+been."
+
+"Why wouldn't it be a good idea," suggested Marjory, "for us all to go
+down to Mr. Downing's office and tell him all about it? You see, he
+hasn't lived here very long and perhaps he doesn't understand that we
+have paid our rent for all summer."
+
+"Yes," assented Jean, "that would probably be the best thing to do. He
+won't mind having us go to the office because he told us to take the key
+there. But where _is_ his office?"
+
+"I know," said Bettie. "Here's the address on the letter, and the
+dentist I go to is right near there, so I can find it easily."
+
+"Then let's start right away," cried eager Mabel, uncovering a
+disheveled head and a tear-stained countenance. "Don't let's lose a
+minute."
+
+"Mercy, no," said Jean, taking Mabel by the shoulders and pushing her
+before her to the blue-room mirror. "Do you think you can go _any_ place
+looking like that? Do you think you _look_ like a desirable tenant?
+We've all got to be just as clean and neat as we can be. We've got to
+impress him with our--our ladylikeness."
+
+"I'll braid Mabel's hair," offered Bettie, "if Marjory will run around
+the block and get all our hats. I'm wearing Dick's straw one with the
+blue ribbon just now, Marjory. You'll find it some place in our front
+hall if Tommy hasn't got it on."
+
+"Bring mine, too," said Jean; "it's in my room."
+
+"I don't know _where_ mine is," said Mabel, "but if you can't find it
+you'd better wear your Sunday one and lend me your everyday one."
+
+"I don't see myself lending you any more hats," said Marjory, who had,
+like the other girls, brightened at the prospect of going to Mr.
+Downing's. "I haven't forgotten how you left the last one outdoors all
+night in the rain, and how it looked afterwards, when Aunty Jane made me
+wear it to punish me for _my_ carelessness. You'll go in your own hat or
+none."
+
+"Well," said Mabel, meekly, "I guess you'll probably find it in my room
+under the bed, if it isn't in the parlor behind the sofa."
+
+"Now, remember," said Jean, who was retying the bow on Bettie's hair,
+"we're all to be polite, whatever happens, for we mustn't let Mr.
+Downing think we're anything like the Milligans. If he won't let us have
+the cottage when he knows about the rent's being paid--though I'm
+almost sure he _will_ let us keep it--why, we'll just have to give it up
+and not let him see that we care."
+
+"I'll be good," promised Bettie.
+
+"You needn't be afraid of _me_," said Mabel. "I wouldn't humble myself
+to _speak_ to such a despisable man."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 15
+
+An Obdurate Landlord
+
+
+Twenty minutes later when Mr. Downing roared "_Come in_" in the
+terrifying voice he usually reserved for agents and other unexpected or
+unwelcome visitors, he was plainly very much surprised to see four pale
+girls with shocked, reproachful eyes file in and come to an embarrassed
+standstill just inside the office door, which closed of its own accord
+and left them imprisoned with the enemy. They waited quietly.
+
+"Oh, good morning," said he, in a much milder tone, as he swung about in
+his revolving chair. "What can I do for you? Have you brought the key so
+soon?"
+
+"We came," said Jean, propelled suddenly forward by a vigorous push from
+the rear, "to see you about Dandelion Cottage. We think you've made a
+mistake."
+
+"Indeed!" said Mr. Downing, who did not at any time like to be
+considered mistaken. "Suppose you explain."
+
+So sweet-voiced Jean explained all about digging the dandelions to pay
+the rent, about Mr. Black's giving them the key at the end of the week,
+and about all the lovely times they had had and were still hoping to
+have in their precious cottage before giving it up for the winter.
+
+Mr. Downing, personally, did not like Mr. Black. He had a poor opinion
+of the older man's business ability, and perhaps a somewhat exalted
+opinion of his own. He considered Mr. Black old-fashioned and far too
+easy-going. He felt that parish affairs were more likely to flourish in
+the hands of a younger, shrewder, and more modern person, and he had an
+idea that he was that person. At any rate, now that Mr. Black was out of
+town, Mr. Downing was glad of an opportunity to display his own superior
+shrewdness. He would show the vestry a thing or two, and incidentally
+increase the parish income, which as everybody knew stood greatly in
+need of increasing. He had no patience with slipshod methods. He was
+truly sorry when business matters compelled him to appear hard-hearted;
+but to him it seemed little short of absurd for a man of Mr. Black's
+years to waste on four small girls a cottage that might be bringing in a
+comfortable sum every month in the year.
+
+"Now that's a very pretty little story," said Mr. Downing, when Jean had
+finished. "But, you see, you've already had the cottage more than long
+enough to pay you for pulling those few weeds."
+
+"_Few!_" exclaimed Mabel, in indignant protest and forgetting her
+promise of silence. "_Few!_ Why, there were _billions_ of 'em. If we'd
+been paid two cents a hundred for them, we'd all be _rich_. Mr. Black
+promised us we could have that cottage for all summer and our rent
+hasn't half perspired yet."
+
+"She means _ex_pired," explained Marjory, "but she's right for once. Mr.
+Black did say we could stay there all summer, and it isn't quite August
+yet, you know."
+
+"Hum," said Mr. Downing. "Nobody said anything to _me_ about any such
+arrangement, and I'm keeping the books. I don't know what Mr. Black
+could have been thinking of if he made any such foolish promise as that.
+Of course it's not binding. Why, that cottage ought to be renting for
+ten or twelve dollars a month!"
+
+"But the plaster's very bad," pleaded Bettie, eagerly, "and the roof
+leaks in every room in the house but one, and something's the matter
+underneath so it's too cold for folks to live in during the winter. It
+was vacant for a long time before _we_ had it."
+
+"It looked very comfortable to _me_," said Mr. Downing, who had lived in
+the town for only a few months and neither knew nor suspected the real
+condition of the house. "I'm afraid your arrangement with Mr. Black
+doesn't hold good. Mr. Morgan and I think it best to have the house
+vacated at once. You see, we're in danger of losing the rent from the
+next house, because the Milligans have threatened to move out if you
+don't."
+
+"If--if seven dollars and a half would do you any good," said Mabel,
+"and if you're mean enough to take all the money we've got in this
+world--"
+
+"I'm not," said Mr. Downing. "I'm only reasonable, and I want you to be
+reasonable too. You must look at this thing from a business standpoint.
+You see, the rent from those two houses should bring in twenty-five
+dollars a month, which isn't more than a sufficient return for the money
+invested. The taxes--"
+
+"A note for you, Mr. Downing," said a boy, who had quietly opened the
+office door.
+
+"Why," said Mr. Downing, when he had read the note, "this is really
+quite a remarkable coincidence. This communication is from Mr. Milligan,
+who has found a desirable tenant for the cottage he is now in, and
+wishes, himself, to occupy the cottage you are going to vacate. Very
+clever idea on Mr. Milligan's part. This will save him five dollars a
+month and is a most convenient arrangement all around. He wishes to move
+in at once."
+
+"Mr. Milligan!" gasped three of the astonished girls.
+
+"Those Milligans in _our_ house!" cried Mabel. "Well, _isn't_ that the
+worst!"
+
+"You see," said Mr. Downing, "it is really necessary for you to move at
+once. I think you had better begin without further loss of time. Good
+morning, good morning, all of you, and please believe me, I'm sorry
+about this, but it can't be helped."
+
+"I hope," said Mabel, summoning all her dignity for a parting shot,
+"that you'll never live long enough to regret this--this outrage. There
+are seven rolls of paper on the walls of that cottage that belong to us,
+and we expect to be paid for every one of them."
+
+"How much?" asked Mr. Downing, suppressing a smile, for Mabel was never
+more amusing than when she was very angry.
+
+"Five cents a roll--thirty-five cents altogether."
+
+Mr. Downing gravely reached into his trousers pocket, fished up a
+handful of loose change, scrupulously counted out three dimes and a
+nickel, and handed them to Mabel, who, with averted eyes and chin held
+unnecessarily high, accepted the price of the Blossom wall paper
+haughtily, and, following the others, stalked from the office.
+
+The unhappy girls could not trust themselves to talk as they hastened
+homeward. They held hands tightly, walking four abreast along the quiet
+street, and barely managed to keep the tears back and the rapidly
+swelling lumps in their little throats successfully swallowed until
+Jean's trembling fingers had unlocked the cottage door.
+
+Then, with one accord, they rushed pell-mell for the blue-room bed,
+hurled themselves upon its excelsior pillows, and burst into tears. Jean
+and Bettie cried silently but bitterly; Marjory wept audibly, with long,
+shuddering sobs; but Mabel simply bawled. Mabel always did her crying on
+the excellent principle that, if a thing were worth doing at all, it was
+worth doing well. She was doing it so well on this occasion that Jean,
+who seldom cried and whose puffed, scarlet eyelids contrasted oddly and
+rather pathetically with her colorless cheeks, presently sat up to
+remonstrate.
+
+"Mabel!" she said, slipping an arm about the chief mourner, "do you want
+the Milligans to hear you? We're on their side of the house, you know."
+
+Jean couldn't have used a better argument. Mabel stopped short in the
+middle of one of her very best howls, sat up, and shook her head
+vigorously.
+
+"Well, I just guess I don't," said she. "I'd die first!"
+
+"I thought so," said Jean, with just a faint glimmer of a smile. "We
+mustn't let those people guess how awfully we care. Go bathe your eyes,
+Mabel--there must be a little warm water in the tea kettle."
+
+Then the comforter turned to Bettie, and made the appeal that was most
+likely to reach that always-ready-to-help young person.
+
+"Come, Bettie dear, you've cried long enough. We must get to work, for
+we've a tremendous lot to do. Don't you suppose that, if we had all the
+things packed in baskets or bundles, we could get a few of your brothers
+to help us move out after dark? I just _can't_ let those Milligans gloat
+over us while we go back and forth with things."
+
+Bettie's only response was a sob.
+
+"Where in the world can we put the things?" asked Marjory, sitting up
+suddenly and displaying a blotched and swollen countenance very unlike
+her usual fair, rose-tinted face. "Of course we can each take our dolls
+and books home, but our furniture--"
+
+"I'm going to ask Mother if we can't store it upstairs in our barn. I'm
+sure she'll let us."
+
+"Oh, I _wish_ Mr. Black were here. It doesn't seem possible we've
+really got to move. There _must_ be some way out of it. Oh, Bettie,
+_couldn't_ we write to Mr. Black?"
+
+"It would take too-oo-oo long," sobbed Bettie, sitting up and mopping
+her eyes with the muslin window curtain, which she could easily reach
+from the foot of the bed. "He's way off in Washington. Oh, dear--oh,
+dear--oh, dear!"
+
+"Why couldn't we telegraph?" demanded Marjory, with whom hope died hard.
+"Telegrams go pretty fast, don't they?"
+
+"They cost terribly," said Bettie. "They're almost as expensive as
+express packages. Still, we might find out what it costs."
+
+"I dow the telegraph-mad," wheezed Mabel from the wash-basin. "I'll go
+hobe ad telephode hib ad ask what it costs--I've heard by father give
+hib bessages lots of tibes. Oh, by, by dose is all stuffed up."
+
+"Try a handkerchief," suggested Jean. "Go ask, if you want to; it won't
+do any harm, nor probably any good."
+
+Mabel ran home, taking care to keep her back turned toward the Milligan
+house. During her brief absence, the girls bathed their eyes and made
+sundry other futile attempts to do away with all outward signs of grief.
+
+"He says," cried Mabel, bursting in excitedly, "that sixty cents is the
+regular price in the daytime, but it's forty cents for a night message.
+It seems kind of mean to wake folks up in the middle of the night just
+to save twenty cents, doesn't it?"
+
+"Yes," said Bettie. "I couldn't be impolite enough to do that to anybody
+I like as well as I like Mr. Black. If we haven't money enough to send a
+daytime message, we mustn't send any."
+
+"Well, we haven't," said Jean. "We've only thirty-five cents."
+
+"And we wouldn't have had that," said Mabel, "if I hadn't remembered
+that wall paper just in the nick of time."
+
+Strangely enough, not one of the girls thought of the money in the bank.
+Perhaps it did not occur to them that it would be possible to remove any
+portion of their precious seven dollars and a half without withdrawing
+it all; they knew little of business matters. Nor did they think of
+appealing to their parents for aid at this crisis. Indeed, they were all
+too dazed by the suddenness and tremendousness of the blow to think very
+clearly about anything. The sum needed seemed a large one to the girls,
+who habitually bought a cent's worth of candy at a time from the
+generous proprietor of the little corner shop. Mabel, the only one with
+an allowance, was, to her father's way of thinking, a hopeless little
+spendthrift, already deeply plunged in debt by her unpaid fines for
+lateness to meals.
+
+The Tucker income did not go round even for the grown-ups, so of course
+there were few pennies for the Tucker children. Marjory's Aunty Jane had
+ideas of her own on the subject of spending-money for little
+girls--Marjory did not suspect that the good but rather austere woman
+made a weekly pilgrimage to the bank for the purpose of religiously
+depositing a small sum in her niece's name; and, if she had known it,
+Marjory would probably have been improvident enough to prefer spot cash
+in smaller amounts. Only that morning tender-hearted Jean had heard
+patient Mrs. Mapes lamenting because butter had gone up two cents a
+pound and because all the bills had seemed larger than those of the
+preceding month--Jean always took the family bills very much to heart.
+
+The girls sorrowfully concluded that there was nothing left for them to
+do but to obey Mr. Downing. They had looked forward with dread to giving
+up the cottage when winter should come, but the idea of losing it in
+midsummer was a thousand times worse.
+
+"We'll just have to give it up," said grieved little Bettie. "There's
+nothing else we _can_ do, with Mr. Black away. When I go home tonight
+I'll write to him and apologize for not being able to keep our promise
+about the dinner party. That's the hardest thing of all to give up."
+
+"But you don't know his address," objected Jean.
+
+"Yes, I do, because Father wrote to him about some church business this
+morning, before going away, and gave Dick the letter to mail. Of course
+Dick forgot all about it and left it on the hall mantelpiece. It's
+probably there yet, for I'm the only person that ever remembers to mail
+Father's letters--he forgets them himself most of the time."
+
+"Now let's get to work," said Jean. "Since we have to move let's pretend
+we really want to. I've always thought it must be quite exciting to
+really truly move. You see, we _must_ get it over before the Milligans
+guess that we've begun, and there isn't any too much time left. I'll
+begin to take down the things in the parlor and tie them up in the
+bedclothes. We'll leave all the curtains until the last so that no one
+will know what we're doing."
+
+"I'll help you," said Bettie.
+
+"Mabel and I might be packing the dishes," said Marjory. "It will be
+easier to do it while we have the table left to work on. Come along,
+Mabel."
+
+Mabel followed obediently. When the forlorn pair reached the kitchen,
+Marjory announced her intention of exploring the little shed for empty
+baskets, leaving Mabel to stack the cups and plates in compact piles.
+Mabel, without knowing just why she did it, picked up her old friend,
+the cracked lemonade-pitcher and gave it a little shake. Something
+rattled. Mabel, always an inquisitive young person, thrust her fingers
+into the dusty depths to bring up a piece of money--two pieces--three
+pieces--four pieces.
+
+"Oh," she gasped, "it's my lemonade money! Oh, what a lucky omen!
+Girls!"
+
+The next instant Mabel clapped a plump, dusty hand over her own lips to
+keep them from announcing the discovery, and then, stealthily concealing
+the twenty cents in the pocket that still contained the wall-paper
+money, she stole quickly through the cottage and ran to her own home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 16
+
+Mabel Plans a Surprise
+
+
+The girls were indignant later when they discovered Mabel's apparent
+desertion. It was precisely like Mabel, they said, to shirk when there
+was anything unpleasant to be done. For once, however, they were
+wronging Mabel--poor, self-sacrificing Mabel, who with fifty-five cents
+at her disposal was planning a beautiful surprise for her unappreciative
+cottage-mates. The girls might have known that nothing short of an
+ambitious project for saving the cottage from the Milligans would have
+kept the child away when so much was going on. For Mabel was at that
+very moment doing what was for her the hardest kind of work; all alone
+in her own room at home she was laboriously composing a telegram.
+
+She had never sent a telegram, nor had she even read one. She could not
+consult her mother because Mrs. Bennett had inconsiderately gone down
+town to do her marketing. Dr. Bennett, however, was a very busy man and
+sometimes received a number of important messages in one day. Mabel felt
+that the occasion justified her studying several late specimens which
+she resurrected from the waste-paper basket under her father's desk.
+These, however, proved rather unsatisfactory models since none of them
+seemed to exactly fit the existing emergency. Most of them, indeed, were
+in cipher.
+
+"I suppose," said Mabel, nibbling her penholder thoughtfully, "they make
+'em short so they'll fit these little sheets of yellow paper, but
+there's lots more space they _might_ use if they didn't leave such wide
+margins. I'll write small so I can say all I want to, but, dear me, I
+can't think of a thing to say."
+
+It took a long time, but the message was finished at last. With a deep
+sigh of satisfaction, Mabel folded it neatly and put it into an envelope
+which she carefully sealed. Then, putting on her hat, and taking the
+telegram with her, she ran to Bettie's home and opened the door--none of
+the four girls were required to ring each other's doorbells. There, sure
+enough, was the letter waiting to be mailed to Mr. Black. Mabel, who had
+thought to bring a pencil, copied the address in her big, vertical
+handwriting, and without further ado ran with it to her friend, the
+telegraph operator, whose office was just around the corner. All the
+distances in the little town were short, and Mabel had frequently been
+sent to the place with messages written by her father, so she did not
+feel the need of asking permission.
+
+The clerk opened the envelope--Mabel considered this decidedly rude of
+him--and proceeded to read the message. It took him a long time. Then he
+looked from Mabel's flushed cheeks and eager eyes to the little
+collection of nickels and dimes she had placed on the counter. Mabel
+wondered why the young man chewed the ends of his sandy mustache so
+vigorously. Perhaps he was amused at something; she looked about the
+little office to see what it could be that pleased him so greatly, but
+there seemed to be nothing to excite mirth. She decided that he was
+either a very cheerful young man naturally, or else he was feeling
+joyful because the clock said that it was nearly time for luncheon.
+
+"It'll be all right, Miss Mabel," said he at last. "It's a pretty good
+fifty-five cents' worth; but I guess Mr. Black won't object to that. I
+hope you'll always come to me when you have messages to send."
+
+"I won't if you go and read them all," said Mabel, at which her friend
+looked even more cheerful than he had before.
+
+Ten minutes later Mabel, mumbling something about having had an errand
+to attend to, presented herself at the cottage. Beyond a few meekly
+received reproaches from Marjory, no one said anything about the
+unexplained absence. Indeed, they were all too busy and too preoccupied
+to care, the greater grief of losing the cottage having swallowed up all
+lesser concerns.
+
+At a less trying time the girls would have discovered within ten minutes
+that Mabel was suffering from a suppressed secret; but everything was
+changed now. Although Mabel fairly bristled with importance and gave out
+sundry very broad hints, no one paid the slightest attention. Gradually,
+in the stress of packing, the matter of the telegram faded from Mabel's
+short memory, for preparing to move proved a most exciting operation,
+and also a harrowing one. Every few moments somebody would say: "Our
+last day," and then the other three would fall to weeping on anything
+that happened to come handy. Of course the packing had stirred up
+considerable dust; this, mingled with tears, added much to the
+forlornness of the cottagers' appearance when they went home at noon
+with their news.
+
+The parents and Aunty Jane said it was a shame, but all agreed that
+there was nothing to be done. All were sorry to have the girls deprived
+of the cottage, for the mothers had certainly found it a relief to have
+their little daughters' leisure hours so safely and happily occupied.
+Mabel's mother was especially sorry.
+
+Never was moving more melancholy nor house more forlorn when the moving,
+done after dark with great caution, and mostly through the dining-room
+window on the side of the house farthest from the Milligans, was finally
+accomplished. The Tucker boys had been only too delighted to help. By
+bedtime the cottage was empty of everything but the curtains on the
+Milligan side of the house. An hour later the tired girls were asleep;
+but under each pillow there was a handkerchief rolled in a tight, grimy
+little ball and soaked with tears.
+
+In the morning, the girls returned for a last look, and for the
+remaining curtains. Dandelion Cottage, stripped of its furniture and
+without its pictures, showed its age and all its infirmities. Great
+patches of plaster and wall paper were missing, for the gay posters had
+covered a multitude of defects. The indignant Tucker boys had disobeyed
+Bettie and had removed not only the tin they had put on the leaking
+roof, but the steps they had built at the back door, the drain they had
+found it necessary to place under the kitchen sink, and the bricks with
+which they had propped the tottering chimneys.
+
+Before the day was over, the tenants whom the Milligans had found for
+their own house were clamoring to move in, so the Milligans took
+possession of the cottage late that afternoon, getting the key from Mr.
+Downing, into whose keeping the girls had silently delivered it that
+morning. To do Mr. Downing justice, nothing had ever hurt him quite as
+much as did the dignified silence of the three pale girls who waited for
+a moment in the doorway, while equally pallid Jean went quietly forward
+to lay the key on his desk. He realized suddenly that not one of them
+could have spoken a word without bursting into tears; and for the rest
+of that day he hated himself most heartily.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 17
+
+Several Surprises Take Effect
+
+
+Mr. Black opened the door of his hotel apartment in Washington one
+sultry noon in response to a vigorous, prolonged rapping from without.
+The bellboy handed him a telegram. When Mr. Black had read the long
+message he smiled and frowned, but cheerfully paid the three dollars and
+forty-one cents additional charges that the messenger demanded.
+
+It was Mabel's message; the clerk had transmitted it faithfully, even
+to the two misspelled words that had proved too much for the excited
+little writer. If the receiving clerk had not considerately tucked in a
+few periods for the sake of clearness, there would have been no
+punctuation marks, because, as everybody knows, very few telegrams _are_
+punctuated; but Mabel, of course, had not taken that into consideration.
+It was quite the longest message and certainly the most amusing one that
+Mr. Black had ever received. It read:
+
+ "DEAR MR. BLACK,
+
+ "We are well but terribly unhappy for the worst has happened.
+ Cant you come to the reskew as they say in books for we are
+ really in great trouble because the Milligans a very unpolite
+ and untruthful family next door want dandelion cottage for
+ themselves the pigs and Mr. Downing says we must move out at
+ once and return the key our own darling key that you gave us.
+ We are moving out now and crying so hard we can hardly write. I
+ mean myself. Is Mr. Downing the boss of the whole church. Cant
+ you tell him we truly paid the rent for all summer by digging
+ dandelions. He does not believe us. We are too sad to write any
+ more with love from your little friends
+
+ "JEAN MARJORY BETTIE AND I.
+
+ "P. S. How about your dinner party if we lose the cottage?"
+
+Mr. Black read and reread the typewritten yellow sheet a great many
+times; sometimes he frowned, sometimes he chuckled; the postscript
+seemed to please him particularly, for whenever he reached that point
+his deep-set eyes twinkled merrily. Presently he propped the dispatch
+against the wall at the back of his table and sat down in front of it to
+write a reply. He wrote several messages, some long, some short; then he
+tore them all up--they seemed inadequate compared with Mabel's.
+
+"That man Downing," said he, dropping the scraps into the waste-basket,
+"means well, but he muddles every pie he puts his finger in. Probably if
+I wire him he'll botch things worse than ever. Dear me, it _is_ too bad
+for those nice children to lose any part of their precious stay in that
+cottage, now, for of course they'll have to give it up when cold weather
+comes. If I can wind my business up today there isn't any good reason
+why I can't go straight through without stopping in Chicago. It's time I
+was home, anyway; it's pretty warm here for a man that likes a cold
+climate."
+
+Meanwhile, things were happening in Mr. Black's own town.
+
+It was a dark, threatening day when the Milligans, delighted at the
+success of their efforts to dislodge its rightful tenants, hurriedly
+moved into Dandelion Cottage; but, dark though it was, Mrs. Milligan
+soon began to find her new possession full of unsuspected blemishes.
+Now that the pictures were down and the rugs were up, she discovered the
+badly broken plaster, the tattered condition of the wall paper, the
+leaking drain, and the clumsily mended rat-holes. She found, too, that
+she had made a grievous mistake in her calculations. She had supposed
+that the tiny pantry was a third bedroom; with its neat muslin curtains,
+it certainly looked like one when viewed from the outside; and crafty
+Laura, intensely desirous of seeing the enemy ousted from the cottage at
+any price, had not considered it necessary to enlighten her mother.
+
+"My goodness!" exclaimed Mrs. Milligan, a thin woman with a shrewish
+countenance now much streaked with dust. "I thought you said there was a
+fine cellar under this house? It's barely three feet deep, and there's
+no stairs and no floor. It's full of old rubbish."
+
+"I never was down there," admitted Laura, dropping a dishpanful of
+cooking utensils with a crash and hastily making for safe quarters
+behind a mountain of Milligan furniture, "but I've often seen the trap
+door."
+
+"It hasn't been opened for years. And where's the nice big closet you
+said opened off the bedroom? There isn't a decent closet in this house.
+I don't see what possessed you--"
+
+"It serves you right," said Mr. Milligan, unsympathetically. "You
+wouldn't wait for anything, but had to rush right in. I told you you'd
+better take your time about it, but no--"
+
+"You know very well, James Milligan," snapped the irate lady, "that the
+Knapps wouldn't have taken our house if they couldn't have had it at
+once."
+
+"Well, I _don't_ know," growled Mr. Milligan, scowling crossly at the
+constantly growing heaps of incongruously mixed household goods, "where
+in Sam Hill you're going to put all that stuff. There isn't room for a
+cat to turn around, and the place ain't fit to live in, anyway."
+
+Bad as things looked, even Mr. Milligan did not guess that first busy
+day how hopelessly out of repair the cottage really was; but he was soon
+to find out.
+
+The summer had been an unusually dry one; so dry that the girls had been
+obliged to carry many pails of water to their garden every evening. The
+moving-day had been cloudy--out of sympathy, perhaps, for the little
+cottagers. That night it rained, the first long, steady downpour in
+weeks. This proved no gentle shower, but a fierce, robust, pelting
+flood. Seemingly a discriminating rain, too, choosing carefully between
+the just and the unjust, for most of it fell upon the Milligans. With
+the sole exception of the dining-room, every room in the house leaked
+like a sieve.
+
+The tired, disgusted Milligans, drenched in their beds, leaped hastily
+from their shower baths to look about, by candlelight, for shelter. Mr.
+Milligan spread a mattress, driest side up, on the dining-room floor,
+and the unfortunate family spent the rest of the night huddled in an
+uncomfortable heap in the one dry spot the house afforded.
+
+Very early the next morning they sent post-haste for Mr. Downing.
+
+Mr. Downing, who hated to be disturbed before eight, arrived at ten
+o'clock; and, with an expert carpenter, made a thorough examination of
+the house, which the rain had certainly not improved.
+
+"It will take three hundred--possibly four hundred dollars," said the
+carpenter, who had been making a great many figures in a worn little
+note-book, "to make this place habitable. It needs a new roof, new
+chimneys, new floors, a new foundation, new plumbing, new plaster--in
+short, just about _everything_ except the four outside walls. Then there
+are no lights and no heating plant, which of course would be extra. It's
+probably one of the oldest houses in town. What's it renting for?"
+
+"Ten dollars a month."
+
+"It isn't worth it. Half that money would be a high price. Even if it
+were placed in good repair it would be six years at least before you
+could expect to get the money expended on repairs back in rent. The
+only thing to do is to tear it down and build a larger and more modern
+house that will bring a better rent, for there's no money in a
+ten-dollar house on a lot of this size--the taxes eat all the profits."
+
+"Well," said Mr. Downing, "this house certainly looked far more
+comfortable when I saw it the other day than it does now. Those children
+must have had the defects very well concealed. They deceived me
+completely."
+
+"They deceived us all," said Mrs. Milligan, resentfully. "Half of our
+furniture is ruined. Look at that sofa!"
+
+Mr. Downing looked. The drenched old-gold plush sofa certainly looked
+very much like a half-drowned Jersey calf.
+
+"Of course," continued Mrs. Milligan, sharply, "we expect to have our
+losses made good. Then we've had all our trouble for nothing, too. Of
+course we can't stay here--the place isn't fit for pigs. I suppose the
+best thing _we_ can do is to move right back into our own house."
+
+"Ye-es," said Mr. Milligan, overlooking the fact that Mrs. Milligan had
+inadvertently called her family pigs, "it certainly looks like the best
+thing to do. I'll go and tell the Knapps that they'll have to move out
+at once--we can't spend another night under this roof."
+
+The Knapps, however, proved disobliging and flatly declined to move a
+second time. The Milligans had begged them to take the house off their
+hands, and they had signed a contract. Moreover, it was just the kind of
+house the Knapps had long been looking for, and now that they were
+moved, more than half settled, and altogether satisfied with their part
+of the bargain, they politely but firmly announced their intention of
+staying where they were until the lease should expire.
+
+There was nothing the former tenants could do about it. They were
+homeless and quite as helpless as the four little girls had been in
+similar circumstances; and they made a far greater fuss about it. By
+this they gained, however, nothing but the disapproval of everybody
+concerned; so, finally, the Milligans, disgusted with Dandelion Cottage,
+with Mr. Downing, and for once even a little bit with themselves,
+dejectedly hunted up a new home in a far less pleasant neighborhood, and
+moved hurriedly out of Dandelion Cottage--and, except for the memories
+they left behind them, out of the story.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 18
+
+A Hurried Retreat
+
+
+The girls, of course, had been barred out while all these exciting
+latest events were taking place in their dear cottage; but Marjory, who
+lived next door to it, had seen something of the Milligans' hasty exit
+and had guessed at part of the truth. Mrs. Knapp, who seemed a pleasant,
+likable little woman, in spite of her unwillingness to accommodate her
+new landlord, unknowingly confirmed their suspicions when she told her
+friend Mrs. Crane about it; for Mrs. Crane, in her turn, told the news
+to the four little housekeepers the next morning as they sat homeless
+and forlorn on her doorstep. It was always Mrs. Crane to whom the
+Dandelion Cottagers turned whenever they were in need of consolation
+and, as in this case, consolation was usually forthcoming.
+
+The girls, in their excitement at hearing the news about their late
+possession, did not notice that sympathetic Mrs. Crane looked tired and
+worried as she sat, in the big red rocking chair on her porch, peeling
+potatoes.
+
+"Oh!" squealed Mabel, from the broad arm of Mrs. Crane's chair, "I'm
+glad! I'm glad! I'm glad!"
+
+"I can't help being a little bit glad, too," said fair-minded Jean. "I
+suppose it wasn't very pleasant for the Milligans, but I guess they
+deserved all they got."
+
+"They deserved a great deal more," said Marjory, resentfully. "Think of
+these last awful days!"
+
+"If they'd had _much_ more," said Mrs. Crane, "they'd have been drowned.
+Why, children! the place was just flooded."
+
+"I'm ashamed to tell of it," said Bettie, "but I'm awfully afraid that
+our boys took off part of the pieces of tin that they nailed on the roof
+last spring. I heard them doing _something_ up there the night we
+moved; but Bob only grinned when I asked him about it."
+
+"Good for the boys!" cried Marjory, gleefully. "I wouldn't be unladylike
+enough to set traps for the Milligans myself, but I can't help feeling
+glad that somebody else did."
+
+"It was Bob's own tin," giggled delighted Mabel, almost tumbling into
+Mrs. Crane's potato pan in her joy. "I guess he had a right to take it
+home if he wanted to."
+
+"Anyway," said Jean, from her perch on the porch railing, "I'm glad
+they're gone."
+
+"But it doesn't do _us_ any good," sighed Bettie. "And the summer's just
+flying."
+
+"Yes, it does," insisted Jean. "We _can_ stand having the cottage
+empty--we can pretend, you know, that it's an enchanted castle that can
+be opened only by a certain magic key that--"
+
+"Somebody's baby has swallowed," shrieked Mabel, the matter-of-fact.
+
+"Mercy no, goosie," said Marjory. "She means a magic word that nobody
+can remember."
+
+"That's it," said Jean. "Of course we couldn't do even that with the
+cottage full of Milligans."
+
+"No," assented Marjory, "the most active imagination would refuse to
+activate--"
+
+"To _what_?" gasped Mabel.
+
+"To work," explained Marjory.
+
+"I should say so," agreed Mabel, again threatening the potatoes. "It was
+just as much as I could do to come over here this morning to breathe the
+same air with that cottage with those folks in it staring me in the
+face, but now--"
+
+"After all," sighed Bettie, sorrowfully, from the other arm of Mrs.
+Crane's big chair, "having the Milligans out of the cottage doesn't make
+_much_ difference, as long as we're out, too. Oh, I _did_ love that
+little house so. I just hated to think of cold weather coming to drive
+us out; but I never dreamed of anything so dreadful as having to leave
+it right in this lovely warm weather."
+
+"If Mr. Black had stayed in town," said Mabel, feelingly, "we'd be
+dusting that darling cottage this very minute."
+
+Mrs. Crane sniffed in the odd way she always did whenever Mr. Black's
+name was mentioned. This scornful sniff, accompanying Mrs. Crane's
+evident disapproval of their dearest friend, was the only thing that the
+girls disliked about Mrs. Crane.
+
+"I _know_ you'd like Mr. Black if you only knew him," said Bettie,
+earnestly. "In some ways you're a good deal like him. You're both the
+same color, your eyebrows turn up the same way at the outside corners,
+and you both like us. Mr. Black has a beautiful soul."
+
+"Indeed," said Mrs. Crane. "And haven't I a beautiful soul too?"
+
+"Why, of course," said Bettie, leaning down to rub her cheek against
+Mrs. Crane's. "I meant _both_ of you. We like you both just the same."
+
+"Only it's different," explained Jean. "Mr. Black doesn't need us, and
+sometimes you do. We _like_ to do things for you."
+
+"I'm glad of that," said Mrs. Crane, "for I need you this very minute.
+But don't you be too sure about his not needing you as well. He must
+lead a pretty lonely life, because it's years since his wife died. I
+never heard of anybody else liking her, but I guess _he_ did. He's one
+of the faithful kind, maybe, for he's lived all alone in that great big
+house ever since. I guess it does him good to have you little girls for
+friends."
+
+"What was his wife like?" asked Mabel, eagerly. "Did you use to know
+her?"
+
+"No, indeed," said Mrs. Crane, again giving the objectionable sniff.
+"That is, not so very well--a little light-headed, useless thing, no
+more fit to keep house--but there! there. It doesn't make any difference
+_now_, and I've learned that it isn't the best housekeepers that get
+married easiest. If it was, I wouldn't be so worried _now_."
+
+"Is anything the matter?" asked Jean, quick to note the distress in Mrs.
+Crane's voice.
+
+"Yes," returned the good woman, "there are two things the matter."
+
+"Your poor foot?" queried Bettie, instantly all sympathy.
+
+"No, the foot's all right. It's Mr. Barlow and my eyes. Mr. Barlow is
+going to be married to a young lady he's been writing to for a long
+time, and I'm going to lose him because he wants to keep house. It won't
+be easy to find another lodger for that little, shabby, old-fashioned
+room. I'm trying to make a new rag carpet for it, but I'm all at a
+standstill because I can't see to thread my needle. I declare, I don't
+know what is going to become of me."
+
+"When I grow up," said Bettie, "you shall live with me."
+
+"But what am I to do while I'm waiting for you to grow up?" asked Mrs.
+Crane, smiling at Bettie's protecting manner.
+
+"Let us be your eyes," suggested Jean. "Couldn't we thread about a
+million needles for you? Don't you think a million would last all day?"
+
+"I should think it might," said Mrs. Crane, somewhat comforted. "I
+haven't quite a million, but if Marjory will get my cushion and a spool
+of cotton I'll be very glad to have you thread all I have."
+
+The girls worked in silence for fully five minutes. Then Mabel jabbed
+the solitary needle she had threaded into the sawdust cushion and said:
+
+"Don't you suppose Mr. Downing might let us have the cottage _now_, if
+we went to him? Nobody else seems to care about it. What do you think,
+Mrs. Crane?"
+
+"Why, my dear, I suppose it wouldn't do any harm to ask. You'd better
+see what your own people think about it."
+
+"Let's go ask them now," cried impetuous Mabel, springing to her feet.
+Forgetting all about the needles and without waiting to say good-by to
+Mrs. Crane, the eager girl made a diagonal rush for the corner nearest
+her own home.
+
+The others remained long enough to thread all the needles. Then they,
+too, went home with the news about the cottage and about Mrs. Crane.
+They were realizing, for the first time, that their good friend might
+become helpless long before they were ready to use her as a grandmother
+for their children, but they couldn't see just what was to be done about
+it. The idea of going to Mr. Downing, however, soon drove every other
+thought away, for the parents and Aunty Jane, too, advised them to ask.
+They even encouraged them.
+
+But when Jean and Bettie, hopefully dressed in their Sunday-best, and
+Marjory and Mabel, with their abundant locks elaborately curled
+besides, presented themselves and their request at Mr. Downing's house
+that evening, they were not at all encouraged by their reception.
+
+Mr. Downing, a man of moods, had just come off second-best in an
+encounter with Mrs. Milligan, whom he had accidentally met on his way
+home to dinner, and, at the moment the girls appeared, the cottage was
+just about the last subject that the badgered man cared to discuss.
+Before Jean had fairly stated her errand, the enraged Mr. Downing roared
+"_No!_" so emphatically that his four alarmed visitors backed hurriedly
+off the Downing porch and fled as one girl. Mabel, to be sure, measured
+her length in the canna bed near the gate, but she scrambled up,
+snorting with fright and indignation, and none of them paused again in
+their flight until Jean's door, which seemed safest, had closed behind
+them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 19
+
+The Response to Mabel's Telegram
+
+
+The night of their flitting from Dandelion Cottage, the girls had
+hastily eaten all the radishes in the cottage garden to prevent their
+falling into the hands of the grasping Milligans. Now, the morning after
+their visit to Mr. Downing, they were wishing that they hadn't; not
+because the radishes had disagreed with them, but for quite a different
+reason. They could not enter the cottage, of course, but it had
+occurred to them that it might be possible to derive a certain
+melancholy satisfaction from tending and replenishing the little garden.
+That pleasure, at least, had not been forbidden them; but before
+beginning active operations, they took the precaution of enlarging the
+hole in the back fence, so that instantaneous flight would be possible
+in case Mr. Downing should stroll cottageward.
+
+Their motive was good. When Mr. Black returned, if he ever should,
+Bettie meant that he should find the little yard in perfect order.
+
+"We'll keep to our part of the bargain, anyway," said Bettie, as the
+four girls were making their first cautious tour of inspection about the
+cottage yard. "There's lots of work to be done."
+
+"Yes," agreed Jean. "We said we'd keep this yard nice all summer, and it
+wouldn't be right not to do it."
+
+"I wonder if we ought to ask Mr. Downing?" asked conscientious Bettie,
+stooping to pull off some gone-to-seed pansies.
+
+"Perhaps you'd like the job!" suggested Marjory, with mild sarcasm.
+
+"My sakes!" said Mabel. "I wouldn't go near that man again if I was
+going to swallow an automobile the next moment if I didn't. I could hear
+him roar '_No_' every few minutes all night. I fell out of bed twice,
+dreaming that I was trying to get off of that old porch of his before he
+could grab me."
+
+"Well, I guess we'd better not ask," said Jean, "because I'm pretty sure
+he'd have the same answer ready."
+
+"He certainly ought not to mind having us take care of our own flowers,"
+said Marjory.
+
+"That's true," said Bettie, poking the moist earth with a friendly
+finger. "They're growing splendidly since the rain. See how nice and
+full of growiness the ground is."
+
+"I can get more pansy plants," offered Marjory, "to fill up these holes
+the Milligan dog made."
+
+"Mrs. Crane promised to give us some aster plants," said Mabel. "Let's
+put 'em along by the fence."
+
+"Let's do," said Jean. "You go see if you can have them now."
+
+"I _know_ Mr. Black will be pleased," declared Bettie, "if he finds this
+place looking nice. I'm so thankful we didn't remember to ask Mr.
+Downing about it."
+
+"We didn't have a chance," said Jean, ruefully; "but just the same, I'm
+willing to keep on forgetting until Mr. Black comes."
+
+It began to look, however, as if Mr. Black were never coming. Bettie had
+written as she had promised but had had no reply, though the letter had
+not been mailed for ten minutes before she began to watch for the
+postman. Even Mabel, having had no response to her telegram and
+supposing it to have gone astray, had given up hope.
+
+Mabel, ever averse to confessing the failure of any of her enterprises,
+had decided to postpone saying anything about the telegram until one or
+another of the girls should remember to ask what had become of the
+thirty-five cents. So far, none of them had thought of it.
+
+Still, it seemed probable, in spite of Mr. Black's continued absence,
+that he would get home some time, for he had left so much behind him. In
+the business portion of the town there was a huge building whose sign
+read: "PETER BLACK AND COMPANY." Then, in the prettiest part of the
+residence district, where the lawns were big and the shrubs were planted
+scientifically by a landscape gardener and where the hillside bristled
+with roses, there was a large, handsome stone house that, as everybody
+knew, belonged to Mr. Black. Although there were industrious clerks at
+work in the one, and a middle-aged housekeeper, with a furnace-tending,
+grass-cutting husband equally busy in the other, it was reasonable to
+suppose that Mr. Black, even if he had no family, would have to return
+some time, if only to enjoy his beloved rose-bushes.
+
+Thanks to Mabel's telegram (Bettie's letter, forwarded from Washington,
+did not reach him for many days) he did come. He had had to stop in
+Chicago, after all, and there had been unexpected delays; but just a
+week from the day the Milligans had left the cottage, Mr. Black
+returned.
+
+Without even stopping to look in at his own office, the traveler went
+straight to the rectory to ask for Bettie. Bettie, Mrs. Tucker told him,
+he would probably find in the cottage yard.
+
+Mr. Black took a short cut through the hole in the back fence, arriving
+on the cottage lawn just in time to meet a procession of girls entering
+the front gate. Each girl was carrying a huge, heavy clod of earth, out
+of the top of which grew a sturdy green plant; for the cottageless
+cottagers had discovered the only successful way of performing the
+difficult feat of restocking their garden with half-grown vegetables.
+Their neighbors had proved generous when Bettie had explained that if
+one could only dig deep enough one could transplant _anything_, from a
+cabbage to pole-beans. Some of the grown-up gardeners, to be sure, had
+been skeptical, but they were all willing that the girls should make the
+attempt.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Black!" shrieked the four girls, dropping their burdens to make
+a simultaneous rush for the senior warden. "Oh! oh! oh! Is it really
+you? We're so glad--so awfully glad you've come!"
+
+"Well, I declare! So am I," said Mr. Black, with his arms full of girls.
+"It seems like getting home again to have a family of nice girls waiting
+with a welcome, even if it's a pretty sandy one. What are you doing with
+all the real estate? I thought you'd all been turned out, but you seem
+to be all here. I declare, if you haven't all been growing!"
+
+"We were--we are--we have," cried the girls, dancing up and down
+delightedly. "Mr. Downing made us give up the cottage, but he didn't say
+anything about the garden--and--and--we thought we'd better forget to
+ask about it."
+
+"Tell me the whole story," said Mr. Black. "Let's sit here on the
+doorstep. I'm sure I could listen more comfortably if there were not so
+many excited girls dancing on my best toes."
+
+So Mr. Black, with a girl at each side and two at his feet, heard the
+story from beginning to end, and he seemed to find it much more amusing
+than the girls had at any time considered it. He simply roared with
+laughter when Bettie apologized about Bob and the tin.
+
+"Well," said he, when the recital was ended, and he had shown the girls
+Mabel's telegram, and the thoroughly delighted Mabel had been praised
+and enthusiastically hugged by the other three, "I _have_ heard of
+cottages with more than one key. Suppose you see, Bettie, if anything on
+this ring will fit that keyhole."
+
+Three of the flat, slender keys did not, but the fourth turned easily in
+the lock. Bettie opened the door.
+
+"Possession," said Mr. Black, with a twinkle in his eye, "is nine points
+of the law. You'd better go to work at once and move in and get to
+cooking; you see, there's a vacancy under my vest that nothing but that
+promised dinner party can fill. The sooner you get settled, the sooner I
+get that good square meal. Besides, if you don't work, you won't have an
+appetite for a great big box of candy that I have in my trunk."
+
+"Oh," sighed Bettie, rubbing her cheek against Mr. Black's sleeve, "it
+seems too good to be true."
+
+"What, the candy?" teased Mr. Black.
+
+"No, the cottage," explained Bettie, earnestly. "Oh, I do hope winter
+will be about six months late this year to make up for this."
+
+"Perhaps it'll forget to come at all," breathed Mabel, hopefully. "I'd
+almost be willing to skip Christmas if there was any way of stretching
+this summer out to February. Somebody please pinch me--I'm afraid I'm
+dreaming--Oh! ouch! I didn't say _everybody_."
+
+By this time, of course, all the young housekeepers' relatives
+were deeply interested in the cottage. After living for a
+never-to-be-forgotten week with the four unhappiest little girls in
+town, all were eager to reinstate them in the restored treasure. The
+girls, having rushed home with the joyful news, were almost overwhelmed
+with unexpected offers of parental assistance. The grown-ups were not
+only willing but anxious to help. Then, too, the Mapes boys and the
+young Tuckers almost came to blows over who should have the honor of
+mending the roof with the bundles of shingles that Dr. Bennett insisted
+on furnishing. Marjory's Aunty Jane said that if somebody who could
+drive nails without smashing his thumb would mend the holes in the
+parlor floor she would give the girls a pretty ingrain carpet, one side
+of which looked almost new. Dr. Bennett himself laid a clean new floor
+in the little kitchen over the rough old one, and Mrs. Mapes mended the
+broken plaster in all the rooms by pasting unbleached muslin over the
+holes. Mr. Tucker replaced all broken panes of glass, while his busy
+wife found time to tack mosquito-netting over the kitchen and pantry
+windows.
+
+So interested, indeed, were all the grown-ups and all the brothers that
+the girls chuckled delightedly. It wouldn't have surprised them so very
+much if all their people had fallen suddenly to playing with dolls and
+to having tea-parties in the cottage; but the place was still far too
+disorderly for either of these juvenile occupations to prove attractive
+to anybody.
+
+In the midst of the confusion, Mr. Downing stopped at the cottage door
+one noon and asked for the girls, who eyed him doubtfully and
+resentfully as they met him, after Marjory had hesitatingly ushered him
+into the untidy little parlor.
+
+Mr. Downing smiled at them in a friendly but decidedly embarrassed
+manner. He had not forgotten his own lack of cordiality when the girls
+had called on him, and he wanted to atone for it. Mr. Black had
+tactfully but effectively pointed out to Mr. Downing--already deeply
+disgusted with the Milligans--the error of his ways, and Mr. Downing, as
+generous as he was hasty and irascible, was honest enough to admit that
+he had been mistaken not only in his estimate of Mr. Black, but also in
+his treatment of the little cottagers. Now, eager to make amends, he
+looked somewhat anxiously from one to another of his silent hostesses,
+who in return looked questioningly at Mr. Downing. Surely, with Mr.
+Black in town, Mr. Downing _couldn't_ be thinking of turning them out a
+second time; still, he had disappointed them before, probably he would
+again, and the girls meant to take no chances. So they kept still, with
+searching eyes glued upon Mr. Downing's countenance. All at once, they
+realized that they were looking into friendly eyes, and three of them
+jumped to the conclusion that the junior warden was not the heartless
+monster they had considered him.
+
+"I came," said Mr. Downing, noticing the change of expression in
+Bettie's face, "to offer you, with my apologies, this key and this
+little document. The paper, as you will see, is signed by all the
+vestrymen--my own name is written _very_ large--and it gives you the
+right to the use of this cottage until such time as the church feels
+rich enough to tear it down and build a new one. There is no immediate
+cause for alarm on this score, for there were only sixty-two cents in
+the plate last Sunday. I have come to the conclusion, young ladies, that
+I was overhasty in my judgment. I didn't understand the matter, and I'm
+afraid I acted without due consideration--I often do. But I hope you'll
+forgive me, for I sincerely beg _all_ your pardons."
+
+"It's all right," said Bettie, "as long as it was just a mistake. It's
+easy to forgive mistakes."
+
+"Yes," said Marjory, sagely, "we all make 'em."
+
+"It's all right, anyway," added Jean.
+
+Mr. Downing looked expectantly at Mabel, who for once had preserved a
+dead silence.
+
+"Well?" he asked, interrogatively.
+
+"I don't suppose I can ever really _quite_ forgive you," confessed
+Mabel, with evident reluctance. "It'll be awfully hard work, but I guess
+I can try."
+
+"Perhaps my peace-offering will help your efforts a little," said Mr.
+Downing, smiling. "It seems to be coming in now at your gate."
+
+The girls turned hastily to look, but all they could see was a very
+untidy man with a large book under his arm.
+
+"These," said Mr. Downing, taking the book from the man, who had walked
+in at the open door, "are samples of inexpensive wall papers. You're to
+choose as much as you need of the kinds you like best, and this man will
+put it wherever it will do the most good, and I'll pay the bill. Now,
+Miss Blue Eyes, do I stand a better chance of forgiveness?"
+
+"Yes, yes!" cried Mabel. "I'm almost glad you needed to apologize. You
+did it beautifully, too. Mercy, when _I_ apologize--and I have to do a
+_fearful_ lot of apologizing--I don't begin to do it so nicely!"
+
+"Perhaps," offered Mr. Downing, "when you've had as much practice as I
+have, it will come easier. I see, however, that you are far more
+suitable tenants than the Milligans would have been, for my humble
+apologies to them met with a very different reception. I assure you
+that, if there's ever any rivalry between you again, my vote goes with
+you--you're so easily satisfied. Now don't hesitate to choose whatever
+you want from this book. This paperhanger is yours, too, until you're
+done with him."
+
+"Oh, thank you, thank you, _thank_ you," cried the girls, with happy
+voices, as Mr. Downing turned to go; "you _couldn't_ have thought of a
+nicer peace-offering."
+
+Of course it took a long, long time for so many young housekeepers to
+choose papers for the parlor and the two bedrooms, but after much
+discussion and many differences of opinion, it was finally selected. The
+girls decided on green for the parlor, blue for one bedroom, and pink
+for the other, and they were easily persuaded to choose small patterns.
+
+Then the smiling paperhanger worked with astonishing rapidity and said
+that he didn't object in the least to having four pairs of bright eyes
+watch from the doorway every strip go into place. It seemed to be no
+trouble at all to paper the little low-ceilinged cottage, and, oh! how
+beautiful it was when it was all done. The cool, cucumber-green parlor
+was just the right shade to melt into the soft blue and white of the
+front bedroom. As for the dainty pink room, as Bettie said rapturously,
+it fairly made one smell roses to look at it, it was so sweet.
+
+It was finished by the following night, for no paperhanger could have
+had the heart to linger over his work with so many anxious eyes
+following every movement. Mrs. Tucker washed and ironed and mended the
+white muslin curtains; and, with such a bower to move into, the second
+moving-in and settling, the girls decided, was really better than the
+first. When their belongings were finally reinstalled in the cottage
+even Mabel no longer felt resentful toward the Milligans.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 20
+
+The Odd Behavior of the Grown-ups
+
+
+Even with all its ingenious though inexpensive improvements, the
+renovated cottage would probably have failed to satisfy a genuine
+rent-paying family, but to the contented girls it seemed absolutely
+perfect.
+
+At last, it looked to everybody as if the long-deferred dinner party
+were actually to take place. There, in readiness, were the girls, the
+money, the cottage, and Mr. Black, and nothing had happened to Mrs.
+Bartholomew Crane--who might easily, as Mabel suggested harrowingly,
+have moved away or died at any moment during the summer.
+
+One day, very soon after the cottage was settled, a not-at-all-surprised
+Mr. Black and a very-much-astonished Mrs. Crane each received a formal
+invitation to dine under its reshingled roof. Composed by all four, the
+note was written by Jean, whose writing and spelling all conceded to be
+better than the combined efforts of the other three. Bettie delivered
+the notes with her own hand, two days before the event, and on the
+morning of the party she went a second time to each house to make
+certain that neither of the expected guests had forgotten the date.
+
+"Forget!" exclaimed Mr. Black, standing framed in his own doorway. "My
+dear little girl, how _could_ I forget, when I've been saving room for
+that dinner ever since early last spring? Nothing, I assure you, could
+keep me away or even delay me. I have eaten a _very_ light breakfast, I
+shall go entirely without luncheon--"
+
+"I wouldn't do that," warned Bettie. "You see it's our first dinner
+party and something _might_ go wrong. The soup might scorch--"
+
+"It wouldn't have the heart to," said Mr. Black. "_No_ soup could be so
+unkind."
+
+Of course the cottage was the busiest place imaginable during the days
+immediately preceding the dinner party. The girls had made elaborate
+plans and their pockets fairly bulged with lists of things that they
+were to be sure to remember and not on any account to forget. Then the
+time came for them to begin to do all the things that they had planned
+to do, and the cottage hummed like a hive of bees.
+
+First the precious seven dollars and a half, swelled by some mysterious
+process to seven dollars and fifty-seven cents, had to be withdrawn from
+the bank, the most imposing building in town with its almost oppressive
+air of formal dignity. The rather diffident girls went in a body to get
+the money and looked with astonishment at the extra pennies.
+
+"That's the interest," explained the cashier, noting with quiet
+amusement the puzzled faces.
+
+"Oh," said Jean, "we've had that in school, but this is the first time
+we've ever seen any."
+
+"We didn't suppose," supplemented Bettie, "that interest was real money.
+_I_ thought it was something like those x-plus-y things that the boys
+have in algebra."
+
+"Or like mermaids and goddesses," said Mabel.
+
+"She means myths," interpreted Marjory.
+
+"I see," said the cashier. "Perhaps you like real, tangible interest
+better than the kind you have in school."
+
+"Oh, we do, we do!" cried the four girls.
+
+"After this," confided Bettie, "it will be easier to study about."
+
+Then, with the money carefully divided into three portions, placed in
+three separate purses, which in turn were deposited one each in Jean's,
+Marjory's, and Bettie's pockets, Mabel having flatly declined to burden
+herself with any such weighty responsibility, the four went to purchase
+their groceries.
+
+The smiling clerks at the various shops confused them a little at first
+by offering them new brands of breakfast foods with strange, oddly
+spelled names, but the girls explained patiently at each place that they
+were giving a dinner party, not a breakfast, and that they wanted
+nothing but the things on their list. It took time and a great deal of
+discussion to make so many important purchases, but finally the
+groceries were all ordered.
+
+Next the little housekeepers went to the butcher's to ask for a chicken.
+
+"Vat kind of schicken you vant?" asked the stout, impatient German
+butcher.
+
+Jean looked at Bettie, Bettie looked at Marjory, and Marjory, although
+she knew it was hopeless, looked at Mabel.
+
+"Vell?" said the busy butcher, interrogatively.
+
+"One to cook--without feathers," gasped Jean.
+
+"A spring schicken?"
+
+"Is that--is that better than a summer one?" faltered Bettie,
+cautiously. "You see it's summer now."
+
+"Perhaps," suggested Mabel, seized with a bright thought, "an August
+one--"
+
+"Here, Schon," shouted the busy butcher to his assistant, "you pring
+oudt three-four schicken. You can pick von oudt vile I vaits on dese
+odder gostomer."
+
+"I think," said Jean, indicating one of the fowls John had produced for
+her inspection, "that that's about the right size. It's so small and
+smooth that it ought to be tender."
+
+"I wouldn't take that one, Miss," cautioned honest John, under his
+breath, "it looks to me like a little old bantam rooster. Leave it to me
+and I'll find you a good one."
+
+To his credit, John was as good as his word.
+
+The little housekeepers felt very important indeed, when, later in the
+day, a procession of genuine grocery wagons, drawn by flesh-and-blood
+horses, drew up before the cottage door to deliver all kinds of
+really-truly parcels. They had not quite escaped the breakfast foods
+after all, because each consignment of groceries was enriched by several
+sample packages; enough altogether, the girls declared joyously, to
+provide a great many noon luncheons.
+
+Of course all the parcels had to be unwrapped, admired, and sorted
+before being carefully arranged in the pantry cupboard, which had never
+before found itself so bountifully supplied. Then, for a busy half-day,
+cook books and real cooks were anxiously consulted; for, as Mabel said,
+it was really surprising to see how many different ways there were to
+cook even the simplest things.
+
+Jean and Bettie were to do the actual cooking. The other two, in
+elaborately starched caps and aprons of spotless white (provided Mabel,
+though this seemed doubtful, could keep hers white), were to take turns
+serving the courses. The first course was to be tomato soup; it came in
+a can with directions outside and cost fifteen cents, which Mabel
+considered cheap because of the printed cooking lesson.
+
+"If they'd send printed directions with their raw chickens and
+vegetables," said she, "maybe folks might be able to tell which recipe
+belonged to which thing."
+
+"Well," laughed Marjory, "_some_ cooks don't have to read a whole page
+before they discover that directions for making plum pudding don't help
+them to make corned-beef hash. You always forget to look at the top of
+the page."
+
+"Never mind," said Jean, "she found a good recipe for salad dressing."
+
+"That's true," said Marjory, "but before you use it you'd better make
+sure that it isn't a polish for hardwood floors. There, don't throw the
+book at me, Mabel--I won't say another word."
+
+The three mothers and Aunty Jane, grown suddenly astonishingly obliging,
+not only consented to lend whatever the girls asked for, but actually
+thrust their belongings upon them to an extent that was almost
+overwhelming. The same impulse seemed to have seized them all. It
+puzzled the girls, yet it pleased them too, for it was such a decided
+novelty to have six parents (even the fathers appeared interested) and
+one aunt positively vying with one another to aid the young cottagers
+with their latest plan. The girls could remember a time, not so very far
+distant, when it was almost hopeless to ask for even such common things
+as potatoes, not to mention eggs and butter. Now, however, everything
+was changed. Aunty Jane would provide soup spoons, napkins, and a
+tablecloth--yes, her very best short one. Marjory could hardly believe
+her ears, but hastily accepted the cloth lest the offer should be
+withdrawn. The girls, having set their hearts on using the "Frog that
+would a-wooing go" plates for the escalloped salmon (to their minds
+there seemed to be some vague connection between frogs and fishes), were
+compelled to decline offers of all the fish plates belonging to the four
+families. The potato salad, garnished with lettuce from the cottage
+garden, was to be eaten with Mrs. Bennett's best salad forks The
+roasted chicken was not to be entrusted to the not-always-reliable
+cottage oven but was to be cooked at the Tuckers' house and carved with
+Mr. Mapes's best game set. Mrs. Bennett's cook would make a pie--yes,
+even a difficult lemon pie with a meringue on top, promised Mrs.
+Bennett.
+
+Then there were to be butter beans out of the cottage garden, and sliced
+cucumbers from the green-grocer's because Mrs. Crane had confessed to a
+fondness for cucumbers. There was one beet in the garden almost large
+enough to be eaten; that, too, was to be sacrificed. The dessert had
+been something of a problem. It had proved so hard to decide this matter
+that they decided to compromise by adding both pudding and ice cream to
+the Bennett pie. A brick of ice cream and some little cakes could easily
+be purchased ready-made from the town caterer, with the change they had
+left. Thoughts of their money's giving out no longer troubled them, for
+had not Mabel's surprising father told them that if they ran short they
+need not hesitate to ask him for any amount within reason?
+
+"I declare," said bewildered Mabel, "I can't see what has come over Papa
+and Mamma. Do I look pale, or anything--as if I might be going to die
+before very long?"
+
+"No," said Marjory, "you certainly don't; but I've wondered if Aunty
+Jane could be worried about _me_. I never knew her to be so
+generous--why, it's getting to be a kind of nuisance! Do you s'pose
+they're going to insist on doing _everything_?"
+
+"Well," said Bettie, "they've certainly helped us a lot. I don't know
+_why_ they've done it, but I'm glad they have. You see, we _must_ have
+everything perfectly beautiful because Mr. Black is rich and is
+accustomed to good dinners, and Mrs. Crane is poor and never has any
+very nice ones. If our people keep all their promises, it can't help
+being a splendid dinner."
+
+The three mothers and Aunty Jane and all the fathers did keep their
+promises. They, too, wanted the dinner to be a success, for they knew,
+as all the older residents of the little town knew--and as the children
+themselves might have known if the story had not been so old and their
+parents had been in the habit of gossiping (which fortunately they were
+not)--that there was a reason why Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane were the last
+two persons to be invited to a tête-à-tête dinner party. Yet, strangely
+enough, there was an equally good reason why no one wanted to interfere
+and why everyone wanted to help.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 21
+
+The Dinner
+
+
+The girls, a little uneasy lest their alarmingly interested parents
+should insist on cooking and serving the entire dinner, were both
+relieved and perplexed to find that the grown-ups, while perfectly
+willing to help with the dinner provided they could work in their own
+kitchens, flatly declined the most urgent invitations to enter the
+cottage on the afternoon or evening of the party.
+
+It was incomprehensible. Until noon of the very day of the feast the
+parents and Aunty Jane had paid the girls an almost embarrassing number
+of visits. Now, when the girls really wanted them and actually gave each
+of them a very special invitation, each one unexpectedly held aloof.
+For, as the hour approached, the girls momentarily became more and more
+convinced that something would surely go wrong in the cottage kitchen
+with no experienced person to keep things moving. They decided, at four
+o'clock, to ask Mrs. Mapes to oversee things.
+
+"No, indeed," said Mrs. Mapes. "You may have anything there is in my
+house, but you can't have _me_. You don't need _anybody_; you won't have
+a mite of trouble."
+
+Finding Mrs. Mapes unpersuadable, they went to Mrs. Tucker, who, next to
+Jean's mother, was usually the most obliging of parents.
+
+"No," said Mrs. Tucker, "I couldn't think of it. No, no, no, not for one
+moment. It's much better for you to do it all by yourselves."
+
+Still hopeful, the girls ran to Mrs. Bennett.
+
+"Mercy, no!" exclaimed that good woman, with discouraging emphasis. "I'm
+not a bit of use in a strange kitchen, and there are reasons--Oh! I mean
+it's your party and it won't be any fun if somebody else runs it."
+
+"Shall we ask your Aunty Jane?" asked Bettie. "We don't seem to be
+having any luck."
+
+"Yes," replied Marjory. "She loves to manage things."
+
+But Marjory's Aunty Jane proved no more willing than the rest.
+
+"No, _ma'am_!" she said, emphatically. "I wouldn't do it for ten
+dollars. Why, it would just spoil everything to have a grown person
+around. Don't even _think_ of such a thing."
+
+So the girls, feeling just a little indignant at their disobliging
+relatives, decided to get along as well as they could without them.
+
+At last, everything was either cooked or cooking. The table was
+beautifully set and decorated and flowers bloomed everywhere in
+Dandelion Cottage. Jean and Bettie, in the freshest of gingham aprons,
+were taking turns watching the things simmering on the stove. Mabel,
+looking fatter than ever in her short, white, stiffly starched apron,
+was on the doorstep craning her neck to see if the guests showed any
+signs of coming, and Marjory was busily putting a few entirely
+unnecessary finishing touches to the table.
+
+The guests were invited for half-past six, but had been hospitably urged
+by Bettie to appear sooner if they wished. At exactly fifteen minutes
+after six, Mrs. Crane, in her old-fashioned, threadbare, best black
+silk and a very-much-mended real-lace collar, and with her iron-gray
+hair far more elaborately arranged than she usually wore it, crossed the
+street, lifting her skirts high and stepping gingerly to avoid the dust.
+She supposed that she was to be the only guest, for the girls had not
+mentioned any other.
+
+Mabel, prodigiously formal and most unusually solemn, met her at the
+door, ushered her into the blue room, and invited her to remove her
+wraps. The light shawl that Mrs. Crane had worn over her head was the
+only wrap she had, but it was not so easily removed as it might have
+been. It caught on one of her hair pins, which necessitated rearranging
+several locks of hair that had slipped from place. This took some time
+and, while she was thus occupied, Mr. Black turned the corner, went
+swiftly toward the cottage, mounted the steps, and rang the doorbell.
+
+Mabel received him with even greater solemnity than she had Mrs. Crane.
+
+"I think I'd better take your hat," said she. "We haven't any hat rack,
+but it'll be perfectly safe on the pink-room bed because we haven't any
+Tucker babies taking naps on it today."
+
+Mr. Black handed his hat to her with an elaborate politeness that
+equaled her own.
+
+"Marjory!" she whispered as she went through the dining-room. "He's
+wearing his dress suit!"
+
+"Sh! he'll hear you," warned Marjory.
+
+"Well, anyway, I'm frightened half to death. Oh, _would_ you mind
+passing all the wettest things? I hadn't thought about his clothes."
+
+"Yes, I guess I'd better; he might want to wear 'em again."
+
+"They're both here," announced Mabel, opening the kitchen door.
+
+"You help Bettie stir the soup and the mashed potatoes," said Jean,
+whisking off her apron and tying it about Mabel's neck. "I'll go in and
+shake hands with them and then come back and dish up."
+
+Jean found both guests looking decidedly ill at ease. Mr. Black stood by
+the parlor table absent-mindedly undressing a family of paper dolls.
+Mrs. Crane, pale and nervously clutching the curtain, seemed unable to
+move from the bedroom doorway.
+
+"Oh!" said Jean, "I do believe Mabel forgot all about introducing you.
+We told her to be sure to remember, but she hasn't been able to take her
+mind off of her apron since she put it on. Mrs. Crane, this is our--our
+preserver, Mr. Black."
+
+The guests bowed stiffly.
+
+Jean began to wish that she could think of some way to break the ice.
+Both were jolly enough on ordinary occasions, but apparently both had
+suddenly been stricken dumb. Perhaps dinner parties always affected
+grown persons that way, or perhaps the starch from Mabel's apron had
+proved contagious; Jean smiled at the thought. Then she made another
+effort to promote sociability.
+
+"Mrs. Crane," explained Jean, turning to Mr. Black, who was nervously
+tearing the legs off of the father of the paper-doll family, "is our
+very nicest neighbor. We like her just ever so much--everybody does.
+We've often told _you_, Mrs. Crane, how fond we are of Mr. Black. It was
+because you are our two very dearest friends that we invited you both--"
+
+"Je-e-e-e-an!" called a distressed voice from the kitchen.
+
+"Mercy!" exclaimed Jean, making a hurried exit, "I hope that soup isn't
+scorched!"
+
+"No," said Bettie, slightly aggrieved, "but _I_ wanted a chance, too, to
+say how-do-you-do to those people before I get all mixed up with the
+cooking. I thought you were _never_ coming back."
+
+"Well, it's your turn now," said Jean. "Give me that spoon."
+
+Bettie, finding their guests seated in opposite corners of the room and
+apparently deeply interested in the cottage literature--Mr. Black buried
+in _Dottie Dimple_ and Mrs. Crane absorbed in _Mother Goose_--naturally
+concluded that they were waiting to be introduced, and accordingly made
+the presentation.
+
+"Mrs. Crane," said she, "I want you to meet Mr. Black, and I hope,"
+added warm-hearted Bettie, "that you'll like each other very much
+because we're so fond of you both. You're each a surprise party for the
+other--we thought you'd both like it better if you had somebody besides
+children to talk to."
+
+"Very kind, I'm sure," mumbled Mr. Black, whose company manners, it
+seemed to Bettie, were far from being as pleasant as his everyday ones.
+Bettie gave a deep sigh and made one more effort to set the
+conversational ball rolling.
+
+"I'm afraid I'll have to go back to the kitchen now, and leave you to
+entertain each other. Please both of you be _very_ entertaining--you're
+both so jolly when you just run in."
+
+Bettie's eyes were wistful as she went toward the kitchen. Was it
+possible, she wondered, that her beloved Mr. Black could despise Mrs.
+Crane because she was _poor_? It didn't seem possible, yet there was
+certainly something wrong. Perhaps he was merely hungry. That was it, of
+course; she would put the dinner on at once--even good-natured Dr.
+Tucker, she remembered, was sometimes a little bearlike when meals were
+delayed.
+
+Five minutes later, Marjory escorted the guests to the dining-room, and,
+finding both of these usually talkative persons alarmingly silent, she
+inferred of course that Mabel had forgotten--as indeed Mabel had--her
+instructions in regard to introducing them. Marjory's manners on formal
+occasions were very pretty; they were pretty now, and so was she, as she
+hastened to make up for Mabel's oversight.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Black," she cried, earnestly, "I'm afraid no one remembered to
+introduce you. It's our first dinner party, you know, and we're not very
+wise. This is our dearest neighbor, Mrs. Crane, Mr. Black."
+
+The guests bowed stiffly for the third time. Practice should have lent
+grace to the salutation, but seemingly it had not.
+
+"Aren't some of you young people going to sit down with me?" demanded
+Mr. Black, noticing suddenly that the table was set for only two.
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Crane with evident dismay, "surely you're coming to the
+table, too."
+
+"We can't," explained Marjory. "It takes all of us to do the serving.
+Besides, we haven't but two dining-room chairs. Sit here, please, Mrs.
+Crane; and this is your place, Mr. Black."
+
+Mr. Black looked red and uncomfortable as he unfolded his napkin. Mrs.
+Crane looked, as Marjory said afterward, for all the world as if she
+were going to cry. Perhaps the prospect of a good dinner after a long
+siege of poor ones was too much for her, for ordinarily Mrs. Crane was a
+very cheerful woman.
+
+Although both guests declared that the soup was very good indeed,
+neither seemed to really enjoy it.
+
+"They just kind of worried a little of it down," said the distressed
+Marjory, when she handed Mr. Black's plate, still three-quarters full,
+to Jean in the kitchen. "Do you suppose there's anything the matter with
+it?"
+
+"There can't be," said Bettie. "I've tasted it and it's good."
+
+"They're just saving room for the other things," comforted Mabel. "I
+guess _I_ wouldn't fill myself up with soup if I could smell roasted
+chicken keeping warm in the oven."
+
+Although Mabel had asked to be spared passing the spillable things, it
+seemed reasonably safe to trust her with the dish of escalloped salmon.
+She succeeded in passing it without disaster to either the dish or the
+guests' garments, and her apron was still immaculate.
+
+"Why," exclaimed Mabel, suddenly noticing that the guests sat stiff and
+silent, "the girls said I was to be sure to introduce you the moment you
+came, and I never thought a thing about it. Do forgive me--I'm the
+stupidest girl. Mrs. Black--I mean Mr. Crane--no, _Mrs._ Crane--"
+
+"We've been introduced," said Mr. Black, rather shortly. "Might I have a
+glass of water?"
+
+A pained, surprised look crept into Mabel's eyes. A moment later she
+went to the kitchen.
+
+The instant the guests were left alone, Mrs. Crane did an odd thing. She
+leaned forward and spoke in a low, earnest tone to Mr. Black.
+
+"Peter," she said, "can't we pretend to be sociable for a little while?
+It isn't comfortable, of course, but it isn't right to spoil those
+children's pleasure by acting like a pair of wooden dolls. Let's talk to
+each other whenever they're in the room just as if we had just met for
+the first time."
+
+"You're right, Sarah," said Mr. Black. "Let's talk about the weather.
+It's a safe topic and there's always plenty of it."
+
+When Marjory opened the door to carry in the salad there was a pleasant
+hum of voices in the dining-room. It seemed to all the girls that the
+guests were really enjoying themselves, for Mr. Black was telling Mrs.
+Crane how much warmer it was in Washington, and Mrs. Crane was informing
+Mr. Black that, except for the one shower that fell so opportunely on
+the Milligans, it had been a remarkably dry summer. The four anxious
+hostesses, feeling suddenly cheered, fell joyously to eating the soup
+and the salmon that remained on the stove. Until that moment, they had
+been too uneasy to realize that they were hungry; but as Marjory carried
+in the crackers, half-famished Mabel breathed a fervent hope that the
+guests wouldn't help themselves too lavishly to the salad.
+
+To the astonishment of Mabel, who carried the chicken successfully to
+its place before Mr. Black, who was to carve it, Mr. Black did not ask
+the other guest what part she liked best, but, with a whimsical smile,
+quietly cut off both wings and put them on Mrs. Crane's plate.
+
+Mrs. Crane looked up with an odd, tremulous expression--sort of weepy,
+Mabel called it afterwards--and said: "Thank you, Peter."
+
+It seemed to Mabel at the time that the guests were getting acquainted
+with a rapidity that was little short of remarkable--"Peter" indeed.
+
+Then, when everything else was eaten, and Marjory had brought the nuts
+and served them, Mrs. Crane, hardly waiting for the door to close behind
+the little waitress, leaned forward suddenly and said:
+
+"Peter, do you remember how you pounded my thumb when I held that hard
+black walnut for you to crack?"
+
+"I remember everything, Sarah. I've always been sorry about that
+thumb--and I've been sorry about a good many other things since. Do you
+think--do you think you could forgive me?"
+
+"Well, I just guess I could," returned Mrs. Crane, heartily. "After all,
+it was just as much my fault as it was yours--maybe more."
+
+"No, I never thought that, Sarah. _I_ was the one to blame."
+
+When the door opened a moment later to admit the finger-bowls and all
+four of the girls, who had licked the ice-cream platter and had nothing
+more to do in the kitchen since everything had been served--there, to
+the housekeepers' unbounded amazement, were Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane,
+with their arms stretched across the little table, holding each other's
+middle-aged hands in a tight clasp, and both had tears in their eyes.
+
+The girls looked at them in consternation.
+
+"Was--was it the dinner?" ventured Mabel, at last. "Was it as bad as--as
+all that?"
