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-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30075 ***
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
-
-
-
-
-By Belle K. Maniates
-
-AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY
-
-MILDEW MANCE
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken him.
-FRONTISPIECE. _See page 114._]
-
-
-
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
-
-By
-
-Belle Kanaris Maniates
-
-With illustrations by
-
-Tony Sarg
-
-Boston
-
-Little, Brown, and Company
-
-1917
-
-
-
-
-Copyright, 1917,
-
-By Little, Brown, and Company.
-
-All rights reserved
-
-Published February, 1917
-
-Norwood Press
-
-Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
-
-Presswork by The Colonial Press, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- I ABOUT SILVIA AND MYSELF 1
- II INTRODUCING OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS 9
- III IN WHICH WE ARE PESTERED BY POLYDORES 28
- IV IN WHICH WE TAKE BOARDERS 45
- V IN WHICH WE TAKE A VACATION 61
- VI A FLIRT AND A WOMAN-HATER 77
- VII IN WHICH NOTHING MUCH HAPPENS 90
- VIII PTOLEMY DISAPPEARS AND I VISIT A HAUNTED HOUSE 99
- IX IN WHICH WE SEE GHOSTS 123
- X IN WHICH WE MAKE SOME DISCOVERIES 138
- XI A BAD MEANS TO A GOOD END 152
- XII "TOO MUCH POLYDORES" 164
- XIII ROB'S FRIEND THE REPORTER 173
- XIV A MIDNIGHT EXCURSION 195
- XV WHAT MISS FRAYNE FOUND OUT 203
- XVI PTOLEMY'S TALE 213
- XVII ALL ABOUT UNCLE ISSACHAR'S VISIT 229
- XVIII IN WHICH I DECIDE ON EXTREME MEASURES 254
- XIX WHICH HAS TO DO WITH SOME LETTERS 267
- XX "THE MONEY WE EARNT FOR YOU" 276
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken
- him. _Frontispiece_
- Uncle Issachar 10
- Dr. Felix Polydore 23
- "Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to
- Beth and Rob." 80
- He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us. 102
- I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to
- pull together and beat it to the lake 126
- The landlady intears waylaid me 132
- I had to carry Diogenes most of the way 168
- Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia's
- plaintive protests outside the door 192
- I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but
- with an injured air 224
- "He went to the front window and dropped a young
- kitten down on the old gent's head." 242
- "We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled
- Emerald from underneath." 256
-
-
-
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOURS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-_About Silvia and Myself_
-
-
-Some people have children born unto them, some acquire children and
-others have children thrust upon them. Silvia and I are of the last
-named class. We have no offspring of our own, but yesterday, today,
-and forever we have those of our neighbor.
-
-We were born and bred in the same little home-grown city and as a
-small boy, even, I was Silvia's worshiper, but perforce a worshiper
-from afar.
-
-Her upcoming had been supervised by a grimalkin governess who drew
-around the form of her young charge the awful circle of exclusiveness,
-intercourse with child-kind being strictly prohibited.
-
-Children are naturally gregarious little creatures, however, and
-Silvia on rare occasions managed to break parole and make adroit
-escape from surveillance. Then she would speed to the top of the
-boundary wall that separated the stable precincts from an alluring
-alley which was the playground of the plebeian progeny of the humble
-born.
-
-To the circle of dirty but fascinating ragamuffins she became an
-interested tangent, a silent observer. Here I had my first meeting
-with her. I was not of her class, neither was I to the alley born, but
-sailed in the sane mid-channel that ameliorates the distinction
-between high and low life.
-
-On this eventful day I was taking a short cut on my way to school. One
-of the group of alleyites, with the inherent friendliness of the
-unchartered but big-hearted members of the silt of the stream of
-humans, had proffered to little Silvia a chip on which was a patch of
-mud designed to become a fruitcake stuffed with pebbles in lieu of
-raisins and frosted with moistened ashes. Before the enticing pastime
-of transformation was begun, however, Silvia was swiftly snatched from
-the contaminating midst and borne away over the ramparts.
-
-Thereafter I haunted the alley, hoping for another glimpse of the
-little picture girl on the wall. At last I attained my desire. One
-Saturday afternoon I saw her coming, alone, down a long rosebush
-bordered path. A thrill ran through me. Our eyes met. Yet all I found
-to say was: "C'mon over."
-
-She responded to this invitation and I helped her over the wall. She
-looked longingly at the Irish playing in the mud, but a clean sandpile
-in my own backyard not far away seemed to me a more fitting
-environment for one so daintily clad.
-
-We played undisturbed for a never-to-be-forgotten half hour and then
-they found her out. Reprimanding voices jangled and the whole world
-was out of tune.
-
-Thereafter a strict watch was kept on little Silvia's movements and I
-saw her only at rare intervals, when she was going into church or as
-she rode past our house. She always remembered me and on such
-meetings a faint, reminiscent smile lighted the somber little face and
-her eyes met mine as if in a mysterious promise.
-
-She grew up an outlawed, isolated child deprived of her birthright,
-but in spite of the handicaps of so barren a childhood, she achieved
-young womanhood unspoiled and in possession of her early democratic
-tendencies.
-
-When I was making a modest start in a legal way, her parents died and
-left her with that most unprofitable of legacies, an encumbered
-estate. Then I dared to renew our acquaintance begun on the sandpile.
-She went to live with a poor but practical relation and was initiated
-into the science of stretching an inadequate income to meet everyday
-needs. In time I wooed and won her.
-
-We set up housekeeping in a small, thriving mid-Western city where I
-secured a partnership in a legal firm. Silvia had all the requisites
-of mind and manner and Domestic Science necessary to a "hearth-and
-home-" maker.
-
-We lived in a house which was one of many made to the same measure
-with the inevitable street porch, big window, trimmed lawn in front
-and garden in the rear. We had attained the standard of prosperity
-maintained in our home town by keeping "hired help" and installing a
-telephone, so our social status was fixed.