+
+"Well," said Mr. Black, rising to go around the table to place an
+affectionate arm across Mrs. Crane's plump shoulders, "it _was_ the
+dinner, but not its badness--or even its very goodness."
+
+"I guess you'd better tell 'em all about it, Peter," suggested Mrs.
+Crane, whose eyes were shining happily. "It's only fair they should know
+about it--bless their little hearts."
+
+"Well, you see," said Mr. Black, who, as the girls had quickly
+discovered, was once more their own delightfully jolly friend, "once
+upon a time, a long time ago, there was a black-eyed girl named Sarah,
+and a two-years-younger boy, who looked a good deal like her, named
+Peter, and they were brother and sister. They were all the brothers and
+sisters that each had, for their parents died when this boy and girl
+were very young. Peter and Sarah used to dream a beautiful dream of
+living together always, and of going down hand-in-hand to a peaceful,
+plentiful old age. You see, they had no other relative but one very
+cross grandmother, who scolded them both even oftener than they
+deserved--which was probably quite often enough. So I suspect that those
+abused, black-eyed, half-starved children loved each other more than
+most brothers and sisters do."
+
+"Yes," agreed Mrs. Crane, nodding her head and smiling mistily, "they
+certainly did. The poor young things had no one else to love."
+
+"That," said Mr. Black, "was no doubt the reason why, when the
+headstrong boy grew up and married a girl that his sister didn't like,
+and the equally headstrong girl grew up and married a man that her
+brother _couldn't_ like--a regular scoundrel that--"
+
+"Peter!" warned Mrs. Crane.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Black, hastily, "it's all over now, and perhaps we
+_had_ better leave that part of it out. It isn't a pretty story, and
+we'll never mention it again, Sarah. But anyway, girls, this foolish
+brother and sister quarreled, and the brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law
+and even the grandmother, who was old enough to know better, quarreled,
+until finally all four of those hot-tempered young persons were so angry
+that the brother named Peter said he'd never speak to his sister again,
+and the sister named Sarah said she'd never speak to her brother
+again--and they haven't until this very day. Just a pair of young geese,
+weren't they, Sarah?"
+
+"Old geese, too," agreed Mrs. Crane, "for they've both been fearfully
+lonely ever since and they've both been too proud to say so. One of
+them, at least, has wished a great many times that there had never been
+any quarrel."
+
+"_Two_ of 'em. But now this one," said Mr. Black, placing his forefinger
+against his own broad chest, "is going to ask this one--" and he pointed
+to Mrs. Crane--"to come and live with him in his own great big empty
+house, so he'll have a sister again to sew on his buttons, listen to his
+old stories, and make a home for him. What do you say, Sarah?"
+
+"I say yes," said Mrs. Crane; "yes, with all my heart."
+
+"And here," said Mr. Black, smiling into four pairs of sympathetic eyes,
+"are four young people who will have to pretend that they truly belong
+to us once in a while, because we'd both like to have our house full of
+happy little girls. You never had any children, Sarah?"
+
+"No, and you lost your only one, Peter."
+
+"Yes, a little brown-eyed thing like Bettie here--she'd be a woman now,
+probably with children of her own."
+
+"It's--it's just like a story," breathed Bettie, happily. "We've been
+part of a real story and never knew it! I'm so glad you let us have
+Dandelion Cottage, _so_ glad we invited you to dinner, and that nothing
+happened to keep either of you away."
+
+"Peter and I are glad, too," said Mrs. Crane, who indeed looked
+wonderfully happy.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Black, "it's the most successful dinner party I've ever
+attended. Of course I can't hope to equal it, but as soon as Sarah and I
+get to keeping house properly and have decided which is to pour the
+coffee, we're going to return the compliment with a dinner that will
+make your eyes stick out, aren't we, Sarah?"
+
+"Oh, we'll do a great deal more than that," responded generous Mrs.
+Crane. "We'll keep four extra places set at our table all the time."
+
+"Of course we will," cried Mr. Black, heartily. "And we'll fill the
+biggest case in the library with children's books--we'll all go tomorrow
+to pick out the first shelfful--so that when it gets too cold for you to
+stay in Dandelion Cottage you'll have something to take its place.
+You're going to be little sunny Dandelions in the Black-Crane house
+whenever your own people can spare you. But what's the matter? Have you
+all lost your tongues? I didn't suppose you could be so astonishingly
+quiet."
+
+"Oh," sighed Bettie, joyfully, "you've taken _such_ a load off our
+minds. We were simply dreading the winter, with no cottage to have good
+times in."
+
+"Yes," said Jean. "We didn't know how we could manage to _live_ with the
+cottage closed. We've been wondering what in the world we were going to
+do."
+
+"But with school, and you dear people to visit every day on the way
+home," said Marjory, "we'll hardly have time to miss it. Oh! won't it be
+perfectly lovely?"
+
+"I'm going to begin at once to practice being on time to meals," said
+Mabel. "I'm not going to let that extra place do any waiting for _me_."
+
+These were the things that the four girls said aloud; but the joyous
+look that flashed from Jean to Bettie, from Bettie to Marjory, from
+Marjory to Mabel, and from Mabel back again to Jean, said even more
+plainly: "_Now_ there'll be somebody to take care of Mrs. Crane. _Now_
+there'll be somebody to make a home for lonely Mr. Black."
+
+And indeed, subsequent events proved that it was a beautiful arrangement
+for everybody, besides being quite the most astonishing thing that had
+happened in the history of Lakeville.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Dandelion Cottage, by Carroll Watson Rankin
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Dandelion Cottage, by Carroll Watson Rankin
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dandelion Cottage
+
+Author: Carroll Watson Rankin
+
+Illustrator: Mary Stevens
+
+Release Date: October 28, 2011 [EBook #37871]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DANDELION COTTAGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Betsie Bush, Matthew Wheaton
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="400" height="597" alt="Cover" />>
+</div>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h1 class="booktitle">Dandelion Cottage</h1>
+
+<p class="h4">CARROLL WATSON RANKIN</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i001.jpg" width="400" height="249" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<p class="h5"><i>Illustrated by Mary Stevens</i></p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h5">JOHN M. LONGYEAR RESEARCH LIBRARY
+<br />
+Marquette, Michigan
+<br />
+1977</p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h4"><i>First published in 1904</i><br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">The Marquette County Historical Society</span><br />
+213 North Front Street<br />
+Marquette, Michigan 49855</p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h4">FOURTH EDITION<br />
+First Printing, February 1977</p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h5">Printed in the USA by<br />
+<span class="smcap">The Book Concern, Inc.</span><br />
+Hancock, Michigan</p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h4"><i>To</i><br />
+RHODA, FRANCES, AND ELEANOR</p>
+
+<p class="h5"><i>whose lively interest made the writing
+of this little book a joyful task.</i></p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h4">THE PERSONS OF THE STORY</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td class="tdl">Bettie Tucker<br />Jeanie Mapes<br />Mabel Bennett<br />Marjory Vale<br /></td><td class="tdl">}<br />} <i>The Dandelion Cottagers</i><br />}<br />}</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">The Tucker Family: <i>Mostly boys</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">The Mapes Family: <i>Two parents, two boys</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Dr. and Mrs. Bennett: <i>Merely Parents</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Aunty Jane: <i>A Parental Substitute</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Mrs. Crane: <i>The Pleasantest Neighbor</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Mr. Black: <i>The Senior Warden</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Mr. Downing: <i>The Junior Warden</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Miss Blossom: <i>The Lodger</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Mr. Blossom: <i>The Organ Tuner</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Grandma Pike: <i>Another Neighbor</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Mr. and Mrs. Milligan<br />Laura Milligan<br />The Milligan Boy and<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the Milligan Baby<br />The Milligan Dog<br /></td><td class="tdl">}<br />}<br />} <i>The Unpleasantest Neighbors</i><br />}<br />}</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h3">Contents</p>
+
+<div class="centered">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">1.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_1"><i>Mr. Black's Terms</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">1</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">2.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_2"><i>Paying the Rent</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">12</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">3.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_3"><i>The Tenants Take Possession</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">21</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">4.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_4"><i>Furnishing the Cottage</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">33</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">5.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_5"><i>Poverty in the Cottage</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">43</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">6.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_6"><i>A Lodger to the Rescue</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">51</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">7.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_7"><i>The Girls Disclose a Plan</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">64</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">8.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_8"><i>An Unexpected Crop of Dandelions</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">74</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">9.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_9"><i>Changes and Plans</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">83</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">10.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_10"><i>The Milligans</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">97</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">11.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_11"><i>An Embarrassing Visitor</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">111</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">12.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_12"><i>A Lively Afternoon</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">126</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">13.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_13"><i>The Junior Warden</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">142</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">14.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_14"><i>An Unexpected Letter</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">150</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">15.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_15"><i>An Obdurate Landlord</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">158</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">16.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_16"><i>Mabel Plans a Surprise</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">170</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">17.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_17"><i>Several Surprises Take Effect</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">176</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">18.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_18"><i>A Hurried Retreat</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">184</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">19.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_19"><i>The Response to Mabel's Telegram</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">192</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">20.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_20"><i>The Odd Behavior of the Grown-ups</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">205</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">21.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#CHAPTER_21"><i>The Dinner</i></a></td>
+ <td class="tdr">214</td>
+ </tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum">[1]</span></p>
+<h2>Dandelion Cottage</h2>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i009.jpg" width="400" height="388" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_1">CHAPTER 1</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">Mr. Black's Terms</p>
+
+<p>The little square cottage was unoccupied. It had
+stood for many years on the parish property, having
+indeed been built long before the parish bought the
+land for church purposes. It was easy to see how
+Dandelion Cottage came by its name at first, for growing
+all about it were great, fluffy, golden dandelions;
+but afterwards there was another good reason why the<span class="pagenum">[2]</span>
+name was appropriate, as you will discover shortly.</p>
+
+<p>The cottage stood almost directly behind the big
+stone church in Lakeville, a thriving Northern Michigan
+town, and did not show very plainly from the
+street because it was so small by contrast with everything
+else near it. This was fortunate, because, after
+the Tuckers had moved into the big new rectory, the
+smaller house looked decidedly forlorn and deserted.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll leave it just where it stands," the church
+wardens had said, many years previously. "It's precisely
+the right size for Doctor and Mrs. Gunn, for they
+would rather have a small house than a large one.
+When they leave us and we are selecting another
+clergyman, we'll try to get one with a small family."</p>
+
+<p>This plan worked beautifully for a number of years.
+It succeeded so well, in fact, that the vestry finally forgot
+to be cautious, and when at last it secured the
+services of Dr. Tucker, the church had grown so used
+to clergymen with small families that the vestrymen
+engaged the new minister without remembering to
+ask if his family would fit Dandelion Cottage.</p>
+
+<p>But when Dr. Tucker and Mrs. Tucker and eight
+little Tuckers, some on foot and some in baby carriages,
+arrived, the vestrymen regretted this oversight.
+They could see at a glance that the tiny cottage could
+never hold them all.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll just have to build a rectory on the other lot,"<span class="pagenum">[3]</span>
+said Mr. Black, the senior warden. "That's all there is
+about it. The cottage is all out of repair, anyway. It
+wasn't well built in the first place, and the last three
+clergymen have complained bitterly of the inconvenience
+of having to hold up umbrellas in the different
+rooms every time it rained. Their wives objected to the
+wall paper and to being obliged to keep the potatoes
+in the bedroom closet. It's really time we had a new
+rectory."</p>
+
+<p>"It certainly is," returned the junior warden, "and
+we'll all have to take turns entertaining all the little
+Tuckers that there isn't room for in the cottage while
+the new house is getting built."</p>
+
+<p>Seven of the eight little Tuckers were boys. If it
+hadn't been for Bettie they would <i>all</i> have been boys,
+but Bettie saved the day. She was a slender twelve-year-old
+little Bettie, with big brown eyes, a mop of short
+brown curls, and such odd clothes. Busy Mrs. Tucker
+was so in the habit of making boys' garments that she
+could not help giving a boyish cut even to Bettie's
+dresses. There were always sailor collars to the waists,
+and the skirts were invariably kilted. Besides this, the
+little girl wore boys' shoes.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," explained Bettie, who was a cheerful little
+body, "Tommy has to take them next, and of course it
+wouldn't pay to buy shoes for just one girl."</p>
+
+<p>The little Tuckers were not the only children in the<span class="pagenum">[4]</span>
+neighborhood. Bettie found a bosom friend in Dr. Bennett's
+Mabel, who lived next door to the rectory, another
+in Jeanie Mapes, who lived across the street, and
+still another in Marjory Vale, whose home was next
+door to Dandelion Cottage.</p>
+
+<p>Jean, as her little friends best liked to call her, was a
+sweet-faced, gentle-voiced girl of fourteen. Mothers of
+other small girls were always glad to see their own
+more scatterbrained daughters tucked under Jean's
+loving wing, for thoroughly-nice Jean, without being
+in the least priggish, was considered a safe and desirable
+companion. It doesn't <i>always</i> follow that children
+like the persons it is considered best for them to like,
+but in Jean's case both parents and daughters agreed
+that Jean was not only safe but delightful&mdash;the charming
+daughter of a charming mother.</p>
+
+<p>Marjory, a year younger and nearly a head shorter
+than Jean, often seemed older. Outwardly, she was a
+sedate small person, slight, blue-eyed, graceful, and
+very fair. Her manners at times were very pleasing,
+her self-possession almost remarkable; this was the
+result of careful training by a conscientious, but at
+that time sadly unappreciated, maiden aunt who was
+Marjory's sole guardian. There were moments, however,
+when Marjory, who was less sedate than she
+appeared, forgot to be polite. At such times, her ways
+were apt to be less pleasing than those of either Bettie<span class="pagenum">[5]</span>
+or Jean, because her wit was nimbler, her tongue
+sharper, and her heart a trifle less tender. Her mother
+had died when Marjory was only a few weeks old,
+her father had lived only two years longer, and the
+rather solitary little girl had missed much of the warm
+family affection that had fallen to the lot of her three
+more fortunate friends. Those who knew her well
+found much in her to like, but among her schoolmates
+there were girls who said that Marjory was
+"stuck-up," affected, and "too smart."</p>
+
+<p>Mabel, the fourth in this little quartet of friends,
+was eleven, large for her age and young for her years,
+always an unfortunate combination of circumstances.
+She was intensely human and therefore liable to err,
+and, it may be said, she very seldom missed an opportunity.
+In school she read with a tremendous amount
+of expression but mispronounced half the words; when
+questions were asked, she waved her hand triumphantly
+aloft and gave anything but the right answer;
+she had a surprising stock of energy, but most of it
+was misdirected. Warm-hearted, generous, heedless,
+hot-tempered, and always blundering, she was something
+of a trial at home and abroad; yet no one could
+help loving her, for everybody realized that she would
+grow up some day into a really fine woman, and that
+all that was needed in the meantime was considerable
+patience. Rearing Mabel was not unlike the task of<span class="pagenum">[6]</span>
+bringing up a St. Bernard puppy. Mrs. Bennett was
+decidedly glad to note the growing friendship among
+the four girls, for she hoped that Mabel would in time
+grow dignified and sweet like Jean, thoughtful and
+tender like Bettie, graceful and prettily mannered like
+Marjory. But this happy result had yet to be achieved.</p>
+
+<p>The little one-story cottage, too much out of repair
+to be rented, stood empty and neglected. To most
+persons it was an unattractive spot if not actually an
+eyesore. The steps sagged in a dispirited way, some of
+the windows were broken, and the fence, in sympathy
+perhaps with the house, had shed its pickets and
+leaned inward with a discouraged, hopeless air.</p>
+
+<p>But Bettie looked at the little cottage longingly&mdash;she
+could gaze right down upon it from the back bedroom
+window&mdash;a great many times a day. It didn't seem a
+bit too big for a playhouse. Indeed, it seemed a great
+pity that such a delightful little building should go
+unoccupied when Bettie and her homeless dolls were
+simply suffering for just such a shelter.</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't it be nice," said Bettie, one day in the
+early spring, "if we four girls could have Dandelion
+Cottage for our very own?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't it be sweet," mimicked Marjory, "if we
+could have the moon and about twenty stars to play
+jacks with?"</p>
+
+<p>"The cottage isn't <i>quite</i> so far away," said Jean. "It<span class="pagenum">[7]</span>
+<i>would</i> be just lovely to have it, for we never have a
+place to play in comfortably."</p>
+
+<p>"We're generally disturbing grown-ups, I notice,"
+said Marjory, comically imitating her Aunty Jane's
+severest manner. "A little less noise, if you please. Is
+it really necessary to laugh so much and so often?"</p>
+
+<p>"Even Mother gets tired of us sometimes," confided
+Jean. "There are days when no one seems to want all
+of us at once."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it," said Bettie, pathetically, "but it's worse
+for me than it is for the rest of you. You have your
+rooms and nobody to meddle with your things. I no
+sooner get my dolls nicely settled in one corner than
+I have to move them into another, because the babies
+poke their eyes out. It's dreadful, too, to have to live
+with so many boys. I fixed up the cunningest playhouse
+under the clothes-reel last week, but the very
+minute it was finished Rob came home with a horrid
+porcupine and I had to move out in a hurry."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," suggested Marjory, "we could rent the
+cottage."</p>
+
+<p>"Who'd pay the rent?" demanded Mabel. "My allowance
+is five cents a week and I have to pay a fine
+of one cent every time I'm late to meals."</p>
+
+<p>"How much do you have left?" asked Jeanie,
+laughing.<span class="pagenum">[8]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Not a cent. I was seven cents in debt at the end of
+last week."</p>
+
+<p>"I get two cents a hundred for digging dandelions,"
+said Marjory, "but it takes just forever to dig them,
+and ugh! I just hate it."</p>
+
+<p>"I never have any money at all," sighed Bettie.
+"You see there are so many of us."</p>
+
+<p>"Let's go peek in at the windows," suggested Mabel,
+springing up from the grass. "That much won't cost
+us anything at any rate."</p>
+
+<p>Away scampered the four girls, taking a short cut
+through Bettie's back yard.</p>
+
+<p>The cottage had been vacant for more than a year
+and had not improved in appearance. Rampant vines
+clambered over the windows and nowhere else in
+town were there such luxurious weeds as grew in the
+cottage yard. Nowhere else were there such mammoth
+dandelions or such prickly burrs. The girls waded
+fearlessly through them, parted the vines, and, pressing
+their noses against the glass, peered into the cottage
+parlor.</p>
+
+<p>"What a nice, square little room!" said Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think the paper is very pretty," said Mabel.</p>
+
+<p>"We could cover most of the spots with pictures,"
+suggested practical Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"It looks to me sort of spidery," said Mabel, who<span class="pagenum">[9]</span>
+was always somewhat pessimistic. "Probably there's
+rats, too."</p>
+
+<p>"I know how to stop up rat holes," said Bettie, who
+had not lived with seven brothers without acquiring
+a number of useful accomplishments. "I'm not afraid
+of spiders&mdash;that is, not so <i>very</i> much."</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing here?" demanded a gruff
+voice so suddenly that everybody jumped.</p>
+
+<p>The startled girls wheeled about. There stood Bettie's
+most devoted friend, the senior warden.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" cried Bettie, "it's only Mr. Black."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you looking for something?" asked Mr.
+Black.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Bettie. "We're looking for a house.
+We'd like to rent this one, only we haven't a scrap of
+money."</p>
+
+<p>"And what in the name of common sense would
+you do with it?"</p>
+
+<p>"We want it for our dolls," said Bettie, turning a
+pair of big pleading brown eyes upon Mr. Black.
+"You see, we haven't any place to play. Marjory's
+Aunty Jane won't let her cut papers in the house, so
+she can't have any paper dolls, and I can't play any
+place because I have so many brothers. They tomahawk
+all my dolls when they play Indian, shoot them
+with beans when they play soldiers, and drown them
+all when they play shipwreck. Don't you think we<span class="pagenum">[10]</span>
+might be allowed to use the cottage if we'd promise
+to be very careful and not do any damage?"</p>
+
+<p>"We'd clean it up," offered Marjory, as an inducement.</p>
+
+<p>"We'd mend the rat holes," offered Jean, looking
+hopefully at Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you dig the weeds?" demanded Mr. Black.</p>
+
+<p>There was a deep silence. The girls looked at the
+sea of dandelions and then at one another.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Marjory, finally breaking the silence.
+"We'd even dig the weeds."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," echoed the others. "We'd even dig the weeds&mdash;and
+there's just millions of 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"Good!" said Mr. Black. "Now, we'll all sit down
+on the steps and I'll tell you what we'll do. It happens
+that the Village Improvement Society has just notified
+the vestry that the weeds on this lot must be removed
+before they go to seed&mdash;the neighbors have complained
+about them. It would cost the parish several dollars
+to hire a man to do the work, and we're short of funds
+just now. Now, if you four girls will pull up every
+weed in this place before the end of next week you
+shall have the use of the cottage for all the rest of the
+summer in return for your services. How does that
+strike you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" cried Bettie, throwing her arms about Mr.<span class="pagenum">[11]</span>
+Black's neck. "Do let me hug you. Oh, I'm glad&mdash;glad!"</p>
+
+<p>"There, there!" cried stout Mr. Black, shaking Bettie
+off and dropping her where the dandelions grew
+thickest. "I didn't say I was to be strangled as part of
+the bargain. You'd better save your muscle for the
+dandelions. Remember, you've got to pay your rent
+in advance. I shan't hand over the key until the last
+weed is dug."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll begin this minute!" cried enthusiastic Mabel.
+"I'm going straight home for a knife."</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[12]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i020.jpg" width="400" height="350" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_2">CHAPTER 2</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">Paying the Rent</p>
+
+<p>"This is a whopping big yard," said Mabel, looking
+disconsolately at two dandelions and one burdock in
+the bottom of a bushel basket. "There doesn't seem to
+be any place to begin."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to weed out a place big enough to sit
+in," announced Bettie. "Then I'll make it bigger and
+bigger all around me in every direction until it joins
+the clearing next to mine."<span class="pagenum">[13]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I'm a soldier," said Marjory, brandishing a trowel,
+"vanquishing my enemies. You know in books the
+hero always battles single-handed with about a million
+foes and always kills them all and everybody lives
+happy ever after&mdash;zip! There goes one!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm a pioneer," said Jean, slashing away at a
+huge, tough burdock. "I'm chopping down the forest
+primeval to make a potato patch. The dandelions are
+skulking Indians, and I'm capturing them to put in
+my bushel-basket prison."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm just digging weeds," said prosaic Mabel, "and
+I don't like it."</p>
+
+<p>"Neither does anybody else," said Marjory, "but I
+guess having the cottage will be worth it. Just pretend
+it's something else and then you won't mind it so
+much. Play you're digging for diamonds."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't," returned Mabel, hopelessly. "I haven't
+any imagination. This is just plain dirt and I can't
+make myself believe it's anything else."</p>
+
+<p>By supper time the cottage yard presented a decidedly
+disreputable appearance. Before the weeds had
+been disturbed they stood upright, presenting an even
+surface of green with a light crest of dandelion gold.
+But now it was different. Although the number of
+weeds was not greatly decreased, the yard looked as
+if, indeed, a battle had been fought there. Mr. Black,<span class="pagenum">[14]</span>
+passing by on his way to town, began to wonder if he
+had been quite wise in turning it over to the girls.</p>
+
+<p>At four o'clock the following morning, sleepy Bettie
+tumbled out of bed and into her clothes. Then she
+slipped quietly downstairs, out of doors, through the
+convenient hole in the back fence, and into the cottage
+yard. She had been digging for more than an
+hour when Jean, rubbing a pair of sleepy eyes, put in
+her appearance.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" cried Jean, disappointedly. "I meant to have
+a huge bare field to show you when you came, and
+here you are ahead of me. What a lot you've done!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," assented Bettie, happily. "There's room for
+me and my basket, too, in my patch. I'll have to go
+home after a while to help dress the children."</p>
+
+<p>Young though she was&mdash;she was only twelve&mdash;Bettie
+was a most helpful young person. It is hard to imagine
+what Mrs. Tucker would have done without her
+cheerful little daughter. Bettie always spoke of the
+boys as "the children," and she helped her mother
+darn their stockings, sew on their buttons, and sort
+out their collars. The care of the family baby, too, fell
+to her lot.</p>
+
+<p>The boys were good boys, but they were boys. They
+were willing to do errands or pile wood or carry out
+ashes, but none of them ever thought of doing one of
+these things without first being told&mdash;sometimes they<span class="pagenum">[15]</span>
+had to be told a great many times. It was different
+with Bettie. If Tom ate crackers on the front porch,
+it was Bettie who ran for the broom to brush up the
+crumbs. If the second-baby-but-one needed his face
+washed&mdash;and it seemed to Bettie that there never was
+a time when he <i>didn't</i> need it washed&mdash;it was Bettie
+who attended to it. If the cat looked hungry, it was
+Bettie who gave her a saucer of milk. Dick's rabbits
+and Rob's porcupine would have starved if Bettie had
+not fed them, and Donald's dog knew that if no one
+else remembered his bone kind Bettie would bear it
+in mind.</p>
+
+<p>The boys' legs were round and sturdy, but Bettie's
+were very much like pipe stems.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't have time to get fat," Bettie would say.
+"But you don't need to worry about me. I think I'm
+the healthiest person in the house. At least I'm the
+only one that hasn't had to have breakfast in bed this
+week."</p>
+
+<p>Neither Marjory nor Mabel appeared during the
+morning to dig their share of the weeds, but when
+school was out that afternoon they were all on hand
+with their baskets.</p>
+
+<p>"I had to stay," said Mabel, who was the last to
+arrive. "I missed two words in spelling."</p>
+
+<p>"What were they?" asked Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"'Parachute' and 'dandelion.' I hate dandelions,<span class="pagenum">[16]</span>
+anyway. I don't know what parachutes are, but if
+they're any sort of weeds I hate them, too."</p>
+
+<p>The girls laughed. Mabel always looked on the
+gloomiest side of things and always grumbled. She
+seemed to thrive on it, however, for she was built very
+much like a barrel and her cheeks were like a pair of
+round red apples. She was always honest, if a little too
+frank in expressing her opinions, and the girls liked
+her in spite of her blunt ways. She was the youngest
+of the quartet, being only eleven.</p>
+
+<p>"There doesn't seem to be much grass left after the
+weeds are out," said Bettie, surveying the bare, sandy
+patch she had made.</p>
+
+<p>"This has <i>always</i> been a weedy old place," replied
+Jean. "I think the whole neighborhood will feel
+obliged to us if we ever get the lot cleared. Perhaps
+our landlord will plant grass seed. It would be fine
+to have a lawn."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," said Marjory, "he'll let us have some
+flower beds. Wouldn't it be lovely to have nasturtiums
+running right up the sides of the house?"</p>
+
+<p>"They'd be lovely among the vines," agreed Bettie.
+"I've some poppy seeds that we might plant in a long
+narrow bed by the fence."</p>
+
+<p>"There are hundreds of little pansy plants coming
+up all over our yard," said Jean. "We might make a
+little round bed of them right here where I'm sitting.<span class="pagenum">[17]</span>
+What are you going to plant in <i>your</i> bed, Mabel?"</p>
+
+<p>"Butter-beans," said that practical young person,
+promptly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Bettie, with a long sigh, "we'll have
+to work faster than this or summer will be over before
+we have a chance to plant <i>anything</i>. This is the
+biggest <i>little</i> yard I ever did see."</p>
+
+<p>For a time there was silence. Marjory, the soldier,
+fell upon her foes with renewed vigor, and soon had
+an entire regiment in durance vile. Jean, the pioneer,
+fell upon the forest with so much energy that its
+speedy extermination was threatened. Mabel seized
+upon the biggest and toughest burdock she could find
+and pulled with both hands and all her might, until,
+with a sharp crack, the root suddenly parted and
+Mabel, very much to her own surprise, turned a back
+somersault and landed in Bettie's basket.</p>
+
+<p>"Hi there!" cried a voice from the road. "How are
+you youngsters getting along?"</p>
+
+<p>The girls jumped to their feet&mdash;all but Mabel, who
+was still wedged tightly in Bettie's basket. There was
+Mr. Black, with his elbows on the fence, and with
+him was the president of the Village Improvement
+Society; both were smiling broadly.</p>
+
+<p>"Sick of your bargain?" asked Mr. Black.</p>
+
+<p>The four girls shook their heads emphatically.</p>
+
+<p>"Hard work?"<span class="pagenum">[18]</span></p>
+
+<p>Four heads bobbed up and down.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Black, encouragingly, "you've
+made considerable headway today."</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you putting the weeds?" asked the
+president of the Village Improvement Society.</p>
+
+<p>"On the back porch in a piano box," said Bettie.
+"We had a big pile of them last night, but they shrank
+like everything before morning. If they do that <i>every</i>
+time, it won't be necessary for Mabel to jump on them
+to press them down."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me know when you have a wagon load," said
+Mr. Black. "I'll have them hauled away for you."</p>
+
+<p>For the rest of the week the girls worked early and
+late. They began almost at daylight, and the mosquitoes
+found them still digging at dusk.</p>
+
+<p>By Thursday night, only scattered patches of weeds
+remained. The little diggers could hardly tear themselves
+away when they could no longer find the weeds
+because of the gathering darkness. Now that the task
+was so nearly completed it seemed such a waste of
+time to eat and sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Bettie was up earlier than ever the next morning,
+and with one of the boys' spades had loosened the soil
+around some of the very worst patches before any of
+the other girls appeared.</p>
+
+<p>By five o'clock that night the last weed was dug.
+Conscientious Bettie went around the yard a dozen<span class="pagenum">[19]</span>
+times, but however hard she might search, not a single
+remaining weed could she discover.</p>
+
+<p>"Good work," said Jean, balancing her empty basket
+on her head.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems too good to be true," said Bettie, "but
+think of it, girls&mdash;the rent is paid! It's 'most time for
+Mr. Black to go by. Let's watch for him from the
+doorstep&mdash;our own precious doorstep."</p>
+
+<p>"It needs scrubbing," said Mabel. "Besides, it isn't
+ours, yet. Perhaps Mr. Black has changed his mind.
+Some grown-up folks have awfully changeable minds."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" gasped Marjory. "Wouldn't it be perfectly
+dreadful if he had!"</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to the little girls, torn between doubt and
+expectation, that Mr. Black was strangely indifferent
+to the calls of hunger that night. Was he never going
+home to dinner? Was he <i>never</i> coming?</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," suggested Jean, "he has gone out of
+town."</p>
+
+<p>"Or forgotten us," said Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"Or died," said Mabel, dolefully.</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;no," cried Bettie. "There he is; he's coming
+around the corner now&mdash;I can see him. Let's run to
+meet him."</p>
+
+<p>The girls scampered down the street. Bettie seized
+one hand, Mabel the other, Marjory and Jean danced
+along ahead of him, and everybody talked at once.<span class="pagenum">[20]</span>
+Thus escorted, Mr. Black approached the cottage lot.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I declare," said Mr. Black. "You haven't left
+so much as a blade of grass. Do you think you could
+sow some grass seed if I have the ground made ready
+for it?"</p>
+
+<p>The girls thought they could. Bettie timidly suggested
+nasturtiums.</p>
+
+<p>"Flower beds too? Why, of course," said Mr. Black.
+"Vegetables as well if you like. You can have a regular
+farm and grow fairy beanstalks and Cinderella pumpkins
+if you want to. And now, since the rent seems
+to be paid, I suppose there is nothing left for me to
+do but to hand over the key. Here it is, Mistress Bettie,
+and I'm sure I couldn't have a nicer lot of tenants."</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[21]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i029.jpg" width="400" height="360" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_3">CHAPTER 3</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">The Tenants Take Possession</p>
+
+<p>"Our own house&mdash;think of it!" cried Bettie, turning
+the key. "Push, somebody; the door sticks. There! It's
+open."</p>
+
+<p>"Ugh!" said Mabel, drawing back hastily. "It's
+awfully dark and stuffy in there. I guess I won't go
+in just yet&mdash;it smells so dead-ratty."</p>
+
+<p>"It's been shut up so long," explained Jean. "Wait.<span class="pagenum">[22]</span>
+I'll pull some of the vines back from this window.
+There! Can you see better?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lots," said Bettie. "This is the parlor, girls&mdash;but,
+oh, what raggedy paper. We'll need lots of pictures
+to cover all the holes and spots."</p>
+
+<p>"We'd better clean it all first," advised sensible
+Jean. "The windows are covered with dust and the
+floor is just black."</p>
+
+<p>"This," said Marjory, opening a door, "must be the
+dining-room. Oh! What a cunning little corner cupboard&mdash;just
+the place for our dishes."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean it would be if we had any," said Mabel.
+"Mine are all smashed."</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh!" said Jean. "We don't mean doll things&mdash;we
+want real, grown-up ones. Why, what a cunning
+little bedroom!"</p>
+
+<p>"There's one off the parlor, too," said Marjory, "and
+it's even cunninger than this."</p>
+
+<p>"My! what a horrid place!" exclaimed Mabel, poking
+an inquisitive nose into another unexplored room,
+and as hastily withdrawing that offended feature.
+"Mercy, I'm all over spider webs."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the kitchen," explained Bettie. "Most of the
+plaster has fallen down and it's rained in a good deal.
+But here's a good stovepipe hole, and such a cunning
+cupboard built into the wall. What have <i>you</i> found,
+Jean?"<span class="pagenum">[23]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Just a pantry," said Jean, holding up a pair of
+black hands, "and lots of dust. There isn't a clean
+spot in the house."</p>
+
+<p>"So much the better," said Bettie, whose clouds
+always had a silver lining. "We'll have just that much
+more fun cleaning up. I'll tell you what let's do&mdash;and
+we've all day tomorrow to do it in. We'll just regularly
+clean house&mdash;I've <i>always</i> wanted to clean house."</p>
+
+<p>"Me too," cried Mabel, enthusiastically. "We'll bring
+just oceans of water&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There's water here," interrupted Jean, turning a
+faucet. "Water and a pretty good sink. The water
+runs out all right."</p>
+
+<p>"That's good," said Bettie. "We must each bring a
+broom, and soap&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And rags," suggested Jean.</p>
+
+<p>"And papers for the shelves," added Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"And wear our oldest clothes," said Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"Oo-ow, wow!" squealed Mabel.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter?" asked the girls, rushing into
+the pantry.</p>
+
+<p>"Spiders and mice," said Mabel. "I just poked my
+head into the cupboard and a mouse jumped out. I'm
+all spider-webby again, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there won't be any spiders by tomorrow
+night," said Bettie, consolingly, "or any mice either,<span class="pagenum">[24]</span>
+if somebody will bring a cat. Now let's go home to
+supper&mdash;I'm hungry as a bear."</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody remember to wear her oldest clothes,"
+admonished Jean, "and to bring a broom."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tie the key to a string and wear it around my
+neck night and day," said Bettie, locking the door
+carefully when the girls were outside. "Aren't we
+going to have a perfectly glorious summer?"</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Black, on the way to his office the next
+morning, met his four little friends, he did not recognize
+them. Jean, who was fourteen, and tall for her
+age, wore one of her mother's calico wrappers tied in
+at the waist by the strings of the cook's biggest apron.
+Marjory, in the much shrunken gown of a previous
+summer, had her golden curls tucked away under the
+housemaid's sweeping cap. Bettie appeared in her very
+oldest skirt surmounted by an exceedingly ragged
+jacket and cap discarded by one of her brothers; while
+Mabel, with her usual enthusiasm, looked like a veritable
+rag-bag. When Bettie had unlocked the door&mdash;she
+had slept all night with the key in her hand to
+make certain that it would not escape&mdash;the girls
+filed in.</p>
+
+<p>"I know how to handle a broom as well as anybody,"
+said Mabel, giving a mighty sweep and raising
+such a cloud of dust that the four housecleaners were
+obliged to flee out of doors to keep from strangling.<span class="pagenum">[25]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Phew!" said Jean, when she had stopped coughing.
+"I guess we'll have to take it out with a shovel. The
+dust must be an inch thick."</p>
+
+<p>"Wait," cried Marjory, darting off, "I'll get Aunty's
+sprinkling can; then the stuff won't fly so."</p>
+
+<p>After that the sweeping certainly went better. Then
+came the dusting.</p>
+
+<p>"It really looks very well," said Bettie, surveying the
+result with her head on one side and an air of housewifely
+wisdom that would have been more impressive
+if her nose hadn't been perfectly black with soot. "It
+certainly does look better, but I'm afraid you girls
+have most of the dust on your faces. I don't see how
+you managed to do it. Just look at Mabel."</p>
+
+<p>"Just look at yourself!" retorted Mabel, indignantly.
+"You've got the dirtiest face I <i>ever</i> saw."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," said Jean, gently. "I guess we're all
+about alike. I've wiped all the dust off the walls of
+this parlor. Now I'm going to wash the windows and
+the woodwork, and after that I'm going to scrub the
+floor."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know how to scrub?" asked Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"No, but I guess I can learn. There! Doesn't that
+pane look as if a really-truly housemaid had washed
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mabel! Do look out!" cried Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>But the warning came too late. Mabel stepped on<span class="pagenum">[26]</span>
+the slippery bar of soap and sat down hard in a pan
+of water, splashing it in every direction. For a moment
+Mabel looked decidedly cross, but when she got
+up and looked at the tin basin, she began to laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"That's a funny way to empty a basin, isn't it?" she
+said. "There isn't a drop of water left in it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, don't try it again," said Jean. "That's Mrs.
+Tucker's basin and you've smashed it flat. You should
+learn to sit down less suddenly."</p>
+
+<p>"And," said Marjory, "to be more careful in your
+choice of seats&mdash;we'll have to take up a collection and
+buy Mrs. Tucker a new basin, or she'll be afraid to
+lend us anything more."</p>
+
+<p>The girls ran home at noon for a hasty luncheon.
+Rested and refreshed, they all returned promptly to
+their housecleaning.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody wanted to brush out the kitchen cupboard.
+It was not only dusty, but full of spider webs, and
+worst of all, the spiders themselves seemed very much
+at home. The girls left the back door open, hoping
+that the spiders would run out of their own accord.
+Apparently, however, the spiders felt no need of fresh
+air. Bettie, without a word to anyone, ran home, returning
+a moment later with her brother Bob's old
+tame crow blinking solemnly from her shoulder. She
+placed the great, black bird on the cupboard shelf and<span class="pagenum">[27]</span>
+in a very few moments every spider had vanished
+down his greedy throat.</p>
+
+<p>"He just loves them," said Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"How funny!" said Mabel. "Who ever heard of
+getting a crow to help clean house? I wish he could
+scrub floors as well as he clears out cupboards."</p>
+
+<p>The scrubbing, indeed, looked anything but an inviting
+task. Jean succeeded fairly well with the parlor
+floor, though she declared when that was finished
+that her wrists were so tired that she couldn't hold the
+scrubbing-brush another moment. Marjory and Bettie
+together scrubbed the floor of the tiny dining-room.
+Mabel made a brilliant success of one of the little
+bedrooms, but only, the other girls said, by accidentally
+tipping over a pail of clean water upon it, thereby
+rinsing off a thick layer of soap. Then Jean, having
+rested for a little while, finished the remaining bedroom
+and Marjory scoured the pantry shelves.</p>
+
+<p>The kitchen floor was rough and very dirty. Nobody
+wanted the task of scrubbing it. The tired girls
+leaned against the wall and looked at the floor and
+then at one another.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's leave it until Monday," said Mabel, who
+looked very much as if the others had scrubbed the
+floor with her. "I've had all the housecleaning I want
+for <i>one</i> day."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no," pleaded Bettie. "Everything else is done.<span class="pagenum">[28]</span>
+Just think how lovely it would be to go home tonight
+with all the disagreeable part finished! We could begin
+to move in Monday if we only had the house all
+clean."</p>
+
+<p>"Couldn't we cover the dirtiest places with pieces of
+old carpet?" demanded Mabel.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, what dreadful housekeeping that would be!"
+said Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Jean, "we must have every bit of it nice.
+Perhaps if we sit on the doorstep and rest for a few
+moments we'll feel more like scrubbing."</p>
+
+<p>The tired girls sat in a row on the edge of the low
+porch. They were all rather glad that the next day
+would be Sunday, for between the dandelions and
+the dust they had had a very busy week.</p>
+
+<p>"Why!" said Bettie, suddenly brightening. "We're
+going to have a visitor, I do believe."</p>
+
+<p>"Hi there!" said Mr. Black, turning in at the gate.
+"I smell soap. Housecleaning all done?"</p>
+
+<p>"All," said Bettie, wearily, "except the kitchen floor,
+and, oh! we're <i>so</i> tired. I'm afraid we'll have to leave
+it until Monday, but we just hate to."</p>
+
+<p>"Too tired to eat peanuts?" asked Mr. Black, handing
+Bettie a huge paper bag. "Stay right here on the
+doorstep, all of you, and eat every one of these nuts.
+<span class="pagenum">[29]</span>I'll look around and see what you've been doing&mdash;I'm
+sure there <i>can't</i> be much dirt left inside when
+there's so much on your faces."</p>
+
+<p>It seemed a pity that Mr. Black, who liked little
+girls so well, should have no children of his own. A
+great many years before Bettie's people had moved
+to Lakeville, he had had one sister; and at another
+almost equally remote period he had possessed one
+little daughter, a slender, narrow-chested little maid,
+with great, pathetic brown eyes, so like Bettie's that
+Mr. Black was startled when Dr. Tucker's little
+daughter had first smiled at him from the Tucker
+doorway, for the senior warden's little girl had lived
+to be only six years old. This, of course, was the secret
+of Mr. Black's affection for Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Black, who was a moderately stout, gray-haired
+man of fifty-five, with kind, dark eyes and a strong,
+rugged, smooth-shaven countenance, had a great deal
+of money, a beautiful home perched on the brow of
+a green hill overlooking the lake, and a silk hat. This
+last made a great impression on the children, for silk
+hats were seldom worn in Lakeville. Mr. Black looked
+very nice indeed in his, when he wore it to church
+Sunday morning, but Bettie felt more at home with
+him when he sat bareheaded on the rectory porch,
+with his short, crisp, thick gray hair tossed by the
+south wind.</p>
+
+<p>Besides these possessions, Mr. Black owned a garden<span class="pagenum">[30]</span>
+on the sheltered hillside where wonderful roses grew
+as they would grow nowhere else in Lakeville. This
+was fortunate because Mr. Black loved roses, and spent
+much time poking about among them with trowel
+and pruning shears. Then, there were shelves upon
+shelves of books in the big, dingy library, which was
+the one room that the owner of the large house really
+lived in. A public-spirited man, Mr. Black had a wide
+circle of acquaintances and a few warm friends; but
+with all his possessions, and in spite of a jovial, cheerful
+manner in company, his dark, rather stern face,
+as Bettie had very quickly discovered, was sad when
+he sat alone in his pew in church. He had really nothing
+in the world to love but his books and his roses.
+It was evident, to anyone who had time to think
+about it, that kind Mr. Black, whose wife had died so
+many years before that only the oldest townspeople
+could remember that he had had a wife, was, in spite
+of his comfortable circumstances, a very lonely man,
+and that, as he grew older, he felt his loneliness more
+keenly. There were others besides Bettie who realized
+this, but it was not an easy matter to offer sympathy
+to Mr. Black&mdash;there was a dignity about him that repelled
+anything that looked like pity. Bettie was the
+one person who succeeded, without giving offense, in
+doing this difficult thing, but Bettie did it unconsciously,
+without in the least knowing that she <i>had</i><span class="pagenum">[31]</span>
+accomplished it, and this, of course, was another
+reason for the strong friendship between Mr. Black
+and her.</p>
+
+<p>The girls found the peanuts decidedly refreshing;
+their unusual exercise had given them astonishing appetites.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," said Bettie, some ten minutes later,
+when the paper bag was almost empty, "what Mr.
+Black is doing in there."</p>
+
+<p>"I think, from the swishing, swushing sounds I
+hear," said Jean, "that Mr. Black must be scrubbing
+the kitchen."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" gasped the girls.</p>
+
+<p>"Come and see," said Jean, stealing in on tiptoe.</p>
+
+<p>There, sure enough, was stout Mr. Black dipping a
+broom every now and then into a pail of soapy water
+and vigorously sweeping the floor with it.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>think</i>," whispered Mabel, ruefully, "that that's
+Mother's best broom."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," consoled Jean. "You can take mine
+home if you think she'll care. It's really mine because
+I bought it when we had that broom drill in the sixth
+grade. It's been hanging on my wall ever since."</p>
+
+<p>"Hi there!" exclaimed Mr. Black, who, looking up
+suddenly, had discovered the smiling girls in the
+doorway. "You didn't know I could scrub, did you?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Black, quite regardless of his spotless cuffs and<span class="pagenum">[32]</span>
+his polished shoes, drew a bucket of fresh water and
+dashed it over the floor, sweeping the flood out of
+doors and down the back steps.</p>
+
+<p>"There," said Mr. Black, standing the broom in the
+corner, "if there's a cleaner house in town than this,
+I don't know where you'll find it. In return for scrubbing
+this kitchen, of course, I shall expect you to invite
+me to dinner when you get to housekeeping."</p>
+
+<p>"We will! We do!" shouted the girls. "And we'll
+cook every single thing ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know that I'll insist on <i>that</i>," returned Mr.
+Black, teasingly, "but I shan't let you forget about the
+dinner."</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[33]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i040.jpg" width="400" height="360" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_4">CHAPTER 4</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">Furnishing the Cottage</p>
+
+<p>After tea that Saturday night four tired but spotlessly
+clean little girls sat on Jean's doorstep, making
+plans for the coming week.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do for a stove?" asked Mrs.
+Mapes.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a toy one," replied Mabel, "but it has only
+one leg and it always smokes. Besides, I can't find it."</p>
+
+<p>"I have a little box stove that the boys used to have<span class="pagenum">[34]</span>
+in their camp," said Mrs. Mapes. "It has three good
+legs and it doesn't smoke at all. If you want it, and if
+you'll promise to be very careful about your fire, I'll
+have one of the boys set it up for you."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be lovely," said Bettie, gratefully.
+"Mamma has given me four saucers and a syrup jug,
+and I have a few pieces left of quite a large-sized
+doll's tea set."</p>
+
+<p>"We have an old rug," said Marjory, "that I'm
+almost sure I can have for the parlor floor, and I have
+two small rocking chairs of my own."</p>
+
+<p>"There's a lot of old things in our garret," said
+Mabel; "three-legged tables, and chairs with the seats
+worn out. I know Mother'll let us take them."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Bettie, "take everything you have to
+the cottage Monday afternoon after school. Bring all
+the pictures you can to cover the walls, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hark!" said Mrs. Mapes. "I think somebody is
+calling Bettie."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my!" said Bettie, springing to her feet. "This
+is bath night and I promised to bathe the twins. I
+must go this minute."</p>
+
+<p>"I think Bettie is sweet," said Jean. "Mr. Black
+would never have given us the cottage if he hadn't
+been so fond of Bettie; but she doesn't put on any airs
+at all. She makes us feel as if it belonged to all of us."</p>
+
+<p>"Bettie <i>is</i> a sweet little girl," said Mrs. Mapes, "but<span class="pagenum">[35]</span>
+she's far too energetic for such a little body. You
+mustn't let her do <i>all</i> the work."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we don't!" exclaimed Mabel, grandly. "Why,
+what are you laughing at, Marjory?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, nothing," said Marjory. "I just happened to
+remember how you scrubbed that bedroom floor."</p>
+
+<p>From four to six on Monday afternoon, the little
+housekeepers, heavily burdened each time with their
+goods and chattels, made many small journeys between
+their homes and Dandelion Cottage. The parlor
+was soon piled high with furniture that was all more
+or less battered.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me," said Jean, pausing at the door with an
+armful of carpet. "How am I ever to get in? Hadn't
+we better straighten out what we have before we
+bring anything more?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Bettie. "I wouldn't be surprised if we
+had almost enough for two houses. I'm sure I've seen
+six clocks."</p>
+
+<p>"That's only one for each room," said Mabel. "Besides,
+none of the four that <i>I</i> brought will go."</p>
+
+<p>"Neither will my two," said Marjory, giggling.</p>
+
+<p>"We might call this 'The House of the Tickless
+Clocks,'" suggested Jean.</p>
+
+<p>"Or of the grindless coffee-mill," giggled Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"Or of the talkless telephone," added Mabel. "I<span class="pagenum">[36]</span>
+brought over an old telephone box so we could pretend
+we had a telephone."</p>
+
+<p>There were still several things lacking when the
+children had found places for all their crippled belongings.
+They had no couch for the sofa pillows
+Mabel had brought, but Bettie converted two wooden
+boxes and a long board into an admirable cozy corner.
+She even upholstered this sadly misnamed piece of
+furniture with the burlaps and excelsior that had been
+packed about her father's new desk, but it still needed
+a cover. The windows lacked curtains, the girls had
+only one fork, and their cupboard was so distressingly
+empty that it rivaled Mother Hubbard's.</p>
+
+<p>They had planned to eat and even sleep at the cottage
+during vacation, which was still some weeks distant;
+but, as they had no beds and no provisions, and
+as their parents said quite emphatically that they could
+<i>not</i> stay away from home at night, part of this plan
+had to be given up.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the grown-ups, however, were greatly
+pleased with the cottage plan. Marjory's Aunty Jane,
+who was nervous and disliked having children running
+in and out of her spotlessly neat house, was glad
+to have Marjory happy with her little friends, provided
+they were all perfectly safe&mdash;and out of earshot.
+Overworked Mrs. Tucker found it a great relief to
+have careful Bettie take two or three of the smallest<span class="pagenum">[37]</span>
+children entirely off her hands for several hours each
+day. When these infants, divided as equally as possible
+among the four girls, were not needed indoors
+to serve as playthings, they rolled about contentedly
+inside the cottage fence. Mabel's mother did not hesitate
+to say that she, for one, was thankful enough that
+Mr. Black had given the girls a place to play in. With
+Mabel engaged elsewhere, it was possible, Mrs. Bennett
+said, to keep her own house quite respectably
+neat. Mrs. Mapes, indeed, missed quiet, orderly Jean;
+but she would not mention it for fear of spoiling her
+tender-hearted little daughter's pleasure, and it did
+not occur to modest Jean that she was of sufficient
+consequence to be missed by her mother or anyone
+else.</p>
+
+<p>The neighbors, finding that the long-deserted cottage
+was again occupied, began to be curious about
+the occupants. One day Mrs. Bartholomew Crane, who
+lived almost directly opposite the cottage, found herself
+so devoured by kindly curiosity that she could
+stand it no longer. Intending to be neighborly, for
+Mrs. Crane was always neighborly in the best sense
+of the word, she put on her one good dress and
+started across the street to call on the newcomers.</p>
+
+<p>It was really a great undertaking for Mrs. Crane to
+pay visits, for she was a stout, slow-moving person,
+and, owing to the antiquity and consequent tenderness<span class="pagenum">[38]</span>
+of her best garments, it was an even greater
+undertaking for the good woman to make a visiting
+costume. Her best black silk, for instance, had to be
+neatly mended with court-plaster when all other remedies
+had failed, and her old, thread-lace collars had
+been darned until their original floral patterns had
+given place to a mosaic of spider webs. Mrs. Crane's
+motives, however, were far better than her clothes.
+Years before, when she was newly married, she had
+lived for months a stranger in a strange town, where
+it was no unusual occurrence to live for years in ignorance
+of one's next-door neighbor's very name. During
+those unhappy months poor Mrs. Crane, sociable by
+nature yet sadly afflicted with shyness, had suffered
+keenly from loneliness and homesickness. She had
+vowed then that no other stranger should suffer as
+she had suffered, if it were in her power to prevent
+it; so, in spite of increasing difficulties, kind Mrs.
+Crane conscientiously called on each newcomer. In
+many cases, hers was the first welcome to be extended
+to persons settling in Lakeville, and although these
+visits were prompted by single-minded generosity, it
+was natural that she should, at the same time, make
+many friends. These, however, were seldom lasting
+ones, for many persons, whose business kept them in
+Lakeville for perhaps only a few months, afterwards<span class="pagenum">[39]</span>
+moved away and drifted quietly out of Mrs. Crane's
+life.</p>
+
+<p>That afternoon the four girls realized for the first
+time that Dandelion Cottage was provided with a
+doorbell. In response to its lively jingling, Mabel
+dropped the potato she was peeling with neatness but
+hardly with dispatch, and hurried to the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Is your moth&mdash;Is the lady of the house at home?"
+asked Mrs. Crane.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes'm, all of us are&mdash;there's four," stammered
+Mabel, who wasn't quite sure of her ability to entertain
+a grown-up caller. "Please walk in. Oh! don't sit
+down in that one, please! There's only two legs on
+that chair, and it always goes down flat."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me," said Mrs. Crane, moving toward the
+cozy corner, "I shouldn't have suspected it."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you can't sit <i>there</i>, either," exclaimed Mabel.
+"You see, that's the Tucker baby taking his nap."</p>
+
+<p>"My land!" said stout Mrs. Crane. "I thought it was
+one of those new-fashioned roll pillows."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>This</i> chair," said Mabel, dragging one in from the
+dining room, "is the safest one we have in the house,
+but you must be careful to sit right down square in
+the middle of it because it slides out from under you
+if you sit too hard on the front edge. If you'll excuse
+me just a minute I'll go call the others&mdash;they're making
+a vegetable garden in the back yard."<span class="pagenum">[40]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, I declare!" said Mrs. Crane, when she had
+recognized the four young housekeepers and had
+heard all about the housekeeping. "It seems as if I
+ought to be able to find something in the way of furniture
+for you. I have a single iron bedstead I'm
+willing to lend you, and maybe I can find you some
+other things."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you very much," said Bettie, politely.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope," said Mrs. Crane, pleasantly, "that you'll
+be very neighborly and come over to see me whenever
+you feel like it, for I'm always alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Jean, speaking for the household.
+"We'd just love to."</p>
+
+<p>"Haven't you <i>any</i> children?" asked Bettie, sympathetically.</p>
+
+<p>"Not one," replied Mrs. Crane. "I've never had any
+but I've always loved children."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm <i>sure</i> you have a lot of grandchildren," said
+Mabel, consolingly. "You look so nice and grandmothery."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Mrs. Crane, not appearing so sorrowful
+as Mabel had supposed an utterly grandchildless person
+<i>would</i> look, "I've never possessed any grandchildren
+either."</p>
+
+<p>"But," queried Mabel, who was sometimes almost
+too inquisitive, "haven't you any relatives, husbands,
+or <i>anybody</i>, in all the world?"<span class="pagenum">[41]</span></p>
+
+<p>Many months afterward the girls were suddenly
+reminded of Mrs. Crane's odd, contradictory reply:</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;Yes&mdash;that is, no. None to speak of, I mean.
+Do you girls sleep here, too?"</p>
+
+<p>"No" said Jean. "We want to, awfully, but our
+mothers won't let us. You see, we sleep so soundly
+that they're all afraid we might get the house afire,
+burn up, and never know a thing about it."</p>
+
+<p>"They're quite right," said Mrs. Crane. "I suppose
+they like to have you at home once in a while."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, they do have us," replied Bettie. "We eat and
+sleep at home and they have us all day Sundays. When
+they want any of us other times, all they have to do
+is to open a back window and call&mdash;Dear me, Mrs.
+Crane, I'll have to ask you to excuse me this very
+minute&mdash;There's somebody calling me now."</p>
+
+<p>Other visitors, including the girls' parents, called at
+the cottage and seemed to enjoy it very much indeed.
+The visitors were always greatly interested and everybody
+wanted to help. One brought a little table that
+really stood up very well if kept against the wall,
+another found curtains for all the windows&mdash;a little
+ragged, to be sure, but still curtains. Grandma Pike,
+who had a wonderful garden, was so delighted with
+everything that she gave the girls a crimson petunia
+growing in a red tomato can, and a great many neat
+little homemade packets of flower seeds. Rob said they<span class="pagenum">[42]</span>
+might have even his porcupine if they could get it out
+from under the rectory porch.</p>
+
+<p>By the end of the week the cottage presented quite
+a lived-in appearance. Bright pictures covered the
+dingy paper, and, thanks to numerous donations, the
+rooms looked very well furnished. No one would have
+suspected that the chairs were untrustworthy, the tables
+crippled, and the clocks devoid of works. The cottage
+seemed cozy and pleasant, and the girls kept it
+in apple-pie order.</p>
+
+<p>Out of doors, the grass was beginning to show and
+little green specks dotted the flower beds. Other green
+specks in crooked rows staggered across the vegetable
+garden.</p>
+
+<p>The four mothers, satisfied that their little daughters
+were safe in Dandelion Cottage, left them in undisturbed
+possession.</p>
+
+<p>"I declare," said Mrs. Mapes one day, "the only
+time I see Jean, nowadays, is when she's asleep. All
+the rest of the time she's in school or at the cottage."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Bennett, "when I miss my scissors
+or any of my dishes or anything else, I always have
+to go to the cottage and get out a search warrant.
+Mabel has carried off a wagonload of things, but I
+don't know <i>when</i> our own house has been so peaceful."</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[43]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i051.jpg" width="400" height="337" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_5">CHAPTER 5</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">Poverty in the Cottage</p>
+
+<p>"There's no use talking," said Jean, one day, as the
+girls sat at their dining-room table eating very smoky
+toast and drinking the weakest of cocoa, "we'll have
+to get some provisions of our own before long if we're
+going to invite Mr. Black to dinner as we promised.
+The cupboard's perfectly empty and Bridget says I
+can't take another scrap of bread or one more potato
+out of the house this week."<span class="pagenum">[44]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Aunty Jane says there'll be trouble," said Marjory,
+"if I don't keep out of her ice box, so I guess I can't
+bring any more milk. When she says there'll be
+trouble, there usually is, if I'm not pretty careful. But
+dear me, it <i>is</i> such fun to cook our own meals on that
+dear little box-stove, even if most of the things do
+taste pretty awful."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish," said Mabel, mournfully, "that somebody
+would give us a hen, so we could make omelets."</p>
+
+<p>"Who ever made omelets out of a hen?" asked
+Jean, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"I meant out of the eggs, of course," said Mabel,
+with dignity. "Hens lay eggs, don't they? If we count
+on five or six eggs a day&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The goose that laid the golden egg laid only one
+a day," said Marjory. "It seems to me that six is a
+good many."</p>
+
+<p>"I wasn't talking about geese," said Mabel, "but
+about just plain everyday hens."</p>
+
+<p>"Six-every-day hens, you mean, don't you?" asked
+Marjory, teasingly. "You'd better wish for a cow, too,
+while you're about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Bettie, "we certainly need one, for I'm
+not to ask for butter more than twice a week. Mother
+says she'll be in the poorhouse before summer's over
+if she has to provide butter for <i>two</i> families."</p>
+
+<p>"I just tell you what it is, girls," said Jean, nibbling<span class="pagenum">[45]</span>
+her cindery crust, "we'll just have to earn some money
+if we're to give Mr. Black any kind of a dinner."</p>
+
+<p>Mabel, who always accepted new ideas with enthusiasm,
+slipped quietly into the kitchen, took a solitary
+lemon from the cupboard, cut it in half, and squeezed
+the juice into a broken-nosed pitcher. This done, she
+added a little sugar and a great deal of water to the
+lemon juice, slipped quietly out of the back door, ran
+around the house and in at the front door, taking a
+small table from the front room. This she carried out
+of doors to the corner of the lot facing the street,
+where she established her lemonade stand.</p>
+
+<p>She was almost immediately successful, for the day
+was warm, and Mrs. Bartholomew Crane, who was
+entertaining two visitors on her front porch, was glad
+of an opportunity to offer her guests something in the
+way of refreshment. The cottage boasted only one
+glass that did not leak, but Mabel cheerfully made
+three trips across the street with it&mdash;it did not occur
+to any of them until too late it would have been easier
+to carry the pitcher across in the first place. The lemonade
+was decidedly weak, but the visitors were too
+polite to say so. On her return, a thirsty small boy
+offered Mabel a nickel for all that was left in the
+pitcher, and Mabel, after a moment's hesitation, accepted
+the offer.</p>
+
+<p>"You're getting a bargain," said Mabel. "There's as<span class="pagenum">[46]</span>
+much as a glass and three quarters there, besides all
+the lemon."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you get a whole pitcherful out of one lemon?"
+asked the boy. "You'd be able to make circus lemonade
+all right."</p>
+
+<p>Before the other girls had had time to discover what
+had become of her, the proprietor of the lemonade
+stand marched into the cottage and proudly displayed
+four shining nickels and the empty pitcher.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, where in the world did you get all that?"
+cried Marjory. "Surely you never earned it by being
+on time for meals&mdash;you've been late three times a day
+ever since we got the cottage."</p>
+
+<p>"Sold lemonade," said Mabel. "Our troubles are
+over, girls. I'm going to buy <i>two</i> lemons tomorrow
+and sell twice as much."</p>
+
+<p>"Good!" cried Bettie, "I'll help. The boys have
+promised to bring me a lot of arbutus tonight&mdash;they
+went to the woods this morning. I'll tie it in bunches
+and perhaps we can sell that, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't it be splendid if we could have Mr.
+Black here to dinner next Saturday?" said Jean. "I'll
+never be satisfied until we've kept that promise, but
+I don't suppose we could possibly get enough things
+together by that time."</p>
+
+<p>"I have a sample can of baking powder," offered<span class="pagenum">[47]</span>
+Marjory, hopefully. "I'll bring it over next time I
+come."</p>
+
+<p>"What's the good?" asked matter-of-fact Mabel.
+"We can't feed Mr. Black on just plain baking powder,
+and we haven't any biscuits to raise with it."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me," said Jean, "I wish we hadn't been so
+extravagant at first. If we hadn't had so many tea
+parties last week, we might get enough flour and
+things at home. Mother says it's too expensive having
+all her groceries carried off."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," consoled Mabel, confidently. "We'll
+be buying our own groceries by this time tomorrow
+with the money we make selling lemonade. A boy
+said my lemonade was quite as good as you can buy
+at the circus."</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, however, it rained the next day and
+the next, so lemonade was out of the question. By the
+time it cleared, Bettie's neat little bunches of arbutus
+were no longer fresh, and careless Mabel had forgotten
+where she had put the money. She mentioned
+no fewer than twenty-two places where the four precious
+nickels might be, but none of them happened to
+be the right one.</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy me," said Bettie, "it's dreadful to be so poor!
+I'm afraid we'll have to invite Mr. Black to one of our
+bread-and-sugar tea-parties, after all."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Jean, firmly. "We've just got to give him<span class="pagenum">[48]</span>
+a regular seven-course dinner&mdash;he has 'em every day
+at home. We'll have to put it off until we can do it
+in style."</p>
+
+<p>"By and by," said Mabel, "we'll have beans and
+radishes and things in our own garden, and we can
+go to the woods for berries."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," said Bettie, hopefully, "one of the boys
+might catch a fish&mdash;Rob <i>almost</i> did, once."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose I could ask Aunty Jane for a potato once
+in a while," said Marjory, "but I'll have to give her
+time to forget about last month's grocery bill&mdash;she
+says we never before used so many eggs in one month
+and I guess Maggie <i>did</i> give me a good many. Potatoes
+will keep, you know. We can save 'em until we
+have enough for a meal."</p>
+
+<p>"While we're about it," said Bettie, "I think we'd
+better have Mrs. Crane to dinner, too. She's such a
+nice old lady and she's been awfully good to us."</p>
+
+<p>"She's not very well off," agreed Mabel, "and probably
+a real, first-class dinner would taste good to her."</p>
+
+<p>"But," pleaded Bettie, "don't let's ask her until
+we're sure of the date. As it is, I can't sleep nights for
+thinking of how Mr. Black must feel. He'll think we
+don't want him."</p>
+
+<p>"You'd better explain to him," suggested Jean,
+"that it isn't convenient to have him just yet, but
+that we're going to just as soon as ever we can. We<span class="pagenum">[49]</span>
+mustn't tell him why, because it would be just like
+him to send the provisions here himself, and then it
+wouldn't really be <i>our</i> party."</p>
+
+<p>In spite of all the girls' plans, however, by the end
+of the week the cottage larder was still distressingly
+empty. Marjory had, indeed, industriously collected
+potatoes, only to have them carried off by an equally
+industrious rat; and Mabel's four nickels still remained
+missing. Things in the vegetable garden seemed singularly
+backward, possibly because the four eager
+gardeners kept digging them up to see if they were
+growing. Their parents and Marjory's Aunty Jane
+were firmer than ever in their refusal to part with
+any more staple groceries.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps if the girls had explained why they wanted
+the things, their relatives would have been more generous;
+but girllike, the four poverty-stricken young
+housekeepers made a deep mystery of their dinner
+plan. It was their most cherished secret, and when
+they met each morning they always said, mysteriously,
+"Good morning&mdash;remember M. B. D.," which meant,
+of course, "Mr. Black's Dinner."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Black, indeed, never went by without referring
+to the girls' promise.</p>
+
+<p>"When," he would ask, "is that dinner party coming
+off? It's a long time since I've been invited to a
+first-class dinner, cooked by four accomplished young<span class="pagenum">[50]</span>
+ladies, and I'm getting hungrier every minute. When
+I get up in the morning I always say: 'Now I won't
+eat much breakfast because I've got to save room for
+that dinner'&mdash;and then, after all, I don't get invited."</p>
+
+<p>The situation was growing really embarrassing. The
+girls began to feel that keeping house, not to mention
+giving dinner parties, with no income whatever, was
+anything but a joke.</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[51]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i059.jpg" width="400" height="360" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_6">CHAPTER 6</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">A Lodger to the Rescue</p>
+
+<p>Grass was beginning to grow on the tiny lawn, all
+sorts of thrifty young seedlings were popping up in
+the flower beds, and Jean's pansies were actually beginning
+to blossom. The girls had trained the rampant
+Virginia creeper away from the windows and
+had coaxed it to climb the porch pillars. From the
+outside, no one would have suspected that Dandelion<span class="pagenum">[52]</span>
+Cottage was not occupied by a regular grown-up
+family. Book agents and peddlers offered their wares
+at the front door, and appeared very much crestfallen
+when Bettie, or one of the others, explained that the
+neatly kept little cottage was just a playhouse. Handbills
+and sample packages of yeast cakes were left on
+the doorstep, and once a brand-new postman actually
+dropped a letter into the letter-box; Mabel carried it
+afterward to Mrs. Bartholomew Crane, to whom it
+rightfully belonged.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon, when Jean was rearranging the
+dining-room pictures&mdash;they had to be rearranged very
+frequently&mdash;and when Mabel and Marjory were busy
+putting fresh papers on the pantry shelves, there was
+a ring at the doorbell.</p>
+
+<p>Bettie, who had been dusting the parlor, pushed the
+chairs into place, threw her duster into the dining-room
+and ran to the door. A lady&mdash;Bettie described
+her afterwards as a "middle-aged young lady with
+the sweetest dimple"&mdash;stood on the doorstep.</p>
+
+<p>"Is your mother at home?" asked the lady, smiling
+pleasantly at Bettie, who liked the stranger at once.</p>
+
+<p>"She&mdash;she doesn't live here," said Bettie, taken by
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you can tell me what I want to know. I'm
+a stranger in town and I want to rent a room in this
+neighborhood. I am to have my meals at Mrs. Baker's,<span class="pagenum">[53]</span>
+but she hasn't any place for me to sleep. I don't want
+anything very expensive, but of course I'd be willing
+to pay a fair price. Do you know of anybody with
+rooms to rent? I'm to be in town for three weeks."</p>
+
+<p>Bettie shook her head, reflectively. "No, I don't
+believe I do, unless&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Bettie paused to look inquiringly at Jean, who,
+framed by the dining-room doorway, was nodding
+her head vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps Jean does," finished Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you <i>very</i> particular," asked Jean, coming forward,
+"about what kind of room it is?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, not so very," returned the guest. "I'm afraid
+I couldn't afford a very grand one."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you very timid?" asked Bettie, who had suddenly
+guessed what Jean had in mind. "I mean are
+you afraid of burglars and mice and things like that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, most persons are, I imagine," said the young
+woman, whose eyes were twinkling pleasantly. "Are
+there a great many mice and burglars in this neighborhood?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mice," said Jean, "but not burglars. It's a <i>very</i>
+honest neighborhood. I think I have an idea, but you
+see there are four of us and I'll have to consult the
+others about it, too. Sit here, please, in the cozy corner&mdash;it's
+the safest piece of furniture we have. Now if<span class="pagenum">[54]</span>
+you'll excuse us just a minute we'll go to the kitchen
+and talk it over."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," murmured the lady, who looked a trifle
+embarrassed at encountering the gaze of the forty-two
+staring dolls that sat all around the parlor with their
+backs against the baseboard. "I hope I haven't interrupted
+a party."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all," assured Bettie, with her best company
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Girls," said Jean, when she and Bettie were in the
+kitchen with the door carefully closed behind them,
+"would you be willing to rent the front bedroom to
+a clean, nice-looking lady if she'd be willing to take
+it? She wants to pay for a room, she says, and she
+<i>looks</i> very polite and pleasant, doesn't she, Bettie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," corroborated Bettie, "I like her. She has kind
+of twinkling brown eyes and such nice dimples."</p>
+
+<p>"You see," explained Jean, "the money would pay
+for Mr. Black's dinner."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, so it would," cried Marjory. "Let's do it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," echoed Mabel, "for goodness' sake, let's do
+it. It's only three weeks, anyway, and what's three
+weeks!"</p>
+
+<p>"How would it be," asked Marjory, cautiously, "to
+take her on approval? Aunty Jane always has hats
+and things sent on approval, so she can send them
+back if they don't fit."<span class="pagenum">[55]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Splendid!" cried Mabel. "If she doesn't fit Dandelion
+Cottage, she can't stay."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," gurgled Marjory, "<i>what</i> a dinner we'll give
+Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane! We'll have ice cream
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Huh!" said Mabel, "most likely she won't take the
+room at all. Anyhow, probably she's got tired of waiting
+and has gone."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll go and see," said Jean. "Come on, everybody."</p>
+
+<p>The lady, however, still sat on the hard, lumpy cozy
+corner, with her toes just touching the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said she, smiling at the flock of girls, "how
+about the idea?"</p>
+
+<p>The other three looked expectantly at Jean; Mabel
+nudged her elbow and Bettie nodded at her.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>You</i> talk," said Marjory; "you're the oldest."</p>
+
+<p>"It's like this," explained Jean. "This house isn't
+good enough to rent to grown-ups because it's all out
+of repair, so they've lent it to us for the summer for
+a playhouse. The back of it leaks dreadfully when it
+rains, and the plaster is all down in the kitchen, but
+the front bedroom is really very nice&mdash;if you don't
+mind having four kinds of carpet on the floor. This
+is a very safe neighborhood, no tramps or anything
+like that, and if you're not an awfully timid person,
+perhaps you wouldn't mind staying alone at night."<span class="pagenum">[56]</span></p>
+
+<p>"If you did," added Bettie, "probably one of us
+could sleep in the other room unless it happened to
+rain&mdash;it rains right down on the bed."</p>
+
+<p>"Could I go upstairs to look at the room?" asked
+the young woman.</p>
+
+<p>"There isn't any upstairs," said Bettie, pulling back
+a curtain; "the room's right here."</p>
+
+<p>"Why! What a dear little room&mdash;all white and
+blue!"</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you don't mind having children around,"
+said Marjory, somewhat anxiously. "You see, we'd
+have to play in the rest of the house."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," added Jean, hastily, "if you had company
+you could use the parlor&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And the front steps," said Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm very fond of children," said the young lady,
+"and I don't expect to have any company but you
+because I don't know anybody here. I shall be away
+every day until about five o'clock because I am here
+with my father who is tuning church organs, and I
+have to help him. I strike the notes while he works
+behind the organ. He has a room at Mrs. Baker's, but
+she didn't have any place to put me. I think I should
+like this little room very much indeed. Now, how
+much are you going to charge me for it?"</p>
+
+<p>Jean looked at Bettie, and Bettie looked at the other
+two.<span class="pagenum">[57]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," said Jean, at last.</p>
+
+<p>"Neither do I," said Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"Would&mdash;would a dollar a week be too much?"
+asked Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't be enough," said the young woman,
+promptly. "My father pays five for the room <i>he</i> has,
+but it's really a larger room than he wanted. I should
+be very glad to give you two dollars and a half a
+week&mdash;I'm sure I couldn't find a furnished room anywhere
+for less than that. Can I move in tonight? I've
+nothing but a small trunk."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye-es," said Bettie, looking inquiringly at Jean.
+"I <i>think</i> we could get it ready by seven o'clock. It's
+all perfectly clean, but you see we'll have to change
+things around a little and fix up the washstand."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure," said the visitor, turning to depart, "that
+it all looks quite lovely just as it is. You may expect
+me at seven."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," exclaimed Marjory, when the door had
+closed behind their pleasant visitor, "isn't this too
+grand for words! It's just like finding a bush with
+pennies growing on it, or a pot of gold at the end of
+the rainbow. Two and a half a week! That's&mdash;let me
+see. Why! that's seven dollars and a half! We can buy
+Mr. Black's dinner and have enough money left to
+live on for a long time afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy!" cried Mabel. "We never said a word to<span class="pagenum">[58]</span>
+her about taking her on approval. We didn't even
+ask her name."</p>
+
+<p>"Pshaw!" said Jean. "She's all right. She couldn't
+be disagreeable if she wanted to with that dimple and
+those sparkles in her eyes; but, girls, we've a tremendous
+lot to do."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Mabel. "If she'd known that the pillows
+under those ruffled shams were just flour sacks stuffed
+with excelsior, she wouldn't have thought everything
+so lovely. Girls, what in the world are we to do for
+sheets? We haven't even one."</p>
+
+<p>"And blankets?" said Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"And quilts?" said Bettie. "That old white spread
+is every bit of bedclothes we own. I was <i>so</i> afraid
+she'd turn the cover down and see that everything
+else was just pieces of burlap."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a good thing the mattress is all right," said
+Marjory. "But there isn't any bottom to the water
+pitcher, and the basin leaks like anything."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll just have to go home," said Jean, "and tell
+our mothers all about it. We'll have to borrow what
+we need. We must get a lamp too, and some oil, because
+there isn't any other way of lighting the house."</p>
+
+<p>The four girls ran first of all to Bettie's house with
+their surprising news.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Bettie," said Mrs. Tucker, when her little<span class="pagenum">[59]</span>
+daughter, helped by the other three, had explained the
+situation, "are you <i>sure</i> she's nice? I'm afraid you've
+been a little rash."</p>
+
+<p>"Just as nice as can be," assured Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Dr. Tucker, "I guess it's all right. I
+know the organ tuner&mdash;I used to see him twice a year
+when we lived in Ohio. His name is Blossom and
+he's a very fine old fellow. I met his daughter this
+afternoon when they were examining the church
+organ, and she seemed a pleasant, well-educated young
+woman&mdash;I believe he said she teaches a kindergarten
+during the winter. The girls haven't made any mistake
+this time."</p>
+
+<p>"Then we must make her comfortable," said Mrs.
+Tucker. "You may take sheets and pillow-cases from
+the linen closet, Bettie, and you must see that she has
+everything she needs."</p>
+
+<p>Excited Bettie danced off to the linen closet and the
+others ran home to tell the good news.</p>
+
+<p>"I've filled a lamp for you, Bettie," said Mrs. Tucker,
+meeting Bettie, with her arms full of sheets at the
+bottom of the stairs. "Here's a box of matches, too."</p>
+
+<p>When Bettie was returning with her spoils to Dandelion
+Cottage she almost bumped into Mabel, whom
+she met at the gate with a pillow under each arm, a
+folded patchwork quilt balanced unsteadily on her<span class="pagenum">[60]</span>
+head, and her chubby hands clasped about a big brass
+lamp.</p>
+
+<p>"The pillows are off my own bed," said Mabel.
+"Mother wasn't home, but she wouldn't care, anyway."</p>
+
+<p>"But can you sleep without them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'll take home one of the excelsior ones," said
+Mabel. "I can sleep on anything."</p>
+
+<p>Jean came in a moment later with a pile of blankets
+and quilts. She, too, had a lamp, packed carefully in
+a big basket that hung from her arm. Marjory followed
+almost at her heels with more bedding, towels,
+a fourth lamp, and two candlesticks.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," laughed Bettie, when all the lamps and
+candles were placed in a row on the dining-room table,
+"I guess Miss Blossom will have almost light enough.
+Here are four big lamps and two candles&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I've six more candles in my blouse," said Mabel,
+laughing and fishing them out one at a time. "I
+thought they'd do for the blue candlesticks Mrs. Crane
+gave us for the bedroom."</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it fortunate," said Jean, who was thumping
+the mattress vigorously, "that we put the best bed in
+this room? Beds are such hard things to move."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye-es," said Bettie, rather doubtfully, "but I think
+we'd better tell Miss Blossom not to be surprised if
+the slats fall out once in a while during the night. You<span class="pagenum">[61]</span>
+know they always do if you happen to turn over too
+suddenly."</p>
+
+<p>"We must warn her about the chairs, too," said
+Marjory. "They're none of them really very safe."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess," said Jean, "I'd better bring over the rocking
+chair from my own room, but I'm afraid she'll
+just have to grin and bear the slats, because they <i>will</i>
+fall out in spite of anything I can do."</p>
+
+<p>By seven o'clock the room was invitingly comfortable.
+The washstand, which was really only a wooden
+box thinly disguised by a muslin curtain gathered
+across the front and sides, was supplied with a sound
+basin, a whole pitcher, numerous towels, and four
+kinds of soap&mdash;the girls had all thought of soap. They
+were unable to decide which kind the lodger would
+like best, so they laid Bettie's clear amber cake of
+glycerine soap, Jean's scentless white castile, Marjory's
+square of green cucumber soap, and Mabel's highly
+perfumed oval pink cake, in a rainbow row on the
+washstand.</p>
+
+<p>The bed, bountifully supplied with coverings&mdash;had
+Dandelion Cottage been suddenly transported to
+Alaska the lodger would still have had blankets to
+spare, so generously had her enthusiastic landladies
+provided&mdash;looked very comfortable indeed. At half-past
+seven when the lodger arrived with apologies for<span class="pagenum">[62]</span>
+being late because the drayman who was to move her
+trunk had been slow, the cottage, for the first time
+since the girls had occupied it, was brilliantly lighted.</p>
+
+<p>"We thought," explained Bettie, "that you might
+feel less frightened in a strange place if you had plenty
+of light, though we didn't really mean to have so
+many lamps&mdash;we each supposed we were bringing the
+only one. Anyway, we don't know which one burns
+best."</p>
+
+<p>"If they should <i>all</i> go out," said Mabel, earnestly,
+"there are candles and matches on the little shelf above
+the bed."</p>
+
+<p>When the lodger had been warned about the loose
+slats and the untrustworthiness of the chairs, the girls
+said good-night.</p>
+
+<p>"You needn't go on <i>my</i> account," said Miss Blossom.
+"It's pleasant to have you here&mdash;still, I'm not
+afraid to stay alone. You must always do just as you
+like about staying, you know; I shouldn't like to think
+that I was driving you out of this dear little house,
+for it was nice of you to let me come. I think I was
+very fortunate in finding a room so near Mrs. Baker's."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Jean, "but we always have to be
+home before dark unless we have permission to stay
+any place."</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>have</i> to go," confided Mabel, "because I was so
+excited that I forgot to eat my supper."<span class="pagenum">[63]</span></p>
+
+<p>"So did I," said Marjory, frankly, "and I'm just as
+hungry as a bear."</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody come home with me," said Jean. "We
+always have dinner later than you do and the things
+can't be <i>very</i> cold."</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[64]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i072.jpg" width="400" height="359" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_7">CHAPTER 7</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">The Girls Disclose a Plan</p>
+
+<p>"Did you sleep well, Miss Blossom?" asked Bettie,
+shyly waylaying the lodger who was on her way to
+breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye-es," said Miss Blossom, smiling brightly,
+"though in spite of your warning and all my care,
+the bottom dropped out of my bed and landed the
+mattress on the floor. But no harm was done. As soon<span class="pagenum">[65]</span>
+as I discovered that I was not falling down an elevator
+shaft, I went to sleep again. I think if I had a
+few nails and some little blocks of wood I could fix
+those slats so they'd stay in better; you see they're not
+quite long enough for the bed."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll find some for you," said Bettie. "You'll find
+them on the parlor table when you get back."</p>
+
+<p>Before the week was over, the girls had discovered
+that their new friend was in every way a most delightful
+person. She proved surprisingly skillful with
+hammer and nails, and besides mending the bed she
+soon had several of the chairs quite firm on their legs.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," cried Bettie one day as she delightedly inspected
+an old black walnut rocker that had always
+collapsed at the slightest touch, "this old chair is
+almost strong enough to <i>walk</i>! I'm so glad you've
+made so many of them safe, because, when Mrs. Bartholomew
+Crane comes to see us, she's always afraid
+to sit down. She's such a nice neighbor that we'd like
+to make her comfortable."</p>
+
+<p>"We do have the loveliest friends," said Jean, with
+a contented sigh. "It's hard to tell which is the nicest
+one."</p>
+
+<p>"But the dearest <i>two</i>," exclaimed Marjory, discriminating
+nicely, "are Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane&mdash;except
+you, of course, Miss Blossom."</p>
+
+<p>"Somehow," added Bettie, "we always think of<span class="pagenum">[66]</span>
+those two in one breath, like Dombey and Son, or
+Jack and Jill."</p>
+
+<p>"But they couldn't be farther apart <i>really</i>," declared
+Jean. "They're both nice, both are kind of old, both
+are dark and rather stout, but except for that they're
+altogether different. Mr. Black has everything in the
+world that anybody could want, and Mrs. Crane hasn't
+much of anything. Mr. Black is invited to banquets
+and things and rides in carriages and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Has a silk hat," Mabel broke in.</p>
+
+<p>"And Mrs. Crane," continued Jean, paying no attention
+to the interruption, "can't even afford to ride
+in the street car&mdash;I've heard her say so."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish," groaned generous Mabel, with deep contrition,
+"that I'd never taken a cent for that lemonade
+I sold her last spring. If I'd dreamed how good and
+how poor she was, I wouldn't have. She might have
+had <i>four</i> rides with that money."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> wish," said Jean, "we could do something perfectly
+grand and beautiful for Mrs. Crane. She's always
+doing the kindest little things for other people."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," demanded Marjory, "aren't we going to
+have her here to dinner, too, when we have Mr.
+Black? Please don't tell anybody, Miss Blossom&mdash;it's
+to be a surprise."</p>
+
+<p>"Still, just a dinner doesn't seem to be enough," said
+Jean, who, with her chin in her hand, seemed to be<span class="pagenum">[67]</span>
+thinking deeply. "Of course it helps, but I'd rather
+save her life or do something like that."</p>
+
+<p>"Little things count for a great deal in this world,
+sometimes," said Miss Blossom, leaning down to
+brush her cheek softly against Jean's. "It's generally
+wiser to leave the big things until one is big enough
+to handle them."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Crane <i>is</i> pretty big," offered matter-of-fact
+Mabel.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear," laughed Miss Blossom, "that wasn't at
+all what I meant."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Black," said Bettie, dreamily, "has enough
+<i>things</i>, but I don't believe he really cares about anything
+in the world but his roses. His face is different
+when he talks about them, kind of soft all about the
+corners and not so&mdash;not so&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Daniel Webstery," supplied Jean, understandingly.</p>
+
+<p>"It must be pretty lonely for him without any
+family," agreed Miss Blossom. "I don't know what
+would become of Father if he didn't have me to
+keep him cheered up&mdash;we're wonderful chums, Father
+and I."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh", mourned tender-hearted Bettie, "I <i>wish</i> I
+could make Mrs. Crane rich enough so she wouldn't
+need to mend all the time, and that I could provide
+Mr. Black with some really truly relatives to love him
+the way you love your father."<span class="pagenum">[68]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Bettie! Bettie!" cried Mabel, suddenly beginning,
+in her excitement, to bounce up and down on
+the one chair that possessed springs. "I know exactly
+how we could help them both. We could beg seven
+or eight children from the orphan asylum&mdash;they're
+<i>glad</i> to give 'em away&mdash;and let Mrs. Crane sell 'em to
+Mr. Black for&mdash;for ten dollars apiece."</p>
+
+<p>Such a storm of merriment followed this simple
+solution of the problem that Mabel for the moment
+looked quite crushed. Her chair, incidentally, was
+crushed too, for Mabel's final bounce proved too much
+for its frail constitution; its four legs spread suddenly
+and lowered the surprised Mabel gently to the floor.
+Everybody laughed again, Mabel as heartily as anyone,
+and, for a time, the sorrows of Mrs. Crane and
+Mr. Black were forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>The dinner party, however, still remained uppermost
+in all their plans. Mabel was in favor of giving it
+at once, but the other girls were more cautious, so the
+little mistresses of Dandelion Cottage finally decided
+to postpone the party until after Miss Blossom had
+paid her rent in full.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," explained cautious Marjory, one day
+when the girls were alone, "she might get called away
+suddenly before the three weeks are up, and if we
+spent more money than we <i>have</i> it wouldn't be very<span class="pagenum">[69]</span>
+comfortable. Besides, I've never seen seven dollars and
+a half all at once, and I'd like to."</p>
+
+<p>But the dinner plan was no longer the profound
+secret that it had been at first, for when the young
+housekeepers had told their mothers about their
+lodger, they had been obliged to tell them also what
+they intended to do with the money. In the excitement
+of the moment, they had all neglected to mention
+Mrs. Crane, but later, when they made good this
+omission, their news was received in a most perplexing
+fashion. The girls were greatly puzzled, but they did
+not happen to compare notes until after something
+that happened at the dinner party had reminded them
+of their parents' incomprehensible behavior.</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma," said Bettie, one evening at supper time,
+soon after Miss Blossom's arrival, "I forgot to tell you
+that we're going to ask Mrs. Crane, too, when we have
+Mr. Black to dinner. It's to be a surprise for both of
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" gasped Mrs. Tucker, dropping her muffin,
+and looking not at Bettie, but at Dr. Tucker. "Surely
+not Mrs. Crane and Mr. Black, too! You don't mean
+both at the same time!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes, Mamma," said Bettie. "It wouldn't cost
+any more."</p>
+
+<p>Then the little girl looked with astonishment first
+at her father and then at her mother, for Dr. Tucker,<span class="pagenum">[70]</span>
+with a warning finger against his lips, was shaking
+his head just as hard as he could at Mrs. Tucker, who
+looked the very picture of amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," asked Bettie, "what's the matter? Don't
+you think it's a good plan? Isn't it the right thing
+to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Dr. Tucker, still looking at Bettie's
+mother, who was nodding her approval, "I shouldn't
+be surprised if it might prove a <i>very</i> good thing to
+do. Your idea of making it a surprise to both of them
+is a good one, too. I should keep it the darkest kind
+of secret until the very last moment, if I were you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," agreed Mrs. Tucker, "I should certainly keep
+it a secret."</p>
+
+<p>Jean, too, happened to mention the matter at home
+and with very much the same result. Mr. Mapes
+looked at Mrs. Mapes with something in his eye that
+very closely resembled an amused twinkle, and Jean
+was almost certain that there was an answering
+twinkle in her mother's eye.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the joke?" asked Jean.</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't think of spoiling it by telling," said Mrs.
+Mapes. "If there's anything I can do to help you with
+your dinner party I shall be delighted to do it."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, will you?" cried Jean. "When I told you about
+it last week I thought, somehow, that you weren't
+very much interested."<span class="pagenum">[71]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I'm very much interested indeed," returned Mrs.
+Mapes. "I hope you'll be able to keep the surprise part
+of it a secret to the very last moment. That's always
+the best part of a dinner party, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Mr. Mapes, "if you know who the other
+guests are to be, it always takes away part of the
+pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>When Marjory told the news, her Aunty Jane, who
+seldom smiled and who usually appeared to care very
+little about the doings in Dandelion Cottage, greatly
+surprised her niece by suddenly displaying as many as
+seven upper teeth; she showed, too, such flattering
+interest in the coming event that Marjory plucked up
+courage to ask for potatoes and other provisions that
+might prove useful.</p>
+
+<p>"When you've decided what day you're going to
+have your party," said Aunty Jane, with astonishing
+good nature, "I'll give or lend you anything you want,
+provided you don't tell either of your guests who the
+other one is to be."</p>
+
+<p>When Mabel told about the plan, she too was very
+much perplexed at the way her news was received.
+Her parents, after one speaking glance at each other,
+leaned back in their chairs and laughed until the tears
+rolled down their cheeks. But they, too, heartily approved
+of the dinner party and advised strict secrecy
+regarding the guests.<span class="pagenum">[72]</span></p>
+
+<p>School was out, and, as Bettie said, every day was
+Saturday, but the days were slipping away altogether
+too rapidly. The lawn, by this time, was covered with
+what Mabel called "real grass," great bunches of
+Jean's sweetest purple pansies had to be picked every
+morning so they wouldn't go to seed, and the long
+bed by the fence threatened to burst at any moment
+into blossom. Even the much-disturbed vegetable garden
+was doing so nicely that it was possible to tell the
+lettuce from the radish plants.</p>
+
+<p>Two of Miss Blossom's three weeks had gone. She
+herself was to leave town the following Thursday,
+and the dinner party was to take place the day after;
+but even the thought of the great event failed to keep
+the little cottagers quite cheerful, for they hated to
+think of losing their lovely lodger. Whenever this
+charming young person was not busy at one or
+another of the various churches with her father, she
+was playing with the children. "Just exactly," said
+Bettie, "as if she were just twelve years old, too." Her
+clever fingers made dresses for each of the four biggest
+dolls, and such cunning baby bonnets for each of
+the four littlest ones.</p>
+
+<p>Best of all, she taught the girls how to do a great
+many things. She showed them how to turn the narrowest
+of hems, how to gather a ruffle neatly, and
+how to take the tiniest of stitches. Bettie, who had<span class="pagenum">[73]</span>
+to help with the weekly darning, and Marjory, who
+had to mend her own stockings, actually found it
+pleasant work after Miss Blossom had shown them
+several different ways of weaving the threads.</p>
+
+<p>"I just wish," cried Mabel, one day, in a burst of
+gratitude, "that you'd fall ill, or something so we
+could do something for <i>you</i>. You're just lovely to <i>us</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Mabel," said Miss Blossom, with eyes
+that twinkled delightedly, "I'm sure you'd take beautiful
+care of me&mdash;I'm almost tempted to try it. Shall
+I have measles, or just plain smallpox?"</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[74]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i082.jpg" width="400" height="363" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_8">CHAPTER 8</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">An Unexpected Crop of Dandelions</p>
+
+<p>In spite of the prospect of losing her, the last week
+of Miss Blossom's stay was a delightful one to the
+girls because so many pleasant things happened. The
+best of all concerned the cottage dining-room.</p>
+
+<p>This room had proved the hardest spot in the house
+to make attractive, for it seemed to resist all efforts to
+make a well-furnished room of it. Most of the faded<span class="pagenum">[75]</span>
+paper was loose and much of it had dropped off in
+patches during the time that the cottage was vacant,
+showing the ugly, dark, painted wall underneath. It
+was only too evident that the pictures that the girls
+had fastened up carefully with pins had been put up
+for purposes of concealment, the ceiling was stained
+and dingy, and the rug was far too small to cover
+the floor where some industrious former occupant had
+daubed paint of various gaudy hues while trying, perhaps,
+to find the right shade for the woodwork.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, what little furniture there was in the
+dining-room showed very plainly that it had not been
+intended originally for dining-room use; the buffet, in
+particular, proclaimed loudly in big black letters that
+it was nothing but a soap box, and Bettie's best efforts
+could not make anything else of it. Now that the day
+for the long-postponed dinner party was actually set,
+the girls' attention was more than ever directed toward
+the forlorn appearance of the little dining-room.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me," said Bettie, one day when the five
+friends, seated around the table, were cutting out pictures
+for a wonderful scrap-book for the little lame
+boy whom Miss Blossom had discovered living near
+one of the churches, "I do wish this dining-room
+didn't look so sort of bedroomy."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Jean, "I've tried putting the buffet in<span class="pagenum">[76]</span>
+every corner and all around the walls, and it <i>won't</i>
+look like anything but a wooden box."</p>
+
+<p>"I tried covering it with a gathered curtain," said
+Mabel, "but that made it look so like a washstand
+that I took it off again."</p>
+
+<p>"Why," exclaimed Miss Blossom, "you've given me
+a beautiful idea! I believe we could make a splendid
+sideboard out of that piano box that's so in our way
+on the back porch. We'd just have to saw the ends
+down a little, nail on some boards, paint it some plain,
+dark color, and spread a towel over the top, and we'd
+have a beautiful Flemish oak sideboard. I'll buy the
+can of paint."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do the painting," said Jean. "I helped Mother
+paint our kitchen floor, so I know a little about it."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be lovely. I've been thinking, too, that
+it would be a good idea to fix a little shelf under this
+window to hold your petunia and these two geraniums
+that are suffering so for sunshine. I think I could
+make it from the boards in that soap box."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, thank you!" cried Bettie. "I don't believe
+there's <i>anything</i> you don't know how to do."</p>
+
+<p>The piano box, transformed by Miss Blossom and
+the four girls into a very good imitation of a Flemish
+oak sideboard, did indeed make such an imposing
+piece of furniture that the rest of the room looked
+shabbier than ever by contrast.<span class="pagenum">[77]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid," said Miss Blossom, surveying the effect
+with an air of comical dismay, "that the rest of our
+dining-room really looks worse than it did before; it's
+like trying to wear a new hat with an old gown. But
+I'm proud of our handiwork."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Jean, "it's a great deal more like a sideboard
+than it is like a piano box."</p>
+
+<p>"It's the sideboardiest sideboard I ever saw," said
+Mabel, "but it's certainly too fine for this room."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," said cheerful Bettie. "We'll let Mr.
+Black sit so he can see the sideboard, and we'll have
+Mrs. Crane face the geraniums on that cunning shelf.
+If their eyes begin to wander around the room we'll
+just call their attention to the things we want them
+to see. When Mamma entertains the sewing society
+she always invites the first one that comes to sit in the
+chair over the hole in the sitting-room rug so the
+others won't notice it. If we catch Mr. Black looking
+at the ceiling we'll say: 'Oh, Mr. Black, did you notice
+the flowers on the sideboard?'"</p>
+
+<p>Everybody laughed at Bettie's comical idea. This
+desperate measure, however, was not needed, for one
+afternoon, the day after the sideboard was finished,
+something happened, something lovelier than the girls
+had ever even dreamed <i>could</i> happen.</p>
+
+<p>It was only three o'clock, yet there was Miss Blossom
+coming home two whole hours earlier than usual; her<span class="pagenum">[78]</span>
+white-haired father was with her and under his arm
+in a long parcel were seven rolls of wall paper.</p>
+
+<p>"My contribution to the cottage," said Mr. Blossom,
+laying the bundle at Bettie's feet and smiling pleasantly
+at the row of girls on the doorstep.</p>
+
+<p>"It's paper for the dining-room," explained Miss
+Blossom. "We happened to pass a store, on our way
+to work this noon, where they were advertising a sale
+of odd rolls of very nice paper at only five cents a roll.
+There were two rolls that were just right for the ceiling,
+and five rolls for the side wall. It seemed just
+exactly the right thing for Dandelion Cottage, so we
+couldn't help buying it."</p>
+
+<p>"It would have been wicked," said Mr. Blossom,
+cutting the string about the bundle, "not to buy such
+suitable paper at such a ridiculous price."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! oh!" cried the delighted girls, as Mr. Blossom
+held up a roll for inspection. "It might have been
+made for this house!"</p>
+
+<p>"Dandelion blossoms in yellow, with such lovely
+soft green leaves," said Bettie, "and such a lovely, light,
+creamy background. Oh! what's that?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's the border," replied Miss Blossom. "See how
+graceful the pattern is, and how saucily those dandelions
+hold their heads. Show them the ceiling paper,
+Father."<span class="pagenum">[79]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" cried Mabel, "just picked-off dandelions
+scattered all over an ocean of milk&mdash;how pretty!"</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have the Village Improvement Society after
+us," laughed Marjory. "They don't allow a dandelion
+to show its head."</p>
+
+<p>"I love dandelions," said Miss Blossom; "real ones,
+I mean; they're such gay, cheerful things and such a
+beautiful color."</p>
+
+<p>"I love them, too," said Jean, "because, you know,
+they paid our rent for us."</p>
+
+<p>"But," said Mabel, "I'm thankful we haven't got to
+dig all these dandelions."</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said Miss Blossom, "we must go right to
+work. If everybody will help, Father and I will put
+it on for you. You needn't be afraid to trust us, because
+last spring we papered our two biggest rooms,
+and they really looked <i>almost</i> professional except for
+one strip that Father got upside-down; but your
+dining-room will be in no danger on that score, for
+Father never makes the same mistake twice. Jean,
+you and Mabel can move all the furniture except the
+table and sideboard into the kitchen&mdash;we'll have to
+stand on the table. Bettie, take down all the pictures.
+Father, you can be trimming the ceiling paper here
+on the sideboard while Marjory starts a fire in the
+kitchen stove so I can have hot water for my paste.<span class="pagenum">[80]</span>
+We'll have our wall covered with dandelions in just
+no time!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said Mr. Blossom, when the furniture was
+out and the pictures were all down, "we must dig the
+soil up well or our dandelions won't grow. Everybody
+must tear as much as she can of this old paper off the
+wall; it's so ragged it comes off very easily."</p>
+
+<p>"The roof used to leak," said Bettie, "but my
+brother Rob unrolled some tin cans and nailed them
+over the place where the truly shingles are gone, and
+it never leaked a mite the last four times it rained."</p>
+
+<p>"The plaster seems fairly good," said Mr. Blossom.
+"I could mend these holes with a little plaster of Paris
+if some obliging young lady would run with this
+dime to the drugstore for ten cents' worth."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll go," said Mabel. "I don't think I like peeling
+walls."</p>
+
+<p>"Mabel," said Miss Blossom, "isn't really fond of
+work, though I notice that she usually does her share."</p>
+
+<p>Everybody helped to mend the cracks, and everybody
+watched with breathless interest to see the first
+long strip, upheld by Mr. Blossom and guided by
+Miss Blossom and the cottage broom, go into place.</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't it be awful," whispered Mabel, "if it
+shouldn't stick?"</p>
+
+<p>But it did stick, smooth and flat, and the paper was
+even prettier on the wall than it had been in the roll.<span class="pagenum">[81]</span></p>
+
+<p>"A side strip next, Father, so we can see how it's
+going to look," pleaded Miss Blossom. "Remember,
+we're just children."</p>
+
+<p>At five o'clock, when half of the ceiling and one
+side of the wall were finished, the front door was
+opened abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>"Hi there!" said Mr. Black, putting his head in at
+the dining-room door. "Why don't you listen when I
+ring your bell? Is that dinner of mine ready? I'm
+losing a pound a day."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Bettie, jumping down from her perch
+on the sideboard, "but it will be next Friday. We're
+getting it ready just as fast as ever we can. We're even
+papering the dining-room for the occasion."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Black, "I just stopped in to say
+that unless you could give me that dinner this very
+minute, I shall have to go hungry for the next five
+weeks."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" cried Bettie, in dismay, "why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I'm going to Washington tonight by the
+six o'clock train and I shall be gone a whole month&mdash;perhaps
+longer."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear," cried Bettie, "we just <i>couldn't</i> have you
+tonight. We're papering the dining-room, and besides
+we haven't a single thing to eat but some stale cake
+that Mrs. Pike gave us."</p>
+
+<p>"I strongly suspect," said Mr. Black, smiling over<span class="pagenum">[82]</span>
+Bettie's head at Mr. Blossom, "that you don't really
+<i>want</i> me to dinner."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we do, we do," assured Bettie, earnestly, "but
+we just <i>can't</i> have company tonight. If you'll just let
+us know exactly when you're coming home, you'll
+find a beautiful dinner ready for you."</p>
+
+<p>"All right," said Mr. Black, "I'll telegraph. I'll say:
+'My dear Miss Bettykins, of Dandelion Cottage: It will
+give me great pleasure to dine with you tomorrow&mdash;or
+would you rather have me say the day after tomorrow?&mdash;evening.
+Yours most devotedly and-so-forth.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes," cried Bettie, "that will be all right, but
+you must give us three days to get ready in."</p>
+
+<p>After all, however, it was Mabel that sent the telegram,
+and it was a very different one.</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[83]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i090.jpg" width="400" height="359" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_9">CHAPTER 9</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">Changes and Plans</p>
+
+<p>When the little dining-room was finished it was
+quite the prettiest room in the house, for the friendly
+Blossoms had painted the battered woodwork a delicate
+green to match the leaves in the paper; and by
+mixing what was left of the green paint with the remaining
+color left from the sideboard, clever Miss
+Blossom obtained a shade that was exactly right for<span class="pagenum">[84]</span>
+as much of the floor as the rug did not cover. Of
+course all the neighbors and all the girls' relatives had
+to come in afterwards to see what Bettie called "the
+very dandelioniest room in Dandelion Cottage."</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to the girls that the time fairly galloped
+from Monday to Thursday. They were heartily sorry
+when the moment came for them to lose their pleasant
+lodger. They went to the train to see the last of her
+and to assure her for the thousandth time that they
+should never forget her. Mabel sobbed audibly at the
+moment of parting, and large tears were rolling down
+silent Bettie's cheeks. Even the seven dollars and fifty
+cents that the girls had handled with such delight
+that morning paled into insignificance beside the fact
+that the train was actually whisking their beloved
+Miss Blossom away from them. When she had paid
+for her lodging she advised her four landladies to
+deposit the money in the bank until time for the dinner
+party, and the girls did so, but even the importance
+of owning a bank account failed to console
+them for their loss. The train out of sight, the sober
+little procession wended its way to Dandelion Cottage
+but the cozy little house seemed strangely silent
+and deserted when Bettie unlocked the door. Mabel,
+who had wept stormily all the way home, sat down
+heavily on the doorstep and wept afresh.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum">[85]</span></p><p>Pinned to a pillow on the parlor couch, Jean discovered
+a little folded square of paper addressed to
+Bettie, who was drumming a sad little tune on the
+window pane.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Bettie," cried Jean, "this looks like a note
+for you from Miss Blossom! Do read it and tell us
+what she says."</p>
+
+<p>"It says," read Bettie: "'My dearest of Betties:
+Thank you for being so nice to me. There's a telephone
+message for you.'"</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder what it means," said Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>Bettie ran to the talkless telephone, slipped her hand
+inside the little door at the top, and found a small
+square parcel wrapped in tissue paper, tied with a
+pink ribbon, and addressed to Miss Bettie Tucker,
+Dandelion Cottage. Bettie hastily undid the wrappings
+and squealed with delight when she saw the
+lovely little handkerchief, bordered delicately with
+lace, that Miss Blossom herself had made for her.
+There was a daintily embroidered "B" in the corner
+to make it Bettie's very own.</p>
+
+<p>Marjory happened upon Jean's note peeping out
+from under a book on the parlor table. It said: "Dear
+Jean: Don't you think it's time for you to look at the
+kitchen clock?"</p>
+
+<p>Of course everybody rushed to the kitchen to see
+Jean take from inside the case of the tickless clock a<span class="pagenum">[86]</span>
+lovely handkerchief just like Bettie's except that it
+was marked with "J."</p>
+
+<p>Marjory's note, which she presently found growing
+on the crimson petunia, sent her flying to the grindless
+coffee-mill, where she too found a similar gift.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mabel, who was now fairly cheerful,
+"I wonder if she forgot all about <i>me</i>."</p>
+
+<p>For several anxious moments the girls searched
+eagerly in Mabel's behalf but no note was visible.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't think where it could be," said housewifely
+Jean, stooping to pick up a bit of string from the
+dining-room rug, and winding it into a little ball.
+"I've looked in every room and&mdash;Why! what a long
+string! I wonder where it's all coming from."</p>
+
+<p>"Under the rug," said Marjory, making a dive for
+the bit of paper that dangled from the end of the
+string. "Here's your note, Mabel."</p>
+
+<p>"I think," Miss Blossom had written, "that there
+must be a mouse in the pantry mousetrap by this
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!" shouted Mabel, a moment later. "A lovely
+lace-edged mouse with an 'M' on it&mdash;no, it's 'M B'&mdash;a
+really truly monogram, the very first monogram I
+ever had."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, so it is," said Marjory. "I suppose she did
+that so we could tell them apart, because if she'd put<span class="pagenum">[87]</span>
+M on both of them we wouldn't have known which
+was which."</p>
+
+<p>"Why," cried Jean, "it's nearly an hour since the
+train left. Wasn't it sweet of her to think of keeping
+us interested so we shouldn't be quite so lonesome?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Bettie, "it was even nicer than our
+lovely presents, but it was just like her."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear," said Mabel, again on the verge of tears,
+"I wish she might have stayed forever. What's the
+use of getting lovely new friends if you have to go
+and lose them the very next minute? She was just
+the nicest grown-up little girl there ever was, and
+I'll never see&mdash;see her any&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Look out, Mabel," warned Marjory, "if you cry on
+that handkerchief you'll spoil that monogram. Miss
+Blossom didn't intend these for crying-handkerchiefs&mdash;one
+good-sized tear would soak them."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Blossom was not the only friend the girls were
+fated to lose that week. Grandma Pike, as everybody
+called the pleasant little old lady, was their next-door
+neighbor on the west side, and the cottagers were
+very fond of her. No one dreamed that Mrs. Pike
+would ever think of going to another town to live;
+but about ten days before Miss Blossom departed, the
+cheery old lady had quite taken everybody's breath
+away by announcing that she was going west, just as<span class="pagenum">[88]</span>
+soon as she could get her things packed, to live with
+her married daughter.</p>
+
+<p>When the girls heard that Grandma Pike was going
+away they were very much surprised and not at all
+pleased at the idea of losing one of their most delightful
+neighbors. At Miss Blossom's suggestion, they
+had spent several evenings working on a parting gift
+for their elderly friend. The gift, a wonderful linen
+traveling case with places in it to carry everything a
+traveler would be likely to need, was finished at last&mdash;with
+so many persons working on it, it was hard to
+keep all the pieces together&mdash;and the girls carried it
+to Grandma Pike, who seemed very much pleased.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," said the delighted old lady, unrolling
+the parcel, "if you haven't gone and made me a grand
+slipper-bag! I'll think of you, now, every time I put
+on my slippers."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," protested Jean. "It's a traveling case with
+places in it for 'most everything <i>but</i> slippers."</p>
+
+<p>"We all sewed on it," explained Mabel. "Those
+little bits of stitches that you can't see at all are Bettie's.
+Jean did all this feather-stitching, and Marjory
+hemmed all the binding. Miss Blossom basted it together
+so it wouldn't be crooked."</p>
+
+<p>"What did <i>you</i> do, Mabel?" asked Grandma Pike,
+smiling over her spectacles.<span class="pagenum">[89]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I took out the basting threads and embroidered
+these letters on the pockets."</p>
+
+<p>"What does this 'P' stand for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pins," said Mabel. "You see it was sort of an accident.
+I started to embroider the word soap on this
+little pocket, but when I got the S O A done, there
+wasn't any room left for the P, so I just put it on the
+<i>next</i> pocket. I knew that if I explained that it was the
+end of 'Soap' and the beginning of 'Pins' you'd remember
+not to get your pins and soap mixed up."</p>
+
+<p>During the lonely days immediately following Miss
+Blossom's departure, Mrs. Bartholomew Crane proved
+a great solace. The girls had somewhat neglected her
+during the preceding busy weeks; but with Miss
+Blossom gone, the cottagers became conscious of an
+aching void that new wall paper and lace handkerchiefs
+and a bank account could not quite fill; so
+presently they resumed their former habit of trotting
+across the street many times a day to visit good-natured
+Mrs. Crane.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Crane's house was very small and looked rather
+gloomy from the outside because the paint had long
+ago peeled off and the weatherbeaten boards had
+grown black with age; but inside it was cheerfulness
+personified. First, there was Mrs. Crane herself, fairly
+radiating comfort. Then there was a bright rag carpet
+on the floor, a glowing red cloth on the little table,<span class="pagenum">[90]</span>
+a lively yellow canary named Dicksy in one window,
+and a gorgeous red-and-crimson but very bad-tempered
+parrot in the other. There were only three
+rooms downstairs and two bed-chambers upstairs.
+Mrs. Crane's own room opened off the little parlor,
+and visitors could see the high feather bed always as
+smooth and rounded on top as one of Mrs. Crane's
+big loaves of light bread. The privileged girls were
+never tired of examining the good woman's patchwork
+quilts, made many years ago of minute, quaint,
+old-fashioned scraps of calico.</p>
+
+<p>Even the garden seemed to differ from other gardens,
+for every inch of it except the patch of green
+grass under the solitary cherry tree was given over to
+flowers, many of them as quaint and old-fashioned as
+the bits of calico in the quilts, and to vegetables that
+ripened a week earlier for Mrs. Crane than similar
+varieties did for anyone else. Yet the garden was so
+little, and the variety so great, that Mrs. Crane never
+had enough of any one thing to sell. She owned her
+little home, but very little else. The two upstairs
+rooms were rented to lodgers, and she knitted stockings
+and mittens to sell because she could knit without
+using her eyes, which, like so many soft, bright,
+black eyes, were far from strong; but the little income
+so gained was barely enough to keep stout, warm-hearted,
+overgenerous Mrs. Crane supplied with food<span class="pagenum">[91]</span>
+and fuel. The neighbors often wondered what would
+become of the good, lonely woman if she lost her
+lodgers, if her eyes failed completely, or if she should
+fall ill. Everybody agreed that Mrs. Crane should
+have been a wealthy woman instead of a poor one,
+because she would undoubtedly have done so much
+good with her money. Mabel had heard her father
+say that there was a good-sized mortgage on the
+place, and Dr. Bennett had instantly added: "Now,
+don't you say anything about that, Mabel." But ever
+after that, Mabel had kept her eyes open during her
+visits to Mrs. Crane, hoping to get a glimpse of the
+dreadful large-sized thing that was not to be mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>On one occasion she thought she saw light. Mrs.
+Crane had expressed a fear that a wandering polecat
+had made a home under her woodshed.</p>
+
+<p>"Is mortgage another name for polecat?" Mabel
+had asked a little later.</p>
+
+<p>"No," imaginative Jean had replied. "A mortgage
+is more like a great, lean, hungry, gray wolf waiting
+just around the corner to eat you up. Don't ever use
+the word before Mrs. Crane; she has one."</p>
+
+<p>"Where does she keep it?" demanded Mabel, agog
+with interest.</p>
+
+<p>"I promised not to talk about it," said Jean, "and
+I won't."<span class="pagenum">[92]</span></p>
+
+<p>Miss Blossom had been gone only two days when
+something happened to Mrs. Crane. It was none of
+the things that the neighbors had expected to happen,
+but for a little while it looked almost as serious.
+Bettie, running across the street right after breakfast
+one morning, with a bunch of fresh chickweed for
+the yellow canary and a cracker for cross Polly, found
+Mrs. Crane, usually the most cheerful person imaginable,
+sitting in her kitchen with a swollen, crimson
+foot in a pail of lukewarm water, and groaning dismally.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mrs. Crane!" cried surprised Bettie. "What in
+the world is the matter? Are&mdash;are you coming down
+with anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've already come," moaned Mrs. Crane, grimly.
+"I was out in my back yard in my thin old slippers
+early this morning putting hellebore on my currant
+bushes, and I stepped down hard on the teeth of the
+rake that I'd dropped on the grass. There's two great
+holes in my foot. How I'm ever going to do things I
+don't know, for 'twas all I could do to crawl into the
+house on my hands and knees."</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't there something I can do for you?" asked
+Bettie, sympathetically.</p>
+
+<p>"Could you get a stick of wood from the shed and
+make me a cup of tea? Maybe I'd feel braver if I
+wasn't so empty."<span class="pagenum">[93]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Of course I could," said Bettie, cheerily.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you what it is," confided Mrs. Crane. "It's
+real nice and independent living all alone as long as
+you're strong and well, but just the minute anything
+happens, there you are like a Robinson Crusoe, cast
+away on a desert isle. I began to think nobody would
+<i>ever</i> come."</p>
+
+<p>"Can't I do something more for you?" asked Bettie,
+poking scraps of paper under the kettle to bring it to
+a boil. "Don't you want Dr. Bennett to look at your
+foot? Hadn't I better get him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, do," said Mrs. Crane, "and then come back.
+I can't bear to think of staying here alone."</p>
+
+<p>For the next four days there was a deep depression
+in the middle of Mrs. Crane's puffy feather bed, for
+the injured foot was badly swollen and Mrs. Crane
+was far too heavy to go hopping about on the other
+one. At first, her usually hopeful countenance wore a
+strained, anxious expression, quite pathetic to see.</p>
+
+<p>"Now don't you worry one bit," said comforting
+little Bettie. "We'll take turns staying with you; we'll
+feed Polly and Dicksy, and I believe every friend you
+have is going to offer to make broth. Mother's making
+some this minute."</p>
+
+<p>"But there's the lodgers," groaned Mrs. Crane,
+"both as particular as a pair of old maids in a glass
+case. Mr. Barlow wants his bedclothes tucked in all<span class="pagenum">[94]</span>
+around so tight that a body'd think he was afraid of
+rolling out of bed nights, and Mr. Bailey won't have
+his tucked in at all&mdash;says he likes 'em 'floating round
+loose and airy.' Do you suppose you girls can make
+those two beds and not get those two lodgers mixed
+up? I declare, I'm so absent-minded myself that I've
+had to climb those narrow stairs many a day to make
+sure I'd done it right."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be afraid," said Jean, who had joined Bettie.
+"Marjory's Aunty Jane has taught her to make beds
+beautifully, and I have a good memory. Between us
+we'll manage splendidly."</p>
+
+<p>"But there's my garden," mourned the usually busy
+woman, who found it hard to lie still with folded
+hands in a world that seemed to be constantly needing
+her. "Dear me! I don't see how I'm going to
+spare myself for a whole week just when everything
+is growing so fast."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll tend to the garden, too," promised Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed we will," echoed Mabel. "We'll water
+everything and weed&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, you won't," said Mrs. Crane, quickly. "You
+can do all the watering you like, but if I catch any
+of you weeding, there'll be trouble."</p>
+
+<p>The young cottagers were even better than their
+promises, for they took excellent care of Mrs. Crane,
+the lodgers, the parrot, the canary, and the garden,<span class="pagenum">[95]</span>
+until the injured foot was well again; but while doing
+all this they learned something that distressed them
+very much, indeed. Of course they had always known
+in a general way that their friend was far from being
+wealthy, but they had not guessed how touchingly
+poor she really was. But now they saw that her cupboard
+was very scantily filled, that her clothing was
+very much patched and mended, her shoes distressingly
+worn out, and that even her dish-towels were
+neatly darned.</p>
+
+<p>"But we won't talk about it to people," said fine-minded
+Jean. "Perhaps she wouldn't like to have
+everybody know."</p>
+
+<p>Even Jean, however, did not guess what a comfort
+proud Mrs. Crane had found it to have her warm-hearted
+little friends stand between her poverty and
+the sometimes-too-prying eyes of a grown-up world.</p>
+
+<p>Unobservant though they had seemed, the girls did
+not forget about the Mother-Hubbardlike state of
+Mrs. Crane's cupboard. After that one of their finest
+castles in Spain always had Mrs. Crane, who would
+have made such a delightful mother and who had
+never had any children, enthroned as its gracious
+mistress. When they had time to think about it at all,
+it always grieved them to think of their generous-natured,
+no-longer-young friend dreading a poverty-stricken,
+loveless, and perhaps homeless old age; for<span class="pagenum">[96]</span>
+this, they had discovered, was precisely what Mrs.
+Crane was doing.</p>
+
+<p>"If she were a little, thin, active old lady, with bobbing
+white curls like Grandma Pike," said Jean, "lots
+of people would have a corner for her; but poor
+Mrs. Crane takes up so much room and is so heavy
+and slow that she's going to be hard to take care of
+when she gets old. Oh, <i>why</i> couldn't she have had
+just one strong, kind son to take care of her?"</p>
+
+<p>"When I'm married," offered Mabel, generously,
+"I'll take her to live with me. I won't <i>have</i> any husband
+if he doesn't promise to take Mrs. Crane, too."</p>
+
+<p>"You shan't have her," declared Jean. "I want her
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>"She's already promised to me," said Bettie, triumphantly.
+"We're going to keep house together
+some place, and I'm going to be an old-maid kindergarten
+teacher."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think that's fair, Bettie Tucker," said Marjory,
+earnestly. "I don't see how my children are to
+have any grandmother if she doesn't live with <i>me</i>.
+Imagine the poor little things with Aunty Jane for a
+grandmother!"</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[97]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i105.jpg" width="400" height="370" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_10">CHAPTER 10</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">The Milligans</p>
+
+<p>To the moment of Grandma Pike's departure, all
+their neighbors had been so pleasant that the girls
+were deceived into thinking that neighbors were never
+anything <i>but</i> pleasant. Although they felt not the
+slightest misgiving as to their future neighbors, they
+had hated to lose dear old Grandma Pike, who had
+always been as good to them as if she had really been<span class="pagenum">[98]</span>
+their grandmother, and whose parting gifts&mdash;sundry
+odds and ends of dishes, old magazines, and broken
+parcels of provisions&mdash;gave them occupation for many
+delightful days. In spite of the lasting pleasure of this
+unexpected donation, however, they could not help
+feeling that, with Mr. Black away, Miss Blossom gone,
+Mrs. Pike living in another town, and only disabled
+Mrs. Crane left, they were losing friends with alarming
+rapidity. Grief for the departed, however, did not
+prevent their taking an active interest in the persons
+who were to occupy the house next door, which Mrs.
+Pike's departure had left vacant.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," said Marjory, pulling the curtain back
+to get a better view of the empty house, "what the
+new people will be like. It's exciting, isn't it, to have
+something happening in this quiet neighborhood?
+What did Grandma Pike say the name was?"</p>
+
+<p>"Milligan," replied Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"Kind of nice name, isn't it?" asked Jean.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," agreed Mabel, brightening suddenly. "I
+made up a long, long rhyme about it last night before
+I went to sleep. Want to hear it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course."</p>
+
+<p>"This one really rhymes," explained Mabel, importantly.
+Her verses sometimes lacked that desirable
+quality, so when they did rhyme Mabel always liked
+to mention it. "Here it is:<span class="pagenum">[99]</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"As soon as a man named Milligan<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Got well he always fell ill again&mdash;ill again&mdash;ill&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Dear me, I can't remember how it went. There was a
+lot more, but I've forgotten the rest."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a great pity," said Marjory, drily, "that you
+didn't forget <i>all</i> of it, because if there's really a Mr.
+Milligan, and I ever see him, I'll think of that rhyme
+and I won't be able to keep my face straight."</p>
+
+<p>"We must be very polite to the Milligans," said considerate
+Bettie, "and call on them as soon as they
+come. Mother always calls on new people; she says it
+makes folks feel more comfortable to be welcomed
+into the neighborhood."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Crane does it, too. We're the nearest, perhaps
+we ought to be the first."</p>
+
+<p>"I think," suggested Jean thoughtfully, "we'd better
+wait until they're nicely settled; they might not like
+visitors too soon. You know <i>we</i> didn't."</p>
+
+<p>"They're going to move in today," said Mabel.
+"Goodness! I wish they'd hurry and come; I'm so
+excited that I keep dusting the same shelf over and
+over again. I'm just wild to see them!"</p>
+
+<p>It was sweeping-day at the cottage when the Milligans'
+furniture began to arrive, but it looked very
+much as if the sweeping would last for at least <i>two</i>
+days because the girls were unable to get very far
+away from the windows that faced west. These were<span class="pagenum">[100]</span>
+the bedroom windows, and, as there were only two
+of them, there were usually two heads at each window.</p>
+
+<p>"There comes the first load," announced Marjory,
+at last. "There's a high-chair on the very top, so there
+must be a baby."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm so glad," said Bettie. "I just love a baby."</p>
+
+<p>Two men unpacked the Milligans' furniture in the
+Milligans' front yard, and each load seemed more interesting
+than the one before it. It was such fun to
+guess what the big, clumsy parcels contained, particularly
+when the contents proved to be quite different
+from what the girls expected.</p>
+
+<p>"Somehow, I don't think they're going to be very
+nice people," said Mabel. "I b'lieve we're going to be
+disappointed in 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Mabel," objected Jean, "we don't know a
+thing about them yet."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do too. Their things&mdash;look&mdash;they don't look
+<i>ladylike</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mabel," laughed Marjory, "you're so funny."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," offered Jean, "the Milligans are poor and
+the children have spoiled things."</p>
+
+<p>"No," insisted Mabel. "They've got some of the
+newest and shiningest furniture I ever saw, but I
+b'lieve it's imitation."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mabel," laughed Jean, "I hope you won't
+watch the loads when <i>I</i> move. For a girl that's slept<span class="pagenum">[101]</span>
+for three weeks on an imitation pillow, you're pretty
+critical."</p>
+
+<p>Presently the Milligans themselves arrived. Mabel
+happened to be counting the buds on the poppy plants
+when they came.</p>
+
+<p>"Girls!" she cried, rushing into the cottage with the
+news. "They've come. I saw them all. There's a Mr.
+Milligan, a Mrs. Milligan, a girl, a boy, a baby, and
+a dog. The girl's the oldest. She's just about my size&mdash;I
+mean height&mdash;and she has straight, light hair. The
+baby walks, and none of them are so very good-looking."</p>
+
+<p>It did not take the newcomers long to discover that
+their next-door neighbors were four little girls. Mrs.
+Milligan found it out that very afternoon when she
+went to the back door to borrow tea. Bettie explained,
+very politely, that Dandelion Cottage was only a
+playhouse, and that their tea-caddy contained nothing
+but glass beads. When Mrs. Milligan returned to her
+own house, she told her own family about it.</p>
+
+<p>"You might as well run over and play with them,
+Laura," she said. "Take the baby with you, too. He's
+a dreadful nuisance under my feet. That'll be a real
+nice place for you both to play all summer."</p>
+
+<p>The girls received their visitors pleasantly; almost,
+indeed, with enthusiasm; but after a very few moments,
+they began to eye the baby with apprehension.<span class="pagenum">[102]</span>
+He refused to make friends with them but wandered
+about rather lawlessly and handled their treasures
+roughly. Laura paid no attention to him but talked to
+the girls. She seemed a bright girl and not at all bashful,
+and she used a great many slang phrases that
+sounded new and, it must be confessed, rather attractive
+to the girls.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, land, yes," she said, "we came here from Chicago
+where we had all kinds of money, and clothes
+to burn&mdash;we lived in a beautiful flat. Pa just came
+here to oblige Mr. Williams&mdash;he's going to clerk in
+Williams's store. Come over and see me&mdash;we'll be
+real friendly and have lots of good times together&mdash;I
+can put you up to lots of dodges. Say, this is a dandy
+place to play in&mdash;I'm coming over often."</p>
+
+<p>Jean looked in silence at Bettie, Bettie at Mabel, and
+Mabel at Marjory. Surely such an outburst of cordiality
+deserved a fitting response, but no one seemed to
+be able to make it.</p>
+
+<p>"Do," said Jean, finally, but rather feebly, "we'd be
+pleased to have you."</p>
+
+<p>Except for a few lively but good-natured squabbles
+between Marjory, who was something of a tease, and
+Mabel, who was Marjory's favorite victim, the little
+mistresses of Dandelion Cottage had always played
+together in perfect harmony; but with the coming of
+the Milligans everything was changed.<span class="pagenum">[103]</span></p>
+
+<p>To start with, between the Milligan baby and the
+Milligan dog, the girls knew no peace. Mrs. Milligan
+was right when she said that the baby was a nuisance,
+for it would have been hard to find a more troublesome
+three-year-old. He pulled down everything he
+could reach, broke the girls' best dishes, wiped their
+precious petunia and the geraniums completely out of
+existence, and roared with a deep bass voice if anyone
+attempted to interfere with him. The dog carried
+mud into the neat little cottage, scratched up the
+garden, and growled if the girls tried to drive him out.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mabel, disconsolately, in one of the
+rare moments when the girls were alone, "I <i>could</i>
+stand the baby and the dog. But I <i>can't</i> stand Laura!"</p>
+
+<p>"Laura certainly likes to boss," said Bettie, who
+looked pale and worried. "I don't just see what we're
+going to do about it. I try to be nice to her, but I
+<i>can't</i> like her. Mother says we must be polite to her,
+but I don't believe Mother knows just what a queer
+girl she is&mdash;you see she's always as quiet as can be
+when there are grown people around."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," agreed Mabel, "her company manners are so
+much properer than mine that Mother says she wishes
+I were more like her."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Marjory, uncompromisingly, "I'm
+mighty glad you're not. Your manners aren't particularly
+good, but you haven't two sets. I think<span class="pagenum">[104]</span>
+Laura's the most disagreeable girl I ever knew. Just as
+she fools you into almost liking her, she turns around
+and scratches you."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," said Jean, "if her people were nicer&mdash;By
+the way, Mother says that after this we must keep the
+windows shut while Mr. Milligan is splitting wood in
+his back yard so we can't hear the awful things he
+says, and that if we hear Mr. and Mrs. Milligan quarreling
+again we mustn't listen."</p>
+
+<p>"Listen!" exclaimed Mabel. "We don't <i>need</i> to
+listen. Their voices keep getting louder and louder
+until it seems as if they were right in this house."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said Marjory, "it can't be pleasant for
+Laura at home, but, dear me, it isn't pleasant for <i>us</i>
+with her over here."</p>
+
+<p>Badly-brought-up Laura was certainly not a pleasant
+playmate. She wanted to lead in everything and was
+amiable only when she was having her own way. She
+was not satisfied with the way the cottage was arranged
+but rearranged it to suit herself. She told the
+girls that their garments were countrified, and laughed
+scornfully at Bettie's boyish frocks and heavy shoes.
+She ridiculed rotund Mabel for being fat, and said
+that Marjory's nose turned up and that Jean's rather
+large mouth was a good opening for a young dentist.
+Before the first week was fairly over, the four girls&mdash;who
+had lived so happily before her arrival&mdash;were<span class="pagenum">[105]</span>
+grieved, indignant, or downright angry three-fourths
+of the time.</p>
+
+<p>Laura had one habit that annoyed the girls excessively,
+although at first they had found it rather amusing.
+Later, however, owing perhaps to a certain rasping
+quality in Laura's voice, it grew very tiresome.
+She transposed the initials of their names. For instance,
+Bettie Tucker became Tettie Bucker, Jeanie Mapes
+became Meanie Japes, while Mabel became Babel
+Mennett. It was particularly distressing to have Laura
+speak familiarly in her sharp, half-scornful tones, of
+their dear, departed Miss Blossom, whose name was
+Gertrude, as Bertie Glossom. Mr. Peter Black, of
+course, became Beter Plack, and Mrs. Bartholomew
+Crane was Mrs. Cartholomew Brane, to lawless young
+Laura.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think it's exactly respectful to do that to
+grown-up people's names," protested Bettie, one day.</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh!" said Laura. "Mrs. Cartholomew Brane looks
+just like an old washtub, she's so fat&mdash;who'd be respectful
+to a washtub? There goes Toctor Ducker,
+Tettie Bucker. Huh! I'd hate to be a parson's daughter&mdash;they're
+always as poor as church mice. What did
+you say your mother's first name is?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't say and I'm not going to," returned Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, anyhow, her bonnet went out of style four<span class="pagenum">[106]</span>
+years ago. I should think the parish'd take up a subscription
+and get her a new one."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish, Laura," said exasperated Jean, another
+day, "that you wouldn't meddle with our things. This
+bedroom is mine and Bettie's, and the other one is
+Mabel's and Marjory's. We wouldn't <i>think</i> of looking
+into each other's private treasure boxes. I've seen you
+open mine half a dozen times this week. The things
+are all keepsakes and I'd rather not have them
+handled."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh! I guess I'll handle 'em if I want to. My
+mother can't keep me out of her bureau drawers, and
+I don't think you're so very much smarter."</p>
+
+<p>A day or two later, the girls of Dandelion Cottage
+were invited to a party in another portion of the town.
+The invitations were left at their own cottage door
+and the delighted girls began at once to make plans
+for the party.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's carry our new handkerchiefs," suggested Jean,
+going to her treasure box. "I believe I'll take mine
+home with me&mdash;I dreamed last night that the cottage
+was on fire and that mine got burned. Besides, I'll
+have to get dressed at home for the party and it would
+be handier to have it there."</p>
+
+<p>"Guess I will, too," said Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"Great idea," said Marjory, taking her own box
+from its shelf. "I never should have thought of anything<span class="pagenum">[107]</span>
+so bright. Let's all write to Miss Blossom and
+tell her that we carried our&mdash;Why! mine isn't in my
+box!"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither is mine," cried Mabel, who had turned
+quite pale at the discovery. "It was there this morning.
+Girls, did any of you touch our handkerchiefs?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course we didn't," said Jean. "See, here's mine
+with 'J' on it, and there are no others in my box."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not," echoed Laura.</p>
+
+<p>"Mine's here, all right," said Bettie, who had been
+struggling with her box, which opened hard. "Are you
+sure you left them in your boxes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certain sure," replied Mabel. "I saw it this morning."</p>
+
+<p>"So did I see mine," asserted Marjory. "After I'd
+shown it to Aunty Jane I brought it back to put in
+my treasure box."</p>
+
+<p>"Laura," asked Jean, "was Marjory's handkerchief
+in her box when you looked in it this morning? I
+heard the cover make that funny little clicking noise
+that it always makes, and just a minute afterward you
+came out of her room."</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I don't know," stammered Laura. "I didn't see
+it&mdash;I never touched her old box. If you say I did, I'll
+go right home and tell my mother you called me a
+thief. I'm going now, anyway."</p>
+
+<p>The girls were in the dining-room just outside of<span class="pagenum">[108]</span>
+the back bedroom door. As Laura was brushing past
+Jean, the opening of the new girl's blouse caught in
+such a fashion on the corner of the sideboard that the
+garment, which fastened in front, came unbuttoned
+from top to bottom. From its bulging front dropped
+Bettie's bead chain, various articles of doll's clothing,
+and the two missing handkerchiefs.</p>
+
+<p>"They're mine!" cried Laura, making a dive for
+the things.</p>
+
+<p>"They're not any such thing!" cried indignant
+Jean. "I made that doll's dress myself, and I know
+the lace on those handkerchiefs."</p>
+
+<p>"They're my mother's," protested Laura. "I took
+'em out of her drawer."</p>
+
+<p>"They're not," contradicted Mabel, prying Laura's
+fingers apart and forcing her to drop one of the
+crumpled handkerchiefs. "Look at that monogram&mdash;'M B'
+for Mabel Bennett."</p>
+
+<p>"It's no such thing," lied Laura, stoutly. "It stands
+for Bertha Milligan and that's my mother's name."</p>
+
+<p>"Give me that other handkerchief this instant," demanded
+Jean, giving Laura a slight shake. "If you
+don't, we'll take it away from you."</p>
+
+<p>"Take the old rag," said Laura. "My mother gives
+away better handkerchiefs than these to beggars. I just
+took 'em anyway to scare Varjory Male and Babel
+Mennett, the silly babies."<span class="pagenum">[109]</span></p>
+
+<p>After this enlightening experience, the girls never
+for a moment left their unwelcome visitor alone in
+any of the rooms of Dandelion Cottage. They stood
+her for almost a week longer, principally because
+there seemed to be no way of getting rid of her.
+Mabel, indeed, had several lively quarrels with her
+during that time, because quick-tempered Mabel, always
+strictly truthful herself, could not tolerate deceit
+in anyone else, and she had, of course, lost all faith
+in Laura.</p>
+
+<p>The end came suddenly one Friday afternoon. Miss
+Blossom had sent to the girls, by mail, a photograph
+of her own charming self, and nothing that the cottage
+contained was more precious. After one of the
+usual tiffs with Mabel, high-handed Laura spitefully
+scratched a disfiguring mustache right across the
+beautiful face, ruining the priceless treasure beyond
+repair.</p>
+
+<p>Even Laura looked slightly dismayed at the result
+of her spiteful work. The others for a moment were
+too horror-stricken for words. Then Mabel, with
+blazing eyes, sprang to her feet and flung the cottage
+door wide open.</p>
+
+<p>"You go home, Laura Milligan!" she cried. "Don't
+you ever dare to come inside this house again!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, go," cried mild Bettie, for once thoroughly
+roused. "We've tried to be nice to you and there<span class="pagenum">[110]</span>
+hasn't been a single day that you haven't been rude
+and horrid. Go home this minute. We're done with
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I won't go until I'm good and ready," retorted
+Laura, tearing the disfigured photograph in two and
+scornfully tossing the pieces into a corner. "Such a fuss
+about a skinny old maid's picture."</p>
+
+<p>"You shan't stay one instant longer!" cried indignant
+Jean, stepping determinedly behind Laura, placing
+her hands on the girl's shoulders, and making a
+sudden run for the door. "There! You're out. Don't
+you ever attempt to come in again."</p>
+
+<p>Bettie, grasping the situation and the Milligan baby
+at the same time, promptly set the boy outside. She
+had handled him with the utmost gentleness, but he
+always roared if anyone touched him, and he roared
+now.</p>
+
+<p>"Yah!" yelled Laura, "I'll tell my mother you
+pinched him&mdash;slapped him, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Sapped him, too," wailed the baby.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Jean, turning the key in the lock,
+"we'll have to keep the door locked after this. Mercy!
+I never behaved so dreadfully to anybody before and
+I hope I'll never have to again."</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[111]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i119.jpg" width="400" height="316" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_11">CHAPTER 11</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">An Embarrassing Visitor</p>
+
+<p>Up to the time of the unpleasantness with Laura, the
+girls had unlocked the cottage in the morning and had
+left it unlocked until they were ready to go home at
+night, for the girls spent all their waking hours at
+Dandelion Cottage. Bettie, indeed, had the care of the
+youngest two Tucker babies, but they were good little
+creatures and when the girls played with their dolls
+they were glad to include the two placid babies, just
+as if they too were dolls. The littlest baby, in particular,<span class="pagenum">[112]</span>
+made a remarkably comfortable plaything, for
+it was all one to him whether he slept in Jean's biggest
+doll's cradle, or in the middle of the dining-room
+table, as long as he was permitted to sleep sixteen
+hours out of the twenty-four. When he wasn't asleep,
+he sucked his thumb contentedly, crowed happily on
+one of the cottage beds, or rolled cheerfully about on
+the cottage floor. The older baby, too, obligingly
+stayed wherever the girls happened to put him. After
+this experience with the Tucker infants, the Milligan
+baby had proved a great disappointment to the girls,
+for they had hoped to use him, too, as an animated
+doll; but he had refused steadfastly to make friends
+even with Bettie, whose way with babies was something
+beautiful to see.</p>
+
+<p>The girls were all required to do their own mending,
+but they found it no hardship to do their darning
+on their own doorstep on sunny days, or around the
+dining-room table if the north wind happened to be
+blowing, for they always had so many interesting
+things to talk about.</p>
+
+<p>During the daytime, the cottage was never left entirely
+alone. It was occupied even at mealtimes because
+the four families dined and supped at different
+hours; for instance, Marjory's Aunty Jane always liked
+her tea at half-past five, but Jean's people did not dine
+until seven. Owing to the impossibility of capturing<span class="pagenum">[113]</span>
+all the boys at one time, supper at the Tucker house
+was a movable feast, so Bettie usually ate whenever
+she found it most convenient. As for Mabel, it is
+doubtful if she knew the exact hours for meals at the
+Bennett house because she was invariably late. After
+the handkerchief episode, the girls planned that one
+or another of them should always be in the cottage
+from the time that it was opened in the morning until
+it was again locked for the night. The morning after
+the later quarrel, however, the girls met by previous
+arrangement on Mabel's doorstep, went in a body to
+the cottage, and, after they were all inside, carefully
+locked the door.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll be on the safe side, anyway," said Jean.
+"Though I shouldn't think that Laura would ever
+want to come near the place again."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, she'll come fast enough," said Mabel. "She's
+cheeky enough for anything. Do you s'pose she told
+her mother about it? She said she was going to."</p>
+
+<p>"Pshaw!" said Marjory. "She was always threatening
+to tell her mother, but nothing ever came of it. If
+she'd told her mother half the things she <i>said</i> she was
+going to, she wouldn't have had time to eat or sleep."</p>
+
+<p>It was hopeless, the girls had decided, to attempt to
+mend the ruined photograph, so, at Bettie's suggestion,
+they had sorrowfully cut it into four pieces of
+equal size, which they divided between them. They<span class="pagenum">[114]</span>
+had just laid the precious fragments tenderly away in
+their treasure boxes when the doorbell rang with
+such a loud, prolonged, jangling peal that everybody
+jumped.</p>
+
+<p>"Laura!" exclaimed the four girls.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Jean, cautiously drawing back the curtain
+of the front window and peeping out. "It's Mrs.
+Milligan!"</p>
+
+<p>"Goodness!" whispered Marjory, "there's no knowing
+what Laura told her&mdash;she never <i>did</i> tell anything
+straight."</p>
+
+<p>"Let's keep still," said Mabel. "Perhaps she'll think
+there's nobody home."</p>
+
+<p>"No hope of that," said Jean. "She saw us come in.
+But, pshaw! she can't hurt us anyway."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Marjory. "What's the use of being
+afraid? <i>We</i> didn't do anything to be ashamed of.
+Aunty Jane says we should have turned Laura out the
+day she took the handkerchiefs."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not exactly afraid," said Bettie, "but I don't
+like Mrs. Milligan. Still, we'll have to let her in, I
+suppose."</p>
+
+<p>A second vigorous peal at the bell warned them that
+their visitor was getting impatient.</p>
+
+<p>"You're the biggest and the most dignified," said
+Marjory, giving Jean a shove. "<i>You</i> go."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't ask her in if you can help it," warned Bettie,<span class="pagenum">[115]</span>
+in a pleading whisper. "The doorbell sounds as if she
+didn't like us very well."</p>
+
+<p>But the visitor did not wait to be asked to come in.
+The moment Jean turned the key the door was flung
+open and Mrs. Milligan brushed past the astonished
+quartet and sailed into the parlor, where she seated
+herself bolt upright on the cozy corner.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to know," demanded Mrs. Milligan, in a
+hard, cold tone that fell unpleasantly on the cottagers'
+ears, "if you consider it ladylike for four great overgrown
+girls to pitch into one poor innocent little child
+and a helpless baby? Your conduct yesterday was
+simply <i>outrageous</i>. You might have injured those children
+for life, or even broken the baby's back."</p>
+
+<p>"Broken the baby's back!" gasped Bettie, in honest
+amazement. "Why, I simply lifted him with my two
+hands and set him just outside the door. I never was
+rough with <i>any</i> baby in all my life!"</p>
+
+<p>"I happen to know, on excellent authority," said
+Mrs. Milligan, "that you slapped both of those helpless
+children and threw them down the front steps.
+Laura was so excited about it that she couldn't sleep,
+and the poor baby cried half the night&mdash;we fear that
+he's injured internally."</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody <i>here</i> injured him," said Mabel. "He always
+cries all the time, anyhow."</p>
+
+<p>"We <i>did</i> put them out and for a very good reason,"<span class="pagenum">[116]</span>
+said Jean, speaking as respectfully as she could, "but
+we certainly didn't hurt either of them. I'm sorry if
+the baby isn't well, but I know it isn't our fault."</p>
+
+<p>"Laura walked down the steps," said Bettie, "and
+the baby turned over and slid down on his stomach
+the way he always does."</p>
+
+<p>"I should think that a <i>minister's</i> daughter," said
+Mrs. Milligan, with a withering glance at poor shrinking
+Bettie, "would scorn to tell such lies."</p>
+
+<p>Bettie, who had never before been accused of untruthfulness,
+looked the picture of conscious guilt; a
+tide of crimson flooded her cheeks and she fingered
+the buttons on her blouse nervously. She was too
+dumbfounded to speak a word in her own defense.
+Mabel, however, was only too ready.</p>
+
+<p>"Bettie never told a lie in her life," cried the indignant
+little girl. "It was your own Laura that told
+stories if anybody did&mdash;and I guess somebody did, all
+right. Laura <i>never</i> tells the truth; she doesn't know
+how to."</p>
+
+<p>"I have implicit confidence in Laura," returned
+Mrs. Milligan, frowning at Mabel. "I believe every
+word she says."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," retorted dauntless Mabel, "that's more than
+the rest of us do. We kept count one day and she told
+seventy-two fibs that we <i>know</i> of."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mabel, do hush," pleaded scandalized Bettie.<span class="pagenum">[117]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Hush nothing," said Mabel, not to be deterred.
+"I'm only telling the truth. Laura took our handkerchiefs
+and then fibbed about it, and we've missed a
+dozen things since that she probably carried off and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mabel, Mabel!" warned Jean, pressing her hand
+over Mabel's too reckless lips. "Don't you know that
+we decided not to say a word about those other
+things? They didn't amount to anything, and we'd
+rather have peace than to make a fuss about them."</p>
+
+<p>"I can see very plainly," said Mrs. Milligan, with
+cold disapproval, "that you're not at all the proper
+sort of children for my little Laura to play with. I
+forbid you to speak to her again; I don't care to have
+her associate with you. I can believe all she says about
+you, for I've never been treated so rudely in my life."</p>
+
+<p>"Apologize, Mabel," whispered Jean, whose arm
+was still about the younger girl's neck.</p>
+
+<p>"If I was rude," said candid Mabel, "I beg your
+pardon. I didn't <i>mean</i> to be impolite, but every word
+I said about Laura was true."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not accept your apology," said Mrs. Milligan,
+rising to depart, "until you've sent a written
+apology to Laura and have retracted everything you've
+said about her, besides."</p>
+
+<p>"It'll never be accepted then," said quick-tempered
+Mabel, "for we haven't done anything to apologize
+for."<span class="pagenum">[118]</span></p>
+
+<p>"No, Mrs. Milligan," said Jean, in her even, pleasant
+voice. "No apology to Laura can ever come from us.
+We stood her just as long as we could, and then we
+turned her out just as kindly as anyone could have
+done it. I told Mother all about it last night and she
+agreed that there wasn't anything else we <i>could</i> have
+done."</p>
+
+<p>"So did Mamma," said Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"So did Aunty Jane."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mrs. Milligan, pausing on the porch,
+"I'd thank you young gossips to keep your tongues
+and your hands off my children in the future."</p>
+
+<p>Jean closed the door and the four girls looked at
+one another in silence. None of their own relatives
+were at all like Mrs. Milligan and they didn't know
+just what to make of their unpleasant experience. At
+last, Marjory gave a long sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said she, "I came awfully near telling her
+when she forbade our playing with Laura that my
+Aunty Jane has forbidden <i>me</i> to even speak to her
+poor abused Laura."</p>
+
+<p>"As for me," said Mabel, with lofty scorn, "I don't
+<i>need</i> to be forbidden."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, girls," said Jean, "I'm sorry it had to
+happen, but I'm glad the matter's ended. Let's not
+talk about it any more. Let's have one of our own<span class="pagenum">[119]</span>
+good old happy days&mdash;the kind we had before Laura
+came."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you what we'll do," said Bettie. "We'll
+each write out a bill of fare for Mr. Black's dinner
+party, and we'll see how many different things we can
+think of. In that way, we'll be sure not to forget anything."</p>
+
+<p>"But the Milligans," breathed Marjory, promptly
+seeing through Bettie's tactful scheme.</p>
+
+<p>The Milligan matter, however, was not by any means
+ended. It was true that the girls paid no further attention
+to Laura, but this did not deter that rather vindictive
+young person from annoying the little cottagers
+in every way that she possibly could, although she was
+afraid to work openly.</p>
+
+<p>As Laura knew, the girls took great pride in their
+little garden. Bettie's good-natured big brother Rob
+had offered to take care of their tiny lawn, and he
+kept it smooth and even. The round pansy bed daily
+yielded handfuls of great purple, white, or golden
+blossoms; the thrifty nasturtiums were beginning to
+bloom with creditable freedom; and many of the different,
+prettily foliaged little plants in the long bed
+near the Milligans' fence were opening their first
+curious, many-colored flowers.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the vegetables were positively getting radishes
+and carrots on their roots, as Bettie put it. The<span class="pagenum">[120]</span>
+pride of the vegetable garden, however, was a huge,
+rampant vine that threatened to take possession of the
+entire yard. There was just the one plant; no one knew
+where the seed came from or how it had managed to
+get itself planted, but there it was, close beside the
+back fence. For want of a better name, the girls called
+it "The Accident," and they expected wonderful
+things from it when the great yellow trumpet-shaped
+flowers should give place to fruit, although they didn't
+know in the least what kind of crop to look for. But
+this made it all the more delightful.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps it'll be pumpkins," said Jean. "I guess I'd
+better hunt up a recipe for pumpkin pie, so's to be
+ready when the time comes."</p>
+
+<p>"Or those funny, pale green squashes that are scalloped
+all around the edge like a dish," said Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"Or cucumbers," said Bettie. "I took Mrs. Crane a
+leaf, one day, and she said it <i>might</i> be cucumbers."</p>
+
+<p>"Or watermelons," said Mabel. "Um-m! wouldn't it
+be grand if it should happen to be watermelons?"</p>
+
+<p>"What I'm wondering is," said Jean, "whether
+there's any danger of the vine's going around the
+house and taking possession of the front yard, too. I
+could almost believe that this was a seedling of Jack's
+beanstalk except that it runs on the ground instead
+of up."</p>
+
+<p>"If it tries to go around the corner," laughed Bettie,<span class="pagenum">[121]</span>
+"we'll train it up the back of the house. Wouldn't it
+be fun to have pumpkins, or squashes, or cucumbers,
+or melons, or maybe all of them at once, growing on
+our roof?"</p>
+
+<p>The day after Mrs. Milligan's visit, Laura, who was
+not invited to the party, and who found time heavy
+on her hands, watched the girls, after stopping for
+Marjory, set out in their pretty summer dresses to
+spend the afternoon at a young friend's house. Laura
+gazed after them enviously. There was no reason why
+she should have been invited, for she had never met
+the little girl who was giving the party, but she didn't
+think of that. Instead, she foolishly laid the unintentional
+slight at the little cottagers' door.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Milligan was sewing on the doorstep and had
+given Laura a dish-towel to hem. Saying something
+about hunting for a thimble, Laura went to the
+kitchen, took the bread-knife from the table drawer,
+stole quietly out of the back door, and slipped between
+the bars of the back fence. Reaching the splendid vine
+that the girls loved so dearly, she parted the huge,
+rough leaves until she found the spot where the vine
+started from the ground. First looking about cautiously
+to make certain that no one was in sight,
+spiteful Laura drew the knife back and forth across
+the thick stem until, with a sudden, sharp crack, the
+sturdy vine parted from its root.<span class="pagenum">[122]</span></p>
+
+<p>Two minutes later, Laura, looking the picture of
+propriety, sat on the Milligans' doorstep hemming her
+dish-towel.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, when the girls made their next daily
+excursion about their garden they were almost broken-hearted
+at finding their beloved vine flat on the
+ground, all withered and dead.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," mourned Marjory, "now we'll never know
+<i>what</i> 'The Accident' was going to bear, pumpkins or
+squashes or&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Mabel, who was blinking hard to keep
+the tears back, "that's the hardest part of it, it was cut
+off in its p-prime&mdash;Oh, dear, I guess I'm g-going to
+cry."</p>
+
+<p>"What <i>could</i> have done it?" asked Bettie, who was
+not far from following Mabel's example. "Has anyone
+stepped on it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps a potato bug ate it off," suggested Jean.</p>
+
+<p>"A two-legged potato bug, I guess," said Marjory,
+who had been examining the ground carefully. "See,
+here are small sharp heel prints close to the root."</p>
+
+<p>"Whose handkerchief is this?" asked Mabel, picking
+up a small tightly crumpled ball and unrolling it
+gingerly. "There's a name on it but my eyes are so
+teary I can't make it out."</p>
+
+<p>"It looks like Milligan," said Bettie, turning it over,
+"but we can't tell how long it's been here."<span class="pagenum">[123]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Horrid as she is," said charitable Jean, "it doesn't
+seem as if even Laura would do such a mean thing.