-
-There was but one adjunct missing to our little Arcadia. While at a
-word or look children flocked to me like friendly puppies in response
-to a call, to Silvia they were still an unknown quantity.
-
-I had hoped that her understanding and love for children might be
-developed in the usual and natural way, but we had now been married
-ten years and this hope had not been realized.
-
-She had tried most assiduously to cultivate an acquaintance with
-members of child-world, but into that kingdom there is no open sesame.
-The sure keen intuition of a child recognizes on sight a kindred
-spirit and Silvia's forced advances met with but indifferent response.
-She wistfully proposed to me one day that we adopt a child. My doubts
-as to the advisability of such a course were confirmed by Huldah, our
-strong staff in household help. In our section of the country servants
-were generally quite conversant with the intimate and personal affairs
-of the home.
-
-"Don't you never do it, Mr. Wade," she counseled. "Ready-mades ain't
-for the likes of her."
-
-When, in acting on this advice, I vetoed Silvia's lukewarm
-proposition, I was convinced of Huldah's wisdom by seeing the look of
-relief that flashed into my wife's troubled countenance, and I knew
-that her suggestion had been but a perfunctory prompting of duty.
-
-Time alone could overcome the effects of her early environment!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-_Introducing Our Next-door Neighbors_
-
-
-One morning Silvia and I lingered over our coffee cups discussing our
-plans for the coming summer, which included visits from my sister Beth
-and my college chum, Rob Rossiter. We wished to avoid having their
-arrivals occur simultaneously, however, because Rob was a woman-hater,
-or thought he was. We decided to have Beth pay her visit first and
-later take Rob with us on our vacation trip to some place where the
-fishing facilities would be to our liking. However, summer vacation
-time like our plans was yet far, vague and dim.
-
-[Illustration: Uncle Issachar]
-
-While I was putting on my overcoat, Silvia had gone to the window and
-was looking pensively at the vacant house next to ours.
-
-"I fear," she said abruptly and irrelevantly, "that we are destined
-to receive no part of Uncle Issachar's fortune."
-
-Uncle Issachar was a wealthy but eccentric relative of my wife. He had
-made us no wedding gift beyond his best wishes, but he had then
-informed us that at the birth of each of our prospective sons he
-should place in the bank to Silvia's account the sum of five thousand
-dollars. We had never invited him to visit us or made any overtures in
-the way of communication with him, lest he should think we were
-cultivating his acquaintance from mercenary motives.
-
-While I was debating whether the lament in Silvia's tone was for the
-loss of the money or the lack of children, she again spoke; this time
-in a tone which had lost its languor.
-
-"There is a big moving van in front of the house next door. At last we
-will have some near neighbors."
-
-"Are they unloading furniture?" I asked inanely, crossing to the
-window.
-
-"No; course not," came cheerfully from Huldah, who had come in to
-remove the dishes. "Most likely they are unloading lions and tigers."
-
-As I have already intimated, Huldah was a privileged servant.
-
-"They are unloading children!" explained Silvia, in a tone implying
-that Huldah's sarcastic implication would be infinitely more
-preferable. "The van seems to be overflowing with them--a perfect
-crowd. Do you suppose the house is to be used as an orphan asylum?"
-
-"I think not," I assured her as I counted the flock. Five children
-would seem like a crowd to Silvia.
-
-"Boys!" exclaimed Huldah tragically, as she joined us for a survey.
-"I'll see that they don't keep the grass off our lawn."
-
-Late that afternoon I opened the outer door of the dining-room in
-response to the rap of strenuously applied knuckles.
-
-A lad of about eleven years with the sardonic face of a satyr and
-diabolically bright eyes peered into the room.
-
-"We're going to have soup for dinner," he announced, "and mother wants
-to borrow a soup plate for father to eat his out of."
-
-Silvia stared at him aghast. She seemed to feel something compelling
-in the boy's personnel, however, and she went to the china closet and
-brought forth a soup plate which she handed to him without comment.
-
-In silence we watched him run across the lawn, twirling the plate
-deftly above his head in juggler fashion.
-
-The next day when we sat down to dinner our new young neighbor again
-appeared on our threshold.
-
-"Halloa!" he called chummily. "We are going to have soup again and we
-want a soup plate for father."
-
-"Where is the one I loaned you yesterday?" demanded Silvia in a tone
-far below thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit, while her features assumed a
-frigidity that would have congealed father's favorite sustenance had
-it been in her vicinity.
-
-"Oh, we broke that!" he casually and cheerfully explained.
-
-With much reluctance Silvia bestowed another plate upon the young
-applicant.
-
-"Wait!" I said as he started to leave, "don't you want the soup
-tureen, too, or the ladle and some soup spoons?"
-
-"No, thank you," he answered politely. "None of the rest of us like
-soup, so we dish father's up in the kitchen. He doesn't like soup
-particularly, but he eats it because it goes down quick and lets him
-have more time for work."
-
-This time as he sped homeward, he didn't spin the plate in air, but
-tried out a new plan of balancing it on a stick.
-
-"I think," I suggested gently, when our young neighbor was lost to our
-sorrowful sight, "that it might be well to invest in another dozen or
-so of soup plates. I will see about getting them at wholesale rates.
-Our supply will soon give out if our new neighbors continue to
-cultivate the soup and borrowing habit."
-
-"I will buy some at the five cent store," replied Silvia. "I think I
-had better call upon them tomorrow and see what manner of people they
-can be."
-
-When I came home the next day it was quite evident that she had
-called.
-
-"Well," I inquired, "what do they keep--a soup house?"
-
-"They are literary people, the highest of high-brows. Their name is
-Polydore, and the head of the house----"
-
-"Mr. or Mrs.?" I interrupted.
-
-"The head of the house," pursued Silvia, ignoring my question, "is a
-collector."