+I can't believe it of her."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> can," said Mabel. "If <i>she</i> had a squash vine, or
+a pumpkin vine, I'd go straight over and spoil it this
+minute."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," said Jean, "we mustn't be horrid just because
+other folks are. We won't pay any attention to
+her&mdash;we'll just be patient."</p>
+
+<p>The girls found four small, green, egglike objects
+growing on the withered vine; they cut them off and
+these, too, were laid tenderly away in their treasure
+boxes.</p>
+
+<p>"When we get old," said Mabel, tearfully, "we'll
+take 'em out and tell our grandchildren all about 'The
+Accident.'"</p>
+
+<p>But even this prospect did not quite console the
+girls for the loss of their treasure.</p>
+
+<p>For the next few days, Laura remained contented
+with doing on the sly whatever she could to annoy
+the girls. One evening, when the girls had gone
+home for the night and while her mother was away
+from home, Laura threw a brick at one of the
+cottage windows, breaking a pane of glass. Reaching
+in through the hole, she scattered handfuls of sand on
+the clean floor that the girls had scrubbed that morning.<span class="pagenum">[124]</span>
+Another night she emptied a basketful of potato
+parings on their neat front porch and daubed molasses
+on their doorknob&mdash;mean little tricks prompted by a
+mean little nature.</p>
+
+<p>It wasn't much fun, however, to annoy persons who
+refused to show any sign of being annoyed, and Laura
+presently changed her tactics. Taking a large bone
+from the pantry one day, when the girls were sitting
+on their doorstep, she first showed it to Towser, the
+Milligan dog, and then threw it over the fence into
+the very middle of the pansy bed. Of course, the big
+clumsy dog bounded over the low fence after the
+bone, crushing many of the delicate pansy plants.
+After that at regular intervals, Laura threw sticks and
+other bones into the other beds with very much the
+same result.</p>
+
+<p>The next time Rob cut the grass he noticed the untidy
+appearance of the beds and asked the reason. The
+girls explained.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll shoot that dog if you say so," offered Rob, with
+honest indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," said Bettie, "it isn't the <i>dog's</i> fault."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Jean, "we're not sure that the dog isn't
+the least objectionable member of the Milligan family."</p>
+
+<p>"How would it do if I licked the boy?" asked Rob.</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't do at all," replied Bettie. "He works<span class="pagenum">[125]</span>
+somewhere in the daytime and never even looks in
+this direction when he's home. He's afraid of girls."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I guess you'll have to grin and bear it," said
+Rob, moving off with the lawn-mower, "since neither
+of my remedies seems to fit the case."</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[126]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i134.jpg" width="400" height="346" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_12">CHAPTER 12</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">A Lively Afternoon</p>
+
+<p>It happened one day that Mrs. Milligan was obliged
+to spend a long afternoon at the dentist's, leaving
+Laura in charge of the house. Unfortunately it happened,
+too, that this was the day when the sewing
+society met, and Mrs. Tucker had asked Bettie to
+stay home for the afternoon because the next-to-the-youngest
+baby was ill with a croupy cold and could
+not go out of doors to the cottage. Devoted Jean offered<span class="pagenum">[127]</span>
+to stay with her beloved Bettie, who gladly accepted
+the offer. Before going to Bettie's, however,
+Jean ran over to Dandelion Cottage to tell the other
+girls about it.</p>
+
+<p>"Mabel," asked Jean, a little doubtfully, "are you
+quite sure you'll be able to turn a deaf ear if Laura
+should happen to bother you? I'm half afraid to leave
+you two girls here alone."</p>
+
+<p>"You needn't be," said Mabel. "I wouldn't associate
+with Laura if I were paid for it. She isn't my kind."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Marjory, "you needn't worry a mite.
+We're going to sit on the doorstep and read a perfectly
+lovely book that Aunty Jane found at the
+library&mdash;it's one that she liked when <i>she</i> was a little
+girl. We're going to take turns reading it aloud."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that certainly ought to keep you out of mischief.
+You'll be safe enough if you stick to your book.
+If anything <i>should</i> happen, just remember that I'm
+at Bettie's."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Grandma," said Marjory, with a comical
+grimace.</p>
+
+<p>Jean laughed, ran around the house, and squeezed
+through the hole in the back fence.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later, lonely Laura, discovering the
+girls on their doorstep, amused herself by sicking the
+dog at them. Towser, however, merely growled lazily
+for a few moments and then went to sleep in the sunshine&mdash;he,<span class="pagenum">[128]</span>
+at least, cherished no particular grudge
+against the girls and probably by that time he recognized
+them as neighbors.</p>
+
+<p>Then Laura perched herself on one of the square
+posts of the dividing fence and began to sing&mdash;in her
+high, rasping, exasperating voice&mdash;a song that was
+almost too personal to be pleasant. It had taken Laura
+almost two hours to compose it, some days before, and
+fully another hour to commit it to memory, but she
+sang it now in an offhand, haphazard way that led
+the girls to suppose that she was making it up as she
+went along. It ran thus:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">There's a lanky girl named Jean,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who's altogether too lean.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Her mouth is too big,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And she wears a wig,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And her eyes are bright sea-green.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Of course it was quite impossible to read even a
+thrillingly interesting book with rude Laura making
+such a disturbance. If the girls had been wise, they
+would have gone into the house and closed the door,
+leaving Laura without an audience; but they were <i>not</i>
+wise and they <i>were</i> curious. They couldn't help waiting
+to hear what Laura was going to sing about the
+rest of them, and they did not need to wait long;
+Laura promptly obliged them with the second verse:<span class="pagenum">[129]</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">There's another named Marjory Vale,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who's about the size of a snail.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Her teeth are light blue&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">She hasn't but two&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And her hair is much too pale.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Laura had, in several instances, sacrificed truth for
+the sake of rhyme, but enough remained to injure the
+vanity of the subjects of her song very sharply. Marjory
+breathed quickly for a moment and flushed pink
+but gave no audible sign that she had heard. Laura,
+somewhat disappointed, proceeded:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">There's a silly young lass called Bet,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thinks she's ev'rybody's sweet pet.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">She slapped my brother,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Fibbed to my mother&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I know what <i>she's</i> going to get.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Mabel snorted indignantly over this injustice to
+her beloved Bettie and started to rise, but Marjory
+promptly seized her skirt and dragged her down.
+Laura, however, saw the movement and was correspondingly
+elated. It showed in her voice:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But the worst of the lot is Mabel,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She eats all the pie she's able.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She's round as a ball,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Has no waist at all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And her manners are bad at the table.<br /></span>
+<span class="pagenum">[130]</span></div></div>
+
+<p>Marjory giggled. She had no thought of being disloyal,
+but this verse was certainly a close fit.</p>
+
+<p>"You just let me go," muttered Mabel, crimson
+with resentment and struggling to break away from
+Marjory's restraining hand. "I'll push her off that
+post."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" said diplomatic Marjory, "perhaps there's
+more to the song."</p>
+
+<p>But there wasn't. Laura began at the beginning and
+sang all the verses again, giving particular emphasis
+to the ones concerning Mabel and Marjory. This, of
+course, grew decidedly monotonous; the girls got tired
+of the constant repetition of the silly song long before
+Laura did. There was something about the song, too,
+that caught and held their attention. Irresistibly attracted,
+held by an exasperating fascination, neither
+girl could help waiting for her own special verse.
+But while this was going on, Mabel, with a finger in
+the ear nearest Laura, was industriously scribbling
+something on a scrap of paper.</p>
+
+<p>As everybody knows, the poetic muse doesn't always
+work when it is most needed, and Mabel was sadly
+handicapped at that moment. She was not satisfied
+with her hasty scrawl but, in the circumstances,
+it was the best she could do. Suddenly, before Marjory
+realized what was about to happen, Mabel was shouting<span class="pagenum">[131]</span>
+back, to an air quite as objectionable as the one
+Laura was singing:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">There's a very rude girl named Laura,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whose ways fill all with horror.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She's all the things she says <i>we</i> are;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All know this to their sorrow.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Yah! yah!" retorted quick-witted Laura. "There
+isn't a rhyme in your old song. If I couldn't rhyme
+better 'n that, I'd learn how. Come over and I'll teach
+you!"</p>
+
+<p>For an instant, Mabel looked decidedly crushed&mdash;<i>no</i>
+poet likes his rhymes disparaged. Laura, noting Mabel's
+crestfallen attitude, went into gales of mocking
+laughter and when Mabel looked at Marjory for sympathy
+Marjory's face was wreathed in smiles. It was
+too much; Mabel hated to be laughed at.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>can</i> rhyme," cried Mabel, springing to her feet
+and giving vent to all her grievances at once. "My
+table manners <i>are</i> good. I'm <i>not</i> fat. I've got just as
+much waist as <i>you</i> have."</p>
+
+<p>"You've got more," shrieked delighted Laura.</p>
+
+<p>Faithless Marjory, struck by this indubitable truth,
+laughed outright.</p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;you can't make Indian-bead chains," sputtered
+Mabel, trying hard to find something crushing
+to say. "You can't make pancakes. You can't drive
+nails."<span class="pagenum">[132]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Yah," retorted Laura, who was right in her element,
+"you can't throw straight."</p>
+
+<p>"Neither can you."</p>
+
+<p>"I can! If I could find anything to throw I'd
+prove it."</p>
+
+<p>Just at this unfortunate moment, a grocery-man
+arrived at the Milligan house with a basketful of
+beautiful scarlet tomatoes. In another second, Laura,
+anxious to prove her ability, had jumped from the
+fence, seized the basket and, with unerring aim, was
+delightedly pelting her astonished enemy with the
+gorgeous fruit. Mabel caught one full in the chest,
+and as she turned to flee, another landed square in
+the middle of her light-blue gingham back; Marjory's
+shoulder stopped a third before the girls retreated to
+the house, leaving Laura, a picturesque figure on the
+high post, shouting derisively:</p>
+
+<p>"Proved it, didn't I? Ki! I proved it."</p>
+
+<p>Marjory, pleading that discretion was the better part
+of valor, begged Mabel to stay indoors; but Mabel,
+who had received, and undoubtedly deserved, the
+worst of the encounter, was for instant revenge. Rushing
+to the kitchen she seized the pan of hard little
+green apples that Grandma Pike had bequeathed the
+girls and flew with them to the porch.</p>
+
+<p>Mabel's first shot took Laura by surprise and landed
+squarely between her shoulders. Mabel was surprised,<span class="pagenum">[133]</span>
+too, because throwing straight was not one of her accomplishments.
+She hadn't hoped to do more than
+frighten her exasperating little neighbor.</p>
+
+<p>Elated by this success, Mabel threw her second
+apple, which, alas, flew wide of its mark and caught
+poor unprepared Mr. Milligan, who was coming in
+at his own gate, just under the jaw, striking in such
+a fashion that it made the astonished man suddenly
+bite his tongue.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody likes to bite his tongue. Naturally Mr. Milligan
+was indignant; indeed, he had every reason to
+be, for Mabel's conduct was disgraceful and the little
+apple was very hard. Entirely overlooking the fact
+that Laura, who had failed to notice her father's untimely
+arrival, was still vigorously pelting Mabel, who
+stood as if petrified on the cottage steps and was making
+no effort to dodge the flying scarlet fruit, Mr. Milligan
+shouted:</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, you young imps, I'll see that you're
+turned out of that cottage for this outrage. We've
+stood just about enough abuse from you. I don't intend
+to put up with any more of it."</p>
+
+<p>Then, suddenly discovering what Laura, who had
+turned around in dismay at the sound of her father's
+voice, was doing, angry Mr. Milligan dragged his suddenly
+crestfallen daughter from the fence, boxed her
+ears soundly, and carried what was left of the tomatoes<span class="pagenum">[134]</span>
+into the house; for that particular basket of fruit
+had been sent from very far south and express charges
+had swelled the price of the unseasonable dainty to a
+very considerable sum.</p>
+
+<p>Marjory, in the cottage kitchen, was alternately
+scolding and laughing at woebegone Mabel when
+Jean and Bettie, released from their charge, ran back
+to Dandelion Cottage. Mabel, crying with indignation,
+sat on the kitchen stove rubbing her eyes with a pair
+of grimy fists&mdash;Mabel's hands always gathered dust.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mabel! how <i>could</i> you!" groaned Jean, when
+Marjory had told the afternoon's story. "I'll never dare
+to leave you here again without some sensible person
+to look after you. Don't you <i>see</i> you've been almost&mdash;yes,
+quite&mdash;as bad as Laura?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care," sobbed unrepentant Mabel. "If you'd
+heard those verses&mdash;and&mdash;and Marjory <i>laughed</i> at
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Couldn't help it," giggled Marjory, who was
+perched on the corner of the kitchen table.</p>
+
+<p>"But surely," reproached gentle-mannered Jean, "it
+wasn't necessary to throw things."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess," said Mabel, suddenly sitting up very
+straight and disclosing a puffy, tear-stained countenance
+that moved Marjory to fresh giggles, "if you'd
+felt those icy cold tomatoes go plump in your eye and
+every place on your very newest dress, <i>you'd</i> have<span class="pagenum">[135]</span>
+been pretty mad, too. Look at me! I was too surprised
+to move after I'd hit Mr. Milligan&mdash;I never saw him
+coming at all&mdash;and I guess every tomato Laura threw
+hit me some place."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," confirmed Marjory, "I'll say that much for
+Laura. She can certainly throw straighter than any girl
+I ever knew&mdash;she throws just like a boy."</p>
+
+<p>Jean, still worried and disapproving, could not help
+laughing, for Laura's plump target showed only too
+good evidence of Laura's skill. Mabel's new light-blue
+gingham showed a round scarlet spot where each
+juicy missile had landed; and besides this, there were
+wide muddy circles where her tears had left highwater
+marks about each eye.</p>
+
+<p>"But, dear me," said Jean, growing sober again,
+"think how low-down and horrid it will sound when
+we tell about it at home. Suppose it should get into
+the papers! Apples and tomatoes! If boys had done it
+it would have sounded bad enough, but for <i>girls</i> to do
+such a thing! Oh, dear, I <i>do</i> wish I'd been here to
+stop it!"</p>
+
+<p>"To stop the tomatoes, you mean," said Mabel.
+"You couldn't have stopped anything else, for I just
+<i>had</i> to do something or burst. I've felt all the week
+just like something sizzling in a bottle and waiting
+to have the cork pulled! I'll <i>never</i> be able to do my<span class="pagenum">[136]</span>
+suffering in silence the way you and Bettie do. Oh,
+girls, I feel just loads better."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you may <i>feel</i> better," said irrepressible Marjory,
+"but you certainly look a lot worse. With those
+muddy rings on your face you look just like a little
+owl that isn't very wise."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear," mourned Bettie, "if Miss Blossom had
+only stayed we wouldn't have had all this trouble with
+those people."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Marjory, shrewdly, "Miss Blossom would
+probably have made Laura over into a very good imitation
+of an honest citizen. I don't think, though, that
+even Miss Blossom could make Laura anything more
+than an imitation, because&mdash;well, because she's Laura.
+It's different with Mabel&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Mabel looked up expectantly, and Marjory, who was
+in a teasing mood, continued.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said she, encouragingly, "Miss Blossom <i>might</i>
+have succeeded in making a nice, polite girl out of
+Mabel if she'd only had time&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"How much time?" demanded Mabel, with sudden
+suspicion.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, about a thousand years," replied Marjory, skipping
+prudently behind tall Jean.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, Mabel," said Bettie, who always sided
+with the oppressed, slipping a thin arm about Mabel's<span class="pagenum">[137]</span>
+plump shoulders. "We like you pretty well, anyway,
+and you've certainly had an awful time."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think," asked Mabel, with sudden concern,
+"that Mr. Milligan <i>could</i> get us turned out of
+the cottage? You know he threatened to."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Bettie. "The cottage is church property
+and no one could do anything about it with Mr. Black
+away because he's the senior warden. Father said only
+this morning that there was all sorts of church business
+waiting for him."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mabel, with a sigh of relief, "Mr.
+Black wouldn't turn us out, so we're perfectly safe.
+Guess I'll go out on the porch and sing my Milligan
+song again."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess you won't," said Jean. "There's a very
+good tub in the Bennett house and I'd advise you to
+go home and take a bath in it&mdash;you look as if you
+needed <i>two</i> baths and a shampoo. Besides, it's almost
+supper time."</p>
+
+<p>Laura's version of the story, unfortunately, differed
+materially from the truth. There was no gainsaying
+the tomatoes&mdash;Mr. Milligan had seen those with his
+own eyes; but Laura claimed that she had been compelled
+to use those expensive vegetables as a means of
+self-defense. According to Laura, whose imagination
+was as well trained as her arm, she had been the innocent
+victim of all sorts of persecution at the hands of<span class="pagenum">[138]</span>
+the four girls. They had called her a thief and had
+insulted not only her but all the other Milligans.
+Mabel, she declared, had opened hostilities that afternoon
+by throwing stones, and poor, abused Laura had
+only used the tomatoes as a last resort. The apple that
+struck Mr. Milligan was, she maintained, the very last
+of about four dozen.</p>
+
+<p>Had the Milligans not been prejudiced, they might
+easily have learned how far from the truth this assertion
+was, for the porch of Dandelion Cottage was still
+bespattered with tomatoes, whereas in the Milligan
+yard there were no traces of the recent encounter.
+This, to be sure, was no particular credit to Mabel for
+there <i>might</i> have been had Mr. Milligan delayed his
+coming by a very few minutes, since Mabel's pan still
+contained seven hard little apples and Mabel still
+longed to use them.</p>
+
+<p>The Milligans, however, <i>were</i> prejudiced. Although
+Laura was often rude and disagreeable at home, she
+was the only little girl the Milligans had; in any
+quarrel with outsiders they naturally sided with their
+own flesh and blood, and, in spite of the tomatoes,
+they did so now. In her mother Laura found a staunch
+champion.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't have those stuck-up little imps there another
+week," said Mrs. Milligan. "If you don't see
+that they're turned out, James, I will."<span class="pagenum">[139]</span></p>
+
+<p>"They stick out their tongues at me every time they
+see me," fibbed Laura, whose own tongue was the
+only one that had been used for sticking-out purposes.
+"They said Ma was no lady, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to complain of them this very night,"
+said Mrs. Milligan, with quick resentment. "I'll show
+'em whether I'm a lady or not."</p>
+
+<p>"Who'll you complain to?" asked Laura, hopefully.</p>
+
+<p>"The church warden, of course. These cottages both
+belong to the church."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Black is the girls' best friend," said Laura. "He
+wouldn't believe anything against them&mdash;besides, he's
+away."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Downing isn't," said Mr. Milligan. "I paid
+him the rent last week. We'll threaten to leave if he
+doesn't turn them out. He's a sharp businessman and
+he wouldn't lose the rent of this house for the sake of
+letting a lot of children use that cottage. I'll see him
+tomorrow."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Mrs. Milligan, "just leave the matter to
+me. <i>I'll</i> talk to Mr. Downing."</p>
+
+<p>"Suit yourself," said Mr. Milligan, glad perhaps to
+shirk a disagreeable task.</p>
+
+<p>After supper that evening, Mrs. Milligan put on her
+best hat and went to Mr. Downing's house, which was
+only about three blocks from her own. The evening
+was warm and she found Mr. and Mrs. Downing<span class="pagenum">[140]</span>
+seated on their front porch. Mrs. Milligan accepted
+their invitation to take a chair and began at once to
+explain the reason for her visit.</p>
+
+<p>The angry woman's tale lost nothing in the telling;
+indeed, it was not hard to discover how Laura came
+by her habit of exaggerating. When Mrs. Milligan
+went home half an hour later, Mr. Downing was
+convinced that the church property was in dangerous
+hands. He couldn't see what Mr. Black had been
+thinking of to allow careless, impudent children who
+played with matches, drove nails in the cottage
+plaster, and insulted innocent neighbors, to occupy
+Dandelion Cottage.</p>
+
+<p>"Somehow," said Mrs. Downing, when the visitor
+had departed, "I don't like that woman. She isn't quite
+a lady."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, my dear," said Mr. Downing. "If only
+<i>half</i> the things she hints at are true, there would be
+reason enough for closing the cottage. The place itself
+doesn't amount to much, I've been told, but a fire
+started there would damage thousands of dollars'
+worth of property. Besides, there's the rent from the
+house those people are in&mdash;we don't want to lose that,
+you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Still, there are always tenants&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Not at this time of the year. I'll look into the
+matter as soon as I can find time."<span class="pagenum">[141]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Remember," said Mrs. Downing, thinking of Mrs.
+Milligan's rasping tones, "that there are two sides to
+every story."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear," said Mr. Downing, complacently, "I
+shall listen with the strictest impartiality to both
+sides."</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[142]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i150.jpg" width="400" height="357" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_13">CHAPTER 13</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">The Junior Warden</p>
+
+<p>By nine o'clock the next morning, the girls were all
+at the cottage as usual. Mrs. Mapes had given them
+materials for a simple cake and Jean and Bettie were
+in the kitchen making it. Marjory, singing as she
+worked, was running her Aunty Jane's carpet-sweeper
+noisily over the parlor rug, while Mabel, whistling an
+accompaniment to Marjory's song, was dusting the<span class="pagenum">[143]</span>
+sideboard; at all times the cottage furniture received
+so much unnecessary dusting that it would not have
+been at all surprising if it had worn thin in spots.</p>
+
+<p>When the doorbell rang suddenly and sharply, Marjory's
+tune stopped short, high in air, and Mabel ran
+to the window.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a man," announced Mabel.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Milligan?" asked Marjory, anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"He's moved so I can't tell."</p>
+
+<p>"Try the other window," urged Marjory, impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"It doesn't look like Mr. Milligan's legs&mdash;I can't see
+the rest of him. They look neat and&mdash;and expensive."</p>
+
+<p>"Probably it's just an agent; they're kind of thick
+lately. You go to the door and tell him we're just pretend
+people, while I'm putting the sweeper out of
+sight."</p>
+
+<p>"Good morning," said Mr. Downing. "Are you&mdash;Why!
+this is a very cozy little place. I had no idea that
+it was so comfortable. May I come in?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye-es," returned Mabel, eyeing him doubtfully,
+"but I think you're probably making a mistake. You
+see, we're not really-truly people."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" said Mr. Downing, with an amused
+glance at plump Mabel. "Is it possible you're a ghost?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean," explained Mabel, "we're just children and
+this is only a playhouse, not a real one. If you have<span class="pagenum">[144]</span>
+anything to sell, or are looking for a boarding place,
+or want to take our census&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Mr. Downing, "I don't want either your
+dollars or your senses. My name is Downing and I'm
+not selling anything. I called on business. Who is the
+head of this&mdash;this ghostly corporation?"</p>
+
+<p>"It has four," said Mabel. "I'll get the rest."</p>
+
+<p>Bettie and Jean, with grown-up gingham aprons
+tied about their necks, followed Mabel to the parlor.
+Mr. Downing had seated himself in one of the chairs
+and the girls sat facing him in a bright-eyed row on
+the couch. Their countenances were so eager and
+expectant that Mr. Downing found it hard to begin.</p>
+
+<p>"I've come in," he said, "to talk over a little matter
+of business with you. I understand that you've been
+having trouble with your neighbors&mdash;exchanging compliments&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said honest Mabel, turning crimson, "it was
+apples and tomatoes. The Milligans are the most troublesome
+neighbors we've ever had."</p>
+
+<p>"So-o?" said the visitor, raising his eyebrows in
+genuine surprise. "Why, I understood that it was quite
+the other way round. I'd like to hear your version of
+the difficulty."</p>
+
+<p>Jean and Bettie, with occasional assistance from
+Marjory and much prompting from Mabel, told him
+all about it. During the recital Mr. Downing's attention<span class="pagenum">[145]</span>
+seemed to wander, for his eyes took in every detail
+of the neat sitting-room, strayed to the prettily
+papered dining-room, and even rested lingeringly upon
+the one visible corner of the dainty blue bedroom.
+Bettie had neglected to close the door between the
+kitchen and the dining-room, which proved unfortunate,
+because the tiny scrap of butter that Jean had
+left melting in a very small pan on the kitchen stove,
+got too hot and with threatening, hissing noises began
+to give forth clouds of thick, disagreeable smoke.
+Jean, the first of the girls to notice it, flew to the
+kitchen, snatched a lid from the stove, and, with a
+newspaper for a holder, swept the burning butter,
+pan and all, into the fire. Then the paper in Jean's
+hand caught fire, and for the instant before she stuffed
+it into the stove and clapped the lid into place, fierce
+red flames leaped high.</p>
+
+<p>To the visitor, prepared by Mrs. Milligan for just
+such doings, it looked for a moment as if all the rear
+end of the cottage were in flames; but Jean returned
+to her place on the couch with an air of what looked
+to Mr. Downing very much like almost criminal unconcern.
+How was Mr. Downing, who did no cooking,
+to know that paper placed on a cake-baking fire
+<i>always</i> flares up in an alarming fashion without doing
+any real harm? He didn't know, and the incident decided
+the matter he was turning over in his mind.<span class="pagenum">[146]</span>
+The girls had found it a little hard to tell their story,
+for it was plain that their visitor was using his eyes
+rather than his ears; moreover, they were not at all
+certain that he had any right to demand the facts in
+the case. When the story was finished, Mr. Downing
+looked at the row of interested faces and cleared his
+throat; but, for some reason, the words he had meant
+to speak refused to come. He hadn't supposed that the
+evicting of unsatisfactory tenants would prove such
+an unpleasant task. The tenants, all at once, seemed
+part of the house, and the man realized suddenly that
+the losing of the cottage was likely to prove a severe
+blow to the four little housekeepers. Perhaps it was
+disconcerting to see the expression of puzzled anxiety
+that had crept into Bettie's great brown eyes, into
+Jean's hazel ones, into Marjory's gray and Mabel's
+blue ones. At any rate, Mr. Downing decided to be
+well out of the way when the blow should fall; he
+realized that it would prove a trying ordeal to face all
+those young eyes filled with indignation and probably
+with tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah-hum," said Mr. Downing, rising to take his
+leave. "I'm much obliged to you young ladies. Hum&mdash;the
+number of this house is what, if you please?"</p>
+
+<p>"Number 224," said Bettie, whose mind worked
+quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"Hum," said Mr. Downing, writing it on the envelope<span class="pagenum">[147]</span>
+he had taken from his pocket, and moving
+rather abruptly toward the door, as if desirous to
+escape as speedily as possible with the knowledge he
+had gleaned. "Thank you very much. I bid you all
+good morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Now what in the world did that man want?" demanded
+Mabel, before the front door had fairly closed.
+"Do you s'pose he's some kind of a lawyer, or&mdash;" and
+Mabel turned pale at the thought&mdash;"a policeman disguised
+as a&mdash;a human being? Do you suppose the
+Milligans are going to get us arrested for just two
+apples&mdash;and&mdash;and a little poetry?"</p>
+
+<p>"More probably," suggested Jean, "he's a burglar.
+Didn't you notice the way he looked around at everything?
+I could see that he sort of lost interest after
+while&mdash;as if he had concluded that we hadn't anything
+worth stealing."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense!" said Bettie. "I don't know what he
+does for a living, but he can't be a burglar. He hasn't
+lived here very long, but he goes to our church and
+comes to our house to vestry meetings. Sometimes on
+warm Sundays when there's nobody else to do it, he
+passes the plate."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mabel, "I hope he isn't a policeman
+weekdays."</p>
+
+<p>"It's more likely," said Marjory, "that he does reporting
+for the papers. The time Aunty Jane was in<span class="pagenum">[148]</span>
+that railroad accident, a reporter came to our house
+to interview her, and he asked questions just as that
+Mr. Downing&mdash;was that his name?&mdash;did. He took
+the number of the house, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, mercy!" gasped Mabel, turning suddenly from
+white to a deep crimson. "If those green apples get
+into the paper, I'll be too ashamed to live! Oh, <i>girls</i>!
+Couldn't we stop him&mdash;couldn't we&mdash;couldn't we pay
+him something <i>not</i> to?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's probably in by now," said Marjory, teasingly.
+"They do it by telegraph, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"He <i>couldn't</i> have been a reporter," protested Mabel.
+"Reporters are always young and very active so they
+can catch lots of scoons&mdash;no, scoots."</p>
+
+<p>"Scoops," corrected Jean.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, scoops. He was kind of slow and a little bit
+bald-headed on top&mdash;I noticed it when he stooped for
+his hat."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, anyway," comforted Jean, "let's not worry
+about it. Let's rebuild our fire&mdash;of course it's out by
+now&mdash;and finish our cake."</p>
+
+<p>In spite of the cake's turning out much better than
+anyone could have expected, with so many agitated
+cooks taking turns stirring it, there was something
+wrong with the day. The girls were filled with uneasy
+forebodings and could settle down to nothing. Marjory
+felt no desire to sing, and even the cake seemed<span class="pagenum">[149]</span>
+to have lost something of its flavor. Moreover, when
+they had stood for a moment on their doorstep to see
+the new steam road-roller go puffing by, Laura had
+tossed her head triumphantly and shouted tauntingly:
+"<i>I</i> know something <i>I</i> shan't tell!" After that, the girls
+could not help wondering if Laura really did know
+something&mdash;some dreadful thing that concerned them
+vitally and was likely to burst upon them at any
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>For the first time in the history of their housekeeping,
+they could find nothing that they really wanted
+to do. During the afternoon they had several little disagreements
+with each other. Mild Jean spoke sharply
+to Marjory, and even sweet-tempered Bettie was
+drawn into a lively dispute with Mabel. Moreover, all
+three of the older girls were inclined to blame Mabel
+for her fracas with the Milligans; and the culprit,
+ashamed one moment and defiant the next, was in a
+most unhappy frame of mind. Altogether, the day was
+a failure and the four friends parted coldly at least an
+hour before the usual time.</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[150]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i158.jpg" width="400" height="290" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_14">CHAPTER 14</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">An Unexpected Letter</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, Jean, with three large bananas as
+a peace offering, was the first to arrive at Dandelion
+Cottage. Jean, a wise young person for her years, had
+decided that a little hard work would clear the atmosphere,
+so, finding no one else in the house, she made
+a fire in the stove, put on the kettle, put up the leaf
+of the kitchen table, and began to take all the dishes
+from the pantry shelves. Dishwashing in the cottage
+was always far more enjoyable than this despised occupation
+usually is elsewhere, owing to the astonishing<span class="pagenum">[151]</span>
+assortment of crockery the girls had accumulated. No
+two of the dishes&mdash;with the exception of a pair of
+plates bearing life-sized portraits of "The frog that
+would a-wooing go, whether his mother would let
+him or no"&mdash;bore the same pattern. There was a bewildering
+diversity, too, in the sizes and shapes of the
+cups and saucers, and an alarming variety in the matter
+of color. But, as the girls had declared gleefully a
+dozen times or more, it would be possible to set the
+table for seven courses when the time should come for
+Mr. Black's and Mrs. Crane's dinner party, because so
+many of the things almost matched if they didn't
+quite. Jean was thinking of this as she lifted the dishes
+from the shelf to the table, and lovingly arranged
+them in pairs, the pink sugar bowl beside the blue
+cream-pitcher, the yellow coffee cup beside the dull
+red Japanese tea cup, and the "Love-the-Giver" mug
+beside the "For my Little Friend" oatmeal bowl. She
+had just taken down the big, dusty, cracked pitcher
+that matched nothing else&mdash;which perhaps was the
+reason that it had remained high on the shelf since
+the day Mabel had used it for her lemonade&mdash;when
+the doorbell rang.</p>
+
+<p>Hastily wiping her dusty hands, Jean ran to the
+door. No one was there, but the postman was climbing
+the steps of the next house, so Jean slipped her
+fingers expectantly into the little, rusty iron letter-box.<span class="pagenum">[152]</span>
+Perhaps there was something from Miss Blossom, who
+sometimes showed that she had not forgotten her little
+landladies.</p>
+
+<p>Sure enough, there was a large white letter, not
+from Miss Blossom to be sure, but from somebody.
+To the young cottagers, letters were always joyous
+happenings; they had no debts, consequently they
+were unacquainted with bills. With this auspicious
+beginning, for of course the coming of a totally unexpected
+letter was an auspicious beginning, it was
+surely going to be a cheerful, perhaps even a delightful,
+day. Jean hummed happily as she laid the unopened
+letter on the dining-room table, for of course
+a letter somewhat oddly addressed to "The Four
+Young Ladies at 224 Fremont Street, City," could be
+opened only when all four were present. When Marjory
+and Bettie came in, they fell upon the letter and
+examined every portion of the envelope, but neither
+girl could imagine who had sent it. It was impossible
+to wait for Mabel, who was always late, so Bettie
+obligingly ran to get her. Even so there was still a
+considerable wait while Mabel laced her shoes; but
+presently Bettie returned, with Mabel, still nibbling
+very-much-buttered toast, at her heels.</p>
+
+<p>"You open it, Jean," panted Bettie. "You can read
+writing better than we can."</p>
+
+<p>"Hurry," urged Mabel, who could keep other persons<span class="pagenum">[153]</span>
+waiting much more easily than she herself could
+wait.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's a fork to open it with," said Marjory. "I
+can't find the scissors. Hurry up; maybe it's a party
+and we'll have to R. S. V. P. right away."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, goody! If it is," squealed Mabel, "I can wear
+my new tan Oxfords."</p>
+
+<p>"It's from Yours respectably&mdash;no, Yours regretfully,
+John W. Downing," announced Jean. "The man that
+was here yesterday, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Read it, read it," pleaded the others, crowding so
+close that Jean had to lift the letter above their heads
+in order to see it at all. "Do hurry up, we're crazy to
+hear it."</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"My Dear Young Ladies," read Jean in a voice that
+started bravely but grew fainter with every line. "It
+is with sincere regret that I write to inform you that
+it no longer suits the convenience of the vestrymen
+to have you occupy the church cottage on Fremont
+Street. It is to be rented as soon as a few necessary
+repairs can be made, and in the meantime you will
+oblige us greatly by moving out at once. Please deliver
+the key at your earliest convenience to me at either
+my house or this office.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours regretfully,</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">John W. Downing</span>."</p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum">[154]</span></p>
+
+<p>For as much as two minutes no one said a word.
+Jean had laid the open letter on the table. Marjory
+and Bettie with their arms tightly locked, as if both
+felt the need of support, reread the closely written
+page in silence. When they reached the end, they
+pushed it toward Mabel.</p>
+
+<p>"What does it mean in plain English?" asked
+Mabel, hoping that both her eyes and her ears had
+deceived her.</p>
+
+<p>"That somebody else is to have the cottage," said
+Jean, "and that in the meantime we're to move."</p>
+
+<p>"In the meantime!" blurted Mabel, with swift
+wrath. "I should say it <i>was</i> the meantime&mdash;the very
+meanest time anybody ever heard of. I'd just like to
+know what right 'Yours-respectably-John-W.-Downing'
+has to turn us out of our own house. I guess we paid
+our rent&mdash;I guess there's blisters on me yet&mdash;I guess
+I dug dandelions&mdash;I guess I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But here Mabel's indignation turned to grief, and
+with one of her very best howls and a torrent of tears
+she buried her face in Jean's apron.</p>
+
+<p>"Bettie," asked Jean with her arms about Mabel,
+"do you think it would do any good to ask your
+father about it? He's the minister, you know, and he
+might explain to Mr. Downing that we were promised
+the cottage for all summer."</p>
+
+<p>"Papa went away this morning and won't be home<span class="pagenum">[155]</span>
+for ten days. He has exchanged with somebody for
+the next two Sundays."</p>
+
+<p>"My pa-pa-papa's away, too," sobbed Mabel, "or
+he'd tell that vile Mr. Downing that it was all the
+Mill-ill-igans' fault. <i>They're</i> the folks that ought to
+be turned out, and I just wuh-wuh-wish they&mdash;they
+had been."</p>
+
+<p>"Why wouldn't it be a good idea," suggested Marjory,
+"for us all to go down to Mr. Downing's office
+and tell him all about it? You see, he hasn't lived here
+very long and perhaps he doesn't understand that we
+have paid our rent for all summer."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," assented Jean, "that would probably be the
+best thing to do. He won't mind having us go to the
+office because he told us to take the key there. But
+where <i>is</i> his office?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know," said Bettie. "Here's the address on the
+letter, and the dentist I go to is right near there, so I
+can find it easily."</p>
+
+<p>"Then let's start right away," cried eager Mabel,
+uncovering a disheveled head and a tear-stained countenance.
+"Don't let's lose a minute."</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy, no," said Jean, taking Mabel by the shoulders
+and pushing her before her to the blue-room
+mirror. "Do you think you can go <i>any</i> place looking
+like that? Do you think you <i>look</i> like a desirable
+tenant? We've all got to be just as clean and neat as<span class="pagenum">[156]</span>
+we can be. We've got to impress him with our&mdash;our
+ladylikeness."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll braid Mabel's hair," offered Bettie, "if Marjory
+will run around the block and get all our hats. I'm
+wearing Dick's straw one with the blue ribbon just
+now, Marjory. You'll find it some place in our front
+hall if Tommy hasn't got it on."</p>
+
+<p>"Bring mine, too," said Jean; "it's in my room."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know <i>where</i> mine is," said Mabel, "but if
+you can't find it you'd better wear your Sunday one
+and lend me your everyday one."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see myself lending you any more hats," said Marjory,
+who had, like the other girls, brightened at the
+prospect of going to Mr. Downing's. "I haven't forgotten
+how you left the last one outdoors all night in
+the rain, and how it looked afterwards, when Aunty
+Jane made me wear it to punish me for <i>my</i> carelessness.
+You'll go in your own hat or none."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mabel, meekly, "I guess you'll probably
+find it in my room under the bed, if it isn't in the
+parlor behind the sofa."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, remember," said Jean, who was retying the
+bow on Bettie's hair, "we're all to be polite, whatever
+happens, for we mustn't let Mr. Downing think we're
+anything like the Milligans. If he won't let us have
+the cottage when he knows about the rent's being
+<span class="pagenum">[157]</span>paid&mdash;though I'm almost sure he <i>will</i> let us keep it&mdash;why,
+we'll just have to give it up and not let him see
+that we care."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll be good," promised Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"You needn't be afraid of <i>me</i>," said Mabel. "I
+wouldn't humble myself to <i>speak</i> to such a despisable
+man."</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[158]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i166.jpg" width="400" height="385" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_15">CHAPTER 15</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">An Obdurate Landlord</p>
+
+<p>Twenty minutes later when Mr. Downing roared
+"<i>Come in</i>" in the terrifying voice he usually reserved
+for agents and other unexpected or unwelcome visitors,
+he was plainly very much surprised to see four pale
+girls with shocked, reproachful eyes file in and come to
+an embarrassed standstill just inside the office door,
+which closed of its own accord and left them imprisoned<span class="pagenum">[159]</span>
+with the enemy. They waited quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, good morning," said he, in a much milder
+tone, as he swung about in his revolving chair. "What
+can I do for you? Have you brought the key so
+soon?"</p>
+
+<p>"We came," said Jean, propelled suddenly forward
+by a vigorous push from the rear, "to see you about
+Dandelion Cottage. We think you've made a mistake."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" said Mr. Downing, who did not at any
+time like to be considered mistaken. "Suppose you
+explain."</p>
+
+<p>So sweet-voiced Jean explained all about digging
+the dandelions to pay the rent, about Mr. Black's giving
+them the key at the end of the week, and about
+all the lovely times they had had and were still hoping
+to have in their precious cottage before giving it
+up for the winter.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Downing, personally, did not like Mr. Black.
+He had a poor opinion of the older man's business
+ability, and perhaps a somewhat exalted opinion of
+his own. He considered Mr. Black old-fashioned and
+far too easy-going. He felt that parish affairs were
+more likely to flourish in the hands of a younger,
+shrewder, and more modern person, and he had an
+idea that he was that person. At any rate, now that
+Mr. Black was out of town, Mr. Downing was glad
+of an opportunity to display his own superior shrewdness.<span class="pagenum">[160]</span>
+He would show the vestry a thing or two, and
+incidentally increase the parish income, which as
+everybody knew stood greatly in need of increasing.
+He had no patience with slipshod methods. He was
+truly sorry when business matters compelled him to
+appear hard-hearted; but to him it seemed little short
+of absurd for a man of Mr. Black's years to waste on
+four small girls a cottage that might be bringing in a
+comfortable sum every month in the year.</p>
+
+<p>"Now that's a very pretty little story," said Mr.
+Downing, when Jean had finished. "But, you see,
+you've already had the cottage more than long enough
+to pay you for pulling those few weeds."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Few!</i>" exclaimed Mabel, in indignant protest and
+forgetting her promise of silence. "<i>Few!</i> Why, there
+were <i>billions</i> of 'em. If we'd been paid two cents a
+hundred for them, we'd all be <i>rich</i>. Mr. Black promised
+us we could have that cottage for all summer and
+our rent hasn't half perspired yet."</p>
+
+<p>"She means <i>ex</i>pired," explained Marjory, "but she's
+right for once. Mr. Black did say we could stay there
+all summer, and it isn't quite August yet, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Hum," said Mr. Downing. "Nobody said anything
+to <i>me</i> about any such arrangement, and I'm keeping
+the books. I don't know what Mr. Black could have
+been thinking of if he made any such foolish promise
+as that. Of course it's not binding. Why, that cottage<span class="pagenum">[161]</span>
+ought to be renting for ten or twelve dollars a month!"</p>
+
+<p>"But the plaster's very bad," pleaded Bettie, eagerly,
+"and the roof leaks in every room in the house but
+one, and something's the matter underneath so it's
+too cold for folks to live in during the winter. It was
+vacant for a long time before <i>we</i> had it."</p>
+
+<p>"It looked very comfortable to <i>me</i>," said Mr. Downing,
+who had lived in the town for only a few months
+and neither knew nor suspected the real condition of
+the house. "I'm afraid your arrangement with Mr.
+Black doesn't hold good. Mr. Morgan and I think it
+best to have the house vacated at once. You see, we're
+in danger of losing the rent from the next house, because
+the Milligans have threatened to move out if
+you don't."</p>
+
+<p>"If&mdash;if seven dollars and a half would do you any
+good," said Mabel, "and if you're mean enough to take
+all the money we've got in this world&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not," said Mr. Downing. "I'm only reasonable,
+and I want you to be reasonable too. You must look
+at this thing from a business standpoint. You see, the
+rent from those two houses should bring in twenty-five
+dollars a month, which isn't more than a sufficient
+return for the money invested. The taxes&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A note for you, Mr. Downing," said a boy, who
+had quietly opened the office door.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," said Mr. Downing, when he had read the<span class="pagenum">[162]</span>
+note, "this is really quite a remarkable coincidence.
+This communication is from Mr. Milligan, who has
+found a desirable tenant for the cottage he is now in,
+and wishes, himself, to occupy the cottage you are
+going to vacate. Very clever idea on Mr. Milligan's
+part. This will save him five dollars a month and is
+a most convenient arrangement all around. He wishes
+to move in at once."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Milligan!" gasped three of the astonished
+girls.</p>
+
+<p>"Those Milligans in <i>our</i> house!" cried Mabel. "Well,
+<i>isn't</i> that the worst!"</p>
+
+<p>"You see," said Mr. Downing, "it is really necessary
+for you to move at once. I think you had better begin
+without further loss of time. Good morning, good
+morning, all of you, and please believe me, I'm sorry
+about this, but it can't be helped."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope," said Mabel, summoning all her dignity
+for a parting shot, "that you'll never live long enough
+to regret this&mdash;this outrage. There are seven rolls of
+paper on the walls of that cottage that belong to us,
+and we expect to be paid for every one of them."</p>
+
+<p>"How much?" asked Mr. Downing, suppressing a
+smile, for Mabel was never more amusing than when
+she was very angry.</p>
+
+<p>"Five cents a roll&mdash;thirty-five cents altogether."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Downing gravely reached into his trousers<span class="pagenum">[163]</span>
+pocket, fished up a handful of loose change, scrupulously
+counted out three dimes and a nickel, and
+handed them to Mabel, who, with averted eyes and
+chin held unnecessarily high, accepted the price of
+the Blossom wall paper haughtily, and, following the
+others, stalked from the office.</p>
+
+<p>The unhappy girls could not trust themselves to
+talk as they hastened homeward. They held hands
+tightly, walking four abreast along the quiet street,
+and barely managed to keep the tears back and the
+rapidly swelling lumps in their little throats successfully
+swallowed until Jean's trembling fingers had
+unlocked the cottage door.</p>
+
+<p>Then, with one accord, they rushed pell-mell for the
+blue-room bed, hurled themselves upon its excelsior
+pillows, and burst into tears. Jean and Bettie cried
+silently but bitterly; Marjory wept audibly, with long,
+shuddering sobs; but Mabel simply bawled. Mabel
+always did her crying on the excellent principle that,
+if a thing were worth doing at all, it was worth doing
+well. She was doing it so well on this occasion that
+Jean, who seldom cried and whose puffed, scarlet eyelids
+contrasted oddly and rather pathetically with her
+colorless cheeks, presently sat up to remonstrate.</p>
+
+<p>"Mabel!" she said, slipping an arm about the chief
+mourner, "do you want the Milligans to hear you?
+We're on their side of the house, you know."<span class="pagenum">[164]</span></p>
+
+<p>Jean couldn't have used a better argument. Mabel
+stopped short in the middle of one of her very best
+howls, sat up, and shook her head vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I just guess I don't," said she. "I'd die first!"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought so," said Jean, with just a faint glimmer
+of a smile. "We mustn't let those people guess how
+awfully we care. Go bathe your eyes, Mabel&mdash;there
+must be a little warm water in the tea kettle."</p>
+
+<p>Then the comforter turned to Bettie, and made the
+appeal that was most likely to reach that always-ready-to-help
+young person.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Bettie dear, you've cried long enough. We
+must get to work, for we've a tremendous lot to do.
+Don't you suppose that, if we had all the things
+packed in baskets or bundles, we could get a few of
+your brothers to help us move out after dark? I just
+<i>can't</i> let those Milligans gloat over us while we go
+back and forth with things."</p>
+
+<p>Bettie's only response was a sob.</p>
+
+<p>"Where in the world can we put the things?" asked
+Marjory, sitting up suddenly and displaying a blotched
+and swollen countenance very unlike her usual fair,
+rose-tinted face. "Of course we can each take our dolls
+and books home, but our furniture&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to ask Mother if we can't store it upstairs
+in our barn. I'm sure she'll let us."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I <i>wish</i> Mr. Black were here. It doesn't seem<span class="pagenum">[165]</span>
+possible we've really got to move. There <i>must</i> be some
+way out of it. Oh, Bettie, <i>couldn't</i> we write to Mr.
+Black?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would take too-oo-oo long," sobbed Bettie, sitting
+up and mopping her eyes with the muslin window
+curtain, which she could easily reach from the
+foot of the bed. "He's way off in Washington. Oh,
+dear&mdash;oh, dear&mdash;oh, dear!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why couldn't we telegraph?" demanded Marjory,
+with whom hope died hard. "Telegrams go pretty
+fast, don't they?"</p>
+
+<p>"They cost terribly," said Bettie. "They're almost as
+expensive as express packages. Still, we might find
+out what it costs."</p>
+
+<p>"I dow the telegraph-mad," wheezed Mabel from
+the wash-basin. "I'll go hobe ad telephode hib ad
+ask what it costs&mdash;I've heard by father give hib bessages
+lots of tibes. Oh, by, by dose is all stuffed up."</p>
+
+<p>"Try a handkerchief," suggested Jean. "Go ask, if
+you want to; it won't do any harm, nor probably any
+good."</p>
+
+<p>Mabel ran home, taking care to keep her back turned
+toward the Milligan house. During her brief absence,
+the girls bathed their eyes and made sundry other futile
+attempts to do away with all outward signs of
+grief.</p>
+
+<p>"He says," cried Mabel, bursting in excitedly, "that<span class="pagenum">[166]</span>
+sixty cents is the regular price in the daytime, but it's
+forty cents for a night message. It seems kind of mean
+to wake folks up in the middle of the night just to
+save twenty cents, doesn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Bettie. "I couldn't be impolite enough to
+do that to anybody I like as well as I like Mr. Black.
+If we haven't money enough to send a daytime message,
+we mustn't send any."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we haven't," said Jean. "We've only thirty-five
+cents."</p>
+
+<p>"And we wouldn't have had that," said Mabel, "if
+I hadn't remembered that wall paper just in the nick
+of time."</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, not one of the girls thought of
+the money in the bank. Perhaps it did not occur to
+them that it would be possible to remove any portion
+of their precious seven dollars and a half without
+withdrawing it all; they knew little of business matters.
+Nor did they think of appealing to their parents
+for aid at this crisis. Indeed, they were all too dazed
+by the suddenness and tremendousness of the blow to
+think very clearly about anything. The sum needed
+seemed a large one to the girls, who habitually bought
+a cent's worth of candy at a time from the generous
+proprietor of the little corner shop. Mabel, the only
+one with an allowance, was, to her father's way of
+thinking, a hopeless little spendthrift, already deeply<span class="pagenum">[167]</span>
+plunged in debt by her unpaid fines for lateness to
+meals.</p>
+
+<p>The Tucker income did not go round even for the
+grown-ups, so of course there were few pennies for
+the Tucker children. Marjory's Aunty Jane had ideas
+of her own on the subject of spending-money for little
+girls&mdash;Marjory did not suspect that the good but
+rather austere woman made a weekly pilgrimage to
+the bank for the purpose of religiously depositing a
+small sum in her niece's name; and, if she had known
+it, Marjory would probably have been improvident
+enough to prefer spot cash in smaller amounts. Only
+that morning tender-hearted Jean had heard patient
+Mrs. Mapes lamenting because butter had gone up two
+cents a pound and because all the bills had seemed
+larger than those of the preceding month&mdash;Jean always
+took the family bills very much to heart.</p>
+
+<p>The girls sorrowfully concluded that there was nothing
+left for them to do but to obey Mr. Downing.
+They had looked forward with dread to giving up the
+cottage when winter should come, but the idea of
+losing it in midsummer was a thousand times worse.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll just have to give it up," said grieved little
+Bettie. "There's nothing else we <i>can</i> do, with Mr.
+Black away. When I go home tonight I'll write to him
+and apologize for not being able to keep our promise<span class="pagenum">[168]</span>
+about the dinner party. That's the hardest thing of all
+to give up."</p>
+
+<p>"But you don't know his address," objected Jean.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do, because Father wrote to him about some
+church business this morning, before going away, and
+gave Dick the letter to mail. Of course Dick forgot all
+about it and left it on the hall mantelpiece. It's probably
+there yet, for I'm the only person that ever remembers
+to mail Father's letters&mdash;he forgets them
+himself most of the time."</p>
+
+<p>"Now let's get to work," said Jean. "Since we have
+to move let's pretend we really want to. I've always
+thought it must be quite exciting to really truly move.
+You see, we <i>must</i> get it over before the Milligans
+guess that we've begun, and there isn't any too much
+time left. I'll begin to take down the things in the
+parlor and tie them up in the bedclothes. We'll leave
+all the curtains until the last so that no one will know
+what we're doing."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll help you," said Bettie.</p>
+
+<p>"Mabel and I might be packing the dishes," said
+Marjory. "It will be easier to do it while we have the
+table left to work on. Come along, Mabel."</p>
+
+<p>Mabel followed obediently. When the forlorn pair
+reached the kitchen, Marjory announced her intention
+of exploring the little shed for empty baskets, leaving
+Mabel to stack the cups and plates in compact piles.<span class="pagenum">[169]</span>
+Mabel, without knowing just why she did it, picked
+up her old friend, the cracked lemonade-pitcher and
+gave it a little shake. Something rattled. Mabel, always
+an inquisitive young person, thrust her fingers into the
+dusty depths to bring up a piece of money&mdash;two
+pieces&mdash;three pieces&mdash;four pieces.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," she gasped, "it's my lemonade money! Oh,
+what a lucky omen! Girls!"</p>
+
+<p>The next instant Mabel clapped a plump, dusty
+hand over her own lips to keep them from announcing
+the discovery, and then, stealthily concealing the
+twenty cents in the pocket that still contained the
+wall-paper money, she stole quickly through the cottage
+and ran to her own home.</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[170]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i178.jpg" width="400" height="336" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_16">CHAPTER 16</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">Mabel Plans a Surprise</p>
+
+<p>The girls were indignant later when they discovered
+Mabel's apparent desertion. It was precisely like Mabel,
+they said, to shirk when there was anything unpleasant
+to be done. For once, however, they were
+wronging Mabel&mdash;poor, self-sacrificing Mabel, who
+with fifty-five cents at her disposal was planning a
+beautiful surprise for her unappreciative cottage-mates.
+The girls might have known that nothing short of an<span class="pagenum">[171]</span>
+ambitious project for saving the cottage from the Milligans
+would have kept the child away when so much
+was going on. For Mabel was at that very moment
+doing what was for her the hardest kind of work; all
+alone in her own room at home she was laboriously
+composing a telegram.</p>
+
+<p>She had never sent a telegram, nor had she even
+read one. She could not consult her mother because
+Mrs. Bennett had inconsiderately gone down town to
+do her marketing. Dr. Bennett, however, was a very
+busy man and sometimes received a number of important
+messages in one day. Mabel felt that the occasion
+justified her studying several late specimens which
+she resurrected from the waste-paper basket under her
+father's desk. These, however, proved rather unsatisfactory
+models since none of them seemed to exactly
+fit the existing emergency. Most of them, indeed, were
+in cipher.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose," said Mabel, nibbling her penholder
+thoughtfully, "they make 'em short so they'll fit these
+little sheets of yellow paper, but there's lots more
+space they <i>might</i> use if they didn't leave such wide
+margins. I'll write small so I can say all I want to,
+but, dear me, I can't think of a thing to say."</p>
+
+<p>It took a long time, but the message was finished at
+last. With a deep sigh of satisfaction, Mabel folded it
+neatly and put it into an envelope which she carefully<span class="pagenum">[172]</span>
+sealed. Then, putting on her hat, and taking the telegram
+with her, she ran to Bettie's home and opened
+the door&mdash;none of the four girls were required to ring
+each other's doorbells. There, sure enough, was the
+letter waiting to be mailed to Mr. Black. Mabel, who
+had thought to bring a pencil, copied the address in
+her big, vertical handwriting, and without further ado
+ran with it to her friend, the telegraph operator, whose
+office was just around the corner. All the distances in
+the little town were short, and Mabel had frequently
+been sent to the place with messages written by her
+father, so she did not feel the need of asking permission.</p>
+
+<p>The clerk opened the envelope&mdash;Mabel considered
+this decidedly rude of him&mdash;and proceeded to read the
+message. It took him a long time. Then he looked
+from Mabel's flushed cheeks and eager eyes to the little
+collection of nickels and dimes she had placed on the
+counter. Mabel wondered why the young man chewed
+the ends of his sandy mustache so vigorously. Perhaps
+he was amused at something; she looked about the
+little office to see what it could be that pleased him so
+greatly, but there seemed to be nothing to excite mirth.
+She decided that he was either a very cheerful young
+man naturally, or else he was feeling joyful because
+the clock said that it was nearly time for luncheon.</p>
+
+<p>"It'll be all right, Miss Mabel," said he at last. "It's<span class="pagenum">[173]</span>
+a pretty good fifty-five cents' worth; but I guess Mr.
+Black won't object to that. I hope you'll always come
+to me when you have messages to send."</p>
+
+<p>"I won't if you go and read them all," said Mabel,
+at which her friend looked even more cheerful than
+he had before.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later Mabel, mumbling something
+about having had an errand to attend to, presented
+herself at the cottage. Beyond a few meekly received
+reproaches from Marjory, no one said anything about
+the unexplained absence. Indeed, they were all too
+busy and too preoccupied to care, the greater grief of
+losing the cottage having swallowed up all lesser
+concerns.</p>
+
+<p>At a less trying time the girls would have discovered
+within ten minutes that Mabel was suffering from a
+suppressed secret; but everything was changed now.
+Although Mabel fairly bristled with importance and
+gave out sundry very broad hints, no one paid the
+slightest attention. Gradually, in the stress of packing,
+the matter of the telegram faded from Mabel's short
+memory, for preparing to move proved a most exciting
+operation, and also a harrowing one. Every few moments
+somebody would say: "Our last day," and then
+the other three would fall to weeping on anything
+that happened to come handy. Of course the packing
+had stirred up considerable dust; this, mingled with<span class="pagenum">[174]</span>
+tears, added much to the forlornness of the cottagers'
+appearance when they went home at noon with their
+news.</p>
+
+<p>The parents and Aunty Jane said it was a shame,
+but all agreed that there was nothing to be done. All
+were sorry to have the girls deprived of the cottage,
+for the mothers had certainly found it a relief to have
+their little daughters' leisure hours so safely and happily
+occupied. Mabel's mother was especially sorry.</p>
+
+<p>Never was moving more melancholy nor house
+more forlorn when the moving, done after dark with
+great caution, and mostly through the dining-room
+window on the side of the house farthest from the
+Milligans, was finally accomplished. The Tucker boys
+had been only too delighted to help. By bedtime the
+cottage was empty of everything but the curtains on
+the Milligan side of the house. An hour later the tired
+girls were asleep; but under each pillow there was a
+handkerchief rolled in a tight, grimy little ball and
+soaked with tears.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning, the girls returned for a last look,
+and for the remaining curtains. Dandelion Cottage,
+stripped of its furniture and without its pictures,
+showed its age and all its infirmities. Great patches of
+plaster and wall paper were missing, for the gay posters
+had covered a multitude of defects. The indignant
+Tucker boys had disobeyed Bettie and had removed<span class="pagenum">[175]</span>
+not only the tin they had put on the leaking roof, but
+the steps they had built at the back door, the drain
+they had found it necessary to place under the kitchen
+sink, and the bricks with which they had propped the
+tottering chimneys.</p>
+
+<p>Before the day was over, the tenants whom the Milligans
+had found for their own house were clamoring
+to move in, so the Milligans took possession of the
+cottage late that afternoon, getting the key from Mr.
+Downing, into whose keeping the girls had silently
+delivered it that morning. To do Mr. Downing justice,
+nothing had ever hurt him quite as much as did
+the dignified silence of the three pale girls who waited
+for a moment in the doorway, while equally pallid
+Jean went quietly forward to lay the key on his desk.
+He realized suddenly that not one of them could have
+spoken a word without bursting into tears; and for
+the rest of that day he hated himself most heartily.</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[176]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i184.jpg" width="400" height="335" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_17">CHAPTER 17</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">Several Surprises Take Effect</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Black opened the door of his hotel apartment in
+Washington one sultry noon in response to a vigorous,
+prolonged rapping from without. The bellboy handed
+him a telegram. When Mr. Black had read the long
+message he smiled and frowned, but cheerfully paid
+the three dollars and forty-one cents additional
+charges that the messenger demanded.</p>
+
+<p>It was Mabel's message; the clerk had transmitted it<span class="pagenum">[177]</span>
+faithfully, even to the two misspelled words that had
+proved too much for the excited little writer. If the
+receiving clerk had not considerately tucked in a few
+periods for the sake of clearness, there would have
+been no punctuation marks, because, as everybody
+knows, very few telegrams <i>are</i> punctuated; but Mabel,
+of course, had not taken that into consideration. It
+was quite the longest message and certainly the most
+amusing one that Mr. Black had ever received. It read:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Black</span>,</p>
+
+<p>"We are well but terribly unhappy for the worst
+has happened. Cant you come to the reskew as they
+say in books for we are really in great trouble because
+the Milligans a very unpolite and untruthful family
+next door want dandelion cottage for themselves the
+pigs and Mr. Downing says we must move out at
+once and return the key our own darling key that
+you gave us. We are moving out now and crying so
+hard we can hardly write. I mean myself. Is Mr.
+Downing the boss of the whole church. Cant you tell
+him we truly paid the rent for all summer by digging
+dandelions. He does not believe us. We are too sad to
+write any more with love from your little friends</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Jean Marjory Bettie and I</span>.</p>
+
+<p>"P. S. How about your dinner party if we lose the
+cottage?"</p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum">[178]</span></p>
+
+<p>Mr. Black read and reread the typewritten yellow
+sheet a great many times; sometimes he frowned,
+sometimes he chuckled; the postscript seemed to
+please him particularly, for whenever he reached that
+point his deep-set eyes twinkled merrily. Presently he
+propped the dispatch against the wall at the back of
+his table and sat down in front of it to write a reply.
+He wrote several messages, some long, some short;
+then he tore them all up&mdash;they seemed inadequate
+compared with Mabel's.</p>
+
+<p>"That man Downing," said he, dropping the scraps
+into the waste-basket, "means well, but he muddles
+every pie he puts his finger in. Probably if I wire him
+he'll botch things worse than ever. Dear me, it <i>is</i> too
+bad for those nice children to lose any part of their
+precious stay in that cottage, now, for of course they'll
+have to give it up when cold weather comes. If I can
+wind my business up today there isn't any good reason
+why I can't go straight through without stopping in
+Chicago. It's time I was home, anyway; it's pretty
+warm here for a man that likes a cold climate."</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, things were happening in Mr. Black's
+own town.</p>
+
+<p>It was a dark, threatening day when the Milligans,
+delighted at the success of their efforts to dislodge its
+rightful tenants, hurriedly moved into Dandelion Cottage;
+but, dark though it was, Mrs. Milligan soon<span class="pagenum">[179]</span>
+began to find her new possession full of unsuspected
+blemishes. Now that the pictures were down and the
+rugs were up, she discovered the badly broken plaster,
+the tattered condition of the wall paper, the leaking
+drain, and the clumsily mended rat-holes. She found,
+too, that she had made a grievous mistake in her calculations.
+She had supposed that the tiny pantry was
+a third bedroom; with its neat muslin curtains, it certainly
+looked like one when viewed from the outside;
+and crafty Laura, intensely desirous of seeing the
+enemy ousted from the cottage at any price, had not
+considered it necessary to enlighten her mother.</p>
+
+<p>"My goodness!" exclaimed Mrs. Milligan, a thin
+woman with a shrewish countenance now much
+streaked with dust. "I thought you said there was a
+fine cellar under this house? It's barely three feet deep,
+and there's no stairs and no floor. It's full of old
+rubbish."</p>
+
+<p>"I never was down there," admitted Laura, dropping
+a dishpanful of cooking utensils with a crash
+and hastily making for safe quarters behind a mountain
+of Milligan furniture, "but I've often seen the
+trap door."</p>
+
+<p>"It hasn't been opened for years. And where's the
+nice big closet you said opened off the bedroom? There
+isn't a decent closet in this house. I don't see what
+possessed you&mdash;"<span class="pagenum">[180]</span></p>
+
+<p>"It serves you right," said Mr. Milligan, unsympathetically.
+"You wouldn't wait for anything, but had
+to rush right in. I told you you'd better take your
+time about it, but no&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You know very well, James Milligan," snapped the
+irate lady, "that the Knapps wouldn't have taken our
+house if they couldn't have had it at once."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I <i>don't</i> know," growled Mr. Milligan, scowling
+crossly at the constantly growing heaps of incongruously
+mixed household goods, "where in Sam Hill
+you're going to put all that stuff. There isn't room for
+a cat to turn around, and the place ain't fit to live in,
+anyway."</p>
+
+<p>Bad as things looked, even Mr. Milligan did not
+guess that first busy day how hopelessly out of repair
+the cottage really was; but he was soon to find out.</p>
+
+<p>The summer had been an unusually dry one; so dry
+that the girls had been obliged to carry many pails of
+water to their garden every evening. The moving-day
+had been cloudy&mdash;out of sympathy, perhaps, for the
+little cottagers. That night it rained, the first long,
+steady downpour in weeks. This proved no gentle
+shower, but a fierce, robust, pelting flood. Seemingly
+a discriminating rain, too, choosing carefully between
+the just and the unjust, for most of it fell upon the
+Milligans. With the sole exception of the dining-room,
+every room in the house leaked like a sieve.<span class="pagenum">[181]</span></p>
+
+<p>The tired, disgusted Milligans, drenched in their
+beds, leaped hastily from their shower baths to look
+about, by candlelight, for shelter. Mr. Milligan spread
+a mattress, driest side up, on the dining-room floor,
+and the unfortunate family spent the rest of the night
+huddled in an uncomfortable heap in the one dry spot
+the house afforded.</p>
+
+<p>Very early the next morning they sent post-haste for
+Mr. Downing.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Downing, who hated to be disturbed before
+eight, arrived at ten o'clock; and, with an expert carpenter,
+made a thorough examination of the house,
+which the rain had certainly not improved.</p>
+
+<p>"It will take three hundred&mdash;possibly four hundred
+dollars," said the carpenter, who had been making a
+great many figures in a worn little note-book, "to
+make this place habitable. It needs a new roof, new
+chimneys, new floors, a new foundation, new plumbing,
+new plaster&mdash;in short, just about <i>everything</i> except
+the four outside walls. Then there are no lights and
+no heating plant, which of course would be extra. It's
+probably one of the oldest houses in town. What's it
+renting for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ten dollars a month."</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't worth it. Half that money would be a high
+price. Even if it were placed in good repair it would
+be six years at least before you could expect to get the<span class="pagenum">[182]</span>
+money expended on repairs back in rent. The only
+thing to do is to tear it down and build a larger and
+more modern house that will bring a better rent, for
+there's no money in a ten-dollar house on a lot of this
+size&mdash;the taxes eat all the profits."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Downing, "this house certainly
+looked far more comfortable when I saw it the other
+day than it does now. Those children must have had
+the defects very well concealed. They deceived me
+completely."</p>
+
+<p>"They deceived us all," said Mrs. Milligan, resentfully.
+"Half of our furniture is ruined. Look at that
+sofa!"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Downing looked. The drenched old-gold plush
+sofa certainly looked very much like a half-drowned
+Jersey calf.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," continued Mrs. Milligan, sharply, "we
+expect to have our losses made good. Then we've had
+all our trouble for nothing, too. Of course we can't
+stay here&mdash;the place isn't fit for pigs. I suppose the
+best thing <i>we</i> can do is to move right back into our
+own house."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye-es," said Mr. Milligan, overlooking the fact
+that Mrs. Milligan had inadvertently called her family
+pigs, "it certainly looks like the best thing to do. I'll
+go and tell the Knapps that they'll have to move out<span class="pagenum">[183]</span>
+at once&mdash;we can't spend another night under this
+roof."</p>
+
+<p>The Knapps, however, proved disobliging and flatly
+declined to move a second time. The Milligans had
+begged them to take the house off their hands, and
+they had signed a contract. Moreover, it was just the
+kind of house the Knapps had long been looking for,
+and now that they were moved, more than half settled,
+and altogether satisfied with their part of the
+bargain, they politely but firmly announced their intention
+of staying where they were until the lease
+should expire.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing the former tenants could do
+about it. They were homeless and quite as helpless as
+the four little girls had been in similar circumstances;
+and they made a far greater fuss about it. By this they
+gained, however, nothing but the disapproval of everybody
+concerned; so, finally, the Milligans, disgusted
+with Dandelion Cottage, with Mr. Downing, and for
+once even a little bit with themselves, dejectedly
+hunted up a new home in a far less pleasant neighborhood,
+and moved hurriedly out of Dandelion Cottage&mdash;and,
+except for the memories they left behind
+them, out of the story.</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[184]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i192.jpg" width="400" height="369" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_18">CHAPTER 18</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">A Hurried Retreat</p>
+
+<p>The girls, of course, had been barred out while all
+these exciting latest events were taking place in their
+dear cottage; but Marjory, who lived next door to it,
+had seen something of the Milligans' hasty exit and
+had guessed at part of the truth. Mrs. Knapp, who
+seemed a pleasant, likable little woman, in spite of her
+unwillingness to accommodate her new landlord, unknowingly<span class="pagenum">[185]</span>
+confirmed their suspicions when she told
+her friend Mrs. Crane about it; for Mrs. Crane, in her
+turn, told the news to the four little housekeepers the
+next morning as they sat homeless and forlorn on her
+doorstep. It was always Mrs. Crane to whom the
+Dandelion Cottagers turned whenever they were in
+need of consolation and, as in this case, consolation
+was usually forthcoming.</p>
+
+<p>The girls, in their excitement at hearing the news
+about their late possession, did not notice that sympathetic
+Mrs. Crane looked tired and worried as she
+sat, in the big red rocking chair on her porch, peeling
+potatoes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" squealed Mabel, from the broad arm of Mrs.
+Crane's chair, "I'm glad! I'm glad! I'm glad!"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't help being a little bit glad, too," said fair-minded
+Jean. "I suppose it wasn't very pleasant for
+the Milligans, but I guess they deserved all they got."</p>
+
+<p>"They deserved a great deal more," said Marjory,
+resentfully. "Think of these last awful days!"</p>
+
+<p>"If they'd had <i>much</i> more," said Mrs. Crane, "they'd
+have been drowned. Why, children! the place was just
+flooded."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm ashamed to tell of it," said Bettie, "but I'm
+awfully afraid that our boys took off part of the pieces
+of tin that they nailed on the roof last spring. I heard<span class="pagenum">[186]</span>
+them doing <i>something</i> up there the night we moved;
+but Bob only grinned when I asked him about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Good for the boys!" cried Marjory, gleefully. "I
+wouldn't be unladylike enough to set traps for the
+Milligans myself, but I can't help feeling glad that
+somebody else did."</p>
+
+<p>"It was Bob's own tin," giggled delighted Mabel,
+almost tumbling into Mrs. Crane's potato pan in her
+joy. "I guess he had a right to take it home if he
+wanted to."</p>
+
+<p>"Anyway," said Jean, from her perch on the porch
+railing, "I'm glad they're gone."</p>
+
+<p>"But it doesn't do <i>us</i> any good," sighed Bettie. "And
+the summer's just flying."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it does," insisted Jean. "We <i>can</i> stand having
+the cottage empty&mdash;we can pretend, you know, that
+it's an enchanted castle that can be opened only by a
+certain magic key that&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Somebody's baby has swallowed," shrieked Mabel,
+the matter-of-fact.</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy no, goosie," said Marjory. "She means a
+magic word that nobody can remember."</p>
+
+<p>"That's it," said Jean. "Of course we couldn't do
+even that with the cottage full of Milligans."</p>
+
+<p>"No," assented Marjory, "the most active imagination
+would refuse to activate&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"To <i>what</i>?" gasped Mabel.<span class="pagenum">[187]</span></p>
+
+<p>"To work," explained Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"I should say so," agreed Mabel, again threatening
+the potatoes. "It was just as much as I could do to
+come over here this morning to breathe the same air
+with that cottage with those folks in it staring me in
+the face, but now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"After all," sighed Bettie, sorrowfully, from the
+other arm of Mrs. Crane's big chair, "having the Milligans
+out of the cottage doesn't make <i>much</i> difference,
+as long as we're out, too. Oh, I <i>did</i> love that
+little house so. I just hated to think of cold weather
+coming to drive us out; but I never dreamed of anything
+so dreadful as having to leave it right in this
+lovely warm weather."</p>
+
+<p>"If Mr. Black had stayed in town," said Mabel, feelingly,
+"we'd be dusting that darling cottage this very
+minute."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Crane sniffed in the odd way she always did
+whenever Mr. Black's name was mentioned. This
+scornful sniff, accompanying Mrs. Crane's evident disapproval
+of their dearest friend, was the only thing
+that the girls disliked about Mrs. Crane.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>know</i> you'd like Mr. Black if you only knew
+him," said Bettie, earnestly. "In some ways you're a
+good deal like him. You're both the same color, your
+eyebrows turn up the same way at the outside corners,
+and you both like us. Mr. Black has a beautiful soul."<span class="pagenum">[188]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Indeed," said Mrs. Crane. "And haven't I a beautiful
+soul too?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, of course," said Bettie, leaning down to rub
+her cheek against Mrs. Crane's. "I meant <i>both</i> of you.
+We like you both just the same."</p>
+
+<p>"Only it's different," explained Jean. "Mr. Black
+doesn't need us, and sometimes you do. We <i>like</i> to do
+things for you."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad of that," said Mrs. Crane, "for I need you
+this very minute. But don't you be too sure about his
+not needing you as well. He must lead a pretty lonely
+life, because it's years since his wife died. I never heard
+of anybody else liking her, but I guess <i>he</i> did. He's one
+of the faithful kind, maybe, for he's lived all alone in
+that great big house ever since. I guess it does him
+good to have you little girls for friends."</p>
+
+<p>"What was his wife like?" asked Mabel, eagerly.
+"Did you use to know her?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, indeed," said Mrs. Crane, again giving the
+objectionable sniff. "That is, not so very well&mdash;a little
+light-headed, useless thing, no more fit to keep house&mdash;but
+there! there. It doesn't make any difference <i>now</i>,
+and I've learned that it isn't the best housekeepers that
+get married easiest. If it was, I wouldn't be so worried
+<i>now</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Is anything the matter?" asked Jean, quick to note
+the distress in Mrs. Crane's voice.<span class="pagenum">[189]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes," returned the good woman, "there are two
+things the matter."</p>
+
+<p>"Your poor foot?" queried Bettie, instantly all sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>"No, the foot's all right. It's Mr. Barlow and my
+eyes. Mr. Barlow is going to be married to a young
+lady he's been writing to for a long time, and I'm
+going to lose him because he wants to keep house. It
+won't be easy to find another lodger for that little,
+shabby, old-fashioned room. I'm trying to make a new
+rag carpet for it, but I'm all at a standstill because I
+can't see to thread my needle. I declare, I don't know
+what is going to become of me."</p>
+
+<p>"When I grow up," said Bettie, "you shall live with
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"But what am I to do while I'm waiting for you to
+grow up?" asked Mrs. Crane, smiling at Bettie's protecting
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us be your eyes," suggested Jean. "Couldn't we
+thread about a million needles for you? Don't you
+think a million would last all day?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should think it might," said Mrs. Crane, somewhat
+comforted. "I haven't quite a million, but if
+Marjory will get my cushion and a spool of cotton I'll
+be very glad to have you thread all I have."</p>
+
+<p>The girls worked in silence for fully five minutes.<span class="pagenum">[190]</span>
+Then Mabel jabbed the solitary needle she had
+threaded into the sawdust cushion and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you suppose Mr. Downing might let us
+have the cottage <i>now</i>, if we went to him? Nobody
+else seems to care about it. What do you think, Mrs.
+Crane?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, my dear, I suppose it wouldn't do any harm
+to ask. You'd better see what your own people think
+about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Let's go ask them now," cried impetuous Mabel,
+springing to her feet. Forgetting all about the needles
+and without waiting to say good-by to Mrs. Crane,
+the eager girl made a diagonal rush for the corner
+nearest her own home.</p>
+
+<p>The others remained long enough to thread all the
+needles. Then they, too, went home with the news
+about the cottage and about Mrs. Crane. They were
+realizing, for the first time, that their good friend
+might become helpless long before they were ready to
+use her as a grandmother for their children, but they
+couldn't see just what was to be done about it. The
+idea of going to Mr. Downing, however, soon drove
+every other thought away, for the parents and Aunty
+Jane, too, advised them to ask. They even encouraged
+them.</p>
+
+<p>But when Jean and Bettie, hopefully dressed in their
+Sunday-best, and Marjory and Mabel, with their abundant<span class="pagenum">[191]</span>
+locks elaborately curled besides, presented themselves
+and their request at Mr. Downing's house that
+evening, they were not at all encouraged by their
+reception.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Downing, a man of moods, had just come off
+second-best in an encounter with Mrs. Milligan, whom
+he had accidentally met on his way home to dinner,
+and, at the moment the girls appeared, the cottage was
+just about the last subject that the badgered man cared
+to discuss. Before Jean had fairly stated her errand,
+the enraged Mr. Downing roared "<i>No!</i>" so emphatically
+that his four alarmed visitors backed hurriedly
+off the Downing porch and fled as one girl. Mabel, to
+be sure, measured her length in the canna bed near
+the gate, but she scrambled up, snorting with fright
+and indignation, and none of them paused again in
+their flight until Jean's door, which seemed safest, had
+closed behind them.</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[192]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i200.jpg" width="400" height="363" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_19">CHAPTER 19</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">The Response to Mabel's Telegram</p>
+
+<p>The night of their flitting from Dandelion Cottage,
+the girls had hastily eaten all the radishes in the
+cottage garden to prevent their falling into the hands
+of the grasping Milligans. Now, the morning after
+their visit to Mr. Downing, they were wishing that
+they hadn't; not because the radishes had disagreed
+with them, but for quite a different reason. They<span class="pagenum">[193]</span>
+could not enter the cottage, of course, but it had occurred
+to them that it might be possible to derive a
+certain melancholy satisfaction from tending and replenishing
+the little garden. That pleasure, at least,
+had not been forbidden them; but before beginning
+active operations, they took the precaution of enlarging
+the hole in the back fence, so that instantaneous
+flight would be possible in case Mr. Downing should
+stroll cottageward.</p>
+
+<p>Their motive was good. When Mr. Black returned,
+if he ever should, Bettie meant that he should find the
+little yard in perfect order.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll keep to our part of the bargain, anyway,"
+said Bettie, as the four girls were making their first
+cautious tour of inspection about the cottage yard.
+"There's lots of work to be done."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," agreed Jean. "We said we'd keep this yard
+nice all summer, and it wouldn't be right not to
+do it."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if we ought to ask Mr. Downing?" asked
+conscientious Bettie, stooping to pull off some gone-to-seed
+pansies.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you'd like the job!" suggested Marjory,
+with mild sarcasm.</p>
+
+<p>"My sakes!" said Mabel. "I wouldn't go near that
+man again if I was going to swallow an automobile
+the next moment if I didn't. I could hear him roar<span class="pagenum">[194]</span>
+'<i>No</i>' every few minutes all night. I fell out of bed
+twice, dreaming that I was trying to get off of that
+old porch of his before he could grab me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I guess we'd better not ask," said Jean, "because
+I'm pretty sure he'd have the same answer
+ready."</p>
+
+<p>"He certainly ought not to mind having us take care
+of our own flowers," said Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"That's true," said Bettie, poking the moist
+earth with a friendly finger. "They're growing splendidly
+since the rain. See how nice and full of growiness
+the ground is."</p>
+
+<p>"I can get more pansy plants," offered Marjory, "to
+fill up these holes the Milligan dog made."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Crane promised to give us some aster plants,"
+said Mabel. "Let's put 'em along by the fence."</p>
+
+<p>"Let's do," said Jean. "You go see if you can have
+them now."</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>know</i> Mr. Black will be pleased," declared Bettie,
+"if he finds this place looking nice. I'm so thankful
+we didn't remember to ask Mr. Downing about it."</p>
+
+<p>"We didn't have a chance," said Jean, ruefully; "but
+just the same, I'm willing to keep on forgetting until
+Mr. Black comes."</p>
+
+<p>It began to look, however, as if Mr. Black were
+never coming. Bettie had written as she had promised
+but had had no reply, though the letter had not been<span class="pagenum">[195]</span>
+mailed for ten minutes before she began to watch for
+the postman. Even Mabel, having had no response to
+her telegram and supposing it to have gone astray,
+had given up hope.</p>
+
+<p>Mabel, ever averse to confessing the failure of any
+of her enterprises, had decided to postpone saying anything
+about the telegram until one or another of the
+girls should remember to ask what had become of the
+thirty-five cents. So far, none of them had thought
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>Still, it seemed probable, in spite of Mr. Black's continued
+absence, that he would get home some time,
+for he had left so much behind him. In the business
+portion of the town there was a huge building whose
+sign read: "<span class="smcap">peter black and company</span>." Then, in
+the prettiest part of the residence district, where the
+lawns were big and the shrubs were planted scientifically
+by a landscape gardener and where the hillside
+bristled with roses, there was a large, handsome
+stone house that, as everybody knew, belonged
+to Mr. Black. Although there were industrious clerks
+at work in the one, and a middle-aged housekeeper,
+with a furnace-tending, grass-cutting husband equally
+busy in the other, it was reasonable to suppose that
+Mr. Black, even if he had no family, would have to
+return some time, if only to enjoy his beloved rose-bushes.<span class="pagenum">[196]</span></p>
+
+<p>Thanks to Mabel's telegram (Bettie's letter, forwarded
+from Washington, did not reach him for
+many days) he did come. He had had to stop in Chicago,
+after all, and there had been unexpected delays;
+but just a week from the day the Milligans had left
+the cottage, Mr. Black returned.</p>
+
+<p>Without even stopping to look in at his own office,
+the traveler went straight to the rectory to ask for
+Bettie. Bettie, Mrs. Tucker told him, he would probably
+find in the cottage yard.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Black took a short cut through the hole in the
+back fence, arriving on the cottage lawn just in time
+to meet a procession of girls entering the front gate.
+Each girl was carrying a huge, heavy clod of earth,
+out of the top of which grew a sturdy green plant;
+for the cottageless cottagers had discovered the only
+successful way of performing the difficult feat of restocking
+their garden with half-grown vegetables.
+Their neighbors had proved generous when Bettie
+had explained that if one could only dig deep enough
+one could transplant <i>anything</i>, from a cabbage to
+pole-beans. Some of the grown-up gardeners, to be
+sure, had been skeptical, but they were all willing that
+the girls should make the attempt.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mr. Black!" shrieked the four girls, dropping
+their burdens to make a simultaneous rush for the<span class="pagenum">[197]</span>
+senior warden. "Oh! oh! oh! Is it really you? We're
+so glad&mdash;so awfully glad you've come!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I declare! So am I," said Mr. Black, with his
+arms full of girls. "It seems like getting home again
+to have a family of nice girls waiting with a welcome,
+even if it's a pretty sandy one. What are you doing
+with all the real estate? I thought you'd all been
+turned out, but you seem to be all here. I declare, if
+you haven't all been growing!"</p>
+
+<p>"We were&mdash;we are&mdash;we have," cried the girls, dancing
+up and down delightedly. "Mr. Downing made
+us give up the cottage, but he didn't say anything
+about the garden&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;we thought we'd better
+forget to ask about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me the whole story," said Mr. Black. "Let's
+sit here on the doorstep. I'm sure I could listen more
+comfortably if there were not so many excited girls
+dancing on my best toes."</p>
+
+<p>So Mr. Black, with a girl at each side and two at his
+feet, heard the story from beginning to end, and he
+seemed to find it much more amusing than the girls
+had at any time considered it. He simply roared with
+laughter when Bettie apologized about Bob and the
+tin.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said he, when the recital was ended, and he
+had shown the girls Mabel's telegram, and the thoroughly
+delighted Mabel had been praised and enthusiastically<span class="pagenum">[198]</span>
+hugged by the other three, "I <i>have</i> heard of
+cottages with more than one key. Suppose you see,
+Bettie, if anything on this ring will fit that keyhole."</p>
+
+<p>Three of the flat, slender keys did not, but the
+fourth turned easily in the lock. Bettie opened the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"Possession," said Mr. Black, with a twinkle in his
+eye, "is nine points of the law. You'd better go to
+work at once and move in and get to cooking; you
+see, there's a vacancy under my vest that nothing but
+that promised dinner party can fill. The sooner you
+get settled, the sooner I get that good square meal.
+Besides, if you don't work, you won't have an appetite
+for a great big box of candy that I have in my
+trunk."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," sighed Bettie, rubbing her cheek against Mr.
+Black's sleeve, "it seems too good to be true."</p>
+
+<p>"What, the candy?" teased Mr. Black.</p>
+
+<p>"No, the cottage," explained Bettie, earnestly. "Oh,
+I do hope winter will be about six months late this
+year to make up for this."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps it'll forget to come at all," breathed Mabel,
+hopefully. "I'd almost be willing to skip Christmas if
+there was any way of stretching this summer out to
+February. Somebody please pinch me&mdash;I'm afraid I'm
+dreaming&mdash;Oh! ouch! I didn't say <i>everybody</i>."</p>
+
+<p>By this time, of course, all the young housekeepers'<span class="pagenum">[199]</span>
+relatives were deeply interested in the cottage. After
+living for a never-to-be-forgotten week with the four
+unhappiest little girls in town, all were eager to reinstate
+them in the restored treasure. The girls, having
+rushed home with the joyful news, were almost overwhelmed
+with unexpected offers of parental assistance.
+The grown-ups were not only willing but anxious
+to help. Then, too, the Mapes boys and the young
+Tuckers almost came to blows over who should have
+the honor of mending the roof with the bundles of
+shingles that Dr. Bennett insisted on furnishing. Marjory's
+Aunty Jane said that if somebody who could
+drive nails without smashing his thumb would mend
+the holes in the parlor floor she would give the girls
+a pretty ingrain carpet, one side of which looked
+almost new. Dr. Bennett himself laid a clean new floor
+in the little kitchen over the rough old one, and Mrs.
+Mapes mended the broken plaster in all the rooms by
+pasting unbleached muslin over the holes. Mr. Tucker
+replaced all broken panes of glass, while his busy wife
+found time to tack mosquito-netting over the kitchen
+and pantry windows.</p>
+
+<p>So interested, indeed, were all the grown-ups and all
+the brothers that the girls chuckled delightedly. It
+wouldn't have surprised them so very much if all their
+people had fallen suddenly to playing with dolls and
+to having tea-parties in the cottage; but the place was<span class="pagenum">[200]</span>
+still far too disorderly for either of these juvenile occupations
+to prove attractive to anybody.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the confusion, Mr. Downing stopped
+at the cottage door one noon and asked for the girls,
+who eyed him doubtfully and resentfully as they met
+him, after Marjory had hesitatingly ushered him into
+the untidy little parlor.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Downing smiled at them in a friendly but decidedly
+embarrassed manner. He had not forgotten
+his own lack of cordiality when the girls had called
+on him, and he wanted to atone for it. Mr. Black had
+tactfully but effectively pointed out to Mr. Downing&mdash;already
+deeply disgusted with the Milligans&mdash;the error
+of his ways, and Mr. Downing, as generous as he was
+hasty and irascible, was honest enough to admit that
+he had been mistaken not only in his estimate of Mr.
+Black, but also in his treatment of the little cottagers.
+Now, eager to make amends, he looked somewhat
+anxiously from one to another of his silent hostesses,
+who in return looked questioningly at Mr. Downing.
+Surely, with Mr. Black in town, Mr. Downing <i>couldn't</i>
+be thinking of turning them out a second time; still,
+he had disappointed them before, probably he would
+again, and the girls meant to take no chances. So they
+kept still, with searching eyes glued upon Mr. Downing's
+countenance. All at once, they realized that they
+were looking into friendly eyes, and three of them<span class="pagenum">[201]</span>
+jumped to the conclusion that the junior warden was
+not the heartless monster they had considered him.</p>
+
+<p>"I came," said Mr. Downing, noticing the change
+of expression in Bettie's face, "to offer you, with my
+apologies, this key and this little document. The paper,
+as you will see, is signed by all the vestrymen&mdash;my
+own name is written <i>very</i> large&mdash;and it gives you the
+right to the use of this cottage until such time as the
+church feels rich enough to tear it down and build a
+new one. There is no immediate cause for alarm on
+this score, for there were only sixty-two cents in the
+plate last Sunday. I have come to the conclusion, young
+ladies, that I was overhasty in my judgment. I didn't
+understand the matter, and I'm afraid I acted without
+due consideration&mdash;I often do. But I hope you'll forgive
+me, for I sincerely beg <i>all</i> your pardons."</p>
+
+<p>"It's all right," said Bettie, "as long as it was just
+a mistake. It's easy to forgive mistakes."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Marjory, sagely, "we all make 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"It's all right, anyway," added Jean.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Downing looked expectantly at Mabel, who for
+once had preserved a dead silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" he asked, interrogatively.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't suppose I can ever really <i>quite</i> forgive you,"
+confessed Mabel, with evident reluctance. "It'll be awfully
+hard work, but I guess I can try."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps my peace-offering will help your efforts a<span class="pagenum">[202]</span>
+little," said Mr. Downing, smiling. "It seems to be
+coming in now at your gate."</p>
+
+<p>The girls turned hastily to look, but all they could
+see was a very untidy man with a large book under
+his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"These," said Mr. Downing, taking the book from
+the man, who had walked in at the open door, "are
+samples of inexpensive wall papers. You're to choose
+as much as you need of the kinds you like best, and
+this man will put it wherever it will do the most good,
+and I'll pay the bill. Now, Miss Blue Eyes, do I stand
+a better chance of forgiveness?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes!" cried Mabel. "I'm almost glad you needed
+to apologize. You did it beautifully, too. Mercy, when
+<i>I</i> apologize&mdash;and I have to do a <i>fearful</i> lot of apologizing&mdash;I
+don't begin to do it so nicely!"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," offered Mr. Downing, "when you've had
+as much practice as I have, it will come easier. I see,
+however, that you are far more suitable tenants than
+the Milligans would have been, for my humble apologies
+to them met with a very different reception. I
+assure you that, if there's ever any rivalry between
+you again, my vote goes with you&mdash;you're so easily
+satisfied. Now don't hesitate to choose whatever you
+want from this book. This paperhanger is yours, too,
+until you're done with him."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, thank you, thank you, <i>thank</i> you," cried the<span class="pagenum">[203]</span>
+girls, with happy voices, as Mr. Downing turned to
+go; "you <i>couldn't</i> have thought of a nicer peace-offering."</p>
+
+<p>Of course it took a long, long time for so many
+young housekeepers to choose papers for the parlor
+and the two bedrooms, but after much discussion and
+many differences of opinion, it was finally selected.
+The girls decided on green for the parlor, blue for one
+bedroom, and pink for the other, and they were easily
+persuaded to choose small patterns.</p>
+
+<p>Then the smiling paperhanger worked with astonishing
+rapidity and said that he didn't object in the
+least to having four pairs of bright eyes watch from
+the doorway every strip go into place. It seemed to be
+no trouble at all to paper the little low-ceilinged cottage,
+and, oh! how beautiful it was when it was all
+done. The cool, cucumber-green parlor was just the
+right shade to melt into the soft blue and white of the
+front bedroom. As for the dainty pink room, as Bettie
+said rapturously, it fairly made one smell roses to look
+at it, it was so sweet.</p>
+
+<p>It was finished by the following night, for no paperhanger
+could have had the heart to linger over his
+work with so many anxious eyes following every movement.
+Mrs. Tucker washed and ironed and mended
+the white muslin curtains; and, with such a bower to<span class="pagenum">[204]</span>
+move into, the second moving-in and settling, the
+girls decided, was really better than the first. When
+their belongings were finally reinstalled in the cottage
+even Mabel no longer felt resentful toward the Milligans.</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[205]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i213.jpg" width="400" height="338" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_20">CHAPTER 20</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">The Odd Behavior of the Grown-ups</p>
+
+<p>Even with all its ingenious though inexpensive improvements,
+the renovated cottage would probably
+have failed to satisfy a genuine rent-paying family,
+but to the contented girls it seemed absolutely perfect.</p>
+
+<p>At last, it looked to everybody as if the long-deferred
+dinner party were actually to take place. There, in
+readiness, were the girls, the money, the cottage, and
+Mr. Black, and nothing had happened to Mrs. Bartholomew<span class="pagenum">[206]</span>
+Crane&mdash;who might easily, as Mabel suggested
+harrowingly, have moved away or died at any
+moment during the summer.</p>
+
+<p>One day, very soon after the cottage was settled,
+a not-at-all-surprised Mr. Black and a very-much-astonished
+Mrs. Crane each received a formal invitation
+to dine under its reshingled roof. Composed by
+all four, the note was written by Jean, whose writing
+and spelling all conceded to be better than the combined
+efforts of the other three. Bettie delivered the
+notes with her own hand, two days before the event,
+and on the morning of the party she went a second
+time to each house to make certain that neither of the
+expected guests had forgotten the date.</p>
+
+<p>"Forget!" exclaimed Mr. Black, standing framed in
+his own doorway. "My dear little girl, how <i>could</i> I
+forget, when I've been saving room for that dinner
+ever since early last spring? Nothing, I assure you,
+could keep me away or even delay me. I have eaten
+a <i>very</i> light breakfast, I shall go entirely without
+luncheon&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't do that," warned Bettie. "You see it's
+our first dinner party and something <i>might</i> go wrong.
+The soup might scorch&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't have the heart to," said Mr. Black.
+"<i>No</i> soup could be so unkind."</p>
+
+<p>Of course the cottage was the busiest place imaginable<span class="pagenum">[207]</span>
+during the days immediately preceding the
+dinner party. The girls had made elaborate plans and
+their pockets fairly bulged with lists of things that
+they were to be sure to remember and not on any
+account to forget. Then the time came for them to
+begin to do all the things that they had planned to
+do, and the cottage hummed like a hive of bees.</p>
+
+<p>First the precious seven dollars and a half, swelled
+by some mysterious process to seven dollars and fifty-seven
+cents, had to be withdrawn from the bank, the
+most imposing building in town with its almost oppressive
+air of formal dignity. The rather diffident
+girls went in a body to get the money and looked
+with astonishment at the extra pennies.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the interest," explained the cashier, noting
+with quiet amusement the puzzled faces.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," said Jean, "we've had that in school, but this
+is the first time we've ever seen any."</p>
+
+<p>"We didn't suppose," supplemented Bettie, "that
+interest was real money. <i>I</i> thought it was something
+like those x-plus-y things that the boys have in
+algebra."</p>
+
+<p>"Or like mermaids and goddesses," said Mabel.</p>
+
+<p>"She means myths," interpreted Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"I see," said the cashier. "Perhaps you like real,
+tangible interest better than the kind you have in
+school."<span class="pagenum">[208]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we do, we do!" cried the four girls.</p>
+
+<p>"After this," confided Bettie, "it will be easier to
+study about."</p>
+
+<p>Then, with the money carefully divided into three
+portions, placed in three separate purses, which in
+turn were deposited one each in Jean's, Marjory's, and
+Bettie's pockets, Mabel having flatly declined to burden
+herself with any such weighty responsibility, the four
+went to purchase their groceries.</p>
+
+<p>The smiling clerks at the various shops confused
+them a little at first by offering them new brands of
+breakfast foods with strange, oddly spelled names, but
+the girls explained patiently at each place that they
+were giving a dinner party, not a breakfast, and that
+they wanted nothing but the things on their list. It
+took time and a great deal of discussion to make so
+many important purchases, but finally the groceries
+were all ordered.</p>
+
+<p>Next the little housekeepers went to the butcher's
+to ask for a chicken.</p>
+
+<p>"Vat kind of schicken you vant?" asked the stout,
+impatient German butcher.</p>
+
+<p>Jean looked at Bettie, Bettie looked at Marjory, and
+Marjory, although she knew it was hopeless, looked at
+Mabel.</p>
+
+<p>"Vell?" said the busy butcher, interrogatively.</p>
+
+<p>"One to cook&mdash;without feathers," gasped Jean.<span class="pagenum">[209]</span></p>
+
+<p>"A spring schicken?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is that&mdash;is that better than a summer one?" faltered
+Bettie, cautiously. "You see it's summer now."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," suggested Mabel, seized with a bright
+thought, "an August one&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Here, Schon," shouted the busy butcher to his
+assistant, "you pring oudt three-four schicken. You
+can pick von oudt vile I vaits on dese odder gostomer."</p>
+
+<p>"I think," said Jean, indicating one of the fowls
+John had produced for her inspection, "that that's
+about the right size. It's so small and smooth that it
+ought to be tender."</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't take that one, Miss," cautioned honest
+John, under his breath, "it looks to me like a little old
+bantam rooster. Leave it to me and I'll find you a
+good one."</p>
+
+<p>To his credit, John was as good as his word.</p>
+
+<p>The little housekeepers felt very important indeed,
+when, later in the day, a procession of genuine grocery
+wagons, drawn by flesh-and-blood horses, drew up
+before the cottage door to deliver all kinds of really-truly
+parcels. They had not quite escaped the breakfast
+foods after all, because each consignment of groceries
+was enriched by several sample packages; enough
+altogether, the girls declared joyously, to provide a
+great many noon luncheons.</p>
+
+<p>Of course all the parcels had to be unwrapped, admired,<span class="pagenum">[210]</span>
+and sorted before being carefully arranged in
+the pantry cupboard, which had never before found
+itself so bountifully supplied. Then, for a busy half-day,
+cook books and real cooks were anxiously consulted;
+for, as Mabel said, it was really surprising to
+see how many different ways there were to cook even
+the simplest things.</p>
+
+<p>Jean and Bettie were to do the actual cooking. The
+other two, in elaborately starched caps and aprons of
+spotless white (provided Mabel, though this seemed
+doubtful, could keep hers white), were to take turns
+serving the courses. The first course was to be tomato
+soup; it came in a can with directions outside and cost
+fifteen cents, which Mabel considered cheap because
+of the printed cooking lesson.</p>
+
+<p>"If they'd send printed directions with their raw
+chickens and vegetables," said she, "maybe folks might
+be able to tell which recipe belonged to which thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," laughed Marjory, "<i>some</i> cooks don't have
+to read a whole page before they discover that directions
+for making plum pudding don't help them to
+make corned-beef hash. You always forget to look at
+the top of the page."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," said Jean, "she found a good recipe
+for salad dressing."</p>
+
+<p>"That's true," said Marjory, "but before you use it
+you'd better make sure that it isn't a polish for hardwood<span class="pagenum">[211]</span>
+floors. There, don't throw the book at me,
+Mabel&mdash;I won't say another word."</p>
+
+<p>The three mothers and Aunty Jane, grown suddenly
+astonishingly obliging, not only consented to lend
+whatever the girls asked for, but actually thrust their
+belongings upon them to an extent that was almost
+overwhelming. The same impulse seemed to have
+seized them all. It puzzled the girls, yet it pleased
+them too, for it was such a decided novelty to have
+six parents (even the fathers appeared interested) and
+one aunt positively vying with one another to aid the
+young cottagers with their latest plan. The girls could
+remember a time, not so very far distant, when it was
+almost hopeless to ask for even such common things
+as potatoes, not to mention eggs and butter. Now,
+however, everything was changed. Aunty Jane would
+provide soup spoons, napkins, and a tablecloth&mdash;yes,
+her very best short one. Marjory could hardly believe
+her ears, but hastily accepted the cloth lest the offer
+should be withdrawn. The girls, having set their
+hearts on using the "Frog that would a-wooing go"
+plates for the escalloped salmon (to their minds there
+seemed to be some vague connection between frogs
+and fishes), were compelled to decline offers of all the
+fish plates belonging to the four families. The potato
+salad, garnished with lettuce from the cottage garden,
+was to be eaten with Mrs. Bennett's best salad forks<span class="pagenum">[212]</span>
+The roasted chicken was not to be entrusted to the
+not-always-reliable cottage oven but was to be cooked
+at the Tuckers' house and carved with Mr. Mapes's
+best game set. Mrs. Bennett's cook would make a pie&mdash;yes,
+even a difficult lemon pie with a meringue on top,
+promised Mrs. Bennett.</p>
+
+<p>Then there were to be butter beans out of the cottage
+garden, and sliced cucumbers from the green-grocer's
+because Mrs. Crane had confessed to a fondness
+for cucumbers. There was one beet in the garden
+almost large enough to be eaten; that, too, was to be
+sacrificed. The dessert had been something of a problem.
+It had proved so hard to decide this matter that
+they decided to compromise by adding both pudding
+and ice cream to the Bennett pie. A brick of ice cream
+and some little cakes could easily be purchased ready-made
+from the town caterer, with the change they had
+left. Thoughts of their money's giving out no longer
+troubled them, for had not Mabel's surprising father
+told them that if they ran short they need not hesitate
+to ask him for any amount within reason?</p>
+
+<p>"I declare," said bewildered Mabel, "I can't see what
+has come over Papa and Mamma. Do I look pale, or
+anything&mdash;as if I might be going to die before very
+long?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Marjory, "you certainly don't; but I've
+wondered if Aunty Jane could be worried about <i>me</i>.<span class="pagenum">[213]</span>
+I never knew her to be so generous&mdash;why, it's getting
+to be a kind of nuisance! Do you s'pose they're going
+to insist on doing <i>everything</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Bettie, "they've certainly helped us a
+lot. I don't know <i>why</i> they've done it, but I'm glad
+they have. You see, we <i>must</i> have everything perfectly
+beautiful because Mr. Black is rich and is accustomed
+to good dinners, and Mrs. Crane is poor and never has
+any very nice ones. If our people keep all their promises,
+it can't help being a splendid dinner."</p>
+
+<p>The three mothers and Aunty Jane and all the fathers
+did keep their promises. They, too, wanted the
+dinner to be a success, for they knew, as all the older
+residents of the little town knew&mdash;and as the children
+themselves might have known if the story had not
+been so old and their parents had been in the habit of
+gossiping (which fortunately they were not)&mdash;that
+there was a reason why Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane
+were the last two persons to be invited to a t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te
+dinner party. Yet, strangely enough, there was an
+equally good reason why no one wanted to interfere
+and why everyone wanted to help.</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">[214]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i222.jpg" width="400" height="321" alt="" />>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="CHAPTER_21">CHAPTER 21</h2>
+
+<p class="h3">The Dinner</p>
+
+<p>The girls, a little uneasy lest their alarmingly interested
+parents should insist on cooking and serving the
+entire dinner, were both relieved and perplexed to find
+that the grown-ups, while perfectly willing to help
+with the dinner provided they could work in their
+own kitchens, flatly declined the most urgent invitations
+to enter the cottage on the afternoon or evening
+of the party.<span class="pagenum">[215]</span></p>
+
+<p>It was incomprehensible. Until noon of the very
+day of the feast the parents and Aunty Jane had paid
+the girls an almost embarrassing number of visits.
+Now, when the girls really wanted them and actually
+gave each of them a very special invitation, each one
+unexpectedly held aloof. For, as the hour approached,
+the girls momentarily became more and more convinced
+that something would surely go wrong in the
+cottage kitchen with no experienced person to keep
+things moving. They decided, at four o'clock, to ask
+Mrs. Mapes to oversee things.</p>
+
+<p>"No, indeed," said Mrs. Mapes. "You may have
+anything there is in my house, but you can't have <i>me</i>.
+You don't need <i>anybody</i>; you won't have a mite of
+trouble."</p>
+
+<p>Finding Mrs. Mapes unpersuadable, they went to
+Mrs. Tucker, who, next to Jean's mother, was usually
+the most obliging of parents.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Mrs. Tucker, "I couldn't think of it.
+No, no, no, not for one moment. It's much better for
+you to do it all by yourselves."</p>
+
+<p>Still hopeful, the girls ran to Mrs. Bennett.</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy, no!" exclaimed that good woman, with discouraging
+emphasis. "I'm not a bit of use in a strange
+kitchen, and there are reasons&mdash;Oh! I mean it's your
+party and it won't be any fun if somebody else
+runs it."<span class="pagenum">[216]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Shall we ask your Aunty Jane?" asked Bettie. "We
+don't seem to be having any luck."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied Marjory. "She loves to manage
+things."</p>
+
+<p>But Marjory's Aunty Jane proved no more willing
+than the rest.</p>
+
+<p>"No, <i>ma'am</i>!" she said, emphatically. "I wouldn't do
+it for ten dollars. Why, it would just spoil everything
+to have a grown person around. Don't even <i>think</i> of
+such a thing."</p>
+
+<p>So the girls, feeling just a little indignant at their
+disobliging relatives, decided to get along as well as
+they could without them.</p>
+
+<p>At last, everything was either cooked or cooking.
+The table was beautifully set and decorated and flowers
+bloomed everywhere in Dandelion Cottage. Jean and
+Bettie, in the freshest of gingham aprons, were taking
+turns watching the things simmering on the stove.
+Mabel, looking fatter than ever in her short, white,
+stiffly starched apron, was on the doorstep craning her
+neck to see if the guests showed any signs of coming,
+and Marjory was busily putting a few entirely unnecessary
+finishing touches to the table.</p>
+
+<p>The guests were invited for half-past six, but had
+been hospitably urged by Bettie to appear sooner if
+they wished. At exactly fifteen minutes after six, Mrs.
+Crane, in her old-fashioned, threadbare, best black<span class="pagenum">[217]</span>
+silk and a very-much-mended real-lace collar, and
+with her iron-gray hair far more elaborately arranged
+than she usually wore it, crossed the street, lifting her
+skirts high and stepping gingerly to avoid the dust.
+She supposed that she was to be the only guest, for
+the girls had not mentioned any other.</p>
+
+<p>Mabel, prodigiously formal and most unusually
+solemn, met her at the door, ushered her into the
+blue room, and invited her to remove her wraps. The
+light shawl that Mrs. Crane had worn over her head
+was the only wrap she had, but it was not so easily
+removed as it might have been. It caught on one of
+her hair pins, which necessitated rearranging several
+locks of hair that had slipped from place. This took
+some time and, while she was thus occupied, Mr. Black
+turned the corner, went swiftly toward the cottage,
+mounted the steps, and rang the doorbell.</p>
+
+<p>Mabel received him with even greater solemnity
+than she had Mrs. Crane.</p>
+
+<p>"I think I'd better take your hat," said she. "We
+haven't any hat rack, but it'll be perfectly safe on the
+pink-room bed because we haven't any Tucker babies
+taking naps on it today."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Black handed his hat to her with an elaborate
+politeness that equaled her own.</p>
+
+<p>"Marjory!" she whispered as she went through the
+dining-room. "He's wearing his dress suit!"<span class="pagenum">[218]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Sh! he'll hear you," warned Marjory.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, anyway, I'm frightened half to death. Oh,
+<i>would</i> you mind passing all the wettest things? I
+hadn't thought about his clothes."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I guess I'd better; he might want to wear 'em
+again."</p>
+
+<p>"They're both here," announced Mabel, opening the
+kitchen door.</p>
+
+<p>"You help Bettie stir the soup and the mashed potatoes,"
+said Jean, whisking off her apron and tying it
+about Mabel's neck. "I'll go in and shake hands with
+them and then come back and dish up."</p>
+
+<p>Jean found both guests looking decidedly ill at ease.
+Mr. Black stood by the parlor table absent-mindedly
+undressing a family of paper dolls. Mrs. Crane, pale
+and nervously clutching the curtain, seemed unable to
+move from the bedroom doorway.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said Jean, "I do believe Mabel forgot all
+about introducing you. We told her to be sure to remember,
+but she hasn't been able to take her mind off
+of her apron since she put it on. Mrs. Crane, this is
+our&mdash;our preserver, Mr. Black."</p>
+
+<p>The guests bowed stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>Jean began to wish that she could think of some
+way to break the ice. Both were jolly enough on ordinary
+occasions, but apparently both had suddenly been
+stricken dumb. Perhaps dinner parties always affected<span class="pagenum">[219]</span>
+grown persons that way, or perhaps the starch from
+Mabel's apron had proved contagious; Jean smiled at
+the thought. Then she made another effort to promote
+sociability.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Crane," explained Jean, turning to Mr. Black,
+who was nervously tearing the legs off of the father
+of the paper-doll family, "is our very nicest neighbor.
+We like her just ever so much&mdash;everybody does. We've
+often told <i>you</i>, Mrs. Crane, how fond we are of Mr.
+Black. It was because you are our two very dearest
+friends that we invited you both&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Je-e-e-e-an!" called a distressed voice from the
+kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy!" exclaimed Jean, making a hurried exit,
+"I hope that soup isn't scorched!"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Bettie, slightly aggrieved, "but <i>I</i> wanted
+a chance, too, to say how-do-you-do to those people
+before I get all mixed up with the cooking. I thought
+you were <i>never</i> coming back."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's your turn now," said Jean. "Give me that
+spoon."</p>
+
+<p>Bettie, finding their guests seated in opposite corners
+of the room and apparently deeply interested in the
+cottage literature&mdash;Mr. Black buried in <i>Dottie Dimple</i>
+and Mrs. Crane absorbed in <i>Mother Goose</i>&mdash;naturally
+concluded that they were waiting to be introduced,
+and accordingly made the presentation.<span class="pagenum">[220]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Crane," said she, "I want you to meet Mr.
+Black, and I hope," added warm-hearted Bettie, "that
+you'll like each other very much because we're so fond
+of you both. You're each a surprise party for the
+other&mdash;we thought you'd both like it better if you had
+somebody besides children to talk to."</p>
+
+<p>"Very kind, I'm sure," mumbled Mr. Black, whose
+company manners, it seemed to Bettie, were far from
+being as pleasant as his everyday ones. Bettie gave a
+deep sigh and made one more effort to set the conversational
+ball rolling.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I'll have to go back to the kitchen now,
+and leave you to entertain each other. Please both of
+you be <i>very</i> entertaining&mdash;you're both so jolly when
+you just run in."</p>
+
+<p>Bettie's eyes were wistful as she went toward the
+kitchen. Was it possible, she wondered, that her beloved
+Mr. Black could despise Mrs. Crane because she
+was <i>poor</i>? It didn't seem possible, yet there was certainly
+something wrong. Perhaps he was merely hungry.
+That was it, of course; she would put the dinner
+on at once&mdash;even good-natured Dr. Tucker, she remembered,
+was sometimes a little bearlike when meals
+were delayed.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later, Marjory escorted the guests to
+the dining-room, and, finding both of these usually
+talkative persons alarmingly silent, she inferred of<span class="pagenum">[221]</span>
+course that Mabel had forgotten&mdash;as indeed Mabel
+had&mdash;her instructions in regard to introducing them.
+Marjory's manners on formal occasions were very
+pretty; they were pretty now, and so was she, as she
+hastened to make up for Mabel's oversight.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mr. Black," she cried, earnestly, "I'm afraid
+no one remembered to introduce you. It's our first
+dinner party, you know, and we're not very wise. This
+is our dearest neighbor, Mrs. Crane, Mr. Black."</p>
+
+<p>The guests bowed stiffly for the third time. Practice
+should have lent grace to the salutation, but seemingly
+it had not.</p>
+
+<p>"Aren't some of you young people going to sit down
+with me?" demanded Mr. Black, noticing suddenly
+that the table was set for only two.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Crane with evident dismay, "surely
+you're coming to the table, too."</p>
+
+<p>"We can't," explained Marjory. "It takes all of us to
+do the serving. Besides, we haven't but two dining-room
+chairs. Sit here, please, Mrs. Crane; and this is
+your place, Mr. Black."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Black looked red and uncomfortable as he unfolded
+his napkin. Mrs. Crane looked, as Marjory said
+afterward, for all the world as if she were going to
+cry. Perhaps the prospect of a good dinner after a
+long siege of poor ones was too much for her, for
+ordinarily Mrs. Crane was a very cheerful woman.<span class="pagenum">[222]</span></p>
+
+<p>Although both guests declared that the soup was
+very good indeed, neither seemed to really enjoy it.</p>
+
+<p>"They just kind of worried a little of it down," said
+the distressed Marjory, when she handed Mr. Black's
+plate, still three-quarters full, to Jean in the kitchen.
+"Do you suppose there's anything the matter with it?"</p>
+
+<p>"There can't be," said Bettie. "I've tasted it and it's
+good."</p>
+
+<p>"They're just saving room for the other things,"
+comforted Mabel. "I guess <i>I</i> wouldn't fill myself up
+with soup if I could smell roasted chicken keeping
+warm in the oven."</p>
+
+<p>Although Mabel had asked to be spared passing the
+spillable things, it seemed reasonably safe to trust her
+with the dish of escalloped salmon. She succeeded in
+passing it without disaster to either the dish or the
+guests' garments, and her apron was still immaculate.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," exclaimed Mabel, suddenly noticing that the
+guests sat stiff and silent, "the girls said I was to be
+sure to introduce you the moment you came, and I
+never thought a thing about it. Do forgive me&mdash;I'm
+the stupidest girl. Mrs. Black&mdash;I mean Mr. Crane&mdash;no,
+<i>Mrs.</i> Crane&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We've been introduced," said Mr. Black, rather
+shortly. "Might I have a glass of water?"</p>
+
+<p>A pained, surprised look crept into Mabel's eyes.
+A moment later she went to the kitchen.<span class="pagenum">[223]</span></p>
+
+<p>The instant the guests were left alone, Mrs. Crane
+did an odd thing. She leaned forward and spoke in a
+low, earnest tone to Mr. Black.</p>
+
+<p>"Peter," she said, "can't we pretend to be sociable
+for a little while? It isn't comfortable, of course, but
+it isn't right to spoil those children's pleasure by acting
+like a pair of wooden dolls. Let's talk to each
+other whenever they're in the room just as if we had
+just met for the first time."</p>
+
+<p>"You're right, Sarah," said Mr. Black. "Let's talk
+about the weather. It's a safe topic and there's always
+plenty of it."</p>
+
+<p>When Marjory opened the door to carry in the salad
+there was a pleasant hum of voices in the dining-room.
+It seemed to all the girls that the guests were
+really enjoying themselves, for Mr. Black was telling
+Mrs. Crane how much warmer it was in Washington,
+and Mrs. Crane was informing Mr. Black that, except
+for the one shower that fell so opportunely on the
+Milligans, it had been a remarkably dry summer. The
+four anxious hostesses, feeling suddenly cheered, fell
+joyously to eating the soup and the salmon that remained
+on the stove. Until that moment, they had
+been too uneasy to realize that they were hungry; but
+as Marjory carried in the crackers, half-famished
+Mabel breathed a fervent hope that the guests wouldn't
+help themselves too lavishly to the salad.<span class="pagenum">[224]</span></p>
+
+<p>To the astonishment of Mabel, who carried the
+chicken successfully to its place before Mr. Black, who
+was to carve it, Mr. Black did not ask the other guest
+what part she liked best, but, with a whimsical smile,
+quietly cut off both wings and put them on Mrs.
+Crane's plate.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Crane looked up with an odd, tremulous expression&mdash;sort
+of weepy, Mabel called it afterwards&mdash;and
+said: "Thank you, Peter."</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Mabel at the time that the guests were
+getting acquainted with a rapidity that was little short
+of remarkable&mdash;"Peter" indeed.</p>
+
+<p>Then, when everything else was eaten, and Marjory
+had brought the nuts and served them, Mrs. Crane,
+hardly waiting for the door to close behind the little
+waitress, leaned forward suddenly and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Peter, do you remember how you pounded my
+thumb when I held that hard black walnut for you
+to crack?"</p>
+
+<p>"I remember everything, Sarah. I've always been
+sorry about that thumb&mdash;and I've been sorry about a
+good many other things since. Do you think&mdash;do you
+think you could forgive me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I just guess I could," returned Mrs. Crane,
+heartily. "After all, it was just as much my fault as it
+was yours&mdash;maybe more."<span class="pagenum">[225]</span></p>
+
+<p>"No, I never thought that, Sarah. <i>I</i> was the one to
+blame."</p>
+
+<p>When the door opened a moment later to admit the
+finger-bowls and all four of the girls, who had licked
+the ice-cream platter and had nothing more to do in
+the kitchen since everything had been served&mdash;there,
+to the housekeepers' unbounded amazement, were
+Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane, with their arms stretched
+across the little table, holding each other's middle-aged
+hands in a tight clasp, and both had tears in their
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The girls looked at them in consternation.</p>
+
+<p>"Was&mdash;was it the dinner?" ventured Mabel, at last.
+"Was it as bad as&mdash;as all that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Black, rising to go around the
+table to place an affectionate arm across Mrs. Crane's
+plump shoulders, "it <i>was</i> the dinner, but not its badness&mdash;or
+even its very goodness."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess you'd better tell 'em all about it, Peter,"
+suggested Mrs. Crane, whose eyes were shining happily.
+"It's only fair they should know about it&mdash;bless
+their little hearts."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you see," said Mr. Black, who, as the girls
+had quickly discovered, was once more their own
+delightfully jolly friend, "once upon a time, a long
+time ago, there was a black-eyed girl named Sarah,
+and a two-years-younger boy, who looked a good<span class="pagenum">[226]</span>
+deal like her, named Peter, and they were brother and
+sister. They were all the brothers and sisters that each
+had, for their parents died when this boy and girl
+were very young. Peter and Sarah used to dream a
+beautiful dream of living together always, and of
+going down hand-in-hand to a peaceful, plentiful old
+age. You see, they had no other relative but one very
+cross grandmother, who scolded them both even
+oftener than they deserved&mdash;which was probably quite
+often enough. So I suspect that those abused, black-eyed,
+half-starved children loved each other more than
+most brothers and sisters do."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," agreed Mrs. Crane, nodding her head and
+smiling mistily, "they certainly did. The poor young
+things had no one else to love."</p>
+
+<p>"That," said Mr. Black, "was no doubt the reason
+why, when the headstrong boy grew up and married
+a girl that his sister didn't like, and the equally headstrong
+girl grew up and married a man that her
+brother <i>couldn't</i> like&mdash;a regular scoundrel that&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Peter!" warned Mrs. Crane.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Black, hastily, "it's all over now,
+and perhaps we <i>had</i> better leave that part of it out.
+It isn't a pretty story, and we'll never mention it
+again, Sarah. But anyway, girls, this foolish brother
+and sister quarreled, and the brothers-in-law and
+sisters-in-law and even the grandmother, who was old<span class="pagenum">[227]</span>
+enough to know better, quarreled, until finally all
+four of those hot-tempered young persons were so
+angry that the brother named Peter said he'd never
+speak to his sister again, and the sister named Sarah
+said she'd never speak to her brother again&mdash;and they
+haven't until this very day. Just a pair of young geese,
+weren't they, Sarah?"</p>
+
+<p>"Old geese, too," agreed Mrs. Crane, "for they've
+both been fearfully lonely ever since and they've both
+been too proud to say so. One of them, at least, has
+wished a great many times that there had never been
+any quarrel."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Two</i> of 'em. But now this one," said Mr. Black,
+placing his forefinger against his own broad chest, "is
+going to ask this one&mdash;" and he pointed to Mrs.
+Crane&mdash;"to come and live with him in his own great
+big empty house, so he'll have a sister again to sew
+on his buttons, listen to his old stories, and make a
+home for him. What do you say, Sarah?"</p>
+
+<p>"I say yes," said Mrs. Crane; "yes, with all my
+heart."</p>
+
+<p>"And here," said Mr. Black, smiling into four pairs
+of sympathetic eyes, "are four young people who will
+have to pretend that they truly belong to us once in
+a while, because we'd both like to have our house full
+of happy little girls. You never had any children,
+Sarah?"<span class="pagenum">[228]</span></p>
+
+<p>"No, and you lost your only one, Peter."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, a little brown-eyed thing like Bettie here&mdash;she'd
+be a woman now, probably with children of
+her own."</p>
+
+<p>"It's&mdash;it's just like a story," breathed Bettie, happily.
+"We've been part of a real story and never knew it!
+I'm so glad you let us have Dandelion Cottage, <i>so</i>
+glad we invited you to dinner, and that nothing happened
+to keep either of you away."</p>
+
+<p>"Peter and I are glad, too," said Mrs. Crane, who
+indeed looked wonderfully happy.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Mr. Black, "it's the most successful
+dinner party I've ever attended. Of course I can't hope
+to equal it, but as soon as Sarah and I get to keeping
+house properly and have decided which is to pour the
+coffee, we're going to return the compliment with a
+dinner that will make your eyes stick out, aren't we,
+Sarah?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we'll do a great deal more than that," responded
+generous Mrs. Crane. "We'll keep four extra
+places set at our table all the time."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course we will," cried Mr. Black, heartily.
+"And we'll fill the biggest case in the library with
+children's books&mdash;we'll all go tomorrow to pick out
+the first shelfful&mdash;so that when it gets too cold for you
+to stay in Dandelion Cottage you'll have something
+to take its place. You're going to be little sunny Dandelions<span class="pagenum">[229]</span>
+in the Black-Crane house whenever your own
+people can spare you. But what's the matter? Have
+you all lost your tongues? I didn't suppose you could
+be so astonishingly quiet."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," sighed Bettie, joyfully, "you've taken <i>such</i> a
+load off our minds. We were simply dreading the
+winter, with no cottage to have good times in."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Jean. "We didn't know how we could
+manage to <i>live</i> with the cottage closed. We've been
+wondering what in the world we were going to do."</p>
+
+<p>"But with school, and you dear people to visit every
+day on the way home," said Marjory, "we'll hardly
+have time to miss it. Oh! won't it be perfectly lovely?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to begin at once to practice being on
+time to meals," said Mabel. "I'm not going to let that
+extra place do any waiting for <i>me</i>."</p>
+
+<p>These were the things that the four girls said aloud;
+but the joyous look that flashed from Jean to Bettie,
+from Bettie to Marjory, from Marjory to Mabel, and
+from Mabel back again to Jean, said even more plainly:
+"<i>Now</i> there'll be somebody to take care of Mrs. Crane.
+<i>Now</i> there'll be somebody to make a home for lonely
+Mr. Black."</p>
+
+<p>And indeed, subsequent events proved that it was
+a beautiful arrangement for everybody, besides being
+quite the most astonishing thing that had happened
+in the history of Lakeville.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Dandelion Cottage, by Carroll Watson Rankin
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,6043 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Dandelion Cottage, by Carroll Watson Rankin
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
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+
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+Title: Dandelion Cottage
+
+Author: Carroll Watson Rankin
+
+Illustrator: Mary Stevens
+
+Release Date: October 28, 2011 [EBook #37871]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DANDELION COTTAGE ***
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+
+
+
+ Dandelion Cottage
+
+ CARROLL WATSON RANKIN
+
+
+ _Illustrated by Mary Stevens_
+
+ JOHN M. LONGYEAR RESEARCH LIBRARY
+
+ Marquette, Michigan
+
+ 1977
+
+
+ _First published in 1904_
+
+ THE MARQUETTE COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
+ 213 North Front Street
+ Marquette, Michigan 49855
+
+ FOURTH EDITION
+
+ First Printing, February 1977
+
+ Printed in the USA by
+ THE BOOK CONCERN, INC.
+ Hancock, Michigan
+
+
+ _To_
+ RHODA, FRANCES, AND ELEANOR
+
+ _whose lively interest made the writing
+ of this little book a joyful task._
+
+
+
+
+ THE PERSONS OF THE STORY
+
+
+ BETTIE TUCKER:}
+ JEANIE MAPES:} _The Dandelion Cottagers_
+ MABEL BENNETT:}
+ MARJORY VALE:}
+ THE TUCKER FAMILY: _Mostly boys_
+ THE MAPES FAMILY: _Two parents, two boys_
+ DR. AND MRS. BENNETT: _Merely Parents_
+ AUNTY JANE: _A Parental Substitute_
+ MRS. CRANE: _The Pleasantest Neighbor_
+ MR. BLACK: _The Senior Warden_
+ MR. DOWNING: _The Junior Warden_
+ MISS BLOSSOM: _The Lodger_
+ MR. BLOSSOM: _The Organ Tuner_
+ GRANDMA PIKE: _Another Neighbor_
+ MR. AND MRS. MILLIGAN:}
+ LAURA MILLIGAN:}
+ THE MILLIGAN BOY AND} _The Unpleasantest Neighbors_
+ THE MILLIGAN BABY:}
+ THE MILLIGAN DOG:}
+
+
+
+
+ Contents
+
+
+ 1. _Mr. Black's Terms_
+ 2. _Paying the Rent_
+ 3. _The Tenants Take Possession_
+ 4. _Furnishing the Cottage_
+ 5. _Poverty in the Cottage_
+ 6. _A Lodger to the Rescue_
+ 7. _The Girls Disclose a Plan_
+ 8. _An Unexpected Crop of Dandelions_
+ 9. _Changes and Plans_
+ 10. _The Milligans_
+ 11. _An Embarrassing Visitor_
+ 12. _A Lively Afternoon_
+ 13. _The Junior Warden_
+ 14. _An Unexpected Letter_
+ 15. _An Obdurate Landlord_
+ 16. _Mabel Plans a Surprise_
+ 17. _Several Surprises Take Effect_
+ 18. _A Hurried Retreat_
+ 19. _The Response to Mabel's Telegram_
+ 20. _The Odd Behavior of the Grown-ups_
+ 21. _The Dinner_
+
+
+
+
+Dandelion Cottage
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 1
+
+Mr. Black's Terms
+
+
+The little square cottage was unoccupied. It had stood for many years on
+the parish property, having indeed been built long before the parish
+bought the land for church purposes. It was easy to see how Dandelion
+Cottage came by its name at first, for growing all about it were great,
+fluffy, golden dandelions; but afterwards there was another good reason
+why the name was appropriate, as you will discover shortly.
+
+The cottage stood almost directly behind the big stone church in
+Lakeville, a thriving Northern Michigan town, and did not show very
+plainly from the street because it was so small by contrast with
+everything else near it. This was fortunate, because, after the Tuckers
+had moved into the big new rectory, the smaller house looked decidedly
+forlorn and deserted.
+
+"We'll leave it just where it stands," the church wardens had said, many
+years previously. "It's precisely the right size for Doctor and Mrs.
+Gunn, for they would rather have a small house than a large one. When
+they leave us and we are selecting another clergyman, we'll try to get
+one with a small family."
+
+This plan worked beautifully for a number of years. It succeeded so
+well, in fact, that the vestry finally forgot to be cautious, and when
+at last it secured the services of Dr. Tucker, the church had grown so
+used to clergymen with small families that the vestrymen engaged the new
+minister without remembering to ask if his family would fit Dandelion
+Cottage.
+
+But when Dr. Tucker and Mrs. Tucker and eight little Tuckers, some on
+foot and some in baby carriages, arrived, the vestrymen regretted this
+oversight. They could see at a glance that the tiny cottage could never
+hold them all.
+
+"We'll just have to build a rectory on the other lot," said Mr. Black,
+the senior warden. "That's all there is about it. The cottage is all out
+of repair, anyway. It wasn't well built in the first place, and the last
+three clergymen have complained bitterly of the inconvenience of having
+to hold up umbrellas in the different rooms every time it rained. Their
+wives objected to the wall paper and to being obliged to keep the
+potatoes in the bedroom closet. It's really time we had a new rectory."
+
+"It certainly is," returned the junior warden, "and we'll all have to
+take turns entertaining all the little Tuckers that there isn't room for
+in the cottage while the new house is getting built."
+
+Seven of the eight little Tuckers were boys. If it hadn't been for
+Bettie they would _all_ have been boys, but Bettie saved the day. She
+was a slender twelve-year-old little Bettie, with big brown eyes, a mop
+of short brown curls, and such odd clothes. Busy Mrs. Tucker was so in
+the habit of making boys' garments that she could not help giving a
+boyish cut even to Bettie's dresses. There were always sailor collars to
+the waists, and the skirts were invariably kilted. Besides this, the
+little girl wore boys' shoes.
+
+"You see," explained Bettie, who was a cheerful little body, "Tommy has
+to take them next, and of course it wouldn't pay to buy shoes for just
+one girl."
+
+The little Tuckers were not the only children in the neighborhood.
+Bettie found a bosom friend in Dr. Bennett's Mabel, who lived next door
+to the rectory, another in Jeanie Mapes, who lived across the street,
+and still another in Marjory Vale, whose home was next door to Dandelion
+Cottage.
+
+Jean, as her little friends best liked to call her, was a sweet-faced,
+gentle-voiced girl of fourteen. Mothers of other small girls were always
+glad to see their own more scatterbrained daughters tucked under Jean's
+loving wing, for thoroughly-nice Jean, without being in the least
+priggish, was considered a safe and desirable companion. It doesn't
+_always_ follow that children like the persons it is considered best for
+them to like, but in Jean's case both parents and daughters agreed that
+Jean was not only safe but delightful--the charming daughter of a
+charming mother.
+
+Marjory, a year younger and nearly a head shorter than Jean, often
+seemed older. Outwardly, she was a sedate small person, slight,
+blue-eyed, graceful, and very fair. Her manners at times were very
+pleasing, her self-possession almost remarkable; this was the result of
+careful training by a conscientious, but at that time sadly
+unappreciated, maiden aunt who was Marjory's sole guardian. There were
+moments, however, when Marjory, who was less sedate than she appeared,
+forgot to be polite. At such times, her ways were apt to be less
+pleasing than those of either Bettie or Jean, because her wit was
+nimbler, her tongue sharper, and her heart a trifle less tender. Her
+mother had died when Marjory was only a few weeks old, her father had
+lived only two years longer, and the rather solitary little girl had
+missed much of the warm family affection that had fallen to the lot of
+her three more fortunate friends. Those who knew her well found much in
+her to like, but among her schoolmates there were girls who said that
+Marjory was "stuck-up," affected, and "too smart."
+
+Mabel, the fourth in this little quartet of friends, was eleven, large
+for her age and young for her years, always an unfortunate combination
+of circumstances. She was intensely human and therefore liable to err,
+and, it may be said, she very seldom missed an opportunity. In school
+she read with a tremendous amount of expression but mispronounced half
+the words; when questions were asked, she waved her hand triumphantly
+aloft and gave anything but the right answer; she had a surprising stock
+of energy, but most of it was misdirected. Warm-hearted, generous,
+heedless, hot-tempered, and always blundering, she was something of a
+trial at home and abroad; yet no one could help loving her, for
+everybody realized that she would grow up some day into a really fine
+woman, and that all that was needed in the meantime was considerable
+patience. Rearing Mabel was not unlike the task of bringing up a St.
+Bernard puppy. Mrs. Bennett was decidedly glad to note the growing
+friendship among the four girls, for she hoped that Mabel would in time
+grow dignified and sweet like Jean, thoughtful and tender like Bettie,
+graceful and prettily mannered like Marjory. But this happy result had
+yet to be achieved.
+
+The little one-story cottage, too much out of repair to be rented, stood
+empty and neglected. To most persons it was an unattractive spot if not
+actually an eyesore. The steps sagged in a dispirited way, some of the
+windows were broken, and the fence, in sympathy perhaps with the house,
+had shed its pickets and leaned inward with a discouraged, hopeless air.
+
+But Bettie looked at the little cottage longingly--she could gaze right
+down upon it from the back bedroom window--a great many times a day. It
+didn't seem a bit too big for a playhouse. Indeed, it seemed a great
+pity that such a delightful little building should go unoccupied when
+Bettie and her homeless dolls were simply suffering for just such a
+shelter.
+
+"Wouldn't it be nice," said Bettie, one day in the early spring, "if we
+four girls could have Dandelion Cottage for our very own?"
+
+"Wouldn't it be sweet," mimicked Marjory, "if we could have the moon and
+about twenty stars to play jacks with?"
+
+"The cottage isn't _quite_ so far away," said Jean. "It _would_ be just
+lovely to have it, for we never have a place to play in comfortably."
+
+"We're generally disturbing grown-ups, I notice," said Marjory,
+comically imitating her Aunty Jane's severest manner. "A little less
+noise, if you please. Is it really necessary to laugh so much and so
+often?"
+
+"Even Mother gets tired of us sometimes," confided Jean. "There are days
+when no one seems to want all of us at once."
+
+"I know it," said Bettie, pathetically, "but it's worse for me than it
+is for the rest of you. You have your rooms and nobody to meddle with
+your things. I no sooner get my dolls nicely settled in one corner than
+I have to move them into another, because the babies poke their eyes
+out. It's dreadful, too, to have to live with so many boys. I fixed up
+the cunningest playhouse under the clothes-reel last week, but the very
+minute it was finished Rob came home with a horrid porcupine and I had
+to move out in a hurry."
+
+"Perhaps," suggested Marjory, "we could rent the cottage."
+
+"Who'd pay the rent?" demanded Mabel. "My allowance is five cents a week
+and I have to pay a fine of one cent every time I'm late to meals."
+
+"How much do you have left?" asked Jeanie, laughing.
+
+"Not a cent. I was seven cents in debt at the end of last week."
+
+"I get two cents a hundred for digging dandelions," said Marjory, "but
+it takes just forever to dig them, and ugh! I just hate it."
+
+"I never have any money at all," sighed Bettie. "You see there are so
+many of us."
+
+"Let's go peek in at the windows," suggested Mabel, springing up from
+the grass. "That much won't cost us anything at any rate."
+
+Away scampered the four girls, taking a short cut through Bettie's back
+yard.
+
+The cottage had been vacant for more than a year and had not improved in
+appearance. Rampant vines clambered over the windows and nowhere else in
+town were there such luxurious weeds as grew in the cottage yard.
+Nowhere else were there such mammoth dandelions or such prickly burrs.
+The girls waded fearlessly through them, parted the vines, and, pressing
+their noses against the glass, peered into the cottage parlor.
+
+"What a nice, square little room!" said Marjory.
+
+"I don't think the paper is very pretty," said Mabel.
+
+"We could cover most of the spots with pictures," suggested practical
+Marjory.
+
+"It looks to me sort of spidery," said Mabel, who was always somewhat
+pessimistic. "Probably there's rats, too."
+
+"I know how to stop up rat holes," said Bettie, who had not lived with
+seven brothers without acquiring a number of useful accomplishments.
+"I'm not afraid of spiders--that is, not so _very_ much."
+
+"What are you doing here?" demanded a gruff voice so suddenly that
+everybody jumped.
+
+The startled girls wheeled about. There stood Bettie's most devoted
+friend, the senior warden.
+
+"Oh!" cried Bettie, "it's only Mr. Black."
+
+"Were you looking for something?" asked Mr. Black.
+
+"Yes," said Bettie. "We're looking for a house. We'd like to rent this
+one, only we haven't a scrap of money."
+
+"And what in the name of common sense would you do with it?"
+
+"We want it for our dolls," said Bettie, turning a pair of big pleading
+brown eyes upon Mr. Black. "You see, we haven't any place to play.
+Marjory's Aunty Jane won't let her cut papers in the house, so she can't
+have any paper dolls, and I can't play any place because I have so many
+brothers. They tomahawk all my dolls when they play Indian, shoot them
+with beans when they play soldiers, and drown them all when they play
+shipwreck. Don't you think we might be allowed to use the cottage if
+we'd promise to be very careful and not do any damage?"
+
+"We'd clean it up," offered Marjory, as an inducement.
+
+"We'd mend the rat holes," offered Jean, looking hopefully at Bettie.
+
+"Would you dig the weeds?" demanded Mr. Black.
+
+There was a deep silence. The girls looked at the sea of dandelions and
+then at one another.
+
+"Yes," said Marjory, finally breaking the silence. "We'd even dig the
+weeds."
+
+"Yes," echoed the others. "We'd even dig the weeds--and there's just
+millions of 'em."
+
+"Good!" said Mr. Black. "Now, we'll all sit down on the steps and I'll
+tell you what we'll do. It happens that the Village Improvement Society
+has just notified the vestry that the weeds on this lot must be removed
+before they go to seed--the neighbors have complained about them. It
+would cost the parish several dollars to hire a man to do the work, and
+we're short of funds just now. Now, if you four girls will pull up every
+weed in this place before the end of next week you shall have the use of
+the cottage for all the rest of the summer in return for your services.
+How does that strike you?"
+
+"Oh!" cried Bettie, throwing her arms about Mr. Black's neck. "Do let
+me hug you. Oh, I'm glad--glad!"
+
+"There, there!" cried stout Mr. Black, shaking Bettie off and dropping
+her where the dandelions grew thickest. "I didn't say I was to be
+strangled as part of the bargain. You'd better save your muscle for the
+dandelions. Remember, you've got to pay your rent in advance. I shan't
+hand over the key until the last weed is dug."
+
+"We'll begin this minute!" cried enthusiastic Mabel. "I'm going straight
+home for a knife."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 2
+
+Paying the Rent
+
+
+"This is a whopping big yard," said Mabel, looking disconsolately at two
+dandelions and one burdock in the bottom of a bushel basket. "There
+doesn't seem to be any place to begin."
+
+"I'm going to weed out a place big enough to sit in," announced Bettie.
+"Then I'll make it bigger and bigger all around me in every direction
+until it joins the clearing next to mine."
+
+"I'm a soldier," said Marjory, brandishing a trowel, "vanquishing my
+enemies. You know in books the hero always battles single-handed with
+about a million foes and always kills them all and everybody lives happy
+ever after--zip! There goes one!"
+
+"I'm a pioneer," said Jean, slashing away at a huge, tough burdock. "I'm
+chopping down the forest primeval to make a potato patch. The dandelions
+are skulking Indians, and I'm capturing them to put in my bushel-basket
+prison."
+
+"I'm just digging weeds," said prosaic Mabel, "and I don't like it."
+
+"Neither does anybody else," said Marjory, "but I guess having the
+cottage will be worth it. Just pretend it's something else and then you
+won't mind it so much. Play you're digging for diamonds."
+
+"I can't," returned Mabel, hopelessly. "I haven't any imagination. This
+is just plain dirt and I can't make myself believe it's anything else."
+
+By supper time the cottage yard presented a decidedly disreputable
+appearance. Before the weeds had been disturbed they stood upright,
+presenting an even surface of green with a light crest of dandelion
+gold. But now it was different. Although the number of weeds was not
+greatly decreased, the yard looked as if, indeed, a battle had been
+fought there. Mr. Black, passing by on his way to town, began to wonder
+if he had been quite wise in turning it over to the girls.
+
+At four o'clock the following morning, sleepy Bettie tumbled out of bed
+and into her clothes. Then she slipped quietly downstairs, out of doors,
+through the convenient hole in the back fence, and into the cottage
+yard. She had been digging for more than an hour when Jean, rubbing a
+pair of sleepy eyes, put in her appearance.
+
+"Oh!" cried Jean, disappointedly. "I meant to have a huge bare field to
+show you when you came, and here you are ahead of me. What a lot you've
+done!"
+
+"Yes," assented Bettie, happily. "There's room for me and my basket,
+too, in my patch. I'll have to go home after a while to help dress the
+children."
+
+Young though she was--she was only twelve--Bettie was a most helpful
+young person. It is hard to imagine what Mrs. Tucker would have done
+without her cheerful little daughter. Bettie always spoke of the boys as
+"the children," and she helped her mother darn their stockings, sew on
+their buttons, and sort out their collars. The care of the family baby,
+too, fell to her lot.
+
+The boys were good boys, but they were boys. They were willing to do
+errands or pile wood or carry out ashes, but none of them ever thought
+of doing one of these things without first being told--sometimes they
+had to be told a great many times. It was different with Bettie. If Tom
+ate crackers on the front porch, it was Bettie who ran for the broom to
+brush up the crumbs. If the second-baby-but-one needed his face
+washed--and it seemed to Bettie that there never was a time when he
+_didn't_ need it washed--it was Bettie who attended to it. If the cat
+looked hungry, it was Bettie who gave her a saucer of milk. Dick's
+rabbits and Rob's porcupine would have starved if Bettie had not fed
+them, and Donald's dog knew that if no one else remembered his bone kind
+Bettie would bear it in mind.
+
+The boys' legs were round and sturdy, but Bettie's were very much like
+pipe stems.
+
+"I don't have time to get fat," Bettie would say. "But you don't need to
+worry about me. I think I'm the healthiest person in the house. At least
+I'm the only one that hasn't had to have breakfast in bed this week."
+
+Neither Marjory nor Mabel appeared during the morning to dig their share
+of the weeds, but when school was out that afternoon they were all on
+hand with their baskets.
+
+"I had to stay," said Mabel, who was the last to arrive. "I missed two
+words in spelling."
+
+"What were they?" asked Marjory.
+
+"'Parachute' and 'dandelion.' I hate dandelions, anyway. I don't know
+what parachutes are, but if they're any sort of weeds I hate them, too."
+
+The girls laughed. Mabel always looked on the gloomiest side of things
+and always grumbled. She seemed to thrive on it, however, for she was
+built very much like a barrel and her cheeks were like a pair of round
+red apples. She was always honest, if a little too frank in expressing
+her opinions, and the girls liked her in spite of her blunt ways. She
+was the youngest of the quartet, being only eleven.
+
+"There doesn't seem to be much grass left after the weeds are out," said
+Bettie, surveying the bare, sandy patch she had made.
+
+"This has _always_ been a weedy old place," replied Jean. "I think the
+whole neighborhood will feel obliged to us if we ever get the lot
+cleared. Perhaps our landlord will plant grass seed. It would be fine to
+have a lawn."
+
+"Perhaps," said Marjory, "he'll let us have some flower beds. Wouldn't
+it be lovely to have nasturtiums running right up the sides of the
+house?"
+
+"They'd be lovely among the vines," agreed Bettie. "I've some poppy
+seeds that we might plant in a long narrow bed by the fence."
+
+"There are hundreds of little pansy plants coming up all over our yard,"
+said Jean. "We might make a little round bed of them right here where
+I'm sitting. What are you going to plant in _your_ bed, Mabel?"
+
+"Butter-beans," said that practical young person, promptly.
+
+"Well," said Bettie, with a long sigh, "we'll have to work faster than
+this or summer will be over before we have a chance to plant _anything_.
+This is the biggest _little_ yard I ever did see."
+
+For a time there was silence. Marjory, the soldier, fell upon her foes
+with renewed vigor, and soon had an entire regiment in durance vile.
+Jean, the pioneer, fell upon the forest with so much energy that its
+speedy extermination was threatened. Mabel seized upon the biggest and
+toughest burdock she could find and pulled with both hands and all her
+might, until, with a sharp crack, the root suddenly parted and Mabel,
+very much to her own surprise, turned a back somersault and landed in
+Bettie's basket.
+
+"Hi there!" cried a voice from the road. "How are you youngsters getting
+along?"
+
+The girls jumped to their feet--all but Mabel, who was still wedged
+tightly in Bettie's basket. There was Mr. Black, with his elbows on the
+fence, and with him was the president of the Village Improvement
+Society; both were smiling broadly.
+
+"Sick of your bargain?" asked Mr. Black.
+
+The four girls shook their heads emphatically.
+
+"Hard work?"
+
+Four heads bobbed up and down.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Black, encouragingly, "you've made considerable headway
+today."
+
+"Where are you putting the weeds?" asked the president of the Village
+Improvement Society.
+
+"On the back porch in a piano box," said Bettie. "We had a big pile of
+them last night, but they shrank like everything before morning. If they
+do that _every_ time, it won't be necessary for Mabel to jump on them to
+press them down."
+
+"Let me know when you have a wagon load," said Mr. Black. "I'll have
+them hauled away for you."
+
+For the rest of the week the girls worked early and late. They began
+almost at daylight, and the mosquitoes found them still digging at dusk.
+
+By Thursday night, only scattered patches of weeds remained. The little
+diggers could hardly tear themselves away when they could no longer find
+the weeds because of the gathering darkness. Now that the task was so
+nearly completed it seemed such a waste of time to eat and sleep.
+
+Bettie was up earlier than ever the next morning, and with one of the
+boys' spades had loosened the soil around some of the very worst patches
+before any of the other girls appeared.
+
+By five o'clock that night the last weed was dug. Conscientious Bettie
+went around the yard a dozen times, but however hard she might search,
+not a single remaining weed could she discover.
+
+"Good work," said Jean, balancing her empty basket on her head.
+
+"It seems too good to be true," said Bettie, "but think of it,
+girls--the rent is paid! It's 'most time for Mr. Black to go by. Let's
+watch for him from the doorstep--our own precious doorstep."
+
+"It needs scrubbing," said Mabel. "Besides, it isn't ours, yet. Perhaps
+Mr. Black has changed his mind. Some grown-up folks have awfully
+changeable minds."
+
+"Oh!" gasped Marjory. "Wouldn't it be perfectly dreadful if he had!"
+
+It seemed to the little girls, torn between doubt and expectation, that
+Mr. Black was strangely indifferent to the calls of hunger that night.
+Was he never going home to dinner? Was he _never_ coming?
+
+"Perhaps," suggested Jean, "he has gone out of town."
+
+"Or forgotten us," said Marjory.
+
+"Or died," said Mabel, dolefully.
+
+"No--no," cried Bettie. "There he is; he's coming around the corner
+now--I can see him. Let's run to meet him."
+
+The girls scampered down the street. Bettie seized one hand, Mabel the
+other, Marjory and Jean danced along ahead of him, and everybody talked
+at once. Thus escorted, Mr. Black approached the cottage lot.
+
+"Well, I declare," said Mr. Black. "You haven't left so much as a blade
+of grass. Do you think you could sow some grass seed if I have the
+ground made ready for it?"
+
+The girls thought they could. Bettie timidly suggested nasturtiums.
+
+"Flower beds too? Why, of course," said Mr. Black. "Vegetables as well
+if you like. You can have a regular farm and grow fairy beanstalks and
+Cinderella pumpkins if you want to. And now, since the rent seems to be
+paid, I suppose there is nothing left for me to do but to hand over the
+key. Here it is, Mistress Bettie, and I'm sure I couldn't have a nicer
+lot of tenants."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 3
+
+The Tenants Take Possession
+
+
+"Our own house--think of it!" cried Bettie, turning the key. "Push,
+somebody; the door sticks. There! It's open."
+
+"Ugh!" said Mabel, drawing back hastily. "It's awfully dark and stuffy
+in there. I guess I won't go in just yet--it smells so dead-ratty."
+
+"It's been shut up so long," explained Jean. "Wait. I'll pull some of
+the vines back from this window. There! Can you see better?"
+
+"Lots," said Bettie. "This is the parlor, girls--but, oh, what raggedy
+paper. We'll need lots of pictures to cover all the holes and spots."
+
+"We'd better clean it all first," advised sensible Jean. "The windows
+are covered with dust and the floor is just black."
+
+"This," said Marjory, opening a door, "must be the dining-room. Oh! What
+a cunning little corner cupboard--just the place for our dishes."
+
+"You mean it would be if we had any," said Mabel. "Mine are all
+smashed."
+
+"Pooh!" said Jean. "We don't mean doll things--we want real, grown-up
+ones. Why, what a cunning little bedroom!"