-
-"So I inferred. Has he a large collection of soup plates?"
-
-"She collects antiquities and writes their history. He pursues
-science."
-
-"They were seemingly communicative. What did they look like?"
-
-"I didn't see them. After I rang I heard a woman's voice bidding some
-one not to answer the bell. She said she couldn't be bothered with
-interruptions, so I went on up the street to call on Mrs. Fleming, who
-told me all about them. She was also refused admittance when she
-called. On my way home I met that boy--that awful boy----"
-
-She paused, evidently overcome by the consideration of his awfulness.
-
-"He had been digging bait--"
-
-Again she paused as if words were inadequate for her climax.
-
-"Well," I encouraged.
-
-"He was carrying his bait--horrid, wriggling angleworms--in our soup
-plate!"
-
-"Then it is not broken yet!" I exclaimed joyfully. "Let us hope it is
-given an antiseptic bath before father's next indulgence in consommé.
-After dinner I will go over and try my luck at paying my respects to
-the soup savant."
-
-"They won't let you in."
-
-"In that case I shall follow their lead of setting aside all ceremony
-and formality and admit myself, as their heir apparent does here."
-
-After dinner and my twilight smoke, I went next door, first asking
-Silvia if there was anything we needed that I could borrow, just to
-show them there were no hard feelings.
-
-My third vigorous ring brought results. A slipshod servant appeared
-and reluctantly seated me in the hall. She read with seeming interest
-the card I handed to her and then, pushing aside some mangy looking
-portières, vanished from view.
-
-She evidently delivered my card, for I heard a woman's voice read my
-name, "Mr. Lucien Wade."
-
-After another short interval the slovenly servant returned and offered
-me my card.
-
-"She seen it," she assured me in answer to my look of surprise.
-
-She again put the portières between us and I was obliged to own myself
-baffled in my efforts to break in. I was showing myself out when my
-onward course was deflected by a troop of noisy children leaded by
-the soup plate skirmisher, who was the oldest and apparently the
-leader of the brood.
-
-"Oh, halloa!" he greeted me with the air of an old acquaintance,
-"didn't you see the folks?"
-
-On my informing him that I had seen no one but the servant, he
-exclaimed:
-
-"Oh, that chicken wouldn't know enough to ask you in! Just follow us.
-Mother wouldn't remember to come out."
-
-I was loth to force my presence on mother, but by this time my
-hospitable young friend had pulled the portières so strenuously that
-they parted from the pole, and I was presented willy nilly to the
-collector of antiquities, who had the angular sharp-cut face and form
-of a rocking horse. She was seated at a table strewn with books and
-papers, writing at a rate of speed that convinced me she was in the
-throes of an inspiration. I forebore to interrupt. My scruples,
-however, were not shared by her eldest son. He gave her elbow a jog of
-reminder which sent her pencil to the floor.
-
-"Mother!" he shouted in megaphone voice, "here's the man next
-door--the one we get our soup plates from."
-
-She looked up abstractedly.
-
-"Oh," she said in dismayed tone, "I thought you had gone. I am very
-much engaged in writing a paper on modern antiquities."
-
-I murmured some sort of an apology for my untimely interruption.
-
-"I am so absorbed in my great work," she explained, "that I am
-oblivious to all else. I have the rare and great gift of concentration
-in a marked degree."
-
-I was quite sure of this fact. She took another pencil from a supply
-box and resumed her literary occupation. As my presence seemed of so
-little moment, I lingered.
-
-"Mother," shouted one of the boys, snatching the pencil from her
-grasp, "I'm hungry. I didn't have any supper."
-
-"Yes, you did!" she asserted. "I saw Gladys give you a bowl of bread
-and milk."
-
-"Emerald took it away from me and drank it up."
-
-"Didn't neither!" denied a shaggy looking boy. "I spilled it."
-
-He accompanied this denial by a fierce punch in his accuser's ribs.
-
-"Here!" said the author of Modern Antiquities, taking a nickel from
-her pocket, "go get yourself some popcorn, Demetrius."
-
-"I ain't Demetrius! I'm Pythagoras."
-
-"It makes no difference. Go and get it and don't speak to me again
-tonight."
-
-The boy had already snatched the coin, and he now started for the
-exit, but his outgoing way was instantly blocked by a promiscuous pack
-of pugilistic Polydores, and an ardent and general onslaught
-followed.
-
-I endeavored to untangle the arms and legs of the attackers and the
-attacked in a desire to rescue the youngest, a child of two, but I
-soon beat a retreat, having no mind to become a punching bag for
-Polydores.
-
-The concentrator at the writing table, looking up vaguely, perceived
-the general joust.
-
-"How provoking!" she exclaimed indignantly. "I was in search of an
-antonym and now they've driven it out of my memory."
-
-I politely offered my sympathy for her loss.
-
-"Did you ever see such misbehaved children?" she asked casually and
-impersonally as she calmly surveyed the free-for-all fight.
-
-[Illustration: Dr. Felix Polydore]
-
-"Children always misbehave before company," I remarked propitiatingly.
-"Of course they know better."
-
-"Why no, they don't!" she declared, looking at me in surprise,
-"they----"
-
-At this instant the errant antonym evidently flashed upon her mental
-vision and her pencil hastened to record it and then flew on at
-lightning speed.
-
-I was about to try to make an escape when a momentary cessation of
-hostilities was caused by the entrance of a moth-eaten, abstracted-looking
-man. As the _two-year-old_ hailed him as "fadder", I gathered that he
-was the person responsible for the family now fighting at his feet.
-
-"What's the trouble?" he asked helplessly.
-
-"She gave Thag a nickel," explained the eldest boy, "and we want it."
-
-The man drew a sigh of relief. The solution of this family problem was
-instantly and satisfactorily met by an impartial distribution of
-nickels.
-
-With demoniac whoops of delight, the contestants fled from the room.