+
+"There's one off the parlor, too," said Marjory, "and it's even
+cunninger than this."
+
+"My! what a horrid place!" exclaimed Mabel, poking an inquisitive nose
+into another unexplored room, and as hastily withdrawing that offended
+feature. "Mercy, I'm all over spider webs."
+
+"That's the kitchen," explained Bettie. "Most of the plaster has fallen
+down and it's rained in a good deal. But here's a good stovepipe hole,
+and such a cunning cupboard built into the wall. What have _you_ found,
+Jean?"
+
+"Just a pantry," said Jean, holding up a pair of black hands, "and lots
+of dust. There isn't a clean spot in the house."
+
+"So much the better," said Bettie, whose clouds always had a silver
+lining. "We'll have just that much more fun cleaning up. I'll tell you
+what let's do--and we've all day tomorrow to do it in. We'll just
+regularly clean house--I've _always_ wanted to clean house."
+
+"Me too," cried Mabel, enthusiastically. "We'll bring just oceans of
+water--"
+
+"There's water here," interrupted Jean, turning a faucet. "Water and a
+pretty good sink. The water runs out all right."
+
+"That's good," said Bettie. "We must each bring a broom, and soap--"
+
+"And rags," suggested Jean.
+
+"And papers for the shelves," added Marjory.
+
+"And wear our oldest clothes," said Bettie.
+
+"Oo-ow, wow!" squealed Mabel.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked the girls, rushing into the pantry.
+
+"Spiders and mice," said Mabel. "I just poked my head into the cupboard
+and a mouse jumped out. I'm all spider-webby again, too."
+
+"Well, there won't be any spiders by tomorrow night," said Bettie,
+consolingly, "or any mice either, if somebody will bring a cat. Now
+let's go home to supper--I'm hungry as a bear."
+
+"Everybody remember to wear her oldest clothes," admonished Jean, "and
+to bring a broom."
+
+"I'll tie the key to a string and wear it around my neck night and day,"
+said Bettie, locking the door carefully when the girls were outside.
+"Aren't we going to have a perfectly glorious summer?"
+
+When Mr. Black, on the way to his office the next morning, met his four
+little friends, he did not recognize them. Jean, who was fourteen, and
+tall for her age, wore one of her mother's calico wrappers tied in at
+the waist by the strings of the cook's biggest apron. Marjory, in the
+much shrunken gown of a previous summer, had her golden curls tucked
+away under the housemaid's sweeping cap. Bettie appeared in her very
+oldest skirt surmounted by an exceedingly ragged jacket and cap
+discarded by one of her brothers; while Mabel, with her usual
+enthusiasm, looked like a veritable rag-bag. When Bettie had unlocked
+the door--she had slept all night with the key in her hand to make
+certain that it would not escape--the girls filed in.
+
+"I know how to handle a broom as well as anybody," said Mabel, giving a
+mighty sweep and raising such a cloud of dust that the four
+housecleaners were obliged to flee out of doors to keep from
+strangling.
+
+"Phew!" said Jean, when she had stopped coughing. "I guess we'll have to
+take it out with a shovel. The dust must be an inch thick."
+
+"Wait," cried Marjory, darting off, "I'll get Aunty's sprinkling can;
+then the stuff won't fly so."
+
+After that the sweeping certainly went better. Then came the dusting.
+
+"It really looks very well," said Bettie, surveying the result with her
+head on one side and an air of housewifely wisdom that would have been
+more impressive if her nose hadn't been perfectly black with soot. "It
+certainly does look better, but I'm afraid you girls have most of the
+dust on your faces. I don't see how you managed to do it. Just look at
+Mabel."
+
+"Just look at yourself!" retorted Mabel, indignantly. "You've got the
+dirtiest face I _ever_ saw."
+
+"Never mind," said Jean, gently. "I guess we're all about alike. I've
+wiped all the dust off the walls of this parlor. Now I'm going to wash
+the windows and the woodwork, and after that I'm going to scrub the
+floor."
+
+"Do you know how to scrub?" asked Marjory.
+
+"No, but I guess I can learn. There! Doesn't that pane look as if a
+really-truly housemaid had washed it?"
+
+"Oh, Mabel! Do look out!" cried Marjory.
+
+But the warning came too late. Mabel stepped on the slippery bar of
+soap and sat down hard in a pan of water, splashing it in every
+direction. For a moment Mabel looked decidedly cross, but when she got
+up and looked at the tin basin, she began to laugh.
+
+"That's a funny way to empty a basin, isn't it?" she said. "There isn't
+a drop of water left in it."
+
+"Well, don't try it again," said Jean. "That's Mrs. Tucker's basin and
+you've smashed it flat. You should learn to sit down less suddenly."
+
+"And," said Marjory, "to be more careful in your choice of seats--we'll
+have to take up a collection and buy Mrs. Tucker a new basin, or she'll
+be afraid to lend us anything more."
+
+The girls ran home at noon for a hasty luncheon. Rested and refreshed,
+they all returned promptly to their housecleaning.
+
+Nobody wanted to brush out the kitchen cupboard. It was not only dusty,
+but full of spider webs, and worst of all, the spiders themselves seemed
+very much at home. The girls left the back door open, hoping that the
+spiders would run out of their own accord. Apparently, however, the
+spiders felt no need of fresh air. Bettie, without a word to anyone, ran
+home, returning a moment later with her brother Bob's old tame crow
+blinking solemnly from her shoulder. She placed the great, black bird on
+the cupboard shelf and in a very few moments every spider had vanished
+down his greedy throat.
+
+"He just loves them," said Bettie.
+
+"How funny!" said Mabel. "Who ever heard of getting a crow to help clean
+house? I wish he could scrub floors as well as he clears out cupboards."
+
+The scrubbing, indeed, looked anything but an inviting task. Jean
+succeeded fairly well with the parlor floor, though she declared when
+that was finished that her wrists were so tired that she couldn't hold
+the scrubbing-brush another moment. Marjory and Bettie together scrubbed
+the floor of the tiny dining-room. Mabel made a brilliant success of one
+of the little bedrooms, but only, the other girls said, by accidentally
+tipping over a pail of clean water upon it, thereby rinsing off a thick
+layer of soap. Then Jean, having rested for a little while, finished the
+remaining bedroom and Marjory scoured the pantry shelves.
+
+The kitchen floor was rough and very dirty. Nobody wanted the task of
+scrubbing it. The tired girls leaned against the wall and looked at the
+floor and then at one another.
+
+"Let's leave it until Monday," said Mabel, who looked very much as if
+the others had scrubbed the floor with her. "I've had all the
+housecleaning I want for _one_ day."
+
+"Oh, no," pleaded Bettie. "Everything else is done. Just think how
+lovely it would be to go home tonight with all the disagreeable part
+finished! We could begin to move in Monday if we only had the house all
+clean."
+
+"Couldn't we cover the dirtiest places with pieces of old carpet?"
+demanded Mabel.
+
+"Oh, what dreadful housekeeping that would be!" said Marjory.
+
+"Yes," said Jean, "we must have every bit of it nice. Perhaps if we sit
+on the doorstep and rest for a few moments we'll feel more like
+scrubbing."
+
+The tired girls sat in a row on the edge of the low porch. They were all
+rather glad that the next day would be Sunday, for between the
+dandelions and the dust they had had a very busy week.
+
+"Why!" said Bettie, suddenly brightening. "We're going to have a
+visitor, I do believe."
+
+"Hi there!" said Mr. Black, turning in at the gate. "I smell soap.
+Housecleaning all done?"
+
+"All," said Bettie, wearily, "except the kitchen floor, and, oh! we're
+_so_ tired. I'm afraid we'll have to leave it until Monday, but we just
+hate to."
+
+"Too tired to eat peanuts?" asked Mr. Black, handing Bettie a huge paper
+bag. "Stay right here on the doorstep, all of you, and eat every one of
+these nuts. I'll look around and see what you've been doing--I'm sure
+there _can't_ be much dirt left inside when there's so much on your
+faces."
+
+It seemed a pity that Mr. Black, who liked little girls so well, should
+have no children of his own. A great many years before Bettie's people
+had moved to Lakeville, he had had one sister; and at another almost
+equally remote period he had possessed one little daughter, a slender,
+narrow-chested little maid, with great, pathetic brown eyes, so like
+Bettie's that Mr. Black was startled when Dr. Tucker's little daughter
+had first smiled at him from the Tucker doorway, for the senior warden's
+little girl had lived to be only six years old. This, of course, was the
+secret of Mr. Black's affection for Bettie.
+
+Mr. Black, who was a moderately stout, gray-haired man of fifty-five,
+with kind, dark eyes and a strong, rugged, smooth-shaven countenance,
+had a great deal of money, a beautiful home perched on the brow of a
+green hill overlooking the lake, and a silk hat. This last made a great
+impression on the children, for silk hats were seldom worn in Lakeville.
+Mr. Black looked very nice indeed in his, when he wore it to church
+Sunday morning, but Bettie felt more at home with him when he sat
+bareheaded on the rectory porch, with his short, crisp, thick gray hair
+tossed by the south wind.
+
+Besides these possessions, Mr. Black owned a garden on the sheltered
+hillside where wonderful roses grew as they would grow nowhere else in
+Lakeville. This was fortunate because Mr. Black loved roses, and spent
+much time poking about among them with trowel and pruning shears. Then,
+there were shelves upon shelves of books in the big, dingy library,
+which was the one room that the owner of the large house really lived
+in. A public-spirited man, Mr. Black had a wide circle of acquaintances
+and a few warm friends; but with all his possessions, and in spite of a
+jovial, cheerful manner in company, his dark, rather stern face, as
+Bettie had very quickly discovered, was sad when he sat alone in his pew
+in church. He had really nothing in the world to love but his books and
+his roses. It was evident, to anyone who had time to think about it,
+that kind Mr. Black, whose wife had died so many years before that only
+the oldest townspeople could remember that he had had a wife, was, in
+spite of his comfortable circumstances, a very lonely man, and that, as
+he grew older, he felt his loneliness more keenly. There were others
+besides Bettie who realized this, but it was not an easy matter to offer
+sympathy to Mr. Black--there was a dignity about him that repelled
+anything that looked like pity. Bettie was the one person who succeeded,
+without giving offense, in doing this difficult thing, but Bettie did it
+unconsciously, without in the least knowing that she _had_ accomplished
+it, and this, of course, was another reason for the strong friendship
+between Mr. Black and her.
+
+The girls found the peanuts decidedly refreshing; their unusual exercise
+had given them astonishing appetites.
+
+"I wonder," said Bettie, some ten minutes later, when the paper bag was
+almost empty, "what Mr. Black is doing in there."
+
+"I think, from the swishing, swushing sounds I hear," said Jean, "that
+Mr. Black must be scrubbing the kitchen."
+
+"What!" gasped the girls.
+
+"Come and see," said Jean, stealing in on tiptoe.
+
+There, sure enough, was stout Mr. Black dipping a broom every now and
+then into a pail of soapy water and vigorously sweeping the floor with
+it.
+
+"I _think_," whispered Mabel, ruefully, "that that's Mother's best
+broom."
+
+"Never mind," consoled Jean. "You can take mine home if you think she'll
+care. It's really mine because I bought it when we had that broom drill
+in the sixth grade. It's been hanging on my wall ever since."
+
+"Hi there!" exclaimed Mr. Black, who, looking up suddenly, had
+discovered the smiling girls in the doorway. "You didn't know I could
+scrub, did you?"
+
+Mr. Black, quite regardless of his spotless cuffs and his polished
+shoes, drew a bucket of fresh water and dashed it over the floor,
+sweeping the flood out of doors and down the back steps.
+
+"There," said Mr. Black, standing the broom in the corner, "if there's a
+cleaner house in town than this, I don't know where you'll find it. In
+return for scrubbing this kitchen, of course, I shall expect you to
+invite me to dinner when you get to housekeeping."
+
+"We will! We do!" shouted the girls. "And we'll cook every single thing
+ourselves."
+
+"I don't know that I'll insist on _that_," returned Mr. Black,
+teasingly, "but I shan't let you forget about the dinner."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 4
+
+Furnishing the Cottage
+
+
+After tea that Saturday night four tired but spotlessly clean little
+girls sat on Jean's doorstep, making plans for the coming week.
+
+"What are you going to do for a stove?" asked Mrs. Mapes.
+
+"I have a toy one," replied Mabel, "but it has only one leg and it
+always smokes. Besides, I can't find it."
+
+"I have a little box stove that the boys used to have in their camp,"
+said Mrs. Mapes. "It has three good legs and it doesn't smoke at all. If
+you want it, and if you'll promise to be very careful about your fire,
+I'll have one of the boys set it up for you."
+
+"That would be lovely," said Bettie, gratefully. "Mamma has given me
+four saucers and a syrup jug, and I have a few pieces left of quite a
+large-sized doll's tea set."
+
+"We have an old rug," said Marjory, "that I'm almost sure I can have for
+the parlor floor, and I have two small rocking chairs of my own."
+
+"There's a lot of old things in our garret," said Mabel; "three-legged
+tables, and chairs with the seats worn out. I know Mother'll let us take
+them."
+
+"Well," said Bettie, "take everything you have to the cottage Monday
+afternoon after school. Bring all the pictures you can to cover the
+walls, and--"
+
+"Hark!" said Mrs. Mapes. "I think somebody is calling Bettie."
+
+"Oh, my!" said Bettie, springing to her feet. "This is bath night and I
+promised to bathe the twins. I must go this minute."
+
+"I think Bettie is sweet," said Jean. "Mr. Black would never have given
+us the cottage if he hadn't been so fond of Bettie; but she doesn't put
+on any airs at all. She makes us feel as if it belonged to all of us."
+
+"Bettie _is_ a sweet little girl," said Mrs. Mapes, "but she's far too
+energetic for such a little body. You mustn't let her do _all_ the
+work."
+
+"Oh, we don't!" exclaimed Mabel, grandly. "Why, what are you laughing
+at, Marjory?"
+
+"Oh, nothing," said Marjory. "I just happened to remember how you
+scrubbed that bedroom floor."
+
+From four to six on Monday afternoon, the little housekeepers, heavily
+burdened each time with their goods and chattels, made many small
+journeys between their homes and Dandelion Cottage. The parlor was soon
+piled high with furniture that was all more or less battered.
+
+"Dear me," said Jean, pausing at the door with an armful of carpet. "How
+am I ever to get in? Hadn't we better straighten out what we have before
+we bring anything more?"
+
+"Yes," said Bettie. "I wouldn't be surprised if we had almost enough for
+two houses. I'm sure I've seen six clocks."
+
+"That's only one for each room," said Mabel. "Besides, none of the four
+that _I_ brought will go."
+
+"Neither will my two," said Marjory, giggling.
+
+"We might call this 'The House of the Tickless Clocks,'" suggested Jean.
+
+"Or of the grindless coffee-mill," giggled Marjory.
+
+"Or of the talkless telephone," added Mabel. "I brought over an old
+telephone box so we could pretend we had a telephone."
+
+There were still several things lacking when the children had found
+places for all their crippled belongings. They had no couch for the sofa
+pillows Mabel had brought, but Bettie converted two wooden boxes and a
+long board into an admirable cozy corner. She even upholstered this
+sadly misnamed piece of furniture with the burlaps and excelsior that
+had been packed about her father's new desk, but it still needed a
+cover. The windows lacked curtains, the girls had only one fork, and
+their cupboard was so distressingly empty that it rivaled Mother
+Hubbard's.
+
+They had planned to eat and even sleep at the cottage during vacation,
+which was still some weeks distant; but, as they had no beds and no
+provisions, and as their parents said quite emphatically that they could
+_not_ stay away from home at night, part of this plan had to be given
+up.
+
+Most of the grown-ups, however, were greatly pleased with the cottage
+plan. Marjory's Aunty Jane, who was nervous and disliked having children
+running in and out of her spotlessly neat house, was glad to have
+Marjory happy with her little friends, provided they were all perfectly
+safe--and out of earshot. Overworked Mrs. Tucker found it a great relief
+to have careful Bettie take two or three of the smallest children
+entirely off her hands for several hours each day. When these infants,
+divided as equally as possible among the four girls, were not needed
+indoors to serve as playthings, they rolled about contentedly inside the
+cottage fence. Mabel's mother did not hesitate to say that she, for one,
+was thankful enough that Mr. Black had given the girls a place to play
+in. With Mabel engaged elsewhere, it was possible, Mrs. Bennett said, to
+keep her own house quite respectably neat. Mrs. Mapes, indeed, missed
+quiet, orderly Jean; but she would not mention it for fear of spoiling
+her tender-hearted little daughter's pleasure, and it did not occur to
+modest Jean that she was of sufficient consequence to be missed by her
+mother or anyone else.
+
+The neighbors, finding that the long-deserted cottage was again
+occupied, began to be curious about the occupants. One day Mrs.
+Bartholomew Crane, who lived almost directly opposite the cottage, found
+herself so devoured by kindly curiosity that she could stand it no
+longer. Intending to be neighborly, for Mrs. Crane was always neighborly
+in the best sense of the word, she put on her one good dress and started
+across the street to call on the newcomers.
+
+It was really a great undertaking for Mrs. Crane to pay visits, for she
+was a stout, slow-moving person, and, owing to the antiquity and
+consequent tenderness of her best garments, it was an even greater
+undertaking for the good woman to make a visiting costume. Her best
+black silk, for instance, had to be neatly mended with court-plaster
+when all other remedies had failed, and her old, thread-lace collars had
+been darned until their original floral patterns had given place to a
+mosaic of spider webs. Mrs. Crane's motives, however, were far better
+than her clothes. Years before, when she was newly married, she had
+lived for months a stranger in a strange town, where it was no unusual
+occurrence to live for years in ignorance of one's next-door neighbor's
+very name. During those unhappy months poor Mrs. Crane, sociable by
+nature yet sadly afflicted with shyness, had suffered keenly from
+loneliness and homesickness. She had vowed then that no other stranger
+should suffer as she had suffered, if it were in her power to prevent
+it; so, in spite of increasing difficulties, kind Mrs. Crane
+conscientiously called on each newcomer. In many cases, hers was the
+first welcome to be extended to persons settling in Lakeville, and
+although these visits were prompted by single-minded generosity, it was
+natural that she should, at the same time, make many friends. These,
+however, were seldom lasting ones, for many persons, whose business kept
+them in Lakeville for perhaps only a few months, afterwards moved away
+and drifted quietly out of Mrs. Crane's life.
+
+That afternoon the four girls realized for the first time that Dandelion
+Cottage was provided with a doorbell. In response to its lively
+jingling, Mabel dropped the potato she was peeling with neatness but
+hardly with dispatch, and hurried to the door.
+
+"Is your moth--Is the lady of the house at home?" asked Mrs. Crane.
+
+"Yes'm, all of us are--there's four," stammered Mabel, who wasn't quite
+sure of her ability to entertain a grown-up caller. "Please walk in. Oh!
+don't sit down in that one, please! There's only two legs on that chair,
+and it always goes down flat."
+
+"Dear me," said Mrs. Crane, moving toward the cozy corner, "I shouldn't
+have suspected it."
+
+"Oh, you can't sit _there_, either," exclaimed Mabel. "You see, that's
+the Tucker baby taking his nap."
+
+"My land!" said stout Mrs. Crane. "I thought it was one of those
+new-fashioned roll pillows."
+
+"_This_ chair," said Mabel, dragging one in from the dining room, "is
+the safest one we have in the house, but you must be careful to sit
+right down square in the middle of it because it slides out from under
+you if you sit too hard on the front edge. If you'll excuse me just a
+minute I'll go call the others--they're making a vegetable garden in the
+back yard."
+
+"Well, I declare!" said Mrs. Crane, when she had recognized the four
+young housekeepers and had heard all about the housekeeping. "It seems
+as if I ought to be able to find something in the way of furniture for
+you. I have a single iron bedstead I'm willing to lend you, and maybe I
+can find you some other things."
+
+"Thank you very much," said Bettie, politely.
+
+"I hope," said Mrs. Crane, pleasantly, "that you'll be very neighborly
+and come over to see me whenever you feel like it, for I'm always
+alone."
+
+"Thank you," said Jean, speaking for the household. "We'd just love to."
+
+"Haven't you _any_ children?" asked Bettie, sympathetically.
+
+"Not one," replied Mrs. Crane. "I've never had any but I've always loved
+children."
+
+"But I'm _sure_ you have a lot of grandchildren," said Mabel,
+consolingly. "You look so nice and grandmothery."
+
+"No," said Mrs. Crane, not appearing so sorrowful as Mabel had supposed
+an utterly grandchildless person _would_ look, "I've never possessed any
+grandchildren either."
+
+"But," queried Mabel, who was sometimes almost too inquisitive, "haven't
+you any relatives, husbands, or _anybody_, in all the world?"
+
+Many months afterward the girls were suddenly reminded of Mrs. Crane's
+odd, contradictory reply:
+
+"No--Yes--that is, no. None to speak of, I mean. Do you girls sleep
+here, too?"
+
+"No" said Jean. "We want to, awfully, but our mothers won't let us. You
+see, we sleep so soundly that they're all afraid we might get the house
+afire, burn up, and never know a thing about it."
+
+"They're quite right," said Mrs. Crane. "I suppose they like to have you
+at home once in a while."
+
+"Oh, they do have us," replied Bettie. "We eat and sleep at home and
+they have us all day Sundays. When they want any of us other times, all
+they have to do is to open a back window and call--Dear me, Mrs. Crane,
+I'll have to ask you to excuse me this very minute--There's somebody
+calling me now."
+
+Other visitors, including the girls' parents, called at the cottage and
+seemed to enjoy it very much indeed. The visitors were always greatly
+interested and everybody wanted to help. One brought a little table that
+really stood up very well if kept against the wall, another found
+curtains for all the windows--a little ragged, to be sure, but still
+curtains. Grandma Pike, who had a wonderful garden, was so delighted
+with everything that she gave the girls a crimson petunia growing in a
+red tomato can, and a great many neat little homemade packets of flower
+seeds. Rob said they might have even his porcupine if they could get it
+out from under the rectory porch.
+
+By the end of the week the cottage presented quite a lived-in
+appearance. Bright pictures covered the dingy paper, and, thanks to
+numerous donations, the rooms looked very well furnished. No one would
+have suspected that the chairs were untrustworthy, the tables crippled,
+and the clocks devoid of works. The cottage seemed cozy and pleasant,
+and the girls kept it in apple-pie order.
+
+Out of doors, the grass was beginning to show and little green specks
+dotted the flower beds. Other green specks in crooked rows staggered
+across the vegetable garden.
+
+The four mothers, satisfied that their little daughters were safe in
+Dandelion Cottage, left them in undisturbed possession.
+
+"I declare," said Mrs. Mapes one day, "the only time I see Jean,
+nowadays, is when she's asleep. All the rest of the time she's in school
+or at the cottage."
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Bennett, "when I miss my scissors or any of my dishes
+or anything else, I always have to go to the cottage and get out a
+search warrant. Mabel has carried off a wagonload of things, but I don't
+know _when_ our own house has been so peaceful."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 5
+
+Poverty in the Cottage
+
+
+"There's no use talking," said Jean, one day, as the girls sat at their
+dining-room table eating very smoky toast and drinking the weakest of
+cocoa, "we'll have to get some provisions of our own before long if
+we're going to invite Mr. Black to dinner as we promised. The cupboard's
+perfectly empty and Bridget says I can't take another scrap of bread or
+one more potato out of the house this week."
+
+"Aunty Jane says there'll be trouble," said Marjory, "if I don't keep
+out of her ice box, so I guess I can't bring any more milk. When she
+says there'll be trouble, there usually is, if I'm not pretty careful.
+But dear me, it _is_ such fun to cook our own meals on that dear little
+box-stove, even if most of the things do taste pretty awful."
+
+"I wish," said Mabel, mournfully, "that somebody would give us a hen, so
+we could make omelets."
+
+"Who ever made omelets out of a hen?" asked Jean, laughing.
+
+"I meant out of the eggs, of course," said Mabel, with dignity. "Hens
+lay eggs, don't they? If we count on five or six eggs a day--"
+
+"The goose that laid the golden egg laid only one a day," said Marjory.
+"It seems to me that six is a good many."
+
+"I wasn't talking about geese," said Mabel, "but about just plain
+everyday hens."
+
+"Six-every-day hens, you mean, don't you?" asked Marjory, teasingly.
+"You'd better wish for a cow, too, while you're about it."
+
+"Yes," said Bettie, "we certainly need one, for I'm not to ask for
+butter more than twice a week. Mother says she'll be in the poorhouse
+before summer's over if she has to provide butter for _two_ families."
+
+"I just tell you what it is, girls," said Jean, nibbling her cindery
+crust, "we'll just have to earn some money if we're to give Mr. Black
+any kind of a dinner."
+
+Mabel, who always accepted new ideas with enthusiasm, slipped quietly
+into the kitchen, took a solitary lemon from the cupboard, cut it in
+half, and squeezed the juice into a broken-nosed pitcher. This done, she
+added a little sugar and a great deal of water to the lemon juice,
+slipped quietly out of the back door, ran around the house and in at the
+front door, taking a small table from the front room. This she carried
+out of doors to the corner of the lot facing the street, where she
+established her lemonade stand.
+
+She was almost immediately successful, for the day was warm, and Mrs.
+Bartholomew Crane, who was entertaining two visitors on her front porch,
+was glad of an opportunity to offer her guests something in the way of
+refreshment. The cottage boasted only one glass that did not leak, but
+Mabel cheerfully made three trips across the street with it--it did not
+occur to any of them until too late it would have been easier to carry
+the pitcher across in the first place. The lemonade was decidedly weak,
+but the visitors were too polite to say so. On her return, a thirsty
+small boy offered Mabel a nickel for all that was left in the pitcher,
+and Mabel, after a moment's hesitation, accepted the offer.
+
+"You're getting a bargain," said Mabel. "There's as much as a glass and
+three quarters there, besides all the lemon."
+
+"Did you get a whole pitcherful out of one lemon?" asked the boy. "You'd
+be able to make circus lemonade all right."
+
+Before the other girls had had time to discover what had become of her,
+the proprietor of the lemonade stand marched into the cottage and
+proudly displayed four shining nickels and the empty pitcher.
+
+"Why, where in the world did you get all that?" cried Marjory. "Surely
+you never earned it by being on time for meals--you've been late three
+times a day ever since we got the cottage."
+
+"Sold lemonade," said Mabel. "Our troubles are over, girls. I'm going to
+buy _two_ lemons tomorrow and sell twice as much."
+
+"Good!" cried Bettie, "I'll help. The boys have promised to bring me a
+lot of arbutus tonight--they went to the woods this morning. I'll tie it
+in bunches and perhaps we can sell that, too."
+
+"Wouldn't it be splendid if we could have Mr. Black here to dinner next
+Saturday?" said Jean. "I'll never be satisfied until we've kept that
+promise, but I don't suppose we could possibly get enough things
+together by that time."
+
+"I have a sample can of baking powder," offered Marjory, hopefully.
+"I'll bring it over next time I come."
+
+"What's the good?" asked matter-of-fact Mabel. "We can't feed Mr. Black
+on just plain baking powder, and we haven't any biscuits to raise with
+it."
+
+"Dear me," said Jean, "I wish we hadn't been so extravagant at first. If
+we hadn't had so many tea parties last week, we might get enough flour
+and things at home. Mother says it's too expensive having all her
+groceries carried off."
+
+"Never mind," consoled Mabel, confidently. "We'll be buying our own
+groceries by this time tomorrow with the money we make selling lemonade.
+A boy said my lemonade was quite as good as you can buy at the circus."
+
+Unfortunately, however, it rained the next day and the next, so lemonade
+was out of the question. By the time it cleared, Bettie's neat little
+bunches of arbutus were no longer fresh, and careless Mabel had
+forgotten where she had put the money. She mentioned no fewer than
+twenty-two places where the four precious nickels might be, but none of
+them happened to be the right one.
+
+"Mercy me," said Bettie, "it's dreadful to be so poor! I'm afraid we'll
+have to invite Mr. Black to one of our bread-and-sugar tea-parties,
+after all."
+
+"No," said Jean, firmly. "We've just got to give him a regular
+seven-course dinner--he has 'em every day at home. We'll have to put it
+off until we can do it in style."
+
+"By and by," said Mabel, "we'll have beans and radishes and things in
+our own garden, and we can go to the woods for berries."
+
+"Perhaps," said Bettie, hopefully, "one of the boys might catch a
+fish--Rob _almost_ did, once."
+
+"I suppose I could ask Aunty Jane for a potato once in a while," said
+Marjory, "but I'll have to give her time to forget about last month's
+grocery bill--she says we never before used so many eggs in one month
+and I guess Maggie _did_ give me a good many. Potatoes will keep, you
+know. We can save 'em until we have enough for a meal."
+
+"While we're about it," said Bettie, "I think we'd better have Mrs.
+Crane to dinner, too. She's such a nice old lady and she's been awfully
+good to us."
+
+"She's not very well off," agreed Mabel, "and probably a real,
+first-class dinner would taste good to her."
+
+"But," pleaded Bettie, "don't let's ask her until we're sure of the
+date. As it is, I can't sleep nights for thinking of how Mr. Black must
+feel. He'll think we don't want him."
+
+"You'd better explain to him," suggested Jean, "that it isn't convenient
+to have him just yet, but that we're going to just as soon as ever we
+can. We mustn't tell him why, because it would be just like him to send
+the provisions here himself, and then it wouldn't really be _our_
+party."
+
+In spite of all the girls' plans, however, by the end of the week the
+cottage larder was still distressingly empty. Marjory had, indeed,
+industriously collected potatoes, only to have them carried off by an
+equally industrious rat; and Mabel's four nickels still remained
+missing. Things in the vegetable garden seemed singularly backward,
+possibly because the four eager gardeners kept digging them up to see if
+they were growing. Their parents and Marjory's Aunty Jane were firmer
+than ever in their refusal to part with any more staple groceries.
+
+Perhaps if the girls had explained why they wanted the things, their
+relatives would have been more generous; but girllike, the four
+poverty-stricken young housekeepers made a deep mystery of their dinner
+plan. It was their most cherished secret, and when they met each morning
+they always said, mysteriously, "Good morning--remember M. B. D.," which
+meant, of course, "Mr. Black's Dinner."
+
+Mr. Black, indeed, never went by without referring to the girls'
+promise.
+
+"When," he would ask, "is that dinner party coming off? It's a long time
+since I've been invited to a first-class dinner, cooked by four
+accomplished young ladies, and I'm getting hungrier every minute. When
+I get up in the morning I always say: 'Now I won't eat much breakfast
+because I've got to save room for that dinner'--and then, after all, I
+don't get invited."
+
+The situation was growing really embarrassing. The girls began to feel
+that keeping house, not to mention giving dinner parties, with no income
+whatever, was anything but a joke.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 6
+
+A Lodger to the Rescue
+
+
+Grass was beginning to grow on the tiny lawn, all sorts of thrifty young
+seedlings were popping up in the flower beds, and Jean's pansies were
+actually beginning to blossom. The girls had trained the rampant
+Virginia creeper away from the windows and had coaxed it to climb the
+porch pillars. From the outside, no one would have suspected that
+Dandelion Cottage was not occupied by a regular grown-up family. Book
+agents and peddlers offered their wares at the front door, and appeared
+very much crestfallen when Bettie, or one of the others, explained that
+the neatly kept little cottage was just a playhouse. Handbills and
+sample packages of yeast cakes were left on the doorstep, and once a
+brand-new postman actually dropped a letter into the letter-box; Mabel
+carried it afterward to Mrs. Bartholomew Crane, to whom it rightfully
+belonged.
+
+One afternoon, when Jean was rearranging the dining-room pictures--they
+had to be rearranged very frequently--and when Mabel and Marjory were
+busy putting fresh papers on the pantry shelves, there was a ring at the
+doorbell.
+
+Bettie, who had been dusting the parlor, pushed the chairs into place,
+threw her duster into the dining-room and ran to the door. A
+lady--Bettie described her afterwards as a "middle-aged young lady with
+the sweetest dimple"--stood on the doorstep.
+
+"Is your mother at home?" asked the lady, smiling pleasantly at Bettie,
+who liked the stranger at once.
+
+"She--she doesn't live here," said Bettie, taken by surprise.
+
+"Perhaps you can tell me what I want to know. I'm a stranger in town and
+I want to rent a room in this neighborhood. I am to have my meals at
+Mrs. Baker's, but she hasn't any place for me to sleep. I don't want
+anything very expensive, but of course I'd be willing to pay a fair
+price. Do you know of anybody with rooms to rent? I'm to be in town for
+three weeks."
+
+Bettie shook her head, reflectively. "No, I don't believe I do,
+unless--"
+
+Bettie paused to look inquiringly at Jean, who, framed by the
+dining-room doorway, was nodding her head vigorously.
+
+"Perhaps Jean does," finished Bettie.
+
+"Are you _very_ particular," asked Jean, coming forward, "about what
+kind of room it is?"
+
+"Why, not so very," returned the guest. "I'm afraid I couldn't afford a
+very grand one."
+
+"Are you very timid?" asked Bettie, who had suddenly guessed what Jean
+had in mind. "I mean are you afraid of burglars and mice and things like
+that?"
+
+"Why, most persons are, I imagine," said the young woman, whose eyes
+were twinkling pleasantly. "Are there a great many mice and burglars in
+this neighborhood?"
+
+"Mice," said Jean, "but not burglars. It's a _very_ honest neighborhood.
+I think I have an idea, but you see there are four of us and I'll have
+to consult the others about it, too. Sit here, please, in the cozy
+corner--it's the safest piece of furniture we have. Now if you'll
+excuse us just a minute we'll go to the kitchen and talk it over."
+
+"Certainly," murmured the lady, who looked a trifle embarrassed at
+encountering the gaze of the forty-two staring dolls that sat all around
+the parlor with their backs against the baseboard. "I hope I haven't
+interrupted a party."
+
+"Not at all," assured Bettie, with her best company manner.
+
+"Girls," said Jean, when she and Bettie were in the kitchen with the
+door carefully closed behind them, "would you be willing to rent the
+front bedroom to a clean, nice-looking lady if she'd be willing to take
+it? She wants to pay for a room, she says, and she _looks_ very polite
+and pleasant, doesn't she, Bettie?"
+
+"Yes," corroborated Bettie, "I like her. She has kind of twinkling brown
+eyes and such nice dimples."
+
+"You see," explained Jean, "the money would pay for Mr. Black's dinner."
+
+"Why, so it would," cried Marjory. "Let's do it."
+
+"Yes," echoed Mabel, "for goodness' sake, let's do it. It's only three
+weeks, anyway, and what's three weeks!"
+
+"How would it be," asked Marjory, cautiously, "to take her on approval?
+Aunty Jane always has hats and things sent on approval, so she can send
+them back if they don't fit."
+
+"Splendid!" cried Mabel. "If she doesn't fit Dandelion Cottage, she
+can't stay."
+
+"Oh," gurgled Marjory, "_what_ a dinner we'll give Mr. Black and Mrs.
+Crane! We'll have ice cream and--"
+
+"Huh!" said Mabel, "most likely she won't take the room at all. Anyhow,
+probably she's got tired of waiting and has gone."
+
+"We'll go and see," said Jean. "Come on, everybody."
+
+The lady, however, still sat on the hard, lumpy cozy corner, with her
+toes just touching the ground.
+
+"Well," said she, smiling at the flock of girls, "how about the idea?"
+
+The other three looked expectantly at Jean; Mabel nudged her elbow and
+Bettie nodded at her.
+
+"_You_ talk," said Marjory; "you're the oldest."
+
+"It's like this," explained Jean. "This house isn't good enough to rent
+to grown-ups because it's all out of repair, so they've lent it to us
+for the summer for a playhouse. The back of it leaks dreadfully when it
+rains, and the plaster is all down in the kitchen, but the front bedroom
+is really very nice--if you don't mind having four kinds of carpet on
+the floor. This is a very safe neighborhood, no tramps or anything like
+that, and if you're not an awfully timid person, perhaps you wouldn't
+mind staying alone at night."
+
+"If you did," added Bettie, "probably one of us could sleep in the other
+room unless it happened to rain--it rains right down on the bed."
+
+"Could I go upstairs to look at the room?" asked the young woman.
+
+"There isn't any upstairs," said Bettie, pulling back a curtain; "the
+room's right here."
+
+"Why! What a dear little room--all white and blue!"
+
+"I hope you don't mind having children around," said Marjory, somewhat
+anxiously. "You see, we'd have to play in the rest of the house."
+
+"Of course," added Jean, hastily, "if you had company you could use the
+parlor--"
+
+"And the front steps," said Bettie.
+
+"I'm very fond of children," said the young lady, "and I don't expect to
+have any company but you because I don't know anybody here. I shall be
+away every day until about five o'clock because I am here with my father
+who is tuning church organs, and I have to help him. I strike the notes
+while he works behind the organ. He has a room at Mrs. Baker's, but she
+didn't have any place to put me. I think I should like this little room
+very much indeed. Now, how much are you going to charge me for it?"
+
+Jean looked at Bettie, and Bettie looked at the other two.
+
+"I don't know," said Jean, at last.
+
+"Neither do I," said Bettie.
+
+"Would--would a dollar a week be too much?" asked Marjory.
+
+"It wouldn't be enough," said the young woman, promptly. "My father pays
+five for the room _he_ has, but it's really a larger room than he
+wanted. I should be very glad to give you two dollars and a half a
+week--I'm sure I couldn't find a furnished room anywhere for less than
+that. Can I move in tonight? I've nothing but a small trunk."
+
+"Ye-es," said Bettie, looking inquiringly at Jean. "I _think_ we could
+get it ready by seven o'clock. It's all perfectly clean, but you see
+we'll have to change things around a little and fix up the washstand."
+
+"I'm sure," said the visitor, turning to depart, "that it all looks
+quite lovely just as it is. You may expect me at seven."
+
+"Well," exclaimed Marjory, when the door had closed behind their
+pleasant visitor, "isn't this too grand for words! It's just like
+finding a bush with pennies growing on it, or a pot of gold at the end
+of the rainbow. Two and a half a week! That's--let me see. Why! that's
+seven dollars and a half! We can buy Mr. Black's dinner and have enough
+money left to live on for a long time afterwards."
+
+"Mercy!" cried Mabel. "We never said a word to her about taking her on
+approval. We didn't even ask her name."
+
+"Pshaw!" said Jean. "She's all right. She couldn't be disagreeable if
+she wanted to with that dimple and those sparkles in her eyes; but,
+girls, we've a tremendous lot to do."
+
+"Yes," said Mabel. "If she'd known that the pillows under those ruffled
+shams were just flour sacks stuffed with excelsior, she wouldn't have
+thought everything so lovely. Girls, what in the world are we to do for
+sheets? We haven't even one."
+
+"And blankets?" said Marjory.
+
+"And quilts?" said Bettie. "That old white spread is every bit of
+bedclothes we own. I was _so_ afraid she'd turn the cover down and see
+that everything else was just pieces of burlap."
+
+"It's a good thing the mattress is all right," said Marjory. "But there
+isn't any bottom to the water pitcher, and the basin leaks like
+anything."
+
+"We'll just have to go home," said Jean, "and tell our mothers all about
+it. We'll have to borrow what we need. We must get a lamp too, and some
+oil, because there isn't any other way of lighting the house."
+
+The four girls ran first of all to Bettie's house with their surprising
+news.
+
+"But, Bettie," said Mrs. Tucker, when her little daughter, helped by
+the other three, had explained the situation, "are you _sure_ she's
+nice? I'm afraid you've been a little rash."
+
+"Just as nice as can be," assured Bettie.
+
+"Yes," said Dr. Tucker, "I guess it's all right. I know the organ
+tuner--I used to see him twice a year when we lived in Ohio. His name is
+Blossom and he's a very fine old fellow. I met his daughter this
+afternoon when they were examining the church organ, and she seemed a
+pleasant, well-educated young woman--I believe he said she teaches a
+kindergarten during the winter. The girls haven't made any mistake this
+time."
+
+"Then we must make her comfortable," said Mrs. Tucker. "You may take
+sheets and pillow-cases from the linen closet, Bettie, and you must see
+that she has everything she needs."
+
+Excited Bettie danced off to the linen closet and the others ran home to
+tell the good news.
+
+"I've filled a lamp for you, Bettie," said Mrs. Tucker, meeting Bettie,
+with her arms full of sheets at the bottom of the stairs. "Here's a box
+of matches, too."
+
+When Bettie was returning with her spoils to Dandelion Cottage she
+almost bumped into Mabel, whom she met at the gate with a pillow under
+each arm, a folded patchwork quilt balanced unsteadily on her head, and
+her chubby hands clasped about a big brass lamp.
+
+"The pillows are off my own bed," said Mabel. "Mother wasn't home, but
+she wouldn't care, anyway."
+
+"But can you sleep without them?"
+
+"Oh, I'll take home one of the excelsior ones," said Mabel. "I can sleep
+on anything."
+
+Jean came in a moment later with a pile of blankets and quilts. She,
+too, had a lamp, packed carefully in a big basket that hung from her
+arm. Marjory followed almost at her heels with more bedding, towels, a
+fourth lamp, and two candlesticks.
+
+"Well," laughed Bettie, when all the lamps and candles were placed in a
+row on the dining-room table, "I guess Miss Blossom will have almost
+light enough. Here are four big lamps and two candles--"
+
+"I've six more candles in my blouse," said Mabel, laughing and fishing
+them out one at a time. "I thought they'd do for the blue candlesticks
+Mrs. Crane gave us for the bedroom."
+
+"Isn't it fortunate," said Jean, who was thumping the mattress
+vigorously, "that we put the best bed in this room? Beds are such hard
+things to move."
+
+"Ye-es," said Bettie, rather doubtfully, "but I think we'd better tell
+Miss Blossom not to be surprised if the slats fall out once in a while
+during the night. You know they always do if you happen to turn over
+too suddenly."
+
+"We must warn her about the chairs, too," said Marjory. "They're none of
+them really very safe."
+
+"I guess," said Jean, "I'd better bring over the rocking chair from my
+own room, but I'm afraid she'll just have to grin and bear the slats,
+because they _will_ fall out in spite of anything I can do."
+
+By seven o'clock the room was invitingly comfortable. The washstand,
+which was really only a wooden box thinly disguised by a muslin curtain
+gathered across the front and sides, was supplied with a sound basin, a
+whole pitcher, numerous towels, and four kinds of soap--the girls had
+all thought of soap. They were unable to decide which kind the lodger
+would like best, so they laid Bettie's clear amber cake of glycerine
+soap, Jean's scentless white castile, Marjory's square of green cucumber
+soap, and Mabel's highly perfumed oval pink cake, in a rainbow row on
+the washstand.
+
+The bed, bountifully supplied with coverings--had Dandelion Cottage been
+suddenly transported to Alaska the lodger would still have had blankets
+to spare, so generously had her enthusiastic landladies provided--looked
+very comfortable indeed. At half-past seven when the lodger arrived with
+apologies for being late because the drayman who was to move her trunk
+had been slow, the cottage, for the first time since the girls had
+occupied it, was brilliantly lighted.
+
+"We thought," explained Bettie, "that you might feel less frightened in
+a strange place if you had plenty of light, though we didn't really mean
+to have so many lamps--we each supposed we were bringing the only one.
+Anyway, we don't know which one burns best."
+
+"If they should _all_ go out," said Mabel, earnestly, "there are candles
+and matches on the little shelf above the bed."
+
+When the lodger had been warned about the loose slats and the
+untrustworthiness of the chairs, the girls said good-night.
+
+"You needn't go on _my_ account," said Miss Blossom. "It's pleasant to
+have you here--still, I'm not afraid to stay alone. You must always do
+just as you like about staying, you know; I shouldn't like to think that
+I was driving you out of this dear little house, for it was nice of you
+to let me come. I think I was very fortunate in finding a room so near
+Mrs. Baker's."
+
+"Thank you," said Jean, "but we always have to be home before dark
+unless we have permission to stay any place."
+
+"I _have_ to go," confided Mabel, "because I was so excited that I
+forgot to eat my supper."
+
+"So did I," said Marjory, frankly, "and I'm just as hungry as a bear."
+
+"Everybody come home with me," said Jean. "We always have dinner later
+than you do and the things can't be _very_ cold."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 7
+
+The Girls Disclose a Plan
+
+
+"Did you sleep well, Miss Blossom?" asked Bettie, shyly waylaying the
+lodger who was on her way to breakfast.
+
+"Ye-es," said Miss Blossom, smiling brightly, "though in spite of your
+warning and all my care, the bottom dropped out of my bed and landed the
+mattress on the floor. But no harm was done. As soon as I discovered
+that I was not falling down an elevator shaft, I went to sleep again. I
+think if I had a few nails and some little blocks of wood I could fix
+those slats so they'd stay in better; you see they're not quite long
+enough for the bed."
+
+"I'll find some for you," said Bettie. "You'll find them on the parlor
+table when you get back."
+
+Before the week was over, the girls had discovered that their new friend
+was in every way a most delightful person. She proved surprisingly
+skillful with hammer and nails, and besides mending the bed she soon had
+several of the chairs quite firm on their legs.
+
+"Why," cried Bettie one day as she delightedly inspected an old black
+walnut rocker that had always collapsed at the slightest touch, "this
+old chair is almost strong enough to _walk_! I'm so glad you've made so
+many of them safe, because, when Mrs. Bartholomew Crane comes to see us,
+she's always afraid to sit down. She's such a nice neighbor that we'd
+like to make her comfortable."
+
+"We do have the loveliest friends," said Jean, with a contented sigh.
+"It's hard to tell which is the nicest one."
+
+"But the dearest _two_," exclaimed Marjory, discriminating nicely, "are
+Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane--except you, of course, Miss Blossom."
+
+"Somehow," added Bettie, "we always think of those two in one breath,
+like Dombey and Son, or Jack and Jill."
+
+"But they couldn't be farther apart _really_," declared Jean. "They're
+both nice, both are kind of old, both are dark and rather stout, but
+except for that they're altogether different. Mr. Black has everything
+in the world that anybody could want, and Mrs. Crane hasn't much of
+anything. Mr. Black is invited to banquets and things and rides in
+carriages and--"
+
+"Has a silk hat," Mabel broke in.
+
+"And Mrs. Crane," continued Jean, paying no attention to the
+interruption, "can't even afford to ride in the street car--I've heard
+her say so."
+
+"I wish," groaned generous Mabel, with deep contrition, "that I'd never
+taken a cent for that lemonade I sold her last spring. If I'd dreamed
+how good and how poor she was, I wouldn't have. She might have had
+_four_ rides with that money."
+
+"_I_ wish," said Jean, "we could do something perfectly grand and
+beautiful for Mrs. Crane. She's always doing the kindest little things
+for other people."
+
+"Well," demanded Marjory, "aren't we going to have her here to dinner,
+too, when we have Mr. Black? Please don't tell anybody, Miss
+Blossom--it's to be a surprise."
+
+"Still, just a dinner doesn't seem to be enough," said Jean, who, with
+her chin in her hand, seemed to be thinking deeply. "Of course it
+helps, but I'd rather save her life or do something like that."
+
+"Little things count for a great deal in this world, sometimes," said
+Miss Blossom, leaning down to brush her cheek softly against Jean's.
+"It's generally wiser to leave the big things until one is big enough to
+handle them."
+
+"Mrs. Crane _is_ pretty big," offered matter-of-fact Mabel.
+
+"Oh, dear," laughed Miss Blossom, "that wasn't at all what I meant."
+
+"Mr. Black," said Bettie, dreamily, "has enough _things_, but I don't
+believe he really cares about anything in the world but his roses. His
+face is different when he talks about them, kind of soft all about the
+corners and not so--not so--"
+
+"Daniel Webstery," supplied Jean, understandingly.
+
+"It must be pretty lonely for him without any family," agreed Miss
+Blossom. "I don't know what would become of Father if he didn't have me
+to keep him cheered up--we're wonderful chums, Father and I."
+
+"Oh", mourned tender-hearted Bettie, "I _wish_ I could make Mrs. Crane
+rich enough so she wouldn't need to mend all the time, and that I could
+provide Mr. Black with some really truly relatives to love him the way
+you love your father."
+
+"Oh, Bettie! Bettie!" cried Mabel, suddenly beginning, in her
+excitement, to bounce up and down on the one chair that possessed
+springs. "I know exactly how we could help them both. We could beg seven
+or eight children from the orphan asylum--they're _glad_ to give 'em
+away--and let Mrs. Crane sell 'em to Mr. Black for--for ten dollars
+apiece."
+
+Such a storm of merriment followed this simple solution of the problem
+that Mabel for the moment looked quite crushed. Her chair, incidentally,
+was crushed too, for Mabel's final bounce proved too much for its frail
+constitution; its four legs spread suddenly and lowered the surprised
+Mabel gently to the floor. Everybody laughed again, Mabel as heartily as
+anyone, and, for a time, the sorrows of Mrs. Crane and Mr. Black were
+forgotten.
+
+The dinner party, however, still remained uppermost in all their plans.
+Mabel was in favor of giving it at once, but the other girls were more
+cautious, so the little mistresses of Dandelion Cottage finally decided
+to postpone the party until after Miss Blossom had paid her rent in
+full.
+
+"You see," explained cautious Marjory, one day when the girls were
+alone, "she might get called away suddenly before the three weeks are
+up, and if we spent more money than we _have_ it wouldn't be very
+comfortable. Besides, I've never seen seven dollars and a half all at
+once, and I'd like to."
+
+But the dinner plan was no longer the profound secret that it had been
+at first, for when the young housekeepers had told their mothers about
+their lodger, they had been obliged to tell them also what they intended
+to do with the money. In the excitement of the moment, they had all
+neglected to mention Mrs. Crane, but later, when they made good this
+omission, their news was received in a most perplexing fashion. The
+girls were greatly puzzled, but they did not happen to compare notes
+until after something that happened at the dinner party had reminded
+them of their parents' incomprehensible behavior.
+
+"Mamma," said Bettie, one evening at supper time, soon after Miss
+Blossom's arrival, "I forgot to tell you that we're going to ask Mrs.
+Crane, too, when we have Mr. Black to dinner. It's to be a surprise for
+both of them."
+
+"What!" gasped Mrs. Tucker, dropping her muffin, and looking not at
+Bettie, but at Dr. Tucker. "Surely not Mrs. Crane and Mr. Black, too!
+You don't mean both at the same time!"
+
+"Why, yes, Mamma," said Bettie. "It wouldn't cost any more."
+
+Then the little girl looked with astonishment first at her father and
+then at her mother, for Dr. Tucker, with a warning finger against his
+lips, was shaking his head just as hard as he could at Mrs. Tucker, who
+looked the very picture of amazement.
+
+"Why," asked Bettie, "what's the matter? Don't you think it's a good
+plan? Isn't it the right thing to do?"
+
+"Yes," said Dr. Tucker, still looking at Bettie's mother, who was
+nodding her approval, "I shouldn't be surprised if it might prove a
+_very_ good thing to do. Your idea of making it a surprise to both of
+them is a good one, too. I should keep it the darkest kind of secret
+until the very last moment, if I were you."
+
+"Yes," agreed Mrs. Tucker, "I should certainly keep it a secret."
+
+Jean, too, happened to mention the matter at home and with very much the
+same result. Mr. Mapes looked at Mrs. Mapes with something in his eye
+that very closely resembled an amused twinkle, and Jean was almost
+certain that there was an answering twinkle in her mother's eye.
+
+"What's the joke?" asked Jean.
+
+"I couldn't think of spoiling it by telling," said Mrs. Mapes. "If
+there's anything I can do to help you with your dinner party I shall be
+delighted to do it."
+
+"Oh, will you?" cried Jean. "When I told you about it last week I
+thought, somehow, that you weren't very much interested."
+
+"I'm very much interested indeed," returned Mrs. Mapes. "I hope you'll
+be able to keep the surprise part of it a secret to the very last
+moment. That's always the best part of a dinner party, you know."
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Mapes, "if you know who the other guests are to be, it
+always takes away part of the pleasure."
+
+When Marjory told the news, her Aunty Jane, who seldom smiled and who
+usually appeared to care very little about the doings in Dandelion
+Cottage, greatly surprised her niece by suddenly displaying as many as
+seven upper teeth; she showed, too, such flattering interest in the
+coming event that Marjory plucked up courage to ask for potatoes and
+other provisions that might prove useful.
+
+"When you've decided what day you're going to have your party," said
+Aunty Jane, with astonishing good nature, "I'll give or lend you
+anything you want, provided you don't tell either of your guests who the
+other one is to be."
+
+When Mabel told about the plan, she too was very much perplexed at the
+way her news was received. Her parents, after one speaking glance at
+each other, leaned back in their chairs and laughed until the tears
+rolled down their cheeks. But they, too, heartily approved of the dinner
+party and advised strict secrecy regarding the guests.
+
+School was out, and, as Bettie said, every day was Saturday, but the
+days were slipping away altogether too rapidly. The lawn, by this time,
+was covered with what Mabel called "real grass," great bunches of Jean's
+sweetest purple pansies had to be picked every morning so they wouldn't
+go to seed, and the long bed by the fence threatened to burst at any
+moment into blossom. Even the much-disturbed vegetable garden was doing
+so nicely that it was possible to tell the lettuce from the radish
+plants.
+
+Two of Miss Blossom's three weeks had gone. She herself was to leave
+town the following Thursday, and the dinner party was to take place the
+day after; but even the thought of the great event failed to keep the
+little cottagers quite cheerful, for they hated to think of losing their
+lovely lodger. Whenever this charming young person was not busy at one
+or another of the various churches with her father, she was playing with
+the children. "Just exactly," said Bettie, "as if she were just twelve
+years old, too." Her clever fingers made dresses for each of the four
+biggest dolls, and such cunning baby bonnets for each of the four
+littlest ones.
+
+Best of all, she taught the girls how to do a great many things. She
+showed them how to turn the narrowest of hems, how to gather a ruffle
+neatly, and how to take the tiniest of stitches. Bettie, who had to
+help with the weekly darning, and Marjory, who had to mend her own
+stockings, actually found it pleasant work after Miss Blossom had shown
+them several different ways of weaving the threads.
+
+"I just wish," cried Mabel, one day, in a burst of gratitude, "that
+you'd fall ill, or something so we could do something for _you_. You're
+just lovely to _us_."
+
+"Thank you, Mabel," said Miss Blossom, with eyes that twinkled
+delightedly, "I'm sure you'd take beautiful care of me--I'm almost
+tempted to try it. Shall I have measles, or just plain smallpox?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 8
+
+An Unexpected Crop of Dandelions
+
+
+In spite of the prospect of losing her, the last week of Miss Blossom's
+stay was a delightful one to the girls because so many pleasant things
+happened. The best of all concerned the cottage dining-room.
+
+This room had proved the hardest spot in the house to make attractive,
+for it seemed to resist all efforts to make a well-furnished room of it.
+Most of the faded paper was loose and much of it had dropped off in
+patches during the time that the cottage was vacant, showing the ugly,
+dark, painted wall underneath. It was only too evident that the pictures
+that the girls had fastened up carefully with pins had been put up for
+purposes of concealment, the ceiling was stained and dingy, and the rug
+was far too small to cover the floor where some industrious former
+occupant had daubed paint of various gaudy hues while trying, perhaps,
+to find the right shade for the woodwork.
+
+Moreover, what little furniture there was in the dining-room showed very
+plainly that it had not been intended originally for dining-room use;
+the buffet, in particular, proclaimed loudly in big black letters that
+it was nothing but a soap box, and Bettie's best efforts could not make
+anything else of it. Now that the day for the long-postponed dinner
+party was actually set, the girls' attention was more than ever directed
+toward the forlorn appearance of the little dining-room.
+
+"Dear me," said Bettie, one day when the five friends, seated around the
+table, were cutting out pictures for a wonderful scrap-book for the
+little lame boy whom Miss Blossom had discovered living near one of the
+churches, "I do wish this dining-room didn't look so sort of bedroomy."
+
+"Yes," said Jean, "I've tried putting the buffet in every corner and
+all around the walls, and it _won't_ look like anything but a wooden
+box."
+
+"I tried covering it with a gathered curtain," said Mabel, "but that
+made it look so like a washstand that I took it off again."
+
+"Why," exclaimed Miss Blossom, "you've given me a beautiful idea! I
+believe we could make a splendid sideboard out of that piano box that's
+so in our way on the back porch. We'd just have to saw the ends down a
+little, nail on some boards, paint it some plain, dark color, and spread
+a towel over the top, and we'd have a beautiful Flemish oak sideboard.
+I'll buy the can of paint."
+
+"I'll do the painting," said Jean. "I helped Mother paint our kitchen
+floor, so I know a little about it."
+
+"That would be lovely. I've been thinking, too, that it would be a good
+idea to fix a little shelf under this window to hold your petunia and
+these two geraniums that are suffering so for sunshine. I think I could
+make it from the boards in that soap box."
+
+"Oh, thank you!" cried Bettie. "I don't believe there's _anything_ you
+don't know how to do."
+
+The piano box, transformed by Miss Blossom and the four girls into a
+very good imitation of a Flemish oak sideboard, did indeed make such an
+imposing piece of furniture that the rest of the room looked shabbier
+than ever by contrast.
+
+"I'm afraid," said Miss Blossom, surveying the effect with an air of
+comical dismay, "that the rest of our dining-room really looks worse
+than it did before; it's like trying to wear a new hat with an old gown.
+But I'm proud of our handiwork."
+
+"Yes," said Jean, "it's a great deal more like a sideboard than it is
+like a piano box."
+
+"It's the sideboardiest sideboard I ever saw," said Mabel, "but it's
+certainly too fine for this room."
+
+"Never mind," said cheerful Bettie. "We'll let Mr. Black sit so he can
+see the sideboard, and we'll have Mrs. Crane face the geraniums on that
+cunning shelf. If their eyes begin to wander around the room we'll just
+call their attention to the things we want them to see. When Mamma
+entertains the sewing society she always invites the first one that
+comes to sit in the chair over the hole in the sitting-room rug so the
+others won't notice it. If we catch Mr. Black looking at the ceiling
+we'll say: 'Oh, Mr. Black, did you notice the flowers on the
+sideboard?'"
+
+Everybody laughed at Bettie's comical idea. This desperate measure,
+however, was not needed, for one afternoon, the day after the sideboard
+was finished, something happened, something lovelier than the girls had
+ever even dreamed _could_ happen.
+
+It was only three o'clock, yet there was Miss Blossom coming home two
+whole hours earlier than usual; her white-haired father was with her
+and under his arm in a long parcel were seven rolls of wall paper.
+
+"My contribution to the cottage," said Mr. Blossom, laying the bundle at
+Bettie's feet and smiling pleasantly at the row of girls on the
+doorstep.
+
+"It's paper for the dining-room," explained Miss Blossom. "We happened
+to pass a store, on our way to work this noon, where they were
+advertising a sale of odd rolls of very nice paper at only five cents a
+roll. There were two rolls that were just right for the ceiling, and
+five rolls for the side wall. It seemed just exactly the right thing for
+Dandelion Cottage, so we couldn't help buying it."
+
+"It would have been wicked," said Mr. Blossom, cutting the string about
+the bundle, "not to buy such suitable paper at such a ridiculous price."
+
+"Oh! oh!" cried the delighted girls, as Mr. Blossom held up a roll for
+inspection. "It might have been made for this house!"
+
+"Dandelion blossoms in yellow, with such lovely soft green leaves," said
+Bettie, "and such a lovely, light, creamy background. Oh! what's that?"
+
+"That's the border," replied Miss Blossom. "See how graceful the pattern
+is, and how saucily those dandelions hold their heads. Show them the
+ceiling paper, Father."
+
+"Oh!" cried Mabel, "just picked-off dandelions scattered all over an
+ocean of milk--how pretty!"
+
+"We'll have the Village Improvement Society after us," laughed Marjory.
+"They don't allow a dandelion to show its head."
+
+"I love dandelions," said Miss Blossom; "real ones, I mean; they're such
+gay, cheerful things and such a beautiful color."
+
+"I love them, too," said Jean, "because, you know, they paid our rent
+for us."
+
+"But," said Mabel, "I'm thankful we haven't got to dig all these
+dandelions."
+
+"Now," said Miss Blossom, "we must go right to work. If everybody will
+help, Father and I will put it on for you. You needn't be afraid to
+trust us, because last spring we papered our two biggest rooms, and they
+really looked _almost_ professional except for one strip that Father got
+upside-down; but your dining-room will be in no danger on that score,
+for Father never makes the same mistake twice. Jean, you and Mabel can
+move all the furniture except the table and sideboard into the
+kitchen--we'll have to stand on the table. Bettie, take down all the
+pictures. Father, you can be trimming the ceiling paper here on the
+sideboard while Marjory starts a fire in the kitchen stove so I can have
+hot water for my paste. We'll have our wall covered with dandelions in
+just no time!"
+
+"Now," said Mr. Blossom, when the furniture was out and the pictures
+were all down, "we must dig the soil up well or our dandelions won't
+grow. Everybody must tear as much as she can of this old paper off the
+wall; it's so ragged it comes off very easily."
+
+"The roof used to leak," said Bettie, "but my brother Rob unrolled some
+tin cans and nailed them over the place where the truly shingles are
+gone, and it never leaked a mite the last four times it rained."
+
+"The plaster seems fairly good," said Mr. Blossom. "I could mend these
+holes with a little plaster of Paris if some obliging young lady would
+run with this dime to the drugstore for ten cents' worth."
+
+"I'll go," said Mabel. "I don't think I like peeling walls."
+
+"Mabel," said Miss Blossom, "isn't really fond of work, though I notice
+that she usually does her share."
+
+Everybody helped to mend the cracks, and everybody watched with
+breathless interest to see the first long strip, upheld by Mr. Blossom
+and guided by Miss Blossom and the cottage broom, go into place.
+
+"Wouldn't it be awful," whispered Mabel, "if it shouldn't stick?"
+
+But it did stick, smooth and flat, and the paper was even prettier on
+the wall than it had been in the roll.
+
+"A side strip next, Father, so we can see how it's going to look,"
+pleaded Miss Blossom. "Remember, we're just children."
+
+At five o'clock, when half of the ceiling and one side of the wall were
+finished, the front door was opened abruptly.
+
+"Hi there!" said Mr. Black, putting his head in at the dining-room door.
+"Why don't you listen when I ring your bell? Is that dinner of mine
+ready? I'm losing a pound a day."
+
+"No," said Bettie, jumping down from her perch on the sideboard, "but it
+will be next Friday. We're getting it ready just as fast as ever we can.
+We're even papering the dining-room for the occasion."
+
+"Well," said Mr. Black, "I just stopped in to say that unless you could
+give me that dinner this very minute, I shall have to go hungry for the
+next five weeks."
+
+"Oh!" cried Bettie, in dismay, "why?"
+
+"Because I'm going to Washington tonight by the six o'clock train and I
+shall be gone a whole month--perhaps longer."
+
+"Oh, dear," cried Bettie, "we just _couldn't_ have you tonight. We're
+papering the dining-room, and besides we haven't a single thing to eat
+but some stale cake that Mrs. Pike gave us."
+
+"I strongly suspect," said Mr. Black, smiling over Bettie's head at Mr.
+Blossom, "that you don't really _want_ me to dinner."
+
+"Oh, we do, we do," assured Bettie, earnestly, "but we just _can't_ have
+company tonight. If you'll just let us know exactly when you're coming
+home, you'll find a beautiful dinner ready for you."
+
+"All right," said Mr. Black, "I'll telegraph. I'll say: 'My dear Miss
+Bettykins, of Dandelion Cottage: It will give me great pleasure to dine
+with you tomorrow--or would you rather have me say the day after
+tomorrow?--evening. Yours most devotedly and-so-forth.'"
+
+"Yes, yes," cried Bettie, "that will be all right, but you must give us
+three days to get ready in."
+
+After all, however, it was Mabel that sent the telegram, and it was a
+very different one.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 9
+
+Changes and Plans
+
+
+When the little dining-room was finished it was quite the prettiest room
+in the house, for the friendly Blossoms had painted the battered
+woodwork a delicate green to match the leaves in the paper; and by
+mixing what was left of the green paint with the remaining color left
+from the sideboard, clever Miss Blossom obtained a shade that was
+exactly right for as much of the floor as the rug did not cover. Of
+course all the neighbors and all the girls' relatives had to come in
+afterwards to see what Bettie called "the very dandelioniest room in
+Dandelion Cottage."
+
+It seemed to the girls that the time fairly galloped from Monday to
+Thursday. They were heartily sorry when the moment came for them to lose
+their pleasant lodger. They went to the train to see the last of her and
+to assure her for the thousandth time that they should never forget her.
+Mabel sobbed audibly at the moment of parting, and large tears were
+rolling down silent Bettie's cheeks. Even the seven dollars and fifty
+cents that the girls had handled with such delight that morning paled
+into insignificance beside the fact that the train was actually whisking
+their beloved Miss Blossom away from them. When she had paid for her
+lodging she advised her four landladies to deposit the money in the bank
+until time for the dinner party, and the girls did so, but even the
+importance of owning a bank account failed to console them for their
+loss. The train out of sight, the sober little procession wended its way
+to Dandelion Cottage but the cozy little house seemed strangely silent
+and deserted when Bettie unlocked the door. Mabel, who had wept stormily
+all the way home, sat down heavily on the doorstep and wept afresh.
+
+Pinned to a pillow on the parlor couch, Jean discovered a little folded
+square of paper addressed to Bettie, who was drumming a sad little tune
+on the window pane.
+
+"Why, Bettie," cried Jean, "this looks like a note for you from Miss
+Blossom! Do read it and tell us what she says."
+
+"It says," read Bettie: "'My dearest of Betties: Thank you for being so
+nice to me. There's a telephone message for you.'"
+
+"I wonder what it means," said Marjory.
+
+Bettie ran to the talkless telephone, slipped her hand inside the little
+door at the top, and found a small square parcel wrapped in tissue
+paper, tied with a pink ribbon, and addressed to Miss Bettie Tucker,
+Dandelion Cottage. Bettie hastily undid the wrappings and squealed with
+delight when she saw the lovely little handkerchief, bordered delicately
+with lace, that Miss Blossom herself had made for her. There was a
+daintily embroidered "B" in the corner to make it Bettie's very own.
+
+Marjory happened upon Jean's note peeping out from under a book on the
+parlor table. It said: "Dear Jean: Don't you think it's time for you to
+look at the kitchen clock?"
+
+Of course everybody rushed to the kitchen to see Jean take from inside
+the case of the tickless clock a lovely handkerchief just like Bettie's
+except that it was marked with "J."
+
+Marjory's note, which she presently found growing on the crimson
+petunia, sent her flying to the grindless coffee-mill, where she too
+found a similar gift.
+
+"Well," said Mabel, who was now fairly cheerful, "I wonder if she forgot
+all about _me_."
+
+For several anxious moments the girls searched eagerly in Mabel's behalf
+but no note was visible.
+
+"I can't think where it could be," said housewifely Jean, stooping to
+pick up a bit of string from the dining-room rug, and winding it into a
+little ball. "I've looked in every room and--Why! what a long string! I
+wonder where it's all coming from."
+
+"Under the rug," said Marjory, making a dive for the bit of paper that
+dangled from the end of the string. "Here's your note, Mabel."
+
+"I think," Miss Blossom had written, "that there must be a mouse in the
+pantry mousetrap by this time."
+
+"Yes!" shouted Mabel, a moment later. "A lovely lace-edged mouse with an
+'M' on it--no, it's 'M B'--a really truly monogram, the very first
+monogram I ever had."
+
+"Why, so it is," said Marjory. "I suppose she did that so we could tell
+them apart, because if she'd put M on both of them we wouldn't have
+known which was which."
+
+"Why," cried Jean, "it's nearly an hour since the train left. Wasn't it
+sweet of her to think of keeping us interested so we shouldn't be quite
+so lonesome?"
+
+"Yes," said Bettie, "it was even nicer than our lovely presents, but it
+was just like her."
+
+"Oh, dear," said Mabel, again on the verge of tears, "I wish she might
+have stayed forever. What's the use of getting lovely new friends if you
+have to go and lose them the very next minute? She was just the nicest
+grown-up little girl there ever was, and I'll never see--see her any--"
+
+"Look out, Mabel," warned Marjory, "if you cry on that handkerchief
+you'll spoil that monogram. Miss Blossom didn't intend these for
+crying-handkerchiefs--one good-sized tear would soak them."
+
+Miss Blossom was not the only friend the girls were fated to lose that
+week. Grandma Pike, as everybody called the pleasant little old lady,
+was their next-door neighbor on the west side, and the cottagers were
+very fond of her. No one dreamed that Mrs. Pike would ever think of
+going to another town to live; but about ten days before Miss Blossom
+departed, the cheery old lady had quite taken everybody's breath away by
+announcing that she was going west, just as soon as she could get her
+things packed, to live with her married daughter.
+
+When the girls heard that Grandma Pike was going away they were very
+much surprised and not at all pleased at the idea of losing one of their
+most delightful neighbors. At Miss Blossom's suggestion, they had spent
+several evenings working on a parting gift for their elderly friend. The
+gift, a wonderful linen traveling case with places in it to carry
+everything a traveler would be likely to need, was finished at
+last--with so many persons working on it, it was hard to keep all the
+pieces together--and the girls carried it to Grandma Pike, who seemed
+very much pleased.
+
+"Well, well," said the delighted old lady, unrolling the parcel, "if you
+haven't gone and made me a grand slipper-bag! I'll think of you, now,
+every time I put on my slippers."
+
+"No, no," protested Jean. "It's a traveling case with places in it for
+'most everything _but_ slippers."
+
+"We all sewed on it," explained Mabel. "Those little bits of stitches
+that you can't see at all are Bettie's. Jean did all this
+feather-stitching, and Marjory hemmed all the binding. Miss Blossom
+basted it together so it wouldn't be crooked."
+
+"What did _you_ do, Mabel?" asked Grandma Pike, smiling over her
+spectacles.
+
+"I took out the basting threads and embroidered these letters on the
+pockets."
+
+"What does this 'P' stand for?"
+
+"Pins," said Mabel. "You see it was sort of an accident. I started to
+embroider the word soap on this little pocket, but when I got the S O A
+done, there wasn't any room left for the P, so I just put it on the
+_next_ pocket. I knew that if I explained that it was the end of 'Soap'
+and the beginning of 'Pins' you'd remember not to get your pins and soap
+mixed up."
+
+During the lonely days immediately following Miss Blossom's departure,
+Mrs. Bartholomew Crane proved a great solace. The girls had somewhat
+neglected her during the preceding busy weeks; but with Miss Blossom
+gone, the cottagers became conscious of an aching void that new wall
+paper and lace handkerchiefs and a bank account could not quite fill; so
+presently they resumed their former habit of trotting across the street
+many times a day to visit good-natured Mrs. Crane.
+
+Mrs. Crane's house was very small and looked rather gloomy from the
+outside because the paint had long ago peeled off and the weatherbeaten
+boards had grown black with age; but inside it was cheerfulness
+personified. First, there was Mrs. Crane herself, fairly radiating
+comfort. Then there was a bright rag carpet on the floor, a glowing red
+cloth on the little table, a lively yellow canary named Dicksy in one
+window, and a gorgeous red-and-crimson but very bad-tempered parrot in
+the other. There were only three rooms downstairs and two bed-chambers
+upstairs. Mrs. Crane's own room opened off the little parlor, and
+visitors could see the high feather bed always as smooth and rounded on
+top as one of Mrs. Crane's big loaves of light bread. The privileged
+girls were never tired of examining the good woman's patchwork quilts,
+made many years ago of minute, quaint, old-fashioned scraps of calico.
+
+Even the garden seemed to differ from other gardens, for every inch of
+it except the patch of green grass under the solitary cherry tree was
+given over to flowers, many of them as quaint and old-fashioned as the
+bits of calico in the quilts, and to vegetables that ripened a week
+earlier for Mrs. Crane than similar varieties did for anyone else. Yet
+the garden was so little, and the variety so great, that Mrs. Crane
+never had enough of any one thing to sell. She owned her little home,
+but very little else. The two upstairs rooms were rented to lodgers, and
+she knitted stockings and mittens to sell because she could knit without
+using her eyes, which, like so many soft, bright, black eyes, were far
+from strong; but the little income so gained was barely enough to keep
+stout, warm-hearted, overgenerous Mrs. Crane supplied with food and
+fuel. The neighbors often wondered what would become of the good, lonely
+woman if she lost her lodgers, if her eyes failed completely, or if she
+should fall ill. Everybody agreed that Mrs. Crane should have been a
+wealthy woman instead of a poor one, because she would undoubtedly have
+done so much good with her money. Mabel had heard her father say that
+there was a good-sized mortgage on the place, and Dr. Bennett had
+instantly added: "Now, don't you say anything about that, Mabel." But
+ever after that, Mabel had kept her eyes open during her visits to Mrs.
+Crane, hoping to get a glimpse of the dreadful large-sized thing that
+was not to be mentioned.
+
+On one occasion she thought she saw light. Mrs. Crane had expressed a
+fear that a wandering polecat had made a home under her woodshed.
+
+"Is mortgage another name for polecat?" Mabel had asked a little later.
+
+"No," imaginative Jean had replied. "A mortgage is more like a great,
+lean, hungry, gray wolf waiting just around the corner to eat you up.
+Don't ever use the word before Mrs. Crane; she has one."
+
+"Where does she keep it?" demanded Mabel, agog with interest.
+
+"I promised not to talk about it," said Jean, "and I won't."
+
+Miss Blossom had been gone only two days when something happened to Mrs.
+Crane. It was none of the things that the neighbors had expected to
+happen, but for a little while it looked almost as serious. Bettie,
+running across the street right after breakfast one morning, with a
+bunch of fresh chickweed for the yellow canary and a cracker for cross
+Polly, found Mrs. Crane, usually the most cheerful person imaginable,
+sitting in her kitchen with a swollen, crimson foot in a pail of
+lukewarm water, and groaning dismally.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Crane!" cried surprised Bettie. "What in the world is the
+matter? Are--are you coming down with anything?"
+
+"I've already come," moaned Mrs. Crane, grimly. "I was out in my back
+yard in my thin old slippers early this morning putting hellebore on my
+currant bushes, and I stepped down hard on the teeth of the rake that
+I'd dropped on the grass. There's two great holes in my foot. How I'm
+ever going to do things I don't know, for 'twas all I could do to crawl
+into the house on my hands and knees."
+
+"Isn't there something I can do for you?" asked Bettie, sympathetically.
+
+"Could you get a stick of wood from the shed and make me a cup of tea?
+Maybe I'd feel braver if I wasn't so empty."
+
+"Of course I could," said Bettie, cheerily.
+
+"I tell you what it is," confided Mrs. Crane. "It's real nice and
+independent living all alone as long as you're strong and well, but just
+the minute anything happens, there you are like a Robinson Crusoe, cast
+away on a desert isle. I began to think nobody would _ever_ come."
+
+"Can't I do something more for you?" asked Bettie, poking scraps of
+paper under the kettle to bring it to a boil. "Don't you want Dr.
+Bennett to look at your foot? Hadn't I better get him?"
+
+"Yes, do," said Mrs. Crane, "and then come back. I can't bear to think
+of staying here alone."
+
+For the next four days there was a deep depression in the middle of Mrs.
+Crane's puffy feather bed, for the injured foot was badly swollen and
+Mrs. Crane was far too heavy to go hopping about on the other one. At
+first, her usually hopeful countenance wore a strained, anxious
+expression, quite pathetic to see.
+
+"Now don't you worry one bit," said comforting little Bettie. "We'll
+take turns staying with you; we'll feed Polly and Dicksy, and I believe
+every friend you have is going to offer to make broth. Mother's making
+some this minute."
+
+"But there's the lodgers," groaned Mrs. Crane, "both as particular as a
+pair of old maids in a glass case. Mr. Barlow wants his bedclothes
+tucked in all around so tight that a body'd think he was afraid of
+rolling out of bed nights, and Mr. Bailey won't have his tucked in at
+all--says he likes 'em 'floating round loose and airy.' Do you suppose
+you girls can make those two beds and not get those two lodgers mixed
+up? I declare, I'm so absent-minded myself that I've had to climb those
+narrow stairs many a day to make sure I'd done it right."
+
+"Don't be afraid," said Jean, who had joined Bettie. "Marjory's Aunty
+Jane has taught her to make beds beautifully, and I have a good memory.
+Between us we'll manage splendidly."
+
+"But there's my garden," mourned the usually busy woman, who found it
+hard to lie still with folded hands in a world that seemed to be
+constantly needing her. "Dear me! I don't see how I'm going to spare
+myself for a whole week just when everything is growing so fast."
+
+"We'll tend to the garden, too," promised Bettie.
+
+"Yes, indeed we will," echoed Mabel. "We'll water everything and weed--"
+
+"No, you won't," said Mrs. Crane, quickly. "You can do all the watering
+you like, but if I catch any of you weeding, there'll be trouble."
+
+The young cottagers were even better than their promises, for they took
+excellent care of Mrs. Crane, the lodgers, the parrot, the canary, and
+the garden, until the injured foot was well again; but while doing all
+this they learned something that distressed them very much, indeed. Of
+course they had always known in a general way that their friend was far
+from being wealthy, but they had not guessed how touchingly poor she
+really was. But now they saw that her cupboard was very scantily filled,
+that her clothing was very much patched and mended, her shoes
+distressingly worn out, and that even her dish-towels were neatly
+darned.
+
+"But we won't talk about it to people," said fine-minded Jean. "Perhaps
+she wouldn't like to have everybody know."
+
+Even Jean, however, did not guess what a comfort proud Mrs. Crane had
+found it to have her warm-hearted little friends stand between her
+poverty and the sometimes-too-prying eyes of a grown-up world.
+
+Unobservant though they had seemed, the girls did not forget about the
+Mother-Hubbardlike state of Mrs. Crane's cupboard. After that one of
+their finest castles in Spain always had Mrs. Crane, who would have made
+such a delightful mother and who had never had any children, enthroned
+as its gracious mistress. When they had time to think about it at all,
+it always grieved them to think of their generous-natured,
+no-longer-young friend dreading a poverty-stricken, loveless, and
+perhaps homeless old age; for this, they had discovered, was precisely
+what Mrs. Crane was doing.
+
+"If she were a little, thin, active old lady, with bobbing white curls
+like Grandma Pike," said Jean, "lots of people would have a corner for
+her; but poor Mrs. Crane takes up so much room and is so heavy and slow
+that she's going to be hard to take care of when she gets old. Oh, _why_
+couldn't she have had just one strong, kind son to take care of her?"
+
+"When I'm married," offered Mabel, generously, "I'll take her to live
+with me. I won't _have_ any husband if he doesn't promise to take Mrs.
+Crane, too."
+
+"You shan't have her," declared Jean. "I want her myself."
+
+"She's already promised to me," said Bettie, triumphantly. "We're going
+to keep house together some place, and I'm going to be an old-maid
+kindergarten teacher."
+
+"I don't think that's fair, Bettie Tucker," said Marjory, earnestly. "I
+don't see how my children are to have any grandmother if she doesn't
+live with _me_. Imagine the poor little things with Aunty Jane for a
+grandmother!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 10
+
+The Milligans
+
+
+To the moment of Grandma Pike's departure, all their neighbors had been
+so pleasant that the girls were deceived into thinking that neighbors
+were never anything _but_ pleasant. Although they felt not the slightest
+misgiving as to their future neighbors, they had hated to lose dear old
+Grandma Pike, who had always been as good to them as if she had really
+been their grandmother, and whose parting gifts--sundry odds and ends
+of dishes, old magazines, and broken parcels of provisions--gave them
+occupation for many delightful days. In spite of the lasting pleasure of
+this unexpected donation, however, they could not help feeling that,
+with Mr. Black away, Miss Blossom gone, Mrs. Pike living in another
+town, and only disabled Mrs. Crane left, they were losing friends with
+alarming rapidity. Grief for the departed, however, did not prevent
+their taking an active interest in the persons who were to occupy the
+house next door, which Mrs. Pike's departure had left vacant.
+
+"I wonder," said Marjory, pulling the curtain back to get a better view
+of the empty house, "what the new people will be like. It's exciting,
+isn't it, to have something happening in this quiet neighborhood? What
+did Grandma Pike say the name was?"
+
+"Milligan," replied Bettie.
+
+"Kind of nice name, isn't it?" asked Jean.
+
+"Yes," agreed Mabel, brightening suddenly. "I made up a long, long rhyme
+about it last night before I went to sleep. Want to hear it?"
+
+"Of course."
+
+"This one really rhymes," explained Mabel, importantly. Her verses
+sometimes lacked that desirable quality, so when they did rhyme Mabel
+always liked to mention it. "Here it is:
+
+ "As soon as a man named Milligan
+ Got well he always fell ill again--ill again--ill--
+
+"Dear me, I can't remember how it went. There was a lot more, but I've
+forgotten the rest."
+
+"It's a great pity," said Marjory, drily, "that you didn't forget _all_
+of it, because if there's really a Mr. Milligan, and I ever see him,
+I'll think of that rhyme and I won't be able to keep my face straight."
+
+"We must be very polite to the Milligans," said considerate Bettie, "and
+call on them as soon as they come. Mother always calls on new people;
+she says it makes folks feel more comfortable to be welcomed into the
+neighborhood."
+
+"Mrs. Crane does it, too. We're the nearest, perhaps we ought to be the
+first."
+
+"I think," suggested Jean thoughtfully, "we'd better wait until they're
+nicely settled; they might not like visitors too soon. You know _we_
+didn't."
+
+"They're going to move in today," said Mabel. "Goodness! I wish they'd
+hurry and come; I'm so excited that I keep dusting the same shelf over
+and over again. I'm just wild to see them!"
+
+It was sweeping-day at the cottage when the Milligans' furniture began
+to arrive, but it looked very much as if the sweeping would last for at
+least _two_ days because the girls were unable to get very far away from
+the windows that faced west. These were the bedroom windows, and, as
+there were only two of them, there were usually two heads at each
+window.
+
+"There comes the first load," announced Marjory, at last. "There's a
+high-chair on the very top, so there must be a baby."
+
+"I'm so glad," said Bettie. "I just love a baby."
+
+Two men unpacked the Milligans' furniture in the Milligans' front yard,
+and each load seemed more interesting than the one before it. It was
+such fun to guess what the big, clumsy parcels contained, particularly
+when the contents proved to be quite different from what the girls
+expected.
+
+"Somehow, I don't think they're going to be very nice people," said
+Mabel. "I b'lieve we're going to be disappointed in 'em."
+
+"Why, Mabel," objected Jean, "we don't know a thing about them yet."
+
+"Yes, I do too. Their things--look--they don't look _ladylike_."
+
+"Oh, Mabel," laughed Marjory, "you're so funny."
+
+"Perhaps," offered Jean, "the Milligans are poor and the children have
+spoiled things."
+
+"No," insisted Mabel. "They've got some of the newest and shiningest
+furniture I ever saw, but I b'lieve it's imitation."
+
+"Oh, Mabel," laughed Jean, "I hope you won't watch the loads when _I_
+move. For a girl that's slept for three weeks on an imitation pillow,
+you're pretty critical."
+
+Presently the Milligans themselves arrived. Mabel happened to be
+counting the buds on the poppy plants when they came.
+
+"Girls!" she cried, rushing into the cottage with the news. "They've
+come. I saw them all. There's a Mr. Milligan, a Mrs. Milligan, a girl, a
+boy, a baby, and a dog. The girl's the oldest. She's just about my
+size--I mean height--and she has straight, light hair. The baby walks,
+and none of them are so very good-looking."
+
+It did not take the newcomers long to discover that their next-door
+neighbors were four little girls. Mrs. Milligan found it out that very
+afternoon when she went to the back door to borrow tea. Bettie
+explained, very politely, that Dandelion Cottage was only a playhouse,
+and that their tea-caddy contained nothing but glass beads. When Mrs.
+Milligan returned to her own house, she told her own family about it.
+
+"You might as well run over and play with them, Laura," she said. "Take
+the baby with you, too. He's a dreadful nuisance under my feet. That'll
+be a real nice place for you both to play all summer."
+
+The girls received their visitors pleasantly; almost, indeed, with
+enthusiasm; but after a very few moments, they began to eye the baby
+with apprehension. He refused to make friends with them but wandered
+about rather lawlessly and handled their treasures roughly. Laura paid
+no attention to him but talked to the girls. She seemed a bright girl
+and not at all bashful, and she used a great many slang phrases that
+sounded new and, it must be confessed, rather attractive to the girls.
+
+"Oh, land, yes," she said, "we came here from Chicago where we had all
+kinds of money, and clothes to burn--we lived in a beautiful flat. Pa
+just came here to oblige Mr. Williams--he's going to clerk in Williams's
+store. Come over and see me--we'll be real friendly and have lots of
+good times together--I can put you up to lots of dodges. Say, this is a
+dandy place to play in--I'm coming over often."
+
+Jean looked in silence at Bettie, Bettie at Mabel, and Mabel at Marjory.
+Surely such an outburst of cordiality deserved a fitting response, but
+no one seemed to be able to make it.
+
+"Do," said Jean, finally, but rather feebly, "we'd be pleased to have
+you."
+
+Except for a few lively but good-natured squabbles between Marjory, who
+was something of a tease, and Mabel, who was Marjory's favorite victim,
+the little mistresses of Dandelion Cottage had always played together in
+perfect harmony; but with the coming of the Milligans everything was
+changed.
+
+To start with, between the Milligan baby and the Milligan dog, the girls
+knew no peace. Mrs. Milligan was right when she said that the baby was a
+nuisance, for it would have been hard to find a more troublesome
+three-year-old. He pulled down everything he could reach, broke the
+girls' best dishes, wiped their precious petunia and the geraniums
+completely out of existence, and roared with a deep bass voice if anyone
+attempted to interfere with him. The dog carried mud into the neat
+little cottage, scratched up the garden, and growled if the girls tried
+to drive him out.
+
+"Well," said Mabel, disconsolately, in one of the rare moments when the
+girls were alone, "I _could_ stand the baby and the dog. But I _can't_
+stand Laura!"
+
+"Laura certainly likes to boss," said Bettie, who looked pale and
+worried. "I don't just see what we're going to do about it. I try to be
+nice to her, but I _can't_ like her. Mother says we must be polite to
+her, but I don't believe Mother knows just what a queer girl she is--you
+see she's always as quiet as can be when there are grown people around."
+
+"Yes," agreed Mabel, "her company manners are so much properer than mine
+that Mother says she wishes I were more like her."
+
+"Well," said Marjory, uncompromisingly, "I'm mighty glad you're not.
+Your manners aren't particularly good, but you haven't two sets. I
+think Laura's the most disagreeable girl I ever knew. Just as she fools
+you into almost liking her, she turns around and scratches you."
+
+"Perhaps," said Jean, "if her people were nicer--By the way, Mother says
+that after this we must keep the windows shut while Mr. Milligan is
+splitting wood in his back yard so we can't hear the awful things he
+says, and that if we hear Mr. and Mrs. Milligan quarreling again we
+mustn't listen."
+
+"Listen!" exclaimed Mabel. "We don't _need_ to listen. Their voices keep
+getting louder and louder until it seems as if they were right in this
+house."
+
+"Of course," said Marjory, "it can't be pleasant for Laura at home, but,
+dear me, it isn't pleasant for _us_ with her over here."
+
+Badly-brought-up Laura was certainly not a pleasant playmate. She wanted
+to lead in everything and was amiable only when she was having her own
+way. She was not satisfied with the way the cottage was arranged but
+rearranged it to suit herself. She told the girls that their garments
+were countrified, and laughed scornfully at Bettie's boyish frocks and
+heavy shoes. She ridiculed rotund Mabel for being fat, and said that
+Marjory's nose turned up and that Jean's rather large mouth was a good
+opening for a young dentist. Before the first week was fairly over, the
+four girls--who had lived so happily before her arrival--were grieved,
+indignant, or downright angry three-fourths of the time.
+
+Laura had one habit that annoyed the girls excessively, although at
+first they had found it rather amusing. Later, however, owing perhaps to
+a certain rasping quality in Laura's voice, it grew very tiresome. She
+transposed the initials of their names. For instance, Bettie Tucker
+became Tettie Bucker, Jeanie Mapes became Meanie Japes, while Mabel
+became Babel Mennett. It was particularly distressing to have Laura
+speak familiarly in her sharp, half-scornful tones, of their dear,
+departed Miss Blossom, whose name was Gertrude, as Bertie Glossom. Mr.
+Peter Black, of course, became Beter Plack, and Mrs. Bartholomew Crane
+was Mrs. Cartholomew Brane, to lawless young Laura.
+
+"I don't think it's exactly respectful to do that to grown-up people's
+names," protested Bettie, one day.
+
+"Pooh!" said Laura. "Mrs. Cartholomew Brane looks just like an old
+washtub, she's so fat--who'd be respectful to a washtub? There goes
+Toctor Ducker, Tettie Bucker. Huh! I'd hate to be a parson's
+daughter--they're always as poor as church mice. What did you say your
+mother's first name is?"
+
+"I didn't say and I'm not going to," returned Bettie.
+
+"Well, anyhow, her bonnet went out of style four years ago. I should
+think the parish'd take up a subscription and get her a new one."
+
+"I wish, Laura," said exasperated Jean, another day, "that you wouldn't
+meddle with our things. This bedroom is mine and Bettie's, and the other
+one is Mabel's and Marjory's. We wouldn't _think_ of looking into each
+other's private treasure boxes. I've seen you open mine half a dozen
+times this week. The things are all keepsakes and I'd rather not have
+them handled."
+
+"Huh! I guess I'll handle 'em if I want to. My mother can't keep me out
+of her bureau drawers, and I don't think you're so very much smarter."
+
+A day or two later, the girls of Dandelion Cottage were invited to a
+party in another portion of the town. The invitations were left at their
+own cottage door and the delighted girls began at once to make plans for
+the party.
+
+"Let's carry our new handkerchiefs," suggested Jean, going to her
+treasure box. "I believe I'll take mine home with me--I dreamed last
+night that the cottage was on fire and that mine got burned. Besides,
+I'll have to get dressed at home for the party and it would be handier
+to have it there."
+
+"Guess I will, too," said Bettie.
+
+"Great idea," said Marjory, taking her own box from its shelf. "I never
+should have thought of anything so bright. Let's all write to Miss
+Blossom and tell her that we carried our--Why! mine isn't in my box!"
+
+"Neither is mine," cried Mabel, who had turned quite pale at the
+discovery. "It was there this morning. Girls, did any of you touch our
+handkerchiefs?"
+
+"Of course we didn't," said Jean. "See, here's mine with 'J' on it, and
+there are no others in my box."
+
+"Of course not," echoed Laura.
+
+"Mine's here, all right," said Bettie, who had been struggling with her
+box, which opened hard. "Are you sure you left them in your boxes?"
+
+"Certain sure," replied Mabel. "I saw it this morning."
+
+"So did I see mine," asserted Marjory. "After I'd shown it to Aunty Jane
+I brought it back to put in my treasure box."
+
+"Laura," asked Jean, "was Marjory's handkerchief in her box when you
+looked in it this morning? I heard the cover make that funny little
+clicking noise that it always makes, and just a minute afterward you
+came out of her room."
+
+"I--I don't know," stammered Laura. "I didn't see it--I never touched
+her old box. If you say I did, I'll go right home and tell my mother you
+called me a thief. I'm going now, anyway."
+
+The girls were in the dining-room just outside of the back bedroom
+door. As Laura was brushing past Jean, the opening of the new girl's
+blouse caught in such a fashion on the corner of the sideboard that the
+garment, which fastened in front, came unbuttoned from top to bottom.
+From its bulging front dropped Bettie's bead chain, various articles of
+doll's clothing, and the two missing handkerchiefs.
+
+"They're mine!" cried Laura, making a dive for the things.
+
+"They're not any such thing!" cried indignant Jean. "I made that doll's
+dress myself, and I know the lace on those handkerchiefs."
+
+"They're my mother's," protested Laura. "I took 'em out of her drawer."
+
+"They're not," contradicted Mabel, prying Laura's fingers apart and
+forcing her to drop one of the crumpled handkerchiefs. "Look at that
+monogram--'M B' for Mabel Bennett."
+
+"It's no such thing," lied Laura, stoutly. "It stands for Bertha
+Milligan and that's my mother's name."
+
+"Give me that other handkerchief this instant," demanded Jean, giving
+Laura a slight shake. "If you don't, we'll take it away from you."
+
+"Take the old rag," said Laura. "My mother gives away better
+handkerchiefs than these to beggars. I just took 'em anyway to scare
+Varjory Male and Babel Mennett, the silly babies."
+
+After this enlightening experience, the girls never for a moment left
+their unwelcome visitor alone in any of the rooms of Dandelion Cottage.
+They stood her for almost a week longer, principally because there
+seemed to be no way of getting rid of her. Mabel, indeed, had several
+lively quarrels with her during that time, because quick-tempered Mabel,
+always strictly truthful herself, could not tolerate deceit in anyone
+else, and she had, of course, lost all faith in Laura.
+
+The end came suddenly one Friday afternoon. Miss Blossom had sent to the
+girls, by mail, a photograph of her own charming self, and nothing that
+the cottage contained was more precious. After one of the usual tiffs
+with Mabel, high-handed Laura spitefully scratched a disfiguring
+mustache right across the beautiful face, ruining the priceless treasure
+beyond repair.
+
+Even Laura looked slightly dismayed at the result of her spiteful work.
+The others for a moment were too horror-stricken for words. Then Mabel,
+with blazing eyes, sprang to her feet and flung the cottage door wide
+open.
+
+"You go home, Laura Milligan!" she cried. "Don't you ever dare to come
+inside this house again!"
+
+"Yes, go," cried mild Bettie, for once thoroughly roused. "We've tried
+to be nice to you and there hasn't been a single day that you haven't
+been rude and horrid. Go home this minute. We're done with you."
+
+"I won't go until I'm good and ready," retorted Laura, tearing the
+disfigured photograph in two and scornfully tossing the pieces into a
+corner. "Such a fuss about a skinny old maid's picture."
+
+"You shan't stay one instant longer!" cried indignant Jean, stepping
+determinedly behind Laura, placing her hands on the girl's shoulders,
+and making a sudden run for the door. "There! You're out. Don't you ever
+attempt to come in again."
+
+Bettie, grasping the situation and the Milligan baby at the same time,
+promptly set the boy outside. She had handled him with the utmost
+gentleness, but he always roared if anyone touched him, and he roared
+now.
+
+"Yah!" yelled Laura, "I'll tell my mother you pinched him--slapped him,
+too."
+
+"Sapped him, too," wailed the baby.
+
+"Well," said Jean, turning the key in the lock, "we'll have to keep the
+door locked after this. Mercy! I never behaved so dreadfully to anybody
+before and I hope I'll never have to again."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 11
+
+An Embarrassing Visitor
+
+
+Up to the time of the unpleasantness with Laura, the girls had unlocked
+the cottage in the morning and had left it unlocked until they were
+ready to go home at night, for the girls spent all their waking hours at
+Dandelion Cottage. Bettie, indeed, had the care of the youngest two
+Tucker babies, but they were good little creatures and when the girls
+played with their dolls they were glad to include the two placid babies,
+just as if they too were dolls. The littlest baby, in particular, made
+a remarkably comfortable plaything, for it was all one to him whether he
+slept in Jean's biggest doll's cradle, or in the middle of the
+dining-room table, as long as he was permitted to sleep sixteen hours
+out of the twenty-four. When he wasn't asleep, he sucked his thumb
+contentedly, crowed happily on one of the cottage beds, or rolled
+cheerfully about on the cottage floor. The older baby, too, obligingly
+stayed wherever the girls happened to put him. After this experience
+with the Tucker infants, the Milligan baby had proved a great
+disappointment to the girls, for they had hoped to use him, too, as an
+animated doll; but he had refused steadfastly to make friends even with
+Bettie, whose way with babies was something beautiful to see.
+
+The girls were all required to do their own mending, but they found it
+no hardship to do their darning on their own doorstep on sunny days, or
+around the dining-room table if the north wind happened to be blowing,
+for they always had so many interesting things to talk about.
+
+During the daytime, the cottage was never left entirely alone. It was
+occupied even at mealtimes because the four families dined and supped at
+different hours; for instance, Marjory's Aunty Jane always liked her tea
+at half-past five, but Jean's people did not dine until seven. Owing to
+the impossibility of capturing all the boys at one time, supper at the
+Tucker house was a movable feast, so Bettie usually ate whenever she
+found it most convenient. As for Mabel, it is doubtful if she knew the
+exact hours for meals at the Bennett house because she was invariably
+late. After the handkerchief episode, the girls planned that one or
+another of them should always be in the cottage from the time that it
+was opened in the morning until it was again locked for the night. The
+morning after the later quarrel, however, the girls met by previous
+arrangement on Mabel's doorstep, went in a body to the cottage, and,
+after they were all inside, carefully locked the door.
+
+"We'll be on the safe side, anyway," said Jean. "Though I shouldn't
+think that Laura would ever want to come near the place again."
+
+"Oh, she'll come fast enough," said Mabel. "She's cheeky enough for
+anything. Do you s'pose she told her mother about it? She said she was
+going to."
+
+"Pshaw!" said Marjory. "She was always threatening to tell her mother,
+but nothing ever came of it. If she'd told her mother half the things
+she _said_ she was going to, she wouldn't have had time to eat or
+sleep."
+
+It was hopeless, the girls had decided, to attempt to mend the ruined
+photograph, so, at Bettie's suggestion, they had sorrowfully cut it into
+four pieces of equal size, which they divided between them. They had
+just laid the precious fragments tenderly away in their treasure boxes
+when the doorbell rang with such a loud, prolonged, jangling peal that
+everybody jumped.
+
+"Laura!" exclaimed the four girls.
+
+"No," said Jean, cautiously drawing back the curtain of the front window
+and peeping out. "It's Mrs. Milligan!"
+
+"Goodness!" whispered Marjory, "there's no knowing what Laura told
+her--she never _did_ tell anything straight."
+
+"Let's keep still," said Mabel. "Perhaps she'll think there's nobody
+home."
+
+"No hope of that," said Jean. "She saw us come in. But, pshaw! she can't
+hurt us anyway."
+
+"No," said Marjory. "What's the use of being afraid? _We_ didn't do
+anything to be ashamed of. Aunty Jane says we should have turned Laura
+out the day she took the handkerchiefs."
+
+"I'm not exactly afraid," said Bettie, "but I don't like Mrs. Milligan.
+Still, we'll have to let her in, I suppose."
+
+A second vigorous peal at the bell warned them that their visitor was
+getting impatient.
+
+"You're the biggest and the most dignified," said Marjory, giving Jean a
+shove. "_You_ go."
+
+"Don't ask her in if you can help it," warned Bettie, in a pleading
+whisper. "The doorbell sounds as if she didn't like us very well."
+
+But the visitor did not wait to be asked to come in. The moment Jean
+turned the key the door was flung open and Mrs. Milligan brushed past
+the astonished quartet and sailed into the parlor, where she seated
+herself bolt upright on the cozy corner.
+
+"I'd like to know," demanded Mrs. Milligan, in a hard, cold tone that
+fell unpleasantly on the cottagers' ears, "if you consider it ladylike
+for four great overgrown girls to pitch into one poor innocent little
+child and a helpless baby? Your conduct yesterday was simply
+_outrageous_. You might have injured those children for life, or even
+broken the baby's back."
+
+"Broken the baby's back!" gasped Bettie, in honest amazement. "Why, I
+simply lifted him with my two hands and set him just outside the door. I
+never was rough with _any_ baby in all my life!"
+
+"I happen to know, on excellent authority," said Mrs. Milligan, "that
+you slapped both of those helpless children and threw them down the
+front steps. Laura was so excited about it that she couldn't sleep, and
+the poor baby cried half the night--we fear that he's injured
+internally."
+
+"Nobody _here_ injured him," said Mabel. "He always cries all the time,
+anyhow."
+
+"We _did_ put them out and for a very good reason," said Jean, speaking
+as respectfully as she could, "but we certainly didn't hurt either of
+them. I'm sorry if the baby isn't well, but I know it isn't our fault."
+
+"Laura walked down the steps," said Bettie, "and the baby turned over
+and slid down on his stomach the way he always does."
+
+"I should think that a _minister's_ daughter," said Mrs. Milligan, with
+a withering glance at poor shrinking Bettie, "would scorn to tell such
+lies."
+
+Bettie, who had never before been accused of untruthfulness, looked the
+picture of conscious guilt; a tide of crimson flooded her cheeks and she
+fingered the buttons on her blouse nervously. She was too dumbfounded to
+speak a word in her own defense. Mabel, however, was only too ready.
+
+"Bettie never told a lie in her life," cried the indignant little girl.
+"It was your own Laura that told stories if anybody did--and I guess
+somebody did, all right. Laura _never_ tells the truth; she doesn't know
+how to."
+
+"I have implicit confidence in Laura," returned Mrs. Milligan, frowning
+at Mabel. "I believe every word she says."
+
+"Well," retorted dauntless Mabel, "that's more than the rest of us do.
+We kept count one day and she told seventy-two fibs that we _know_ of."
+
+"Oh, Mabel, do hush," pleaded scandalized Bettie.
+
+"Hush nothing," said Mabel, not to be deterred. "I'm only telling the
+truth. Laura took our handkerchiefs and then fibbed about it, and we've
+missed a dozen things since that she probably carried off and--"
+
+"Mabel, Mabel!" warned Jean, pressing her hand over Mabel's too reckless
+lips. "Don't you know that we decided not to say a word about those
+other things? They didn't amount to anything, and we'd rather have peace
+than to make a fuss about them."
+
+"I can see very plainly," said Mrs. Milligan, with cold disapproval,
+"that you're not at all the proper sort of children for my little Laura
+to play with. I forbid you to speak to her again; I don't care to have
+her associate with you. I can believe all she says about you, for I've
+never been treated so rudely in my life."
+
+"Apologize, Mabel," whispered Jean, whose arm was still about the
+younger girl's neck.
+
+"If I was rude," said candid Mabel, "I beg your pardon. I didn't _mean_
+to be impolite, but every word I said about Laura was true."
+
+"I shall not accept your apology," said Mrs. Milligan, rising to depart,
+"until you've sent a written apology to Laura and have retracted
+everything you've said about her, besides."
+
+"It'll never be accepted then," said quick-tempered Mabel, "for we
+haven't done anything to apologize for."
+
+"No, Mrs. Milligan," said Jean, in her even, pleasant voice. "No apology
+to Laura can ever come from us. We stood her just as long as we could,
+and then we turned her out just as kindly as anyone could have done it.
+I told Mother all about it last night and she agreed that there wasn't
+anything else we _could_ have done."
+
+"So did Mamma," said Bettie.
+
+"So did Aunty Jane."
+
+"Well," said Mrs. Milligan, pausing on the porch, "I'd thank you young
+gossips to keep your tongues and your hands off my children in the
+future."
+
+Jean closed the door and the four girls looked at one another in
+silence. None of their own relatives were at all like Mrs. Milligan and
+they didn't know just what to make of their unpleasant experience. At
+last, Marjory gave a long sigh.
+
+"Well," said she, "I came awfully near telling her when she forbade our
+playing with Laura that my Aunty Jane has forbidden _me_ to even speak
+to her poor abused Laura."
+
+"As for me," said Mabel, with lofty scorn, "I don't _need_ to be
+forbidden."
+
+"Come, girls," said Jean, "I'm sorry it had to happen, but I'm glad the
+matter's ended. Let's not talk about it any more. Let's have one of our
+own good old happy days--the kind we had before Laura came."
+
+"I'll tell you what we'll do," said Bettie. "We'll each write out a bill
+of fare for Mr. Black's dinner party, and we'll see how many different
+things we can think of. In that way, we'll be sure not to forget
+anything."
+
+"But the Milligans," breathed Marjory, promptly seeing through Bettie's
+tactful scheme.
+
+The Milligan matter, however, was not by any means ended. It was true
+that the girls paid no further attention to Laura, but this did not
+deter that rather vindictive young person from annoying the little
+cottagers in every way that she possibly could, although she was afraid
+to work openly.
+
+As Laura knew, the girls took great pride in their little garden.
+Bettie's good-natured big brother Rob had offered to take care of their
+tiny lawn, and he kept it smooth and even. The round pansy bed daily
+yielded handfuls of great purple, white, or golden blossoms; the thrifty
+nasturtiums were beginning to bloom with creditable freedom; and many of
+the different, prettily foliaged little plants in the long bed near the
+Milligans' fence were opening their first curious, many-colored flowers.
+
+Some of the vegetables were positively getting radishes and carrots on
+their roots, as Bettie put it. The pride of the vegetable garden,
+however, was a huge, rampant vine that threatened to take possession of
+the entire yard. There was just the one plant; no one knew where the
+seed came from or how it had managed to get itself planted, but there it
+was, close beside the back fence. For want of a better name, the girls
+called it "The Accident," and they expected wonderful things from it
+when the great yellow trumpet-shaped flowers should give place to fruit,
+although they didn't know in the least what kind of crop to look for.
+But this made it all the more delightful.
+
+"Perhaps it'll be pumpkins," said Jean. "I guess I'd better hunt up a
+recipe for pumpkin pie, so's to be ready when the time comes."
+
+"Or those funny, pale green squashes that are scalloped all around the
+edge like a dish," said Marjory.
+
+"Or cucumbers," said Bettie. "I took Mrs. Crane a leaf, one day, and she
+said it _might_ be cucumbers."
+
+"Or watermelons," said Mabel. "Um-m! wouldn't it be grand if it should
+happen to be watermelons?"
+
+"What I'm wondering is," said Jean, "whether there's any danger of the
+vine's going around the house and taking possession of the front yard,
+too. I could almost believe that this was a seedling of Jack's beanstalk
+except that it runs on the ground instead of up."
+
+"If it tries to go around the corner," laughed Bettie, "we'll train it
+up the back of the house. Wouldn't it be fun to have pumpkins, or
+squashes, or cucumbers, or melons, or maybe all of them at once, growing
+on our roof?"
+
+The day after Mrs. Milligan's visit, Laura, who was not invited to the
+party, and who found time heavy on her hands, watched the girls, after
+stopping for Marjory, set out in their pretty summer dresses to spend
+the afternoon at a young friend's house. Laura gazed after them
+enviously. There was no reason why she should have been invited, for she
+had never met the little girl who was giving the party, but she didn't
+think of that. Instead, she foolishly laid the unintentional slight at
+the little cottagers' door.
+
+Mrs. Milligan was sewing on the doorstep and had given Laura a
+dish-towel to hem. Saying something about hunting for a thimble, Laura
+went to the kitchen, took the bread-knife from the table drawer, stole
+quietly out of the back door, and slipped between the bars of the back
+fence. Reaching the splendid vine that the girls loved so dearly, she
+parted the huge, rough leaves until she found the spot where the vine
+started from the ground. First looking about cautiously to make certain
+that no one was in sight, spiteful Laura drew the knife back and forth
+across the thick stem until, with a sudden, sharp crack, the sturdy vine
+parted from its root.
+
+Two minutes later, Laura, looking the picture of propriety, sat on the
+Milligans' doorstep hemming her dish-towel.
+
+Of course, when the girls made their next daily excursion about their
+garden they were almost broken-hearted at finding their beloved vine
+flat on the ground, all withered and dead.
+
+"Oh," mourned Marjory, "now we'll never know _what_ 'The Accident' was
+going to bear, pumpkins or squashes or--"
+
+"Yes," said Mabel, who was blinking hard to keep the tears back, "that's
+the hardest part of it, it was cut off in its p-prime--Oh, dear, I guess
+I'm g-going to cry."
+
+"What _could_ have done it?" asked Bettie, who was not far from
+following Mabel's example. "Has anyone stepped on it?"
+
+"Perhaps a potato bug ate it off," suggested Jean.
+
+"A two-legged potato bug, I guess," said Marjory, who had been examining
+the ground carefully. "See, here are small sharp heel prints close to
+the root."
+
+"Whose handkerchief is this?" asked Mabel, picking up a small tightly
+crumpled ball and unrolling it gingerly. "There's a name on it but my
+eyes are so teary I can't make it out."
+
+"It looks like Milligan," said Bettie, turning it over, "but we can't
+tell how long it's been here."
+
+"Horrid as she is," said charitable Jean, "it doesn't seem as if even
+Laura would do such a mean thing. I can't believe it of her."
+
+"_I_ can," said Mabel. "If _she_ had a squash vine, or a pumpkin vine,
+I'd go straight over and spoil it this minute."
+
+"No, no," said Jean, "we mustn't be horrid just because other folks are.
+We won't pay any attention to her--we'll just be patient."
+
+The girls found four small, green, egglike objects growing on the
+withered vine; they cut them off and these, too, were laid tenderly away
+in their treasure boxes.
+
+"When we get old," said Mabel, tearfully, "we'll take 'em out and tell
+our grandchildren all about 'The Accident.'"
+
+But even this prospect did not quite console the girls for the loss of
+their treasure.
+
+For the next few days, Laura remained contented with doing on the sly
+whatever she could to annoy the girls. One evening, when the girls had
+gone home for the night and while her mother was away from home, Laura
+threw a brick at one of the cottage windows, breaking a pane of glass.
+Reaching in through the hole, she scattered handfuls of sand on the
+clean floor that the girls had scrubbed that morning. Another night she
+emptied a basketful of potato parings on their neat front porch and
+daubed molasses on their doorknob--mean little tricks prompted by a mean
+little nature.
+
+It wasn't much fun, however, to annoy persons who refused to show any
+sign of being annoyed, and Laura presently changed her tactics. Taking a
+large bone from the pantry one day, when the girls were sitting on their
+doorstep, she first showed it to Towser, the Milligan dog, and then
+threw it over the fence into the very middle of the pansy bed. Of
+course, the big clumsy dog bounded over the low fence after the bone,
+crushing many of the delicate pansy plants. After that at regular
+intervals, Laura threw sticks and other bones into the other beds with
+very much the same result.
+
+The next time Rob cut the grass he noticed the untidy appearance of the
+beds and asked the reason. The girls explained.
+
+"I'll shoot that dog if you say so," offered Rob, with honest
+indignation.
+
+"No, no," said Bettie, "it isn't the _dog's_ fault."
+
+"No," said Jean, "we're not sure that the dog isn't the least
+objectionable member of the Milligan family."
+
+"How would it do if I licked the boy?" asked Rob.
+
+"It wouldn't do at all," replied Bettie. "He works somewhere in the
+daytime and never even looks in this direction when he's home. He's
+afraid of girls."
+
+"Then I guess you'll have to grin and bear it," said Rob, moving off
+with the lawn-mower, "since neither of my remedies seems to fit the
+case."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 12
+
+A Lively Afternoon
+
+
+It happened one day that Mrs. Milligan was obliged to spend a long
+afternoon at the dentist's, leaving Laura in charge of the house.
+Unfortunately it happened, too, that this was the day when the sewing
+society met, and Mrs. Tucker had asked Bettie to stay home for the
+afternoon because the next-to-the-youngest baby was ill with a croupy
+cold and could not go out of doors to the cottage. Devoted Jean offered
+to stay with her beloved Bettie, who gladly accepted the offer. Before
+going to Bettie's, however, Jean ran over to Dandelion Cottage to tell
+the other girls about it.
+
+"Mabel," asked Jean, a little doubtfully, "are you quite sure you'll be
+able to turn a deaf ear if Laura should happen to bother you? I'm half
+afraid to leave you two girls here alone."
+
+"You needn't be," said Mabel. "I wouldn't associate with Laura if I were
+paid for it. She isn't my kind."
+
+"No," said Marjory, "you needn't worry a mite. We're going to sit on the
+doorstep and read a perfectly lovely book that Aunty Jane found at the
+library--it's one that she liked when _she_ was a little girl. We're
+going to take turns reading it aloud."
+
+"Well, that certainly ought to keep you out of mischief. You'll be safe
+enough if you stick to your book. If anything _should_ happen, just
+remember that I'm at Bettie's."
+
+"Yes, Grandma," said Marjory, with a comical grimace.
+
+Jean laughed, ran around the house, and squeezed through the hole in the
+back fence.
+
+Half an hour later, lonely Laura, discovering the girls on their
+doorstep, amused herself by sicking the dog at them. Towser, however,
+merely growled lazily for a few moments and then went to sleep in the
+sunshine--he, at least, cherished no particular grudge against the
+girls and probably by that time he recognized them as neighbors.
+
+Then Laura perched herself on one of the square posts of the dividing
+fence and began to sing--in her high, rasping, exasperating voice--a
+song that was almost too personal to be pleasant. It had taken Laura
+almost two hours to compose it, some days before, and fully another hour
+to commit it to memory, but she sang it now in an offhand, haphazard way
+that led the girls to suppose that she was making it up as she went
+along. It ran thus:
+
+ There's a lanky girl named Jean,
+ Who's altogether too lean.
+ Her mouth is too big,
+ And she wears a wig,
+ And her eyes are bright sea-green.
+
+Of course it was quite impossible to read even a thrillingly interesting
+book with rude Laura making such a disturbance. If the girls had been
+wise, they would have gone into the house and closed the door, leaving
+Laura without an audience; but they were _not_ wise and they _were_
+curious. They couldn't help waiting to hear what Laura was going to sing
+about the rest of them, and they did not need to wait long; Laura
+promptly obliged them with the second verse:
+
+ There's another named Marjory Vale,
+ Who's about the size of a snail.
+ Her teeth are light blue--
+ She hasn't but two--
+ And her hair is much too pale.
+
+Laura had, in several instances, sacrificed truth for the sake of rhyme,
+but enough remained to injure the vanity of the subjects of her song
+very sharply. Marjory breathed quickly for a moment and flushed pink but
+gave no audible sign that she had heard. Laura, somewhat disappointed,
+proceeded:
+
+ There's a silly young lass called Bet,
+ Thinks she's ev'rybody's sweet pet.
+ She slapped my brother,
+ Fibbed to my mother--
+ I know what _she's_ going to get.
+
+Mabel snorted indignantly over this injustice to her beloved Bettie and
+started to rise, but Marjory promptly seized her skirt and dragged her
+down. Laura, however, saw the movement and was correspondingly elated.
+It showed in her voice:
+
+ But the worst of the lot is Mabel,
+ She eats all the pie she's able.
+ She's round as a ball,
+ Has no waist at all,
+ And her manners are bad at the table.
+
+Marjory giggled. She had no thought of being disloyal, but this verse
+was certainly a close fit.
+
+"You just let me go," muttered Mabel, crimson with resentment and
+struggling to break away from Marjory's restraining hand. "I'll push her
+off that post."
+
+"Hush!" said diplomatic Marjory, "perhaps there's more to the song."
+
+But there wasn't. Laura began at the beginning and sang all the verses
+again, giving particular emphasis to the ones concerning Mabel and
+Marjory. This, of course, grew decidedly monotonous; the girls got tired
+of the constant repetition of the silly song long before Laura did.
+There was something about the song, too, that caught and held their
+attention. Irresistibly attracted, held by an exasperating fascination,
+neither girl could help waiting for her own special verse. But while
+this was going on, Mabel, with a finger in the ear nearest Laura, was
+industriously scribbling something on a scrap of paper.
+
+As everybody knows, the poetic muse doesn't always work when it is most
+needed, and Mabel was sadly handicapped at that moment. She was not
+satisfied with her hasty scrawl but, in the circumstances, it was the
+best she could do. Suddenly, before Marjory realized what was about to
+happen, Mabel was shouting back, to an air quite as objectionable as
+the one Laura was singing:
+
+ There's a very rude girl named Laura,
+ Whose ways fill all with horror.
+ She's all the things she says _we_ are;
+ All know this to their sorrow.
+
+"Yah! yah!" retorted quick-witted Laura. "There isn't a rhyme in your
+old song. If I couldn't rhyme better 'n that, I'd learn how. Come over
+and I'll teach you!"
+
+For an instant, Mabel looked decidedly crushed--_no_ poet likes his
+rhymes disparaged. Laura, noting Mabel's crestfallen attitude, went into
+gales of mocking laughter and when Mabel looked at Marjory for sympathy
+Marjory's face was wreathed in smiles. It was too much; Mabel hated to
+be laughed at.
+
+"I _can_ rhyme," cried Mabel, springing to her feet and giving vent to
+all her grievances at once. "My table manners _are_ good. I'm _not_ fat.
+I've got just as much waist as _you_ have."
+
+"You've got more," shrieked delighted Laura.
+
+Faithless Marjory, struck by this indubitable truth, laughed outright.
+
+"You--you can't make Indian-bead chains," sputtered Mabel, trying hard
+to find something crushing to say. "You can't make pancakes. You can't
+drive nails."
+
+"Yah," retorted Laura, who was right in her element, "you can't throw
+straight."
+
+"Neither can you."
+
+"I can! If I could find anything to throw I'd prove it."
+
+Just at this unfortunate moment, a grocery-man arrived at the Milligan
+house with a basketful of beautiful scarlet tomatoes. In another second,
+Laura, anxious to prove her ability, had jumped from the fence, seized
+the basket and, with unerring aim, was delightedly pelting her
+astonished enemy with the gorgeous fruit. Mabel caught one full in the
+chest, and as she turned to flee, another landed square in the middle of
+her light-blue gingham back; Marjory's shoulder stopped a third before
+the girls retreated to the house, leaving Laura, a picturesque figure on
+the high post, shouting derisively:
+
+"Proved it, didn't I? Ki! I proved it."
+
+Marjory, pleading that discretion was the better part of valor, begged
+Mabel to stay indoors; but Mabel, who had received, and undoubtedly
+deserved, the worst of the encounter, was for instant revenge. Rushing
+to the kitchen she seized the pan of hard little green apples that
+Grandma Pike had bequeathed the girls and flew with them to the porch.
+
+Mabel's first shot took Laura by surprise and landed squarely between
+her shoulders. Mabel was surprised, too, because throwing straight was
+not one of her accomplishments. She hadn't hoped to do more than
+frighten her exasperating little neighbor.
+
+Elated by this success, Mabel threw her second apple, which, alas, flew
+wide of its mark and caught poor unprepared Mr. Milligan, who was coming
+in at his own gate, just under the jaw, striking in such a fashion that
+it made the astonished man suddenly bite his tongue.
+
+Nobody likes to bite his tongue. Naturally Mr. Milligan was indignant;
+indeed, he had every reason to be, for Mabel's conduct was disgraceful
+and the little apple was very hard. Entirely overlooking the fact that
+Laura, who had failed to notice her father's untimely arrival, was still
+vigorously pelting Mabel, who stood as if petrified on the cottage steps
+and was making no effort to dodge the flying scarlet fruit, Mr. Milligan
+shouted:
+
+"Look here, you young imps, I'll see that you're turned out of that
+cottage for this outrage. We've stood just about enough abuse from you.
+I don't intend to put up with any more of it."
+
+Then, suddenly discovering what Laura, who had turned around in dismay
+at the sound of her father's voice, was doing, angry Mr. Milligan
+dragged his suddenly crestfallen daughter from the fence, boxed her ears
+soundly, and carried what was left of the tomatoes into the house; for
+that particular basket of fruit had been sent from very far south and
+express charges had swelled the price of the unseasonable dainty to a
+very considerable sum.
+
+Marjory, in the cottage kitchen, was alternately scolding and laughing
+at woebegone Mabel when Jean and Bettie, released from their charge, ran
+back to Dandelion Cottage. Mabel, crying with indignation, sat on the
+kitchen stove rubbing her eyes with a pair of grimy fists--Mabel's hands
+always gathered dust.
+
+"Oh, Mabel! how _could_ you!" groaned Jean, when Marjory had told the
+afternoon's story. "I'll never dare to leave you here again without some
+sensible person to look after you. Don't you _see_ you've been
+almost--yes, quite--as bad as Laura?"
+
+"I don't care," sobbed unrepentant Mabel. "If you'd heard those
+verses--and--and Marjory _laughed_ at me."
+
+"Couldn't help it," giggled Marjory, who was perched on the corner of
+the kitchen table.
+
+"But surely," reproached gentle-mannered Jean, "it wasn't necessary to
+throw things."
+
+"I guess," said Mabel, suddenly sitting up very straight and disclosing
+a puffy, tear-stained countenance that moved Marjory to fresh giggles,
+"if you'd felt those icy cold tomatoes go plump in your eye and every
+place on your very newest dress, _you'd_ have been pretty mad, too.
+Look at me! I was too surprised to move after I'd hit Mr. Milligan--I
+never saw him coming at all--and I guess every tomato Laura threw hit me
+some place."
+
+"Yes," confirmed Marjory, "I'll say that much for Laura. She can
+certainly throw straighter than any girl I ever knew--she throws just
+like a boy."
+
+Jean, still worried and disapproving, could not help laughing, for
+Laura's plump target showed only too good evidence of Laura's skill.
+Mabel's new light-blue gingham showed a round scarlet spot where each
+juicy missile had landed; and besides this, there were wide muddy
+circles where her tears had left highwater marks about each eye.
+
+"But, dear me," said Jean, growing sober again, "think how low-down and
+horrid it will sound when we tell about it at home. Suppose it should
+get into the papers! Apples and tomatoes! If boys had done it it would
+have sounded bad enough, but for _girls_ to do such a thing! Oh, dear, I
+_do_ wish I'd been here to stop it!"
+
+"To stop the tomatoes, you mean," said Mabel. "You couldn't have stopped
+anything else, for I just _had_ to do something or burst. I've felt all
+the week just like something sizzling in a bottle and waiting to have
+the cork pulled! I'll _never_ be able to do my suffering in silence the
+way you and Bettie do. Oh, girls, I feel just loads better."
+
+"Well, you may _feel_ better," said irrepressible Marjory, "but you
+certainly look a lot worse. With those muddy rings on your face you look
+just like a little owl that isn't very wise."
+
+"Oh, dear," mourned Bettie, "if Miss Blossom had only stayed we wouldn't
+have had all this trouble with those people."
+
+"No," said Marjory, shrewdly, "Miss Blossom would probably have made
+Laura over into a very good imitation of an honest citizen. I don't
+think, though, that even Miss Blossom could make Laura anything more
+than an imitation, because--well, because she's Laura. It's different
+with Mabel--"
+
+Mabel looked up expectantly, and Marjory, who was in a teasing mood,
+continued.
+
+"Yes," said she, encouragingly, "Miss Blossom _might_ have succeeded in
+making a nice, polite girl out of Mabel if she'd only had time--"
+
+"How much time?" demanded Mabel, with sudden suspicion.
+
+"Oh, about a thousand years," replied Marjory, skipping prudently behind
+tall Jean.
+
+"Never mind, Mabel," said Bettie, who always sided with the oppressed,
+slipping a thin arm about Mabel's plump shoulders. "We like you pretty
+well, anyway, and you've certainly had an awful time."
+
+"Do you think," asked Mabel, with sudden concern, "that Mr. Milligan
+_could_ get us turned out of the cottage? You know he threatened to."
+
+"No," said Bettie. "The cottage is church property and no one could do
+anything about it with Mr. Black away because he's the senior warden.
+Father said only this morning that there was all sorts of church
+business waiting for him."
+
+"Well," said Mabel, with a sigh of relief, "Mr. Black wouldn't turn us
+out, so we're perfectly safe. Guess I'll go out on the porch and sing my
+Milligan song again."
+
+"I guess you won't," said Jean. "There's a very good tub in the Bennett
+house and I'd advise you to go home and take a bath in it--you look as
+if you needed _two_ baths and a shampoo. Besides, it's almost supper
+time."
+
+Laura's version of the story, unfortunately, differed materially from
+the truth. There was no gainsaying the tomatoes--Mr. Milligan had seen
+those with his own eyes; but Laura claimed that she had been compelled
+to use those expensive vegetables as a means of self-defense. According
+to Laura, whose imagination was as well trained as her arm, she had been
+the innocent victim of all sorts of persecution at the hands of the
+four girls. They had called her a thief and had insulted not only her
+but all the other Milligans. Mabel, she declared, had opened hostilities
+that afternoon by throwing stones, and poor, abused Laura had only used
+the tomatoes as a last resort. The apple that struck Mr. Milligan was,
+she maintained, the very last of about four dozen.
+
+Had the Milligans not been prejudiced, they might easily have learned
+how far from the truth this assertion was, for the porch of Dandelion
+Cottage was still bespattered with tomatoes, whereas in the Milligan
+yard there were no traces of the recent encounter. This, to be sure, was
+no particular credit to Mabel for there _might_ have been had Mr.
+Milligan delayed his coming by a very few minutes, since Mabel's pan
+still contained seven hard little apples and Mabel still longed to use
+them.
+
+The Milligans, however, _were_ prejudiced. Although Laura was often rude
+and disagreeable at home, she was the only little girl the Milligans
+had; in any quarrel with outsiders they naturally sided with their own
+flesh and blood, and, in spite of the tomatoes, they did so now. In her
+mother Laura found a staunch champion.
+
+"I won't have those stuck-up little imps there another week," said Mrs.
+Milligan. "If you don't see that they're turned out, James, I will."
+
+"They stick out their tongues at me every time they see me," fibbed
+Laura, whose own tongue was the only one that had been used for
+sticking-out purposes. "They said Ma was no lady, and--"
+
+"I'm going to complain of them this very night," said Mrs. Milligan,
+with quick resentment. "I'll show 'em whether I'm a lady or not."
+
+"Who'll you complain to?" asked Laura, hopefully.
+
+"The church warden, of course. These cottages both belong to the
+church."
+
+"Mr. Black is the girls' best friend," said Laura. "He wouldn't believe
+anything against them--besides, he's away."
+
+"Mr. Downing isn't," said Mr. Milligan. "I paid him the rent last week.
+We'll threaten to leave if he doesn't turn them out. He's a sharp
+businessman and he wouldn't lose the rent of this house for the sake of
+letting a lot of children use that cottage. I'll see him tomorrow."
+
+"No," said Mrs. Milligan, "just leave the matter to me. _I'll_ talk to
+Mr. Downing."
+
+"Suit yourself," said Mr. Milligan, glad perhaps to shirk a disagreeable
+task.
+
+After supper that evening, Mrs. Milligan put on her best hat and went to
+Mr. Downing's house, which was only about three blocks from her own. The
+evening was warm and she found Mr. and Mrs. Downing seated on their
+front porch. Mrs. Milligan accepted their invitation to take a chair and
+began at once to explain the reason for her visit.
+
+The angry woman's tale lost nothing in the telling; indeed, it was not
+hard to discover how Laura came by her habit of exaggerating. When Mrs.
+Milligan went home half an hour later, Mr. Downing was convinced that
+the church property was in dangerous hands. He couldn't see what Mr.
+Black had been thinking of to allow careless, impudent children who
+played with matches, drove nails in the cottage plaster, and insulted
+innocent neighbors, to occupy Dandelion Cottage.
+
+"Somehow," said Mrs. Downing, when the visitor had departed, "I don't
+like that woman. She isn't quite a lady."
+
+"Nonsense, my dear," said Mr. Downing. "If only _half_ the things she
+hints at are true, there would be reason enough for closing the cottage.
+The place itself doesn't amount to much, I've been told, but a fire
+started there would damage thousands of dollars' worth of property.
+Besides, there's the rent from the house those people are in--we don't
+want to lose that, you know."
+
+"Still, there are always tenants--"
+
+"Not at this time of the year. I'll look into the matter as soon as I
+can find time."
+
+"Remember," said Mrs. Downing, thinking of Mrs. Milligan's rasping
+tones, "that there are two sides to every story."
+
+"My dear," said Mr. Downing, complacently, "I shall listen with the
+strictest impartiality to both sides."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 13
+
+The Junior Warden
+
+
+By nine o'clock the next morning, the girls were all at the cottage as
+usual. Mrs. Mapes had given them materials for a simple cake and Jean
+and Bettie were in the kitchen making it. Marjory, singing as she
+worked, was running her Aunty Jane's carpet-sweeper noisily over the
+parlor rug, while Mabel, whistling an accompaniment to Marjory's song,
+was dusting the sideboard; at all times the cottage furniture received
+so much unnecessary dusting that it would not have been at all
+surprising if it had worn thin in spots.
+
+When the doorbell rang suddenly and sharply, Marjory's tune stopped
+short, high in air, and Mabel ran to the window.
+
+"It's a man," announced Mabel.
+
+"Mr. Milligan?" asked Marjory, anxiously.
+
+"He's moved so I can't tell."
+
+"Try the other window," urged Marjory, impatiently.
+
+"It doesn't look like Mr. Milligan's legs--I can't see the rest of him.
+They look neat and--and expensive."
+
+"Probably it's just an agent; they're kind of thick lately. You go to
+the door and tell him we're just pretend people, while I'm putting the
+sweeper out of sight."
+
+"Good morning," said Mr. Downing. "Are you--Why! this is a very cozy
+little place. I had no idea that it was so comfortable. May I come in?"
+
+"Ye-es," returned Mabel, eyeing him doubtfully, "but I think you're
+probably making a mistake. You see, we're not really-truly people."
+
+"Indeed!" said Mr. Downing, with an amused glance at plump Mabel. "Is it
+possible you're a ghost?"
+
+"I mean," explained Mabel, "we're just children and this is only a
+playhouse, not a real one. If you have anything to sell, or are looking
+for a boarding place, or want to take our census--"
+
+"No," said Mr. Downing, "I don't want either your dollars or your
+senses. My name is Downing and I'm not selling anything. I called on
+business. Who is the head of this--this ghostly corporation?"
+
+"It has four," said Mabel. "I'll get the rest."
+
+Bettie and Jean, with grown-up gingham aprons tied about their necks,
+followed Mabel to the parlor. Mr. Downing had seated himself in one of
+the chairs and the girls sat facing him in a bright-eyed row on the
+couch. Their countenances were so eager and expectant that Mr. Downing
+found it hard to begin.
+
+"I've come in," he said, "to talk over a little matter of business with
+you. I understand that you've been having trouble with your
+neighbors--exchanging compliments--"
+
+"No," said honest Mabel, turning crimson, "it was apples and tomatoes.
+The Milligans are the most troublesome neighbors we've ever had."
+
+"So-o?" said the visitor, raising his eyebrows in genuine surprise.
+"Why, I understood that it was quite the other way round. I'd like to
+hear your version of the difficulty."
+
+Jean and Bettie, with occasional assistance from Marjory and much
+prompting from Mabel, told him all about it. During the recital Mr.
+Downing's attention seemed to wander, for his eyes took in every detail
+of the neat sitting-room, strayed to the prettily papered dining-room,
+and even rested lingeringly upon the one visible corner of the dainty
+blue bedroom. Bettie had neglected to close the door between the kitchen
+and the dining-room, which proved unfortunate, because the tiny scrap of
+butter that Jean had left melting in a very small pan on the kitchen
+stove, got too hot and with threatening, hissing noises began to give
+forth clouds of thick, disagreeable smoke. Jean, the first of the girls
+to notice it, flew to the kitchen, snatched a lid from the stove, and,
+with a newspaper for a holder, swept the burning butter, pan and all,
+into the fire. Then the paper in Jean's hand caught fire, and for the
+instant before she stuffed it into the stove and clapped the lid into
+place, fierce red flames leaped high.
+
+To the visitor, prepared by Mrs. Milligan for just such doings, it
+looked for a moment as if all the rear end of the cottage were in
+flames; but Jean returned to her place on the couch with an air of what
+looked to Mr. Downing very much like almost criminal unconcern. How was
+Mr. Downing, who did no cooking, to know that paper placed on a
+cake-baking fire _always_ flares up in an alarming fashion without doing
+any real harm? He didn't know, and the incident decided the matter he
+was turning over in his mind. The girls had found it a little hard to
+tell their story, for it was plain that their visitor was using his eyes
+rather than his ears; moreover, they were not at all certain that he had
+any right to demand the facts in the case. When the story was finished,
+Mr. Downing looked at the row of interested faces and cleared his
+throat; but, for some reason, the words he had meant to speak refused to
+come. He hadn't supposed that the evicting of unsatisfactory tenants
+would prove such an unpleasant task. The tenants, all at once, seemed
+part of the house, and the man realized suddenly that the losing of the
+cottage was likely to prove a severe blow to the four little
+housekeepers. Perhaps it was disconcerting to see the expression of
+puzzled anxiety that had crept into Bettie's great brown eyes, into
+Jean's hazel ones, into Marjory's gray and Mabel's blue ones. At any
+rate, Mr. Downing decided to be well out of the way when the blow should
+fall; he realized that it would prove a trying ordeal to face all those
+young eyes filled with indignation and probably with tears.
+
+"Ah-hum," said Mr. Downing, rising to take his leave. "I'm much obliged
+to you young ladies. Hum--the number of this house is what, if you
+please?"
+
+"Number 224," said Bettie, whose mind worked quickly.
+
+"Hum," said Mr. Downing, writing it on the envelope he had taken from
+his pocket, and moving rather abruptly toward the door, as if desirous
+to escape as speedily as possible with the knowledge he had gleaned.
+"Thank you very much. I bid you all good morning."
+
+"Now what in the world did that man want?" demanded Mabel, before the
+front door had fairly closed. "Do you s'pose he's some kind of a lawyer,
+or--" and Mabel turned pale at the thought--"a policeman disguised as
+a--a human being? Do you suppose the Milligans are going to get us
+arrested for just two apples--and--and a little poetry?"
+
+"More probably," suggested Jean, "he's a burglar. Didn't you notice the
+way he looked around at everything? I could see that he sort of lost
+interest after while--as if he had concluded that we hadn't anything
+worth stealing."
+
+"Nonsense!" said Bettie. "I don't know what he does for a living, but he
+can't be a burglar. He hasn't lived here very long, but he goes to our
+church and comes to our house to vestry meetings. Sometimes on warm
+Sundays when there's nobody else to do it, he passes the plate."
+
+"Well," said Mabel, "I hope he isn't a policeman weekdays."
+
+"It's more likely," said Marjory, "that he does reporting for the
+papers. The time Aunty Jane was in that railroad accident, a reporter
+came to our house to interview her, and he asked questions just as that
+Mr. Downing--was that his name?--did. He took the number of the house,
+too."
+
+"Oh, mercy!" gasped Mabel, turning suddenly from white to a deep
+crimson. "If those green apples get into the paper, I'll be too ashamed
+to live! Oh, _girls_! Couldn't we stop him--couldn't we--couldn't we pay
+him something _not_ to?"
+
+"It's probably in by now," said Marjory, teasingly. "They do it by
+telegraph, you know."
+
+"He _couldn't_ have been a reporter," protested Mabel. "Reporters are
+always young and very active so they can catch lots of scoons--no,
+scoots."
+
+"Scoops," corrected Jean.
+
+"Well, scoops. He was kind of slow and a little bit bald-headed on
+top--I noticed it when he stooped for his hat."
+
+"Well, anyway," comforted Jean, "let's not worry about it. Let's rebuild
+our fire--of course it's out by now--and finish our cake."
+
+In spite of the cake's turning out much better than anyone could have
+expected, with so many agitated cooks taking turns stirring it, there
+was something wrong with the day. The girls were filled with uneasy
+forebodings and could settle down to nothing. Marjory felt no desire to
+sing, and even the cake seemed to have lost something of its flavor.
+Moreover, when they had stood for a moment on their doorstep to see the
+new steam road-roller go puffing by, Laura had tossed her head
+triumphantly and shouted tauntingly: "_I_ know something _I_ shan't
+tell!" After that, the girls could not help wondering if Laura really
+did know something--some dreadful thing that concerned them vitally and
+was likely to burst upon them at any moment.
+
+For the first time in the history of their housekeeping, they could find
+nothing that they really wanted to do. During the afternoon they had
+several little disagreements with each other. Mild Jean spoke sharply to
+Marjory, and even sweet-tempered Bettie was drawn into a lively dispute
+with Mabel. Moreover, all three of the older girls were inclined to
+blame Mabel for her fracas with the Milligans; and the culprit, ashamed
+one moment and defiant the next, was in a most unhappy frame of mind.
+Altogether, the day was a failure and the four friends parted coldly at
+least an hour before the usual time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 14
+
+An Unexpected Letter
+
+
+The next morning, Jean, with three large bananas as a peace offering,
+was the first to arrive at Dandelion Cottage. Jean, a wise young person
+for her years, had decided that a little hard work would clear the
+atmosphere, so, finding no one else in the house, she made a fire in the
+stove, put on the kettle, put up the leaf of the kitchen table, and
+began to take all the dishes from the pantry shelves. Dishwashing in the
+cottage was always far more enjoyable than this despised occupation
+usually is elsewhere, owing to the astonishing assortment of crockery
+the girls had accumulated. No two of the dishes--with the exception of a
+pair of plates bearing life-sized portraits of "The frog that would
+a-wooing go, whether his mother would let him or no"--bore the same
+pattern. There was a bewildering diversity, too, in the sizes and shapes
+of the cups and saucers, and an alarming variety in the matter of color.
+But, as the girls had declared gleefully a dozen times or more, it would
+be possible to set the table for seven courses when the time should come
+for Mr. Black's and Mrs. Crane's dinner party, because so many of the
+things almost matched if they didn't quite. Jean was thinking of this as
+she lifted the dishes from the shelf to the table, and lovingly arranged
+them in pairs, the pink sugar bowl beside the blue cream-pitcher, the
+yellow coffee cup beside the dull red Japanese tea cup, and the
+"Love-the-Giver" mug beside the "For my Little Friend" oatmeal bowl. She
+had just taken down the big, dusty, cracked pitcher that matched nothing
+else--which perhaps was the reason that it had remained high on the
+shelf since the day Mabel had used it for her lemonade--when the
+doorbell rang.
+
+Hastily wiping her dusty hands, Jean ran to the door. No one was there,
+but the postman was climbing the steps of the next house, so Jean
+slipped her fingers expectantly into the little, rusty iron letter-box.
+Perhaps there was something from Miss Blossom, who sometimes showed that
+she had not forgotten her little landladies.
+
+Sure enough, there was a large white letter, not from Miss Blossom to be
+sure, but from somebody. To the young cottagers, letters were always
+joyous happenings; they had no debts, consequently they were
+unacquainted with bills. With this auspicious beginning, for of course
+the coming of a totally unexpected letter was an auspicious beginning,
+it was surely going to be a cheerful, perhaps even a delightful, day.
+Jean hummed happily as she laid the unopened letter on the dining-room
+table, for of course a letter somewhat oddly addressed to "The Four
+Young Ladies at 224 Fremont Street, City," could be opened only when all
+four were present. When Marjory and Bettie came in, they fell upon the
+letter and examined every portion of the envelope, but neither girl
+could imagine who had sent it. It was impossible to wait for Mabel, who
+was always late, so Bettie obligingly ran to get her. Even so there was
+still a considerable wait while Mabel laced her shoes; but presently
+Bettie returned, with Mabel, still nibbling very-much-buttered toast, at
+her heels.
+
+"You open it, Jean," panted Bettie. "You can read writing better than we
+can."
+
+"Hurry," urged Mabel, who could keep other persons waiting much more
+easily than she herself could wait.
+
+"Here's a fork to open it with," said Marjory. "I can't find the
+scissors. Hurry up; maybe it's a party and we'll have to R. S. V. P.
+right away."
+
+"Oh, goody! If it is," squealed Mabel, "I can wear my new tan Oxfords."
+
+"It's from Yours respectably--no, Yours regretfully, John W. Downing,"
+announced Jean. "The man that was here yesterday, you know."
+
+"Read it, read it," pleaded the others, crowding so close that Jean had
+to lift the letter above their heads in order to see it at all. "Do
+hurry up, we're crazy to hear it."
+
+ "My Dear Young Ladies," read Jean in a voice that started
+ bravely but grew fainter with every line. "It is with sincere
+ regret that I write to inform you that it no longer suits the
+ convenience of the vestrymen to have you occupy the church
+ cottage on Fremont Street. It is to be rented as soon as a few
+ necessary repairs can be made, and in the meantime you will
+ oblige us greatly by moving out at once. Please deliver the key
+ at your earliest convenience to me at either my house or this
+ office.
+
+ "Yours regretfully,
+
+ "JOHN W. DOWNING."
+
+For as much as two minutes no one said a word. Jean had laid the open
+letter on the table. Marjory and Bettie with their arms tightly locked,
+as if both felt the need of support, reread the closely written page in
+silence. When they reached the end, they pushed it toward Mabel.
+
+"What does it mean in plain English?" asked Mabel, hoping that both her
+eyes and her ears had deceived her.
+
+"That somebody else is to have the cottage," said Jean, "and that in the
+meantime we're to move."
+
+"In the meantime!" blurted Mabel, with swift wrath. "I should say it
+_was_ the meantime--the very meanest time anybody ever heard of. I'd
+just like to know what right 'Yours-respectably-John-W.-Downing' has to
+turn us out of our own house. I guess we paid our rent--I guess there's
+blisters on me yet--I guess I dug dandelions--I guess I--"
+
+But here Mabel's indignation turned to grief, and with one of her very
+best howls and a torrent of tears she buried her face in Jean's apron.
+
+"Bettie," asked Jean with her arms about Mabel, "do you think it would
+do any good to ask your father about it? He's the minister, you know,
+and he might explain to Mr. Downing that we were promised the cottage
+for all summer."
+
+"Papa went away this morning and won't be home for ten days. He has
+exchanged with somebody for the next two Sundays."
+
+"My pa-pa-papa's away, too," sobbed Mabel, "or he'd tell that vile Mr.
+Downing that it was all the Mill-ill-igans' fault. _They're_ the folks
+that ought to be turned out, and I just wuh-wuh-wish they--they had
+been."
+
+"Why wouldn't it be a good idea," suggested Marjory, "for us all to go
+down to Mr. Downing's office and tell him all about it? You see, he
+hasn't lived here very long and perhaps he doesn't understand that we
+have paid our rent for all summer."
+
+"Yes," assented Jean, "that would probably be the best thing to do. He
+won't mind having us go to the office because he told us to take the key
+there. But where _is_ his office?"
+
+"I know," said Bettie. "Here's the address on the letter, and the
+dentist I go to is right near there, so I can find it easily."
+
+"Then let's start right away," cried eager Mabel, uncovering a
+disheveled head and a tear-stained countenance. "Don't let's lose a
+minute."
+
+"Mercy, no," said Jean, taking Mabel by the shoulders and pushing her
+before her to the blue-room mirror. "Do you think you can go _any_ place
+looking like that? Do you think you _look_ like a desirable tenant?
+We've all got to be just as clean and neat as we can be. We've got to
+impress him with our--our ladylikeness."
+
+"I'll braid Mabel's hair," offered Bettie, "if Marjory will run around
+the block and get all our hats. I'm wearing Dick's straw one with the
+blue ribbon just now, Marjory. You'll find it some place in our front
+hall if Tommy hasn't got it on."
+
+"Bring mine, too," said Jean; "it's in my room."
+
+"I don't know _where_ mine is," said Mabel, "but if you can't find it
+you'd better wear your Sunday one and lend me your everyday one."
+
+"I don't see myself lending you any more hats," said Marjory, who had,
+like the other girls, brightened at the prospect of going to Mr.
+Downing's. "I haven't forgotten how you left the last one outdoors all
+night in the rain, and how it looked afterwards, when Aunty Jane made me
+wear it to punish me for _my_ carelessness. You'll go in your own hat or
+none."
+
+"Well," said Mabel, meekly, "I guess you'll probably find it in my room
+under the bed, if it isn't in the parlor behind the sofa."
+
+"Now, remember," said Jean, who was retying the bow on Bettie's hair,
+"we're all to be polite, whatever happens, for we mustn't let Mr.
+Downing think we're anything like the Milligans. If he won't let us have
+the cottage when he knows about the rent's being paid--though I'm
+almost sure he _will_ let us keep it--why, we'll just have to give it up
+and not let him see that we care."
+
+"I'll be good," promised Bettie.
+
+"You needn't be afraid of _me_," said Mabel. "I wouldn't humble myself
+to _speak_ to such a despisable man."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 15
+
+An Obdurate Landlord
+
+
+Twenty minutes later when Mr. Downing roared "_Come in_" in the
+terrifying voice he usually reserved for agents and other unexpected or
+unwelcome visitors, he was plainly very much surprised to see four pale
+girls with shocked, reproachful eyes file in and come to an embarrassed
+standstill just inside the office door, which closed of its own accord
+and left them imprisoned with the enemy. They waited quietly.
+
+"Oh, good morning," said he, in a much milder tone, as he swung about in
+his revolving chair. "What can I do for you? Have you brought the key so
+soon?"
+
+"We came," said Jean, propelled suddenly forward by a vigorous push from
+the rear, "to see you about Dandelion Cottage. We think you've made a
+mistake."
+
+"Indeed!" said Mr. Downing, who did not at any time like to be
+considered mistaken. "Suppose you explain."
+
+So sweet-voiced Jean explained all about digging the dandelions to pay
+the rent, about Mr. Black's giving them the key at the end of the week,
+and about all the lovely times they had had and were still hoping to
+have in their precious cottage before giving it up for the winter.
+
+Mr. Downing, personally, did not like Mr. Black. He had a poor opinion
+of the older man's business ability, and perhaps a somewhat exalted
+opinion of his own. He considered Mr. Black old-fashioned and far too
+easy-going. He felt that parish affairs were more likely to flourish in
+the hands of a younger, shrewder, and more modern person, and he had an
+idea that he was that person. At any rate, now that Mr. Black was out of
+town, Mr. Downing was glad of an opportunity to display his own superior
+shrewdness. He would show the vestry a thing or two, and incidentally
+increase the parish income, which as everybody knew stood greatly in
+need of increasing. He had no patience with slipshod methods. He was
+truly sorry when business matters compelled him to appear hard-hearted;
+but to him it seemed little short of absurd for a man of Mr. Black's
+years to waste on four small girls a cottage that might be bringing in a
+comfortable sum every month in the year.
+
+"Now that's a very pretty little story," said Mr. Downing, when Jean had
+finished. "But, you see, you've already had the cottage more than long
+enough to pay you for pulling those few weeds."
+
+"_Few!_" exclaimed Mabel, in indignant protest and forgetting her
+promise of silence. "_Few!_ Why, there were _billions_ of 'em. If we'd
+been paid two cents a hundred for them, we'd all be _rich_. Mr. Black
+promised us we could have that cottage for all summer and our rent
+hasn't half perspired yet."
+
+"She means _ex_pired," explained Marjory, "but she's right for once. Mr.
+Black did say we could stay there all summer, and it isn't quite August
+yet, you know."
+
+"Hum," said Mr. Downing. "Nobody said anything to _me_ about any such
+arrangement, and I'm keeping the books. I don't know what Mr. Black
+could have been thinking of if he made any such foolish promise as that.
+Of course it's not binding. Why, that cottage ought to be renting for
+ten or twelve dollars a month!"