-
-I introduced myself to the man of the house, who seemed to realize
-that some sort of compulsory conventionalities must be observed. He
-looked hopelessly at his wife, and seeing that she was beyond response
-to an S O S call to things mundane, he frankly but impressively
-informed me that I must expect nothing of them socially as their lives
-were devoted to research and study. The children, however, he assured
-me, could run over frequently to see us.
-
-I instinctively felt that my call was considered ended, so I took my
-departure. I related the details of my neighborly visit to Silvia, but
-her sense of humor was not stirred. It was entirely dominated by her
-dread of the young Polydores.
-
-"How many children are there?" she asked faintly. "More than the five
-you said you counted that first day?"
-
-"They seemed not so many as much. That is, though I suppose in round
-numbers there are but five, yet each of those five is equal to at
-least three ordinary children."
-
-"Are they all boys? Huldah says the youngest wears dresses."
-
-"Nevertheless he is a boy. They are all unmistakably boys. I think
-they must have been born with boots on and," conscious of the imprints
-of my shins, "hobnail boots at that. Even the youngest, a two-year
-old, seems to have been graduated from Home Rule."
-
-"I can't bear to think of their going to bed hungry," she said
-wistfully. "Think of that unnatural mother expecting them to satisfy
-their hunger by popcorn."
-
-"They didn't though," I assured her. "I saw them stop a street vender
-below here and invest their nickels in hot dogs."
-
-"Hot dogs!" repeated Silvia in horror.
-
-"Wienerwursts," I hastened to interpret.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-_In Which We Are Pestered by Polydores_
-
-
-Our life now became one long round of Polydores. They were with us
-burr-tight, and attached themselves to me with dog-like devotion,
-remaining utterly impervious to Silvia's aloofness and repulses. At
-last, however, she succumbed to their presence as one of the things
-inevitable.
-
-"The Polydores are here to stay," she acknowledged in a
-calmness-of-despair voice.
-
-"They don't seem to be homebodies," I allowed.
-
-The children were not literary like the other productions of their
-profound parents, but were a band of robust, active youngsters
-unburdened with brains, excepting Ptolemy of soup plate fame. Not that
-he betrayed any tendencies toward a learned line, but he was possessed
-of an occult, uncanny, wizard-like wisdom that was disconcerting. His
-contemplative eyes seemed to search my soul and read my inmost
-thoughts.
-
-Pythagoras, Emerald, and Demetrius, aged respectively nine, eight, and
-seven, were very much alike in looks and size, being so many pinched
-caricatures of their mother. To Silvia they were bewildering
-whirlwinds, but Huldah, who seemed to have difficulty in telling them
-apart, always classified them as "Them three", and Silvia and I fell
-into the habit of referring to them in the same way. Huldah could not
-master the Polydore given names either by memory or pronunciation.
-Ptolemy, whose name was shortened to "Tolly" by Diogenes, she called
-"Polly." When she was on speaking terms with "Them three" she
-nicknamed them "Thaggy, Emmy, and Meetie."
-
-Diogenes, the two-year old, was a Tartar when emulating his brothers.
-Alone, he was sometimes normal and a shade more like ordinary
-children.
-
-When they first began swarming in upon us, Silvia drew many lines
-which, however, the Polydores promptly effaced.
-
-"They shall not eat here, anyway," she emphatically declared.
-
-This was her last stand and she went down ingloriously.
-
-One day while we were seated at the table enjoying some of Huldah's
-most palatable dishes, Ptolemy came in. There ensued on our part a
-silence which the lad made no effort to break. Silvia and I each
-slipped him a side glance. He stood statuesque, watching us with the
-mute wistfulness of a hungry animal. There were unwonted small red
-specks high upon his cheekbones, symptoms, Silvia thought, of
-starvation.
-
-She was moved to ask, though reluctantly and perfunctorily:
-
-"Haven't you been to dinner, Ptolemy?"
-
-"Yes," he admitted quickly, "but I could eat another."
-
-Assuming that the forced inquiry was an invitation, before protest
-could be entered he supplied himself with a plate and helped
-himself to food. His need and relish of the meal weakened Silvia's
-fortifications.
-
-This opening, of course, was the wedge that let in other Polydores,
-and thereafter we seldom sat down to a meal without the presence of
-one or more members of the illustrious and famished family, who made
-themselves as entirely at home as would a troop of foraging soldiers.
-Silvia gazed upon their devouring of food with the same surprised,
-shocked, and yet interested manner in which one watches the feeding of
-animals.
-
-"I suppose he ought not to eat so many pickles," she remarked one day,
-as Emerald consumed his ninth Dill.
-
-"You can't kill a Polydore," I assured her.
-
-I never opened a door but more or less Polydores fell in. They were at
-the left of us and at the right of us, with Diogenes always under
-foot. We had no privacy. I found myself waking suddenly in the night
-with the uncomfortable feeling that Ptolemy lurked in a dark corner or
-two of my bedroom.
-
-Even Silvia's boudoir was not free from their invasion. But one door
-in our house remained closed to them. They found no open sesame to
-Huldah's apartment.
-
-"I wish she would let me in on her system," I said. "I wonder how she
-manages to keep them on the outside?"
-
-"I can tell you," confided Silvia. "Emerald and Demetrius went in one
-day and she dropped Demetrius out the window and kicked Emerald out
-the door. You know, Lucien, you are too softhearted to resort to such
-measures."
-
-"I was once," I confessed, "but I think under Polydore régime I am
-getting stoical enough to follow in Huldah's footsteps and go her one
-better."
-
-Our conversation was interrupted by the entrance of Diogenes.
-
-Silvia screamed.
-
-Turning to see what the latest Polydore perpetration might be, I saw
-that Diogenes was frothing at the mouth.
-
-"Oh, he's having a fit!" exclaimed Silvia frantically. "Call Huldah!
-Put him in a hot bath. Quick, Lucien, turn on the hot water."