+
+"But the plaster's very bad," pleaded Bettie, eagerly, "and the roof
+leaks in every room in the house but one, and something's the matter
+underneath so it's too cold for folks to live in during the winter. It
+was vacant for a long time before _we_ had it."
+
+"It looked very comfortable to _me_," said Mr. Downing, who had lived in
+the town for only a few months and neither knew nor suspected the real
+condition of the house. "I'm afraid your arrangement with Mr. Black
+doesn't hold good. Mr. Morgan and I think it best to have the house
+vacated at once. You see, we're in danger of losing the rent from the
+next house, because the Milligans have threatened to move out if you
+don't."
+
+"If--if seven dollars and a half would do you any good," said Mabel,
+"and if you're mean enough to take all the money we've got in this
+world--"
+
+"I'm not," said Mr. Downing. "I'm only reasonable, and I want you to be
+reasonable too. You must look at this thing from a business standpoint.
+You see, the rent from those two houses should bring in twenty-five
+dollars a month, which isn't more than a sufficient return for the money
+invested. The taxes--"
+
+"A note for you, Mr. Downing," said a boy, who had quietly opened the
+office door.
+
+"Why," said Mr. Downing, when he had read the note, "this is really
+quite a remarkable coincidence. This communication is from Mr. Milligan,
+who has found a desirable tenant for the cottage he is now in, and
+wishes, himself, to occupy the cottage you are going to vacate. Very
+clever idea on Mr. Milligan's part. This will save him five dollars a
+month and is a most convenient arrangement all around. He wishes to move
+in at once."
+
+"Mr. Milligan!" gasped three of the astonished girls.
+
+"Those Milligans in _our_ house!" cried Mabel. "Well, _isn't_ that the
+worst!"
+
+"You see," said Mr. Downing, "it is really necessary for you to move at
+once. I think you had better begin without further loss of time. Good
+morning, good morning, all of you, and please believe me, I'm sorry
+about this, but it can't be helped."
+
+"I hope," said Mabel, summoning all her dignity for a parting shot,
+"that you'll never live long enough to regret this--this outrage. There
+are seven rolls of paper on the walls of that cottage that belong to us,
+and we expect to be paid for every one of them."
+
+"How much?" asked Mr. Downing, suppressing a smile, for Mabel was never
+more amusing than when she was very angry.
+
+"Five cents a roll--thirty-five cents altogether."
+
+Mr. Downing gravely reached into his trousers pocket, fished up a
+handful of loose change, scrupulously counted out three dimes and a
+nickel, and handed them to Mabel, who, with averted eyes and chin held
+unnecessarily high, accepted the price of the Blossom wall paper
+haughtily, and, following the others, stalked from the office.
+
+The unhappy girls could not trust themselves to talk as they hastened
+homeward. They held hands tightly, walking four abreast along the quiet
+street, and barely managed to keep the tears back and the rapidly
+swelling lumps in their little throats successfully swallowed until
+Jean's trembling fingers had unlocked the cottage door.
+
+Then, with one accord, they rushed pell-mell for the blue-room bed,
+hurled themselves upon its excelsior pillows, and burst into tears. Jean
+and Bettie cried silently but bitterly; Marjory wept audibly, with long,
+shuddering sobs; but Mabel simply bawled. Mabel always did her crying on
+the excellent principle that, if a thing were worth doing at all, it was
+worth doing well. She was doing it so well on this occasion that Jean,
+who seldom cried and whose puffed, scarlet eyelids contrasted oddly and
+rather pathetically with her colorless cheeks, presently sat up to
+remonstrate.
+
+"Mabel!" she said, slipping an arm about the chief mourner, "do you want
+the Milligans to hear you? We're on their side of the house, you know."
+
+Jean couldn't have used a better argument. Mabel stopped short in the
+middle of one of her very best howls, sat up, and shook her head
+vigorously.
+
+"Well, I just guess I don't," said she. "I'd die first!"
+
+"I thought so," said Jean, with just a faint glimmer of a smile. "We
+mustn't let those people guess how awfully we care. Go bathe your eyes,
+Mabel--there must be a little warm water in the tea kettle."
+
+Then the comforter turned to Bettie, and made the appeal that was most
+likely to reach that always-ready-to-help young person.
+
+"Come, Bettie dear, you've cried long enough. We must get to work, for
+we've a tremendous lot to do. Don't you suppose that, if we had all the
+things packed in baskets or bundles, we could get a few of your brothers
+to help us move out after dark? I just _can't_ let those Milligans gloat
+over us while we go back and forth with things."
+
+Bettie's only response was a sob.
+
+"Where in the world can we put the things?" asked Marjory, sitting up
+suddenly and displaying a blotched and swollen countenance very unlike
+her usual fair, rose-tinted face. "Of course we can each take our dolls
+and books home, but our furniture--"
+
+"I'm going to ask Mother if we can't store it upstairs in our barn. I'm
+sure she'll let us."
+
+"Oh, I _wish_ Mr. Black were here. It doesn't seem possible we've
+really got to move. There _must_ be some way out of it. Oh, Bettie,
+_couldn't_ we write to Mr. Black?"
+
+"It would take too-oo-oo long," sobbed Bettie, sitting up and mopping
+her eyes with the muslin window curtain, which she could easily reach
+from the foot of the bed. "He's way off in Washington. Oh, dear--oh,
+dear--oh, dear!"
+
+"Why couldn't we telegraph?" demanded Marjory, with whom hope died hard.
+"Telegrams go pretty fast, don't they?"
+
+"They cost terribly," said Bettie. "They're almost as expensive as
+express packages. Still, we might find out what it costs."
+
+"I dow the telegraph-mad," wheezed Mabel from the wash-basin. "I'll go
+hobe ad telephode hib ad ask what it costs--I've heard by father give
+hib bessages lots of tibes. Oh, by, by dose is all stuffed up."
+
+"Try a handkerchief," suggested Jean. "Go ask, if you want to; it won't
+do any harm, nor probably any good."
+
+Mabel ran home, taking care to keep her back turned toward the Milligan
+house. During her brief absence, the girls bathed their eyes and made
+sundry other futile attempts to do away with all outward signs of grief.
+
+"He says," cried Mabel, bursting in excitedly, "that sixty cents is the
+regular price in the daytime, but it's forty cents for a night message.
+It seems kind of mean to wake folks up in the middle of the night just
+to save twenty cents, doesn't it?"
+
+"Yes," said Bettie. "I couldn't be impolite enough to do that to anybody
+I like as well as I like Mr. Black. If we haven't money enough to send a
+daytime message, we mustn't send any."
+
+"Well, we haven't," said Jean. "We've only thirty-five cents."
+
+"And we wouldn't have had that," said Mabel, "if I hadn't remembered
+that wall paper just in the nick of time."
+
+Strangely enough, not one of the girls thought of the money in the bank.
+Perhaps it did not occur to them that it would be possible to remove any
+portion of their precious seven dollars and a half without withdrawing
+it all; they knew little of business matters. Nor did they think of
+appealing to their parents for aid at this crisis. Indeed, they were all
+too dazed by the suddenness and tremendousness of the blow to think very
+clearly about anything. The sum needed seemed a large one to the girls,
+who habitually bought a cent's worth of candy at a time from the
+generous proprietor of the little corner shop. Mabel, the only one with
+an allowance, was, to her father's way of thinking, a hopeless little
+spendthrift, already deeply plunged in debt by her unpaid fines for
+lateness to meals.
+
+The Tucker income did not go round even for the grown-ups, so of course
+there were few pennies for the Tucker children. Marjory's Aunty Jane had
+ideas of her own on the subject of spending-money for little
+girls--Marjory did not suspect that the good but rather austere woman
+made a weekly pilgrimage to the bank for the purpose of religiously
+depositing a small sum in her niece's name; and, if she had known it,
+Marjory would probably have been improvident enough to prefer spot cash
+in smaller amounts. Only that morning tender-hearted Jean had heard
+patient Mrs. Mapes lamenting because butter had gone up two cents a
+pound and because all the bills had seemed larger than those of the
+preceding month--Jean always took the family bills very much to heart.
+
+The girls sorrowfully concluded that there was nothing left for them to
+do but to obey Mr. Downing. They had looked forward with dread to giving
+up the cottage when winter should come, but the idea of losing it in
+midsummer was a thousand times worse.
+
+"We'll just have to give it up," said grieved little Bettie. "There's
+nothing else we _can_ do, with Mr. Black away. When I go home tonight
+I'll write to him and apologize for not being able to keep our promise
+about the dinner party. That's the hardest thing of all to give up."
+
+"But you don't know his address," objected Jean.
+
+"Yes, I do, because Father wrote to him about some church business this
+morning, before going away, and gave Dick the letter to mail. Of course
+Dick forgot all about it and left it on the hall mantelpiece. It's
+probably there yet, for I'm the only person that ever remembers to mail
+Father's letters--he forgets them himself most of the time."
+
+"Now let's get to work," said Jean. "Since we have to move let's pretend
+we really want to. I've always thought it must be quite exciting to
+really truly move. You see, we _must_ get it over before the Milligans
+guess that we've begun, and there isn't any too much time left. I'll
+begin to take down the things in the parlor and tie them up in the
+bedclothes. We'll leave all the curtains until the last so that no one
+will know what we're doing."
+
+"I'll help you," said Bettie.
+
+"Mabel and I might be packing the dishes," said Marjory. "It will be
+easier to do it while we have the table left to work on. Come along,
+Mabel."
+
+Mabel followed obediently. When the forlorn pair reached the kitchen,
+Marjory announced her intention of exploring the little shed for empty
+baskets, leaving Mabel to stack the cups and plates in compact piles.
+Mabel, without knowing just why she did it, picked up her old friend,
+the cracked lemonade-pitcher and gave it a little shake. Something
+rattled. Mabel, always an inquisitive young person, thrust her fingers
+into the dusty depths to bring up a piece of money--two pieces--three
+pieces--four pieces.
+
+"Oh," she gasped, "it's my lemonade money! Oh, what a lucky omen!
+Girls!"
+
+The next instant Mabel clapped a plump, dusty hand over her own lips to
+keep them from announcing the discovery, and then, stealthily concealing
+the twenty cents in the pocket that still contained the wall-paper
+money, she stole quickly through the cottage and ran to her own home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 16
+
+Mabel Plans a Surprise
+
+
+The girls were indignant later when they discovered Mabel's apparent
+desertion. It was precisely like Mabel, they said, to shirk when there
+was anything unpleasant to be done. For once, however, they were
+wronging Mabel--poor, self-sacrificing Mabel, who with fifty-five cents
+at her disposal was planning a beautiful surprise for her unappreciative
+cottage-mates. The girls might have known that nothing short of an
+ambitious project for saving the cottage from the Milligans would have
+kept the child away when so much was going on. For Mabel was at that
+very moment doing what was for her the hardest kind of work; all alone
+in her own room at home she was laboriously composing a telegram.
+
+She had never sent a telegram, nor had she even read one. She could not
+consult her mother because Mrs. Bennett had inconsiderately gone down
+town to do her marketing. Dr. Bennett, however, was a very busy man and
+sometimes received a number of important messages in one day. Mabel felt
+that the occasion justified her studying several late specimens which
+she resurrected from the waste-paper basket under her father's desk.
+These, however, proved rather unsatisfactory models since none of them
+seemed to exactly fit the existing emergency. Most of them, indeed, were
+in cipher.
+
+"I suppose," said Mabel, nibbling her penholder thoughtfully, "they make
+'em short so they'll fit these little sheets of yellow paper, but
+there's lots more space they _might_ use if they didn't leave such wide
+margins. I'll write small so I can say all I want to, but, dear me, I
+can't think of a thing to say."
+
+It took a long time, but the message was finished at last. With a deep
+sigh of satisfaction, Mabel folded it neatly and put it into an envelope
+which she carefully sealed. Then, putting on her hat, and taking the
+telegram with her, she ran to Bettie's home and opened the door--none of
+the four girls were required to ring each other's doorbells. There, sure
+enough, was the letter waiting to be mailed to Mr. Black. Mabel, who had
+thought to bring a pencil, copied the address in her big, vertical
+handwriting, and without further ado ran with it to her friend, the
+telegraph operator, whose office was just around the corner. All the
+distances in the little town were short, and Mabel had frequently been
+sent to the place with messages written by her father, so she did not
+feel the need of asking permission.
+
+The clerk opened the envelope--Mabel considered this decidedly rude of
+him--and proceeded to read the message. It took him a long time. Then he
+looked from Mabel's flushed cheeks and eager eyes to the little
+collection of nickels and dimes she had placed on the counter. Mabel
+wondered why the young man chewed the ends of his sandy mustache so
+vigorously. Perhaps he was amused at something; she looked about the
+little office to see what it could be that pleased him so greatly, but
+there seemed to be nothing to excite mirth. She decided that he was
+either a very cheerful young man naturally, or else he was feeling
+joyful because the clock said that it was nearly time for luncheon.
+
+"It'll be all right, Miss Mabel," said he at last. "It's a pretty good
+fifty-five cents' worth; but I guess Mr. Black won't object to that. I
+hope you'll always come to me when you have messages to send."
+
+"I won't if you go and read them all," said Mabel, at which her friend
+looked even more cheerful than he had before.
+
+Ten minutes later Mabel, mumbling something about having had an errand
+to attend to, presented herself at the cottage. Beyond a few meekly
+received reproaches from Marjory, no one said anything about the
+unexplained absence. Indeed, they were all too busy and too preoccupied
+to care, the greater grief of losing the cottage having swallowed up all
+lesser concerns.
+
+At a less trying time the girls would have discovered within ten minutes
+that Mabel was suffering from a suppressed secret; but everything was
+changed now. Although Mabel fairly bristled with importance and gave out
+sundry very broad hints, no one paid the slightest attention. Gradually,
+in the stress of packing, the matter of the telegram faded from Mabel's
+short memory, for preparing to move proved a most exciting operation,
+and also a harrowing one. Every few moments somebody would say: "Our
+last day," and then the other three would fall to weeping on anything
+that happened to come handy. Of course the packing had stirred up
+considerable dust; this, mingled with tears, added much to the
+forlornness of the cottagers' appearance when they went home at noon
+with their news.
+
+The parents and Aunty Jane said it was a shame, but all agreed that
+there was nothing to be done. All were sorry to have the girls deprived
+of the cottage, for the mothers had certainly found it a relief to have
+their little daughters' leisure hours so safely and happily occupied.
+Mabel's mother was especially sorry.
+
+Never was moving more melancholy nor house more forlorn when the moving,
+done after dark with great caution, and mostly through the dining-room
+window on the side of the house farthest from the Milligans, was finally
+accomplished. The Tucker boys had been only too delighted to help. By
+bedtime the cottage was empty of everything but the curtains on the
+Milligan side of the house. An hour later the tired girls were asleep;
+but under each pillow there was a handkerchief rolled in a tight, grimy
+little ball and soaked with tears.
+
+In the morning, the girls returned for a last look, and for the
+remaining curtains. Dandelion Cottage, stripped of its furniture and
+without its pictures, showed its age and all its infirmities. Great
+patches of plaster and wall paper were missing, for the gay posters had
+covered a multitude of defects. The indignant Tucker boys had disobeyed
+Bettie and had removed not only the tin they had put on the leaking
+roof, but the steps they had built at the back door, the drain they had
+found it necessary to place under the kitchen sink, and the bricks with
+which they had propped the tottering chimneys.
+
+Before the day was over, the tenants whom the Milligans had found for
+their own house were clamoring to move in, so the Milligans took
+possession of the cottage late that afternoon, getting the key from Mr.
+Downing, into whose keeping the girls had silently delivered it that
+morning. To do Mr. Downing justice, nothing had ever hurt him quite as
+much as did the dignified silence of the three pale girls who waited for
+a moment in the doorway, while equally pallid Jean went quietly forward
+to lay the key on his desk. He realized suddenly that not one of them
+could have spoken a word without bursting into tears; and for the rest
+of that day he hated himself most heartily.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 17
+
+Several Surprises Take Effect
+
+
+Mr. Black opened the door of his hotel apartment in Washington one
+sultry noon in response to a vigorous, prolonged rapping from without.
+The bellboy handed him a telegram. When Mr. Black had read the long
+message he smiled and frowned, but cheerfully paid the three dollars and
+forty-one cents additional charges that the messenger demanded.
+
+It was Mabel's message; the clerk had transmitted it faithfully, even
+to the two misspelled words that had proved too much for the excited
+little writer. If the receiving clerk had not considerately tucked in a
+few periods for the sake of clearness, there would have been no
+punctuation marks, because, as everybody knows, very few telegrams _are_
+punctuated; but Mabel, of course, had not taken that into consideration.
+It was quite the longest message and certainly the most amusing one that
+Mr. Black had ever received. It read:
+
+ "DEAR MR. BLACK,
+
+ "We are well but terribly unhappy for the worst has happened.
+ Cant you come to the reskew as they say in books for we are
+ really in great trouble because the Milligans a very unpolite
+ and untruthful family next door want dandelion cottage for
+ themselves the pigs and Mr. Downing says we must move out at
+ once and return the key our own darling key that you gave us.
+ We are moving out now and crying so hard we can hardly write. I
+ mean myself. Is Mr. Downing the boss of the whole church. Cant
+ you tell him we truly paid the rent for all summer by digging
+ dandelions. He does not believe us. We are too sad to write any
+ more with love from your little friends
+
+ "JEAN MARJORY BETTIE AND I.
+
+ "P. S. How about your dinner party if we lose the cottage?"
+
+Mr. Black read and reread the typewritten yellow sheet a great many
+times; sometimes he frowned, sometimes he chuckled; the postscript
+seemed to please him particularly, for whenever he reached that point
+his deep-set eyes twinkled merrily. Presently he propped the dispatch
+against the wall at the back of his table and sat down in front of it to
+write a reply. He wrote several messages, some long, some short; then he
+tore them all up--they seemed inadequate compared with Mabel's.
+
+"That man Downing," said he, dropping the scraps into the waste-basket,
+"means well, but he muddles every pie he puts his finger in. Probably if
+I wire him he'll botch things worse than ever. Dear me, it _is_ too bad
+for those nice children to lose any part of their precious stay in that
+cottage, now, for of course they'll have to give it up when cold weather
+comes. If I can wind my business up today there isn't any good reason
+why I can't go straight through without stopping in Chicago. It's time I
+was home, anyway; it's pretty warm here for a man that likes a cold
+climate."
+
+Meanwhile, things were happening in Mr. Black's own town.
+
+It was a dark, threatening day when the Milligans, delighted at the
+success of their efforts to dislodge its rightful tenants, hurriedly
+moved into Dandelion Cottage; but, dark though it was, Mrs. Milligan
+soon began to find her new possession full of unsuspected blemishes.
+Now that the pictures were down and the rugs were up, she discovered the
+badly broken plaster, the tattered condition of the wall paper, the
+leaking drain, and the clumsily mended rat-holes. She found, too, that
+she had made a grievous mistake in her calculations. She had supposed
+that the tiny pantry was a third bedroom; with its neat muslin curtains,
+it certainly looked like one when viewed from the outside; and crafty
+Laura, intensely desirous of seeing the enemy ousted from the cottage at
+any price, had not considered it necessary to enlighten her mother.
+
+"My goodness!" exclaimed Mrs. Milligan, a thin woman with a shrewish
+countenance now much streaked with dust. "I thought you said there was a
+fine cellar under this house? It's barely three feet deep, and there's
+no stairs and no floor. It's full of old rubbish."
+
+"I never was down there," admitted Laura, dropping a dishpanful of
+cooking utensils with a crash and hastily making for safe quarters
+behind a mountain of Milligan furniture, "but I've often seen the trap
+door."
+
+"It hasn't been opened for years. And where's the nice big closet you
+said opened off the bedroom? There isn't a decent closet in this house.
+I don't see what possessed you--"
+
+"It serves you right," said Mr. Milligan, unsympathetically. "You
+wouldn't wait for anything, but had to rush right in. I told you you'd
+better take your time about it, but no--"
+
+"You know very well, James Milligan," snapped the irate lady, "that the
+Knapps wouldn't have taken our house if they couldn't have had it at
+once."
+
+"Well, I _don't_ know," growled Mr. Milligan, scowling crossly at the
+constantly growing heaps of incongruously mixed household goods, "where
+in Sam Hill you're going to put all that stuff. There isn't room for a
+cat to turn around, and the place ain't fit to live in, anyway."
+
+Bad as things looked, even Mr. Milligan did not guess that first busy
+day how hopelessly out of repair the cottage really was; but he was soon
+to find out.
+
+The summer had been an unusually dry one; so dry that the girls had been
+obliged to carry many pails of water to their garden every evening. The
+moving-day had been cloudy--out of sympathy, perhaps, for the little
+cottagers. That night it rained, the first long, steady downpour in
+weeks. This proved no gentle shower, but a fierce, robust, pelting
+flood. Seemingly a discriminating rain, too, choosing carefully between
+the just and the unjust, for most of it fell upon the Milligans. With
+the sole exception of the dining-room, every room in the house leaked
+like a sieve.
+
+The tired, disgusted Milligans, drenched in their beds, leaped hastily
+from their shower baths to look about, by candlelight, for shelter. Mr.
+Milligan spread a mattress, driest side up, on the dining-room floor,
+and the unfortunate family spent the rest of the night huddled in an
+uncomfortable heap in the one dry spot the house afforded.
+
+Very early the next morning they sent post-haste for Mr. Downing.
+
+Mr. Downing, who hated to be disturbed before eight, arrived at ten
+o'clock; and, with an expert carpenter, made a thorough examination of
+the house, which the rain had certainly not improved.
+
+"It will take three hundred--possibly four hundred dollars," said the
+carpenter, who had been making a great many figures in a worn little
+note-book, "to make this place habitable. It needs a new roof, new
+chimneys, new floors, a new foundation, new plumbing, new plaster--in
+short, just about _everything_ except the four outside walls. Then there
+are no lights and no heating plant, which of course would be extra. It's
+probably one of the oldest houses in town. What's it renting for?"
+
+"Ten dollars a month."
+
+"It isn't worth it. Half that money would be a high price. Even if it
+were placed in good repair it would be six years at least before you
+could expect to get the money expended on repairs back in rent. The
+only thing to do is to tear it down and build a larger and more modern
+house that will bring a better rent, for there's no money in a
+ten-dollar house on a lot of this size--the taxes eat all the profits."
+
+"Well," said Mr. Downing, "this house certainly looked far more
+comfortable when I saw it the other day than it does now. Those children
+must have had the defects very well concealed. They deceived me
+completely."
+
+"They deceived us all," said Mrs. Milligan, resentfully. "Half of our
+furniture is ruined. Look at that sofa!"
+
+Mr. Downing looked. The drenched old-gold plush sofa certainly looked
+very much like a half-drowned Jersey calf.
+
+"Of course," continued Mrs. Milligan, sharply, "we expect to have our
+losses made good. Then we've had all our trouble for nothing, too. Of
+course we can't stay here--the place isn't fit for pigs. I suppose the
+best thing _we_ can do is to move right back into our own house."
+
+"Ye-es," said Mr. Milligan, overlooking the fact that Mrs. Milligan had
+inadvertently called her family pigs, "it certainly looks like the best
+thing to do. I'll go and tell the Knapps that they'll have to move out
+at once--we can't spend another night under this roof."
+
+The Knapps, however, proved disobliging and flatly declined to move a
+second time. The Milligans had begged them to take the house off their
+hands, and they had signed a contract. Moreover, it was just the kind of
+house the Knapps had long been looking for, and now that they were
+moved, more than half settled, and altogether satisfied with their part
+of the bargain, they politely but firmly announced their intention of
+staying where they were until the lease should expire.
+
+There was nothing the former tenants could do about it. They were
+homeless and quite as helpless as the four little girls had been in
+similar circumstances; and they made a far greater fuss about it. By
+this they gained, however, nothing but the disapproval of everybody
+concerned; so, finally, the Milligans, disgusted with Dandelion Cottage,
+with Mr. Downing, and for once even a little bit with themselves,
+dejectedly hunted up a new home in a far less pleasant neighborhood, and
+moved hurriedly out of Dandelion Cottage--and, except for the memories
+they left behind them, out of the story.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 18
+
+A Hurried Retreat
+
+
+The girls, of course, had been barred out while all these exciting
+latest events were taking place in their dear cottage; but Marjory, who
+lived next door to it, had seen something of the Milligans' hasty exit
+and had guessed at part of the truth. Mrs. Knapp, who seemed a pleasant,
+likable little woman, in spite of her unwillingness to accommodate her
+new landlord, unknowingly confirmed their suspicions when she told her
+friend Mrs. Crane about it; for Mrs. Crane, in her turn, told the news
+to the four little housekeepers the next morning as they sat homeless
+and forlorn on her doorstep. It was always Mrs. Crane to whom the
+Dandelion Cottagers turned whenever they were in need of consolation
+and, as in this case, consolation was usually forthcoming.
+
+The girls, in their excitement at hearing the news about their late
+possession, did not notice that sympathetic Mrs. Crane looked tired and
+worried as she sat, in the big red rocking chair on her porch, peeling
+potatoes.
+
+"Oh!" squealed Mabel, from the broad arm of Mrs. Crane's chair, "I'm
+glad! I'm glad! I'm glad!"
+
+"I can't help being a little bit glad, too," said fair-minded Jean. "I
+suppose it wasn't very pleasant for the Milligans, but I guess they
+deserved all they got."
+
+"They deserved a great deal more," said Marjory, resentfully. "Think of
+these last awful days!"
+
+"If they'd had _much_ more," said Mrs. Crane, "they'd have been drowned.
+Why, children! the place was just flooded."
+
+"I'm ashamed to tell of it," said Bettie, "but I'm awfully afraid that
+our boys took off part of the pieces of tin that they nailed on the roof
+last spring. I heard them doing _something_ up there the night we
+moved; but Bob only grinned when I asked him about it."
+
+"Good for the boys!" cried Marjory, gleefully. "I wouldn't be unladylike
+enough to set traps for the Milligans myself, but I can't help feeling
+glad that somebody else did."
+
+"It was Bob's own tin," giggled delighted Mabel, almost tumbling into
+Mrs. Crane's potato pan in her joy. "I guess he had a right to take it
+home if he wanted to."
+
+"Anyway," said Jean, from her perch on the porch railing, "I'm glad
+they're gone."
+
+"But it doesn't do _us_ any good," sighed Bettie. "And the summer's just
+flying."
+
+"Yes, it does," insisted Jean. "We _can_ stand having the cottage
+empty--we can pretend, you know, that it's an enchanted castle that can
+be opened only by a certain magic key that--"
+
+"Somebody's baby has swallowed," shrieked Mabel, the matter-of-fact.
+
+"Mercy no, goosie," said Marjory. "She means a magic word that nobody
+can remember."
+
+"That's it," said Jean. "Of course we couldn't do even that with the
+cottage full of Milligans."
+
+"No," assented Marjory, "the most active imagination would refuse to
+activate--"
+
+"To _what_?" gasped Mabel.
+
+"To work," explained Marjory.
+
+"I should say so," agreed Mabel, again threatening the potatoes. "It was
+just as much as I could do to come over here this morning to breathe the
+same air with that cottage with those folks in it staring me in the
+face, but now--"
+
+"After all," sighed Bettie, sorrowfully, from the other arm of Mrs.
+Crane's big chair, "having the Milligans out of the cottage doesn't make
+_much_ difference, as long as we're out, too. Oh, I _did_ love that
+little house so. I just hated to think of cold weather coming to drive
+us out; but I never dreamed of anything so dreadful as having to leave
+it right in this lovely warm weather."
+
+"If Mr. Black had stayed in town," said Mabel, feelingly, "we'd be
+dusting that darling cottage this very minute."
+
+Mrs. Crane sniffed in the odd way she always did whenever Mr. Black's
+name was mentioned. This scornful sniff, accompanying Mrs. Crane's
+evident disapproval of their dearest friend, was the only thing that the
+girls disliked about Mrs. Crane.
+
+"I _know_ you'd like Mr. Black if you only knew him," said Bettie,
+earnestly. "In some ways you're a good deal like him. You're both the
+same color, your eyebrows turn up the same way at the outside corners,
+and you both like us. Mr. Black has a beautiful soul."
+
+"Indeed," said Mrs. Crane. "And haven't I a beautiful soul too?"
+
+"Why, of course," said Bettie, leaning down to rub her cheek against
+Mrs. Crane's. "I meant _both_ of you. We like you both just the same."
+
+"Only it's different," explained Jean. "Mr. Black doesn't need us, and
+sometimes you do. We _like_ to do things for you."
+
+"I'm glad of that," said Mrs. Crane, "for I need you this very minute.
+But don't you be too sure about his not needing you as well. He must
+lead a pretty lonely life, because it's years since his wife died. I
+never heard of anybody else liking her, but I guess _he_ did. He's one
+of the faithful kind, maybe, for he's lived all alone in that great big
+house ever since. I guess it does him good to have you little girls for
+friends."
+
+"What was his wife like?" asked Mabel, eagerly. "Did you use to know
+her?"
+
+"No, indeed," said Mrs. Crane, again giving the objectionable sniff.
+"That is, not so very well--a little light-headed, useless thing, no
+more fit to keep house--but there! there. It doesn't make any difference
+_now_, and I've learned that it isn't the best housekeepers that get
+married easiest. If it was, I wouldn't be so worried _now_."
+
+"Is anything the matter?" asked Jean, quick to note the distress in Mrs.
+Crane's voice.
+
+"Yes," returned the good woman, "there are two things the matter."
+
+"Your poor foot?" queried Bettie, instantly all sympathy.
+
+"No, the foot's all right. It's Mr. Barlow and my eyes. Mr. Barlow is
+going to be married to a young lady he's been writing to for a long
+time, and I'm going to lose him because he wants to keep house. It won't
+be easy to find another lodger for that little, shabby, old-fashioned
+room. I'm trying to make a new rag carpet for it, but I'm all at a
+standstill because I can't see to thread my needle. I declare, I don't
+know what is going to become of me."
+
+"When I grow up," said Bettie, "you shall live with me."
+
+"But what am I to do while I'm waiting for you to grow up?" asked Mrs.
+Crane, smiling at Bettie's protecting manner.
+
+"Let us be your eyes," suggested Jean. "Couldn't we thread about a
+million needles for you? Don't you think a million would last all day?"
+
+"I should think it might," said Mrs. Crane, somewhat comforted. "I
+haven't quite a million, but if Marjory will get my cushion and a spool
+of cotton I'll be very glad to have you thread all I have."
+
+The girls worked in silence for fully five minutes. Then Mabel jabbed
+the solitary needle she had threaded into the sawdust cushion and said:
+
+"Don't you suppose Mr. Downing might let us have the cottage _now_, if
+we went to him? Nobody else seems to care about it. What do you think,
+Mrs. Crane?"
+
+"Why, my dear, I suppose it wouldn't do any harm to ask. You'd better
+see what your own people think about it."
+
+"Let's go ask them now," cried impetuous Mabel, springing to her feet.
+Forgetting all about the needles and without waiting to say good-by to
+Mrs. Crane, the eager girl made a diagonal rush for the corner nearest
+her own home.
+
+The others remained long enough to thread all the needles. Then they,
+too, went home with the news about the cottage and about Mrs. Crane.
+They were realizing, for the first time, that their good friend might
+become helpless long before they were ready to use her as a grandmother
+for their children, but they couldn't see just what was to be done about
+it. The idea of going to Mr. Downing, however, soon drove every other
+thought away, for the parents and Aunty Jane, too, advised them to ask.
+They even encouraged them.
+
+But when Jean and Bettie, hopefully dressed in their Sunday-best, and
+Marjory and Mabel, with their abundant locks elaborately curled
+besides, presented themselves and their request at Mr. Downing's house
+that evening, they were not at all encouraged by their reception.
+
+Mr. Downing, a man of moods, had just come off second-best in an
+encounter with Mrs. Milligan, whom he had accidentally met on his way
+home to dinner, and, at the moment the girls appeared, the cottage was
+just about the last subject that the badgered man cared to discuss.
+Before Jean had fairly stated her errand, the enraged Mr. Downing roared
+"_No!_" so emphatically that his four alarmed visitors backed hurriedly
+off the Downing porch and fled as one girl. Mabel, to be sure, measured
+her length in the canna bed near the gate, but she scrambled up,
+snorting with fright and indignation, and none of them paused again in
+their flight until Jean's door, which seemed safest, had closed behind
+them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 19
+
+The Response to Mabel's Telegram
+
+
+The night of their flitting from Dandelion Cottage, the girls had
+hastily eaten all the radishes in the cottage garden to prevent their
+falling into the hands of the grasping Milligans. Now, the morning after
+their visit to Mr. Downing, they were wishing that they hadn't; not
+because the radishes had disagreed with them, but for quite a different
+reason. They could not enter the cottage, of course, but it had
+occurred to them that it might be possible to derive a certain
+melancholy satisfaction from tending and replenishing the little garden.
+That pleasure, at least, had not been forbidden them; but before
+beginning active operations, they took the precaution of enlarging the
+hole in the back fence, so that instantaneous flight would be possible
+in case Mr. Downing should stroll cottageward.
+
+Their motive was good. When Mr. Black returned, if he ever should,
+Bettie meant that he should find the little yard in perfect order.
+
+"We'll keep to our part of the bargain, anyway," said Bettie, as the
+four girls were making their first cautious tour of inspection about the
+cottage yard. "There's lots of work to be done."
+
+"Yes," agreed Jean. "We said we'd keep this yard nice all summer, and it
+wouldn't be right not to do it."
+
+"I wonder if we ought to ask Mr. Downing?" asked conscientious Bettie,
+stooping to pull off some gone-to-seed pansies.
+
+"Perhaps you'd like the job!" suggested Marjory, with mild sarcasm.
+
+"My sakes!" said Mabel. "I wouldn't go near that man again if I was
+going to swallow an automobile the next moment if I didn't. I could hear
+him roar '_No_' every few minutes all night. I fell out of bed twice,
+dreaming that I was trying to get off of that old porch of his before he
+could grab me."
+
+"Well, I guess we'd better not ask," said Jean, "because I'm pretty sure
+he'd have the same answer ready."
+
+"He certainly ought not to mind having us take care of our own flowers,"
+said Marjory.
+
+"That's true," said Bettie, poking the moist earth with a friendly
+finger. "They're growing splendidly since the rain. See how nice and
+full of growiness the ground is."
+
+"I can get more pansy plants," offered Marjory, "to fill up these holes
+the Milligan dog made."
+
+"Mrs. Crane promised to give us some aster plants," said Mabel. "Let's
+put 'em along by the fence."
+
+"Let's do," said Jean. "You go see if you can have them now."
+
+"I _know_ Mr. Black will be pleased," declared Bettie, "if he finds this
+place looking nice. I'm so thankful we didn't remember to ask Mr.
+Downing about it."
+
+"We didn't have a chance," said Jean, ruefully; "but just the same, I'm
+willing to keep on forgetting until Mr. Black comes."
+
+It began to look, however, as if Mr. Black were never coming. Bettie had
+written as she had promised but had had no reply, though the letter had
+not been mailed for ten minutes before she began to watch for the
+postman. Even Mabel, having had no response to her telegram and
+supposing it to have gone astray, had given up hope.
+
+Mabel, ever averse to confessing the failure of any of her enterprises,
+had decided to postpone saying anything about the telegram until one or
+another of the girls should remember to ask what had become of the
+thirty-five cents. So far, none of them had thought of it.
+
+Still, it seemed probable, in spite of Mr. Black's continued absence,
+that he would get home some time, for he had left so much behind him. In
+the business portion of the town there was a huge building whose sign
+read: "PETER BLACK AND COMPANY." Then, in the prettiest part of the
+residence district, where the lawns were big and the shrubs were planted
+scientifically by a landscape gardener and where the hillside bristled
+with roses, there was a large, handsome stone house that, as everybody
+knew, belonged to Mr. Black. Although there were industrious clerks at
+work in the one, and a middle-aged housekeeper, with a furnace-tending,
+grass-cutting husband equally busy in the other, it was reasonable to
+suppose that Mr. Black, even if he had no family, would have to return
+some time, if only to enjoy his beloved rose-bushes.
+
+Thanks to Mabel's telegram (Bettie's letter, forwarded from Washington,
+did not reach him for many days) he did come. He had had to stop in
+Chicago, after all, and there had been unexpected delays; but just a
+week from the day the Milligans had left the cottage, Mr. Black
+returned.
+
+Without even stopping to look in at his own office, the traveler went
+straight to the rectory to ask for Bettie. Bettie, Mrs. Tucker told him,
+he would probably find in the cottage yard.
+
+Mr. Black took a short cut through the hole in the back fence, arriving
+on the cottage lawn just in time to meet a procession of girls entering
+the front gate. Each girl was carrying a huge, heavy clod of earth, out
+of the top of which grew a sturdy green plant; for the cottageless
+cottagers had discovered the only successful way of performing the
+difficult feat of restocking their garden with half-grown vegetables.
+Their neighbors had proved generous when Bettie had explained that if
+one could only dig deep enough one could transplant _anything_, from a
+cabbage to pole-beans. Some of the grown-up gardeners, to be sure, had
+been skeptical, but they were all willing that the girls should make the
+attempt.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Black!" shrieked the four girls, dropping their burdens to make
+a simultaneous rush for the senior warden. "Oh! oh! oh! Is it really
+you? We're so glad--so awfully glad you've come!"
+
+"Well, I declare! So am I," said Mr. Black, with his arms full of girls.
+"It seems like getting home again to have a family of nice girls waiting
+with a welcome, even if it's a pretty sandy one. What are you doing with
+all the real estate? I thought you'd all been turned out, but you seem
+to be all here. I declare, if you haven't all been growing!"
+
+"We were--we are--we have," cried the girls, dancing up and down
+delightedly. "Mr. Downing made us give up the cottage, but he didn't say
+anything about the garden--and--and--we thought we'd better forget to
+ask about it."
+
+"Tell me the whole story," said Mr. Black. "Let's sit here on the
+doorstep. I'm sure I could listen more comfortably if there were not so
+many excited girls dancing on my best toes."
+
+So Mr. Black, with a girl at each side and two at his feet, heard the
+story from beginning to end, and he seemed to find it much more amusing
+than the girls had at any time considered it. He simply roared with
+laughter when Bettie apologized about Bob and the tin.
+
+"Well," said he, when the recital was ended, and he had shown the girls
+Mabel's telegram, and the thoroughly delighted Mabel had been praised
+and enthusiastically hugged by the other three, "I _have_ heard of
+cottages with more than one key. Suppose you see, Bettie, if anything on
+this ring will fit that keyhole."
+
+Three of the flat, slender keys did not, but the fourth turned easily in
+the lock. Bettie opened the door.
+
+"Possession," said Mr. Black, with a twinkle in his eye, "is nine points
+of the law. You'd better go to work at once and move in and get to
+cooking; you see, there's a vacancy under my vest that nothing but that
+promised dinner party can fill. The sooner you get settled, the sooner I
+get that good square meal. Besides, if you don't work, you won't have an
+appetite for a great big box of candy that I have in my trunk."
+
+"Oh," sighed Bettie, rubbing her cheek against Mr. Black's sleeve, "it
+seems too good to be true."
+
+"What, the candy?" teased Mr. Black.
+
+"No, the cottage," explained Bettie, earnestly. "Oh, I do hope winter
+will be about six months late this year to make up for this."
+
+"Perhaps it'll forget to come at all," breathed Mabel, hopefully. "I'd
+almost be willing to skip Christmas if there was any way of stretching
+this summer out to February. Somebody please pinch me--I'm afraid I'm
+dreaming--Oh! ouch! I didn't say _everybody_."
+
+By this time, of course, all the young housekeepers' relatives
+were deeply interested in the cottage. After living for a
+never-to-be-forgotten week with the four unhappiest little girls in
+town, all were eager to reinstate them in the restored treasure. The
+girls, having rushed home with the joyful news, were almost overwhelmed
+with unexpected offers of parental assistance. The grown-ups were not
+only willing but anxious to help. Then, too, the Mapes boys and the
+young Tuckers almost came to blows over who should have the honor of
+mending the roof with the bundles of shingles that Dr. Bennett insisted
+on furnishing. Marjory's Aunty Jane said that if somebody who could
+drive nails without smashing his thumb would mend the holes in the
+parlor floor she would give the girls a pretty ingrain carpet, one side
+of which looked almost new. Dr. Bennett himself laid a clean new floor
+in the little kitchen over the rough old one, and Mrs. Mapes mended the
+broken plaster in all the rooms by pasting unbleached muslin over the
+holes. Mr. Tucker replaced all broken panes of glass, while his busy
+wife found time to tack mosquito-netting over the kitchen and pantry
+windows.
+
+So interested, indeed, were all the grown-ups and all the brothers that
+the girls chuckled delightedly. It wouldn't have surprised them so very
+much if all their people had fallen suddenly to playing with dolls and
+to having tea-parties in the cottage; but the place was still far too
+disorderly for either of these juvenile occupations to prove attractive
+to anybody.
+
+In the midst of the confusion, Mr. Downing stopped at the cottage door
+one noon and asked for the girls, who eyed him doubtfully and
+resentfully as they met him, after Marjory had hesitatingly ushered him
+into the untidy little parlor.
+
+Mr. Downing smiled at them in a friendly but decidedly embarrassed
+manner. He had not forgotten his own lack of cordiality when the girls
+had called on him, and he wanted to atone for it. Mr. Black had
+tactfully but effectively pointed out to Mr. Downing--already deeply
+disgusted with the Milligans--the error of his ways, and Mr. Downing, as
+generous as he was hasty and irascible, was honest enough to admit that
+he had been mistaken not only in his estimate of Mr. Black, but also in
+his treatment of the little cottagers. Now, eager to make amends, he
+looked somewhat anxiously from one to another of his silent hostesses,
+who in return looked questioningly at Mr. Downing. Surely, with Mr.
+Black in town, Mr. Downing _couldn't_ be thinking of turning them out a
+second time; still, he had disappointed them before, probably he would
+again, and the girls meant to take no chances. So they kept still, with
+searching eyes glued upon Mr. Downing's countenance. All at once, they
+realized that they were looking into friendly eyes, and three of them
+jumped to the conclusion that the junior warden was not the heartless
+monster they had considered him.
+
+"I came," said Mr. Downing, noticing the change of expression in
+Bettie's face, "to offer you, with my apologies, this key and this
+little document. The paper, as you will see, is signed by all the
+vestrymen--my own name is written _very_ large--and it gives you the
+right to the use of this cottage until such time as the church feels
+rich enough to tear it down and build a new one. There is no immediate
+cause for alarm on this score, for there were only sixty-two cents in
+the plate last Sunday. I have come to the conclusion, young ladies, that
+I was overhasty in my judgment. I didn't understand the matter, and I'm
+afraid I acted without due consideration--I often do. But I hope you'll
+forgive me, for I sincerely beg _all_ your pardons."
+
+"It's all right," said Bettie, "as long as it was just a mistake. It's
+easy to forgive mistakes."
+
+"Yes," said Marjory, sagely, "we all make 'em."
+
+"It's all right, anyway," added Jean.
+
+Mr. Downing looked expectantly at Mabel, who for once had preserved a
+dead silence.
+
+"Well?" he asked, interrogatively.
+
+"I don't suppose I can ever really _quite_ forgive you," confessed
+Mabel, with evident reluctance. "It'll be awfully hard work, but I guess
+I can try."
+
+"Perhaps my peace-offering will help your efforts a little," said Mr.
+Downing, smiling. "It seems to be coming in now at your gate."
+
+The girls turned hastily to look, but all they could see was a very
+untidy man with a large book under his arm.
+
+"These," said Mr. Downing, taking the book from the man, who had walked
+in at the open door, "are samples of inexpensive wall papers. You're to
+choose as much as you need of the kinds you like best, and this man will
+put it wherever it will do the most good, and I'll pay the bill. Now,
+Miss Blue Eyes, do I stand a better chance of forgiveness?"
+
+"Yes, yes!" cried Mabel. "I'm almost glad you needed to apologize. You
+did it beautifully, too. Mercy, when _I_ apologize--and I have to do a
+_fearful_ lot of apologizing--I don't begin to do it so nicely!"
+
+"Perhaps," offered Mr. Downing, "when you've had as much practice as I
+have, it will come easier. I see, however, that you are far more
+suitable tenants than the Milligans would have been, for my humble
+apologies to them met with a very different reception. I assure you
+that, if there's ever any rivalry between you again, my vote goes with
+you--you're so easily satisfied. Now don't hesitate to choose whatever
+you want from this book. This paperhanger is yours, too, until you're
+done with him."
+
+"Oh, thank you, thank you, _thank_ you," cried the girls, with happy
+voices, as Mr. Downing turned to go; "you _couldn't_ have thought of a
+nicer peace-offering."
+
+Of course it took a long, long time for so many young housekeepers to
+choose papers for the parlor and the two bedrooms, but after much
+discussion and many differences of opinion, it was finally selected. The
+girls decided on green for the parlor, blue for one bedroom, and pink
+for the other, and they were easily persuaded to choose small patterns.
+
+Then the smiling paperhanger worked with astonishing rapidity and said
+that he didn't object in the least to having four pairs of bright eyes
+watch from the doorway every strip go into place. It seemed to be no
+trouble at all to paper the little low-ceilinged cottage, and, oh! how
+beautiful it was when it was all done. The cool, cucumber-green parlor
+was just the right shade to melt into the soft blue and white of the
+front bedroom. As for the dainty pink room, as Bettie said rapturously,
+it fairly made one smell roses to look at it, it was so sweet.
+
+It was finished by the following night, for no paperhanger could have
+had the heart to linger over his work with so many anxious eyes
+following every movement. Mrs. Tucker washed and ironed and mended the
+white muslin curtains; and, with such a bower to move into, the second
+moving-in and settling, the girls decided, was really better than the
+first. When their belongings were finally reinstalled in the cottage
+even Mabel no longer felt resentful toward the Milligans.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 20
+
+The Odd Behavior of the Grown-ups
+
+
+Even with all its ingenious though inexpensive improvements, the
+renovated cottage would probably have failed to satisfy a genuine
+rent-paying family, but to the contented girls it seemed absolutely
+perfect.
+
+At last, it looked to everybody as if the long-deferred dinner party
+were actually to take place. There, in readiness, were the girls, the
+money, the cottage, and Mr. Black, and nothing had happened to Mrs.
+Bartholomew Crane--who might easily, as Mabel suggested harrowingly,
+have moved away or died at any moment during the summer.
+
+One day, very soon after the cottage was settled, a not-at-all-surprised
+Mr. Black and a very-much-astonished Mrs. Crane each received a formal
+invitation to dine under its reshingled roof. Composed by all four, the
+note was written by Jean, whose writing and spelling all conceded to be
+better than the combined efforts of the other three. Bettie delivered
+the notes with her own hand, two days before the event, and on the
+morning of the party she went a second time to each house to make
+certain that neither of the expected guests had forgotten the date.
+
+"Forget!" exclaimed Mr. Black, standing framed in his own doorway. "My
+dear little girl, how _could_ I forget, when I've been saving room for
+that dinner ever since early last spring? Nothing, I assure you, could
+keep me away or even delay me. I have eaten a _very_ light breakfast, I
+shall go entirely without luncheon--"
+
+"I wouldn't do that," warned Bettie. "You see it's our first dinner
+party and something _might_ go wrong. The soup might scorch--"
+
+"It wouldn't have the heart to," said Mr. Black. "_No_ soup could be so
+unkind."
+
+Of course the cottage was the busiest place imaginable during the days
+immediately preceding the dinner party. The girls had made elaborate
+plans and their pockets fairly bulged with lists of things that they
+were to be sure to remember and not on any account to forget. Then the
+time came for them to begin to do all the things that they had planned
+to do, and the cottage hummed like a hive of bees.
+
+First the precious seven dollars and a half, swelled by some mysterious
+process to seven dollars and fifty-seven cents, had to be withdrawn from
+the bank, the most imposing building in town with its almost oppressive
+air of formal dignity. The rather diffident girls went in a body to get
+the money and looked with astonishment at the extra pennies.
+
+"That's the interest," explained the cashier, noting with quiet
+amusement the puzzled faces.
+
+"Oh," said Jean, "we've had that in school, but this is the first time
+we've ever seen any."
+
+"We didn't suppose," supplemented Bettie, "that interest was real money.
+_I_ thought it was something like those x-plus-y things that the boys
+have in algebra."
+
+"Or like mermaids and goddesses," said Mabel.
+
+"She means myths," interpreted Marjory.
+
+"I see," said the cashier. "Perhaps you like real, tangible interest
+better than the kind you have in school."
+
+"Oh, we do, we do!" cried the four girls.
+
+"After this," confided Bettie, "it will be easier to study about."
+
+Then, with the money carefully divided into three portions, placed in
+three separate purses, which in turn were deposited one each in Jean's,
+Marjory's, and Bettie's pockets, Mabel having flatly declined to burden
+herself with any such weighty responsibility, the four went to purchase
+their groceries.
+
+The smiling clerks at the various shops confused them a little at first
+by offering them new brands of breakfast foods with strange, oddly
+spelled names, but the girls explained patiently at each place that they
+were giving a dinner party, not a breakfast, and that they wanted
+nothing but the things on their list. It took time and a great deal of
+discussion to make so many important purchases, but finally the
+groceries were all ordered.
+
+Next the little housekeepers went to the butcher's to ask for a chicken.
+
+"Vat kind of schicken you vant?" asked the stout, impatient German
+butcher.
+
+Jean looked at Bettie, Bettie looked at Marjory, and Marjory, although
+she knew it was hopeless, looked at Mabel.
+
+"Vell?" said the busy butcher, interrogatively.
+
+"One to cook--without feathers," gasped Jean.
+
+"A spring schicken?"
+
+"Is that--is that better than a summer one?" faltered Bettie,
+cautiously. "You see it's summer now."
+
+"Perhaps," suggested Mabel, seized with a bright thought, "an August
+one--"
+
+"Here, Schon," shouted the busy butcher to his assistant, "you pring
+oudt three-four schicken. You can pick von oudt vile I vaits on dese
+odder gostomer."
+
+"I think," said Jean, indicating one of the fowls John had produced for
+her inspection, "that that's about the right size. It's so small and
+smooth that it ought to be tender."
+
+"I wouldn't take that one, Miss," cautioned honest John, under his
+breath, "it looks to me like a little old bantam rooster. Leave it to me
+and I'll find you a good one."
+
+To his credit, John was as good as his word.
+
+The little housekeepers felt very important indeed, when, later in the
+day, a procession of genuine grocery wagons, drawn by flesh-and-blood
+horses, drew up before the cottage door to deliver all kinds of
+really-truly parcels. They had not quite escaped the breakfast foods
+after all, because each consignment of groceries was enriched by several
+sample packages; enough altogether, the girls declared joyously, to
+provide a great many noon luncheons.
+
+Of course all the parcels had to be unwrapped, admired, and sorted
+before being carefully arranged in the pantry cupboard, which had never
+before found itself so bountifully supplied. Then, for a busy half-day,
+cook books and real cooks were anxiously consulted; for, as Mabel said,
+it was really surprising to see how many different ways there were to
+cook even the simplest things.
+
+Jean and Bettie were to do the actual cooking. The other two, in
+elaborately starched caps and aprons of spotless white (provided Mabel,
+though this seemed doubtful, could keep hers white), were to take turns
+serving the courses. The first course was to be tomato soup; it came in
+a can with directions outside and cost fifteen cents, which Mabel
+considered cheap because of the printed cooking lesson.
+
+"If they'd send printed directions with their raw chickens and
+vegetables," said she, "maybe folks might be able to tell which recipe
+belonged to which thing."
+
+"Well," laughed Marjory, "_some_ cooks don't have to read a whole page
+before they discover that directions for making plum pudding don't help
+them to make corned-beef hash. You always forget to look at the top of
+the page."
+
+"Never mind," said Jean, "she found a good recipe for salad dressing."
+
+"That's true," said Marjory, "but before you use it you'd better make
+sure that it isn't a polish for hardwood floors. There, don't throw the
+book at me, Mabel--I won't say another word."
+
+The three mothers and Aunty Jane, grown suddenly astonishingly obliging,
+not only consented to lend whatever the girls asked for, but actually
+thrust their belongings upon them to an extent that was almost
+overwhelming. The same impulse seemed to have seized them all. It
+puzzled the girls, yet it pleased them too, for it was such a decided
+novelty to have six parents (even the fathers appeared interested) and
+one aunt positively vying with one another to aid the young cottagers
+with their latest plan. The girls could remember a time, not so very far
+distant, when it was almost hopeless to ask for even such common things
+as potatoes, not to mention eggs and butter. Now, however, everything
+was changed. Aunty Jane would provide soup spoons, napkins, and a
+tablecloth--yes, her very best short one. Marjory could hardly believe
+her ears, but hastily accepted the cloth lest the offer should be
+withdrawn. The girls, having set their hearts on using the "Frog that
+would a-wooing go" plates for the escalloped salmon (to their minds
+there seemed to be some vague connection between frogs and fishes), were
+compelled to decline offers of all the fish plates belonging to the four
+families. The potato salad, garnished with lettuce from the cottage
+garden, was to be eaten with Mrs. Bennett's best salad forks The
+roasted chicken was not to be entrusted to the not-always-reliable
+cottage oven but was to be cooked at the Tuckers' house and carved with
+Mr. Mapes's best game set. Mrs. Bennett's cook would make a pie--yes,
+even a difficult lemon pie with a meringue on top, promised Mrs.
+Bennett.
+
+Then there were to be butter beans out of the cottage garden, and sliced
+cucumbers from the green-grocer's because Mrs. Crane had confessed to a
+fondness for cucumbers. There was one beet in the garden almost large
+enough to be eaten; that, too, was to be sacrificed. The dessert had
+been something of a problem. It had proved so hard to decide this matter
+that they decided to compromise by adding both pudding and ice cream to
+the Bennett pie. A brick of ice cream and some little cakes could easily
+be purchased ready-made from the town caterer, with the change they had
+left. Thoughts of their money's giving out no longer troubled them, for
+had not Mabel's surprising father told them that if they ran short they
+need not hesitate to ask him for any amount within reason?
+
+"I declare," said bewildered Mabel, "I can't see what has come over Papa
+and Mamma. Do I look pale, or anything--as if I might be going to die
+before very long?"
+
+"No," said Marjory, "you certainly don't; but I've wondered if Aunty
+Jane could be worried about _me_. I never knew her to be so
+generous--why, it's getting to be a kind of nuisance! Do you s'pose
+they're going to insist on doing _everything_?"
+
+"Well," said Bettie, "they've certainly helped us a lot. I don't know
+_why_ they've done it, but I'm glad they have. You see, we _must_ have
+everything perfectly beautiful because Mr. Black is rich and is
+accustomed to good dinners, and Mrs. Crane is poor and never has any
+very nice ones. If our people keep all their promises, it can't help
+being a splendid dinner."
+
+The three mothers and Aunty Jane and all the fathers did keep their
+promises. They, too, wanted the dinner to be a success, for they knew,
+as all the older residents of the little town knew--and as the children
+themselves might have known if the story had not been so old and their
+parents had been in the habit of gossiping (which fortunately they were
+not)--that there was a reason why Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane were the last
+two persons to be invited to a tete-a-tete dinner party. Yet, strangely
+enough, there was an equally good reason why no one wanted to interfere
+and why everyone wanted to help.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 21
+
+The Dinner
+
+
+The girls, a little uneasy lest their alarmingly interested parents
+should insist on cooking and serving the entire dinner, were both
+relieved and perplexed to find that the grown-ups, while perfectly
+willing to help with the dinner provided they could work in their own
+kitchens, flatly declined the most urgent invitations to enter the
+cottage on the afternoon or evening of the party.
+
+It was incomprehensible. Until noon of the very day of the feast the
+parents and Aunty Jane had paid the girls an almost embarrassing number
+of visits. Now, when the girls really wanted them and actually gave each
+of them a very special invitation, each one unexpectedly held aloof.
+For, as the hour approached, the girls momentarily became more and more
+convinced that something would surely go wrong in the cottage kitchen
+with no experienced person to keep things moving. They decided, at four
+o'clock, to ask Mrs. Mapes to oversee things.
+
+"No, indeed," said Mrs. Mapes. "You may have anything there is in my
+house, but you can't have _me_. You don't need _anybody_; you won't have
+a mite of trouble."
+
+Finding Mrs. Mapes unpersuadable, they went to Mrs. Tucker, who, next to
+Jean's mother, was usually the most obliging of parents.
+
+"No," said Mrs. Tucker, "I couldn't think of it. No, no, no, not for one
+moment. It's much better for you to do it all by yourselves."
+
+Still hopeful, the girls ran to Mrs. Bennett.
+
+"Mercy, no!" exclaimed that good woman, with discouraging emphasis. "I'm
+not a bit of use in a strange kitchen, and there are reasons--Oh! I mean
+it's your party and it won't be any fun if somebody else runs it."
+
+"Shall we ask your Aunty Jane?" asked Bettie. "We don't seem to be
+having any luck."
+
+"Yes," replied Marjory. "She loves to manage things."
+
+But Marjory's Aunty Jane proved no more willing than the rest.
+
+"No, _ma'am_!" she said, emphatically. "I wouldn't do it for ten
+dollars. Why, it would just spoil everything to have a grown person
+around. Don't even _think_ of such a thing."
+
+So the girls, feeling just a little indignant at their disobliging
+relatives, decided to get along as well as they could without them.
+
+At last, everything was either cooked or cooking. The table was
+beautifully set and decorated and flowers bloomed everywhere in
+Dandelion Cottage. Jean and Bettie, in the freshest of gingham aprons,
+were taking turns watching the things simmering on the stove. Mabel,
+looking fatter than ever in her short, white, stiffly starched apron,
+was on the doorstep craning her neck to see if the guests showed any
+signs of coming, and Marjory was busily putting a few entirely
+unnecessary finishing touches to the table.
+
+The guests were invited for half-past six, but had been hospitably urged
+by Bettie to appear sooner if they wished. At exactly fifteen minutes
+after six, Mrs. Crane, in her old-fashioned, threadbare, best black
+silk and a very-much-mended real-lace collar, and with her iron-gray
+hair far more elaborately arranged than she usually wore it, crossed the
+street, lifting her skirts high and stepping gingerly to avoid the dust.
+She supposed that she was to be the only guest, for the girls had not
+mentioned any other.
+
+Mabel, prodigiously formal and most unusually solemn, met her at the
+door, ushered her into the blue room, and invited her to remove her
+wraps. The light shawl that Mrs. Crane had worn over her head was the
+only wrap she had, but it was not so easily removed as it might have
+been. It caught on one of her hair pins, which necessitated rearranging
+several locks of hair that had slipped from place. This took some time
+and, while she was thus occupied, Mr. Black turned the corner, went
+swiftly toward the cottage, mounted the steps, and rang the doorbell.
+
+Mabel received him with even greater solemnity than she had Mrs. Crane.
+
+"I think I'd better take your hat," said she. "We haven't any hat rack,
+but it'll be perfectly safe on the pink-room bed because we haven't any
+Tucker babies taking naps on it today."
+
+Mr. Black handed his hat to her with an elaborate politeness that
+equaled her own.
+
+"Marjory!" she whispered as she went through the dining-room. "He's
+wearing his dress suit!"
+
+"Sh! he'll hear you," warned Marjory.
+
+"Well, anyway, I'm frightened half to death. Oh, _would_ you mind
+passing all the wettest things? I hadn't thought about his clothes."
+
+"Yes, I guess I'd better; he might want to wear 'em again."
+
+"They're both here," announced Mabel, opening the kitchen door.
+
+"You help Bettie stir the soup and the mashed potatoes," said Jean,
+whisking off her apron and tying it about Mabel's neck. "I'll go in and
+shake hands with them and then come back and dish up."
+
+Jean found both guests looking decidedly ill at ease. Mr. Black stood by
+the parlor table absent-mindedly undressing a family of paper dolls.
+Mrs. Crane, pale and nervously clutching the curtain, seemed unable to
+move from the bedroom doorway.
+
+"Oh!" said Jean, "I do believe Mabel forgot all about introducing you.
+We told her to be sure to remember, but she hasn't been able to take her
+mind off of her apron since she put it on. Mrs. Crane, this is our--our
+preserver, Mr. Black."
+
+The guests bowed stiffly.
+
+Jean began to wish that she could think of some way to break the ice.
+Both were jolly enough on ordinary occasions, but apparently both had
+suddenly been stricken dumb. Perhaps dinner parties always affected
+grown persons that way, or perhaps the starch from Mabel's apron had
+proved contagious; Jean smiled at the thought. Then she made another
+effort to promote sociability.
+
+"Mrs. Crane," explained Jean, turning to Mr. Black, who was nervously
+tearing the legs off of the father of the paper-doll family, "is our
+very nicest neighbor. We like her just ever so much--everybody does.
+We've often told _you_, Mrs. Crane, how fond we are of Mr. Black. It was
+because you are our two very dearest friends that we invited you both--"
+
+"Je-e-e-e-an!" called a distressed voice from the kitchen.
+
+"Mercy!" exclaimed Jean, making a hurried exit, "I hope that soup isn't
+scorched!"
+
+"No," said Bettie, slightly aggrieved, "but _I_ wanted a chance, too, to
+say how-do-you-do to those people before I get all mixed up with the
+cooking. I thought you were _never_ coming back."
+
+"Well, it's your turn now," said Jean. "Give me that spoon."
+
+Bettie, finding their guests seated in opposite corners of the room and
+apparently deeply interested in the cottage literature--Mr. Black buried
+in _Dottie Dimple_ and Mrs. Crane absorbed in _Mother Goose_--naturally
+concluded that they were waiting to be introduced, and accordingly made
+the presentation.
+
+"Mrs. Crane," said she, "I want you to meet Mr. Black, and I hope,"
+added warm-hearted Bettie, "that you'll like each other very much
+because we're so fond of you both. You're each a surprise party for the
+other--we thought you'd both like it better if you had somebody besides
+children to talk to."
+
+"Very kind, I'm sure," mumbled Mr. Black, whose company manners, it
+seemed to Bettie, were far from being as pleasant as his everyday ones.
+Bettie gave a deep sigh and made one more effort to set the
+conversational ball rolling.
+
+"I'm afraid I'll have to go back to the kitchen now, and leave you to
+entertain each other. Please both of you be _very_ entertaining--you're
+both so jolly when you just run in."
+
+Bettie's eyes were wistful as she went toward the kitchen. Was it
+possible, she wondered, that her beloved Mr. Black could despise Mrs.
+Crane because she was _poor_? It didn't seem possible, yet there was
+certainly something wrong. Perhaps he was merely hungry. That was it, of
+course; she would put the dinner on at once--even good-natured Dr.
+Tucker, she remembered, was sometimes a little bearlike when meals were
+delayed.
+
+Five minutes later, Marjory escorted the guests to the dining-room, and,
+finding both of these usually talkative persons alarmingly silent, she
+inferred of course that Mabel had forgotten--as indeed Mabel had--her
+instructions in regard to introducing them. Marjory's manners on formal
+occasions were very pretty; they were pretty now, and so was she, as she
+hastened to make up for Mabel's oversight.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Black," she cried, earnestly, "I'm afraid no one remembered to
+introduce you. It's our first dinner party, you know, and we're not very
+wise. This is our dearest neighbor, Mrs. Crane, Mr. Black."
+
+The guests bowed stiffly for the third time. Practice should have lent
+grace to the salutation, but seemingly it had not.
+
+"Aren't some of you young people going to sit down with me?" demanded
+Mr. Black, noticing suddenly that the table was set for only two.
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Crane with evident dismay, "surely you're coming to the
+table, too."
+
+"We can't," explained Marjory. "It takes all of us to do the serving.
+Besides, we haven't but two dining-room chairs. Sit here, please, Mrs.
+Crane; and this is your place, Mr. Black."
+
+Mr. Black looked red and uncomfortable as he unfolded his napkin. Mrs.
+Crane looked, as Marjory said afterward, for all the world as if she
+were going to cry. Perhaps the prospect of a good dinner after a long
+siege of poor ones was too much for her, for ordinarily Mrs. Crane was a
+very cheerful woman.
+
+Although both guests declared that the soup was very good indeed,
+neither seemed to really enjoy it.
+
+"They just kind of worried a little of it down," said the distressed
+Marjory, when she handed Mr. Black's plate, still three-quarters full,
+to Jean in the kitchen. "Do you suppose there's anything the matter with
+it?"
+
+"There can't be," said Bettie. "I've tasted it and it's good."
+
+"They're just saving room for the other things," comforted Mabel. "I
+guess _I_ wouldn't fill myself up with soup if I could smell roasted
+chicken keeping warm in the oven."
+
+Although Mabel had asked to be spared passing the spillable things, it
+seemed reasonably safe to trust her with the dish of escalloped salmon.
+She succeeded in passing it without disaster to either the dish or the
+guests' garments, and her apron was still immaculate.
+
+"Why," exclaimed Mabel, suddenly noticing that the guests sat stiff and
+silent, "the girls said I was to be sure to introduce you the moment you
+came, and I never thought a thing about it. Do forgive me--I'm the
+stupidest girl. Mrs. Black--I mean Mr. Crane--no, _Mrs._ Crane--"
+
+"We've been introduced," said Mr. Black, rather shortly. "Might I have a
+glass of water?"
+
+A pained, surprised look crept into Mabel's eyes. A moment later she
+went to the kitchen.
+
+The instant the guests were left alone, Mrs. Crane did an odd thing. She
+leaned forward and spoke in a low, earnest tone to Mr. Black.
+
+"Peter," she said, "can't we pretend to be sociable for a little while?
+It isn't comfortable, of course, but it isn't right to spoil those
+children's pleasure by acting like a pair of wooden dolls. Let's talk to
+each other whenever they're in the room just as if we had just met for
+the first time."
+
+"You're right, Sarah," said Mr. Black. "Let's talk about the weather.
+It's a safe topic and there's always plenty of it."
+
+When Marjory opened the door to carry in the salad there was a pleasant
+hum of voices in the dining-room. It seemed to all the girls that the
+guests were really enjoying themselves, for Mr. Black was telling Mrs.
+Crane how much warmer it was in Washington, and Mrs. Crane was informing
+Mr. Black that, except for the one shower that fell so opportunely on
+the Milligans, it had been a remarkably dry summer. The four anxious
+hostesses, feeling suddenly cheered, fell joyously to eating the soup
+and the salmon that remained on the stove. Until that moment, they had
+been too uneasy to realize that they were hungry; but as Marjory carried
+in the crackers, half-famished Mabel breathed a fervent hope that the
+guests wouldn't help themselves too lavishly to the salad.
+
+To the astonishment of Mabel, who carried the chicken successfully to
+its place before Mr. Black, who was to carve it, Mr. Black did not ask
+the other guest what part she liked best, but, with a whimsical smile,
+quietly cut off both wings and put them on Mrs. Crane's plate.
+
+Mrs. Crane looked up with an odd, tremulous expression--sort of weepy,
+Mabel called it afterwards--and said: "Thank you, Peter."
+
+It seemed to Mabel at the time that the guests were getting acquainted
+with a rapidity that was little short of remarkable--"Peter" indeed.
+
+Then, when everything else was eaten, and Marjory had brought the nuts
+and served them, Mrs. Crane, hardly waiting for the door to close behind
+the little waitress, leaned forward suddenly and said:
+
+"Peter, do you remember how you pounded my thumb when I held that hard
+black walnut for you to crack?"
+
+"I remember everything, Sarah. I've always been sorry about that
+thumb--and I've been sorry about a good many other things since. Do you
+think--do you think you could forgive me?"
+
+"Well, I just guess I could," returned Mrs. Crane, heartily. "After all,
+it was just as much my fault as it was yours--maybe more."
+
+"No, I never thought that, Sarah. _I_ was the one to blame."
+
+When the door opened a moment later to admit the finger-bowls and all
+four of the girls, who had licked the ice-cream platter and had nothing
+more to do in the kitchen since everything had been served--there, to
+the housekeepers' unbounded amazement, were Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane,
+with their arms stretched across the little table, holding each other's
+middle-aged hands in a tight clasp, and both had tears in their eyes.
+
+The girls looked at them in consternation.
+
+"Was--was it the dinner?" ventured Mabel, at last. "Was it as bad as--as
+all that?"
+
+"Well," said Mr. Black, rising to go around the table to place an
+affectionate arm across Mrs. Crane's plump shoulders, "it _was_ the
+dinner, but not its badness--or even its very goodness."
+
+"I guess you'd better tell 'em all about it, Peter," suggested Mrs.
+Crane, whose eyes were shining happily. "It's only fair they should know
+about it--bless their little hearts."
+
+"Well, you see," said Mr. Black, who, as the girls had quickly
+discovered, was once more their own delightfully jolly friend, "once
+upon a time, a long time ago, there was a black-eyed girl named Sarah,
+and a two-years-younger boy, who looked a good deal like her, named
+Peter, and they were brother and sister. They were all the brothers and
+sisters that each had, for their parents died when this boy and girl
+were very young. Peter and Sarah used to dream a beautiful dream of
+living together always, and of going down hand-in-hand to a peaceful,
+plentiful old age. You see, they had no other relative but one very
+cross grandmother, who scolded them both even oftener than they
+deserved--which was probably quite often enough. So I suspect that those
+abused, black-eyed, half-starved children loved each other more than
+most brothers and sisters do."
+
+"Yes," agreed Mrs. Crane, nodding her head and smiling mistily, "they
+certainly did. The poor young things had no one else to love."
+
+"That," said Mr. Black, "was no doubt the reason why, when the
+headstrong boy grew up and married a girl that his sister didn't like,
+and the equally headstrong girl grew up and married a man that her
+brother _couldn't_ like--a regular scoundrel that--"
+
+"Peter!" warned Mrs. Crane.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Black, hastily, "it's all over now, and perhaps we
+_had_ better leave that part of it out. It isn't a pretty story, and
+we'll never mention it again, Sarah. But anyway, girls, this foolish
+brother and sister quarreled, and the brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law
+and even the grandmother, who was old enough to know better, quarreled,
+until finally all four of those hot-tempered young persons were so angry
+that the brother named Peter said he'd never speak to his sister again,
+and the sister named Sarah said she'd never speak to her brother
+again--and they haven't until this very day. Just a pair of young geese,
+weren't they, Sarah?"
+
+"Old geese, too," agreed Mrs. Crane, "for they've both been fearfully
+lonely ever since and they've both been too proud to say so. One of
+them, at least, has wished a great many times that there had never been
+any quarrel."
+
+"_Two_ of 'em. But now this one," said Mr. Black, placing his forefinger
+against his own broad chest, "is going to ask this one--" and he pointed
+to Mrs. Crane--"to come and live with him in his own great big empty
+house, so he'll have a sister again to sew on his buttons, listen to his
+old stories, and make a home for him. What do you say, Sarah?"
+
+"I say yes," said Mrs. Crane; "yes, with all my heart."
+
+"And here," said Mr. Black, smiling into four pairs of sympathetic eyes,
+"are four young people who will have to pretend that they truly belong
+to us once in a while, because we'd both like to have our house full of
+happy little girls. You never had any children, Sarah?"
+
+"No, and you lost your only one, Peter."
+
+"Yes, a little brown-eyed thing like Bettie here--she'd be a woman now,
+probably with children of her own."
+
+"It's--it's just like a story," breathed Bettie, happily. "We've been
+part of a real story and never knew it! I'm so glad you let us have
+Dandelion Cottage, _so_ glad we invited you to dinner, and that nothing
+happened to keep either of you away."
+
+"Peter and I are glad, too," said Mrs. Crane, who indeed looked
+wonderfully happy.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Black, "it's the most successful dinner party I've ever
+attended. Of course I can't hope to equal it, but as soon as Sarah and I
+get to keeping house properly and have decided which is to pour the
+coffee, we're going to return the compliment with a dinner that will
+make your eyes stick out, aren't we, Sarah?"
+
+"Oh, we'll do a great deal more than that," responded generous Mrs.
+Crane. "We'll keep four extra places set at our table all the time."
+
+"Of course we will," cried Mr. Black, heartily. "And we'll fill the
+biggest case in the library with children's books--we'll all go tomorrow
+to pick out the first shelfful--so that when it gets too cold for you to
+stay in Dandelion Cottage you'll have something to take its place.
+You're going to be little sunny Dandelions in the Black-Crane house
+whenever your own people can spare you. But what's the matter? Have you
+all lost your tongues? I didn't suppose you could be so astonishingly
+quiet."
+
+"Oh," sighed Bettie, joyfully, "you've taken _such_ a load off our
+minds. We were simply dreading the winter, with no cottage to have good
+times in."
+
+"Yes," said Jean. "We didn't know how we could manage to _live_ with the
+cottage closed. We've been wondering what in the world we were going to
+do."
+
+"But with school, and you dear people to visit every day on the way
+home," said Marjory, "we'll hardly have time to miss it. Oh! won't it be
+perfectly lovely?"
+
+"I'm going to begin at once to practice being on time to meals," said
+Mabel. "I'm not going to let that extra place do any waiting for _me_."
+
+These were the things that the four girls said aloud; but the joyous
+look that flashed from Jean to Bettie, from Bettie to Marjory, from
+Marjory to Mabel, and from Mabel back again to Jean, said even more
+plainly: "_Now_ there'll be somebody to take care of Mrs. Crane. _Now_
+there'll be somebody to make a home for lonely Mr. Black."
+
+And indeed, subsequent events proved that it was a beautiful arrangement
+for everybody, besides being quite the most astonishing thing that had
+happened in the history of Lakeville.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Dandelion Cottage, by Carroll Watson Rankin
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