-
-"Not I," I refused grimly. "Let him have a fit and fall in it."
-
-"He ain't got no fit," was the cheerful assurance of Pythagoras, as he
-sauntered in.
-
-"Your mother would have one," I told him, "if she could hear your
-English."
-
-"What is the matter with him?" asked Silvia. "Does he often foam in
-this way?"
-
-"He's been eating your tooth powder," explained Pythagoras. "He likes
-it 'cause it tastes like peppermint, and then he drank some water
-before he swallowed the powder and it all fizzed up and run out his
-mouth."
-
-"I wondered," said Silvia ruefully, "what made my tooth powder
-disappear so rapidly. What shall I do!"
-
-"Resort to strategy!" I advised. "Lock up your powder hereafter and
-fill an empty bottle with powdered alum or something worse and leave
-it around handy."
-
-"Lucien!" exclaimed my wife, who could not seem to recover from this
-latest annoyance, "I don't see how you can be so fond of children. I
-did hope--for your sake and--on account of Uncle Issachar's offer that
-I'd like to have one--but I'd rather go to the poorhouse! I'd almost
-lose your affection rather than have a child."
-
-"But, Silvia!" I remonstrated in dismay, "you shouldn't judge all by
-these. They're not fair samples. They're not children--not home-grown
-children."
-
-"I should say not!" agreed Huldah, who had come into the room. "They
-are imps--imps of the devil."
-
-I believe she was right. They had a generally demoralizing effect on
-our household. I was growing irritable, Silvia careworn. Even Huldah
-showed their influence by acquiring the very latest in slang from
-them. Once in a while to my amusement I heard Silvia unconsciously
-adopting the Polydore argot.
-
-As the result of their better nourishment at our table, the imps of
-the devil daily grew more obstreperous and life became so burdensome
-to Silvia that I proposed moving away to a childless neighborhood.
-
-"They'd find us out," said Silvia wearily, "wherever we went. Distance
-would be no obstacle to them."
-
-"Then we might move out of town, as a last resort," I suggested. "Rob
-says he thinks there is a good legal field in----"
-
-"No, Lucien," vetoed Silvia. "You've a fine practice here, and then
-there's that attorneyship for the Bartwell Manufacturing Company."
-
-My hope of securing this appointment meant a good deal to us. We were
-now living up to every cent of my income and though we had the
-necessities, it was the luxuries of life I craved--for Silvia's sake.
-She was a lover of music and we had no piano. She yearned to ride and
-she had no horse. We both had longings for a touring-car and we wanted
-to travel.
-
-"I've thought of a scheme for a little respite from the sight and
-sound of the Polydores," I remarked one day. "We'll enter them in the
-public school. There are four more weeks yet before the long summer
-vacation."
-
-"That would be too good to be true," declared Silvia. "Five or six
-hours each day, and then, too, their deportment will be so dreadful
-that they will have to stay after school hours."
-
-I thought more likely their deportment would lead to suspension, but
-forbore to wet-blanket Silvia's hopes.
-
-I made my second call upon the male head of the House of Polydore to
-recommend and urge that its young scions be sent to the public school.
-I had misgivings as to the outcome of my proposition, as the Polydore
-parents believed themselves to be the only fount of learning in the
-town. To my surprise and intense gratification, my suggestion met with
-no objections whatever. Felix Polydore referred me to his wife and
-said he would abide by her decision. I found her, of course, buried in
-books, but remembering Ptolemy's mode of gaining attention, I
-peremptorily closed the volume she was studying.
-
-My audacity attained its object and I proferred my request, laying
-great stress on the quietude she would gain thereby. She replied that
-attendance at school would doubtless do them no harm, although she
-expressed her belief that the most thorough educations were those
-obtained outside of schools.
-
-Silvia was wafted into the eighth heaven of bliss and then some, as
-the result of my diplomatic mission. Of course the task of preparing
-pupils out of the pestiferous Polydores devolved upon her, but she was
-actively aided by the eager and willing Huldah and between them they
-pushed the project that promised such an elysium with all speed. The
-prospective pupils themselves were not wildly enthusiastic over this
-curtailment of their liberty, but Huldah won the day by proposing that
-they carry their luncheon with them, promising an abundant supply of
-sugared doughnuts and small pies.
-
-Pythagoras foresaw recreation ahead in the opportunity to "lick all
-the kids," and I assumed that Ptolemy had deep laid schemes for the
-outmaneuvering of teachers, but as his left hand never made confidant
-of his right, I could not expect to fathom the workings of his mind.
-
-Early on a Monday morning, therefore, our household arose to lick our
-Polydore protégés into a shape presentable for admission to school.
-It took two hours to pull up stockings and make them stay pulled,
-tie shoestrings, comb out tangles, adjust collars and neckties, to
-say nothing of vigorous scrubbings to five grimy faces and ten
-dirt-stained hands.
-
-At last with an air of achievement Silvia corralled her round-up and
-unloaded the four eldest upon the public school and then proceeded to
-install the protesting Diogenes in a nursery kindergarten. Huldah
-stood in the doorway as they marched off and sped the parting guests
-with a muttered "Good riddance to bad rubbish."
-
-Silvia returned radiant, but her rejoicing was shortlived. She had
-scarcely taken off her hat and gloves when the four oldest came
-trooping and whooping into the house.
-
-"What's the matter?" gasped Silvia.
-
-"Got to be vaccinated," explained Ptolemy with an appreciative
-grin. Of all the Polydores he was the one who had least objected
-to scholastic pursuits, but he seemed quite jubilant at our
-discomfiture.
-
-We were somewhat reluctant to undertake the responsibility of their
-inoculation, especially after Ptolemy told us that his mother didn't
-believe in vaccination.
-
-"I'll take 'em down and get 'em vaccinated right," declared Huldah.
-"Their ma won't never notice the scars, and if one of you young uns
-blabs about it," she added, turning upon them ferociously, "I'll cut
-your tongue out."
-
-"Suppose there should be some ill result from it," said Silvia
-apprehensively.
-
-"Don't you worry!" exclaimed Huldah. "Most likely it won't amount to
-anything. It'll take some new kind of scabs to work in these brats.
-They're too tough to take anything. Come on now with me," she
-commanded, "and after it's done, I'll get you each an ice cream
-sody."
-
-Through Huldah's efficiency the vaccination was quickly accomplished
-and the children of our neighbor were reluctantly accepted by the
-school authorities.
-
-The Polydores were not parted by reason of dissimilarity of age or
-learning, as they were put into the ungraded room. To keep them there
-enrolled taxed to the utmost our ingenuity in the way of framing
-excuses for their repeated cases of tardiness and suspension.
-
-Silvia felt a little remorseful when she listened to the tale of woe
-recited to her by their teacher at a card party one Saturday
-afternoon.
-
-"She said," my wife repeated, "that yesterday Pythagoras brought two
-mice to school in his marble-bag and let them loose. She doesn't
-believe in corporal punishment, but she determined to experiment with
-its effect on Pythagoras, so she kept him and Emerald, who was
-slightly implicated, after school and sent the latter out to get a
-whip. When he came back he said: 'I couldn't find any stick, but
-here's some rocks you can throw at him,' and handed her a hat full of
-stones. This made her too hysterical to try her experiment, so she
-took away his recess for a week."
-
-"We ought to make her a present," I observed.
-
-"She said," continued Silvia, "that they had given her nervous
-prostration, but she had no time to prostrate, and if she didn't
-succeed in getting them graded by the coming fall term, she should
-accept an offer of marriage she had received from a cross-eyed man,
-and you know how unlucky that would be, Lucien!"
-
-"We may be driven to worse things than that by fall," I replied
-ruefully.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-_In Which We Take Boarders_
-
-
-Four weeks of unalloyed bliss and then the summer vacation times
-arrived, bringing joy to the heart of the Polydores and the teacher of
-the ungraded room, but deep gloom to the hearthside of the Wades.
-
-One misfortune always brings another. A rival applicant received
-the coveted attorneyship and we bade a sad farewell to piano,
-saddle-horse, automobile and journey, the furnishings to our Little
-House of Dreams.
-
-"I did want you to have a car, Lucien," sighed Silvia, regretfully,
-"and you worked so hard this last year, you need a trip. Won't you go
-somewhere with Rob--without me?"
-
-I assured her it would be no vacation without her.
-
-"Do you know, Lucien," she proposed diffidently, "I think it would be
-an excellent plan to invite Uncle Issachar to visit us. He knows no
-more about children than I do--than I did, I mean, and if he should
-see the Polydores he'd give us five thousand each for the children we
-didn't have."
-
-I wouldn't consent to this plan. I had met Uncle Issachar once. He was
-a crusty old bachelor with a morbid suspicion that everyone was
-working him for his money. I don't wonder he thought so. He had no
-other attractions.
-
-Perceiving the strength of my opposition Silvia sweetly and
-sagaciously refrained from further pressure.
-
-"We should not repine," she said. "We have health and happiness and
-love. What are pianos and cars and trips compared to such assets?"
-
-What, indeed! I admitted that things might be worse.
-
-Alas! All too soon was my statement substantiated. That night after we
-had gone to bed, I heard a taxicab sputtering away at the house next
-door.
-
-"The Polydores must have unexpected guests," I remarked.
-
-"I trust they brought no children with them," murmured Silvia
-drowsily.
-
-The next morning while we were at breakfast, the odor of June roses
-wafting in through the open window, the delicious flavor of red-ripe
-strawberries tickling our palate, and the anticipation of rice
-griddle-cakes exhilarating us, the millennium came.
-
-For the five young Polydores bore down upon us _en masse_.
-
-"Father and mother have gone away," proclaimed Ptolemy, who was always
-spokesman for the quintette.
-
-This intelligence was of no particular interest to us--not then, at
-least. We rarely saw father and mother Polydore, and they were
-apparently of no need to their offspring.
-
-Ptolemy's next announcement, however, was startling and effective in
-its dramatic intensity.
-
-"We've come over to stay with you while they are away."
-
-I laughed; jocosely, I thought.
-
-Silvia paid no heed to my forced hilarity, but ejaculated gaspingly:
-
-"Why, what do you mean!"
-
-"They have gone away somewhere," enlightened our oracle. "They went to
-the train last night in a taxi. They have gone somewhere to find out
-something about some kind of aborigines."
-
-"Which reminds me," I remarked reminiscently, "of the man who traveled
-far and vainly in search of a certain plant which, on his return, he
-found growing beside his own doorstep."
-
-Silvia paid no heed to my misplaced pleasantry. She was right--as
-usual. It was no time for levity.
-
-"I don't see," spoke my unappreciative wife, addressing Ptolemy, "why
-their absence should make any difference in your remaining at home.
-Gladys can cook your meals and put Diogenes to bed as usual."
-
-"Gladys has gone," piped Demetrius. "She left yesterday afternoon. She
-was only staying till she could get her pay."
-
-"Father forgot to get another girl in her place," informed Ptolemy,
-"and he forgot to tell mother he had forgotten until just before they
-went to the train. She said it didn't matter--that we could just as
-well come over here and stay with you."
-
-"She said," added Pythagoras, "that you were so crazy over children,
-that probably you'd be glad to have us stay with you all the time."
-
-My last strawberry remained poised in mid-air. It was quite apparent
-to me now that there was nothing funny about this situation.
-
-"Milk, milk!" whimpered Diogenes, pulling at Silvia's dress and making
-frantic efforts to reach the cream pitcher.
-
-Huldah had come in with the griddle-cakes during this avalanche of
-news.
-
-"Here, all you kids!" commanded our field marshal, as she picked up
-Diogenes, "beat it to the kitchen, and I'll give you some breakfast.
-Hustle up!"
-
-The Polydores, whose eyes were bulging with expectancy and
-semi-starvation, tumbled over each other in their eagerness to "hustle
-up and beat it to the kitchen." Our oiler of troubled waters followed,
-and there was assurance of a brief lull.
-
-"What shall we do!" I exclaimed helplessly when the door had closed on
-the last Polydore. I felt too limp and impotent to cope with the
-situation. Not so Silvia.
-
-"Do!" she echoed with an intensity of tone and feeling I had never
-known her to display. "Do! We'll do something, I am sure! I will not
-for a moment submit to such an imposition. Who ever heard of such
-colossal nerve! That father and mother should be brought back and
-prosecuted. I shall report them to the Society for the Prevention of
-Cruelty to Children. But we won't wait for such procedure. We'll
-express each and every Polydore to them at once."
-
-"I should certainly do that P.D.Q. and C.O.D.," I acquiesced, "if the
-Polydore parents could be located, but you know the abodes of
-aborigines are many and scattered."
-
-My remarks seemed to fall as flat as the flapjacks I was siruping.
-
-Silvia arose, determination in every lineament and muscle, and crossed
-the room. She opened the door leading into the kitchen.
-
-"Ptolemy," she demanded, "where have your father and mother gone?"
-
-He came forward and replied in a voice somewhat smothered by cakes and
-sirup.
-
-"I don't know. They didn't say."
-
-"We can find out from the ticket-agent," I optimistically assured
-her.
-
-"They never bother to buy tickets. Pay on the train," Ptolemy
-explained.
-
-My legal habit of counter-argument asserted itself.
-
-"We can easily ascertain to what point their baggage was checked," I
-remarked, again essaying to maintain a rôle of good cheer.
-
-But the pessimistic Ptolemy was right there with another of his
-gloom-casting retaliations.
-
-"They only took suit-cases and they always keep them in the car.
-Here's a check father said to give you to pay for our board. He said
-you could write in any amount you wanted to."
-
-"He got a lot of dough yesterday," informed Pythagoras, "and he put
-half of it in the bank here."
-
-Ptolemy handed over a check which was blank except for Felix
-Polydore's signature.
-
-"I don't see," I weakly exclaimed when my wife had closed the kitchen
-door, "why she put them off on _us_. Why didn't she trade her brats
-off for antiques?"
-
-Silvia eyed the check wistfully. I could read the unspoken thought
-that here, perhaps, was the opportunity for our much-desired trip.
-
-"No, Silvia," I answered quickly, "not for any number of blank checks
-or vacation trips shall you have the care and annoyance of those wild
-Comanches."
-
-"I know what I'll do!" she exclaimed suddenly. "I'll go right down to
-the intelligence office and get anything in the shape of a maid and
-put her in charge of the Polydore caravansary with double wages and
-every night out and any other privileges she requests."
-
-This seemed a sane and sensible arrangement, and I wended my way to
-my office feeling that we were out of the woods.
-
-When I returned home at noon, I found that we had only exchanged the
-woods for water--and deep water at that.
-
-I beheld a strange sight. Silvia sat by our bedroom window twittering
-soft, cooing nonsensical nothings to Diogenes, who was clasped in her
-arms, his flushed little face pressed close to her shoulder.
-
-"He's been quite ill, Lucien. I was frightened and called the doctor.
-He said it was only the slight fever that children are subject to. He
-thought with good care that he'd be all right in a few days."
-
-"Did you succeed in getting a cook to go to the Polydores?" I asked
-anxiously. "You'll need a nurse to go there, too, to take care of
-Diogenes."
-
-She looked at me reproachfully and rebukingly.
-
-"Why, Lucien! You don't suppose I could send this sick baby back to
-that uninviting house with only hired help in charge! Besides, I don't
-believe he'd stay with a stranger. He seems to have taken a fancy to
-me."
-
-Diogenes confirmed this belief by a languid lifting of his eyelids, as
-he feelingly patted her cheek with his baby fingers.
-
-I forebore to suggest that the fancy seemed to be mutual. Diogenes,
-sick, was no longer an "imp of the devil", but a normal, appealing
-little child. It occurred to me that possibly the care of a sick
-Polydore might develop Silvia's tiny germ of child-ken.
-
-"Keep him here of course," I agreed, "but--the other children must
-return home."
-
-"Diogenes would miss them," she said quickly, "and the doctor says his
-whims must be humored while he is sick. He is almost asleep now. I
-think he will let me put him down in his own little bed. Ptolemy
-brought it over here. Pull back the covers for me, Lucien. There!"
-
-Diogenes half opened his eyes, as she laid him in the bed and smiled
-wanly.
-
-"Mudder!" he cooed.
-
-Silvia flushed and looked as if she dreaded some expression of mirth
-from me. Relieved by my silence and a suggestion of moisture in the
-region of my eyes--the day was quite warm--she confessed:
-
-"He has called me that all the morning."
-
-"It would be a wise Polydore that knows its own parents," I observed.
-
-The slight illness of Diogenes lasted three or four days. I still
-shudder to recall the memory of that hideous period. Silvia's time and
-attention were devoted to the sick child. Huldah was putting in all
-her leisure moments at the dentist's, where she was acquiring her
-third set of teeth, and joy rode unconfined and unrestrained with our
-"boarders."
-
-Polydore proclivities made the Reign of Terror formerly known as the
-French Revolution seem like an ice cream festival. I don't regard
-myself as a particularly nervous man, but there's a limit! Their war
-whoops and screeches got on my nerves and temper to the extent of
-sending me into their midst one evening brandishing a whip and
-commanding immediate silence. I got it. Not through fear of
-chastisement, for fear was an emotion unknown to a Polydore, but from
-astonishment at so unexpected a procedure from so unexpected a source.
-Heretofore I had either ignored them or frolicked with them. Before
-they had recovered from their shock, Silvia appeared on the scene.
-
-"Diogenes," she informed them, "was not used to such unwonted quiet,
-and was fretting at the unaccustomed stillness. Would the boys please
-play Indian or some of their games again?"
-
-The boys would. I backed from the room, the whip behind me, carefully
-kept without Silvia's angle of vision. Before Ptolemy resumed his rôle
-of chief, he bestowed a knowing and maddening wink upon me.
-
-I wished that we had remained neighbor-less. I wished that the
-aborigines would scalp Felix Polydore and the writer of Modern
-Antiquities. Then we could land their brats on the Probate Court. I
-wished that this were the reign of Herod. I vowed I would backslide
-from the Presbyterian faith since it no longer included in its
-articles of belief the eternal damnation of infants. How long, O
-Catiline, would--
-
-A paralyzing suspicion flashed into the maelstrom of my vituperative
-maledictions. I rushed wildly upstairs to our combination bedroom,
-sickroom, and nursery, where Silvia sat like a guardian angel beside
-the Polydore patient.
-
-"Silvia," I shouted excitedly, "do you suppose those diabolical
-Polydore parents purposely played this trick on us? Was it a
-premeditated Polydore plan to abandon their young? And can you blame
-them for playing us for easy marks? Could any parents, Polydore, or
-otherwise, ever come back to such fiends as these?"
-
-"Hush!" she cautioned, without so much as a glance in my direction.
-"You'll wake Diogenes!"
-
-Wake Diogenes! Ye Gods! And she had also implored the brothers of
-Diogenes to continue their anvil chorus! This took the last stitch of
-starch from my manly bosom. Spiritless and spineless I bore all
-things, believed all things--but hoped for nothing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-_In Which We Take a Vacation_
-
-
-Diogenes finally convalesced to his former state of ruggedness and
-obstreperousness. He continued, however, to cling to Silvia and to
-call her "mudder." To my amusement the other children followed suit
-and she was now "muddered" by all the Polydores.
-
-"I am glad," I remarked, "that they scorn to include me in their
-adoption. I wouldn't fancy being 'faddered' by the Polydores."
-
-"You won't be," Ptolemy, appearing seemingly from nowhere, assured me.
-"We've named you stepdaddy."
-
-"If it be possible, Silvia," I implored, "let this cup pass from me."
-
-"I am going down to the intelligence office today," replied Silvia
-soothingly. "Diogenes is well enough to go home now, and I can run
-over there every evening and see that he is properly put to bed."
-
-I went down town feeling like a mule relieved of his pack.
-
-When I came home that afternoon, I found Silvia sitting on the shaded
-porch serenely sewing. A Sabbath-like stillness pervaded. Not a
-Polydore in sight or sound.
-
-"Oh!" I cried buoyantly. "The Polydores have been returned to their
-home station!"
-
-"No," she replied calmly. "They told me at the intelligence office
-that it would be absolutely impossible to persuade, bribe, or hire a
-servant to assume the charge of the Polydore place."
-
-"I suppose," I said glumly, "that Gladys gave the job a double cross.
-But will you please account for the phenomenon of the utter absence of
-Polydores at the present period? Has Huldah at last carried out her
-oft-repeated threat of exterminating the Polydore race?"
-
-"Pythagoras," explained Silvia dejectedly, "has gone to the doctor's.
-He broke his wrist this morning. Diogenes is lost and Emerald has gone
-to look for him--"
-
-"Oh, why hunt him up?" I remonstrated. "Maybe Emerald, too, will get
-lost or strayed or stolen."
-
-"Huldah," continued Silvia, "has locked Demetrius in the cellar. I am
-unable to report on Ptolemy. Huldah is half sick, but she won't go to
-bed. She said no beds in Bedlamite for her. But I have a wonderful
-plan to suggest. There is relief in sight if you will consent."
-
-"I will consent to any committable crime on the calendar," I assured
-her, "that will lead to the parting of the Polydore path from ours.
-Divulge."
-
-"We both need a change and rest. Today I heard of a most alluring,
-inexpensive, unfrequented resort called Hope Haven. Unfashionable,
-fine fishing, beautiful scenery, twelve miles from a railroad, and a
-stage stops there but once a day."
-
-"If there is such a place, we'll go there at once, though why such an
-enticing spot should be unfrequented is beyond me. Do we leave the
-Polydores to their fate, or as a town charge?"
-
-"We'll leave them to Huldah. She offered to keep them here if we'd
-take the outing. She said she'd either give them free rein or beat
-their brains out."
-
-"Then I see where the Polydores land in a juvenile jail, or else I
-return to defend Huldah for a charge of murder. We'll take our
-departure by night--tomorrow night--and like the Arabs, or the
-Polydore parents, silently steal away."
-
-"Lucien," said Silvia constrainedly, when we had arranged the details
-of our plan, "if you wouldn't object too much, I should like to take
-Diogenes with us. He hasn't missed his mother, but I really believe
-he'd be homesick without me."
-
-"Take him, of course," I said. "He's manageable away from the others.
-I plainly see you've formed the Polydore habit, and maybe a partial
-parting from the Polydores would be wiser, but we'll take Diogenes as
-an antidote against too perfect a time. But I forgot to tell you that
-I had a letter from Rob today. He plans to come and make his visit
-now and will arrive next Monday. I'll write him to join us at Hope
-Haven. You must write down again for me the route we take to get
-there."
-
-Silvia laughed hopelessly.
-
-"It never rains but it pours. I had a letter from Beth this afternoon,
-and she says she would like to come to us now. She arrives Monday.
-Here is her letter."
-
-"Great minds! It is quite a coincidence," I declared.
-
-"I thought it would be so nice to have Beth go with us to this
-resort."
-
-"It can't be done," I said. "That is, they can't both go. I am not
-going to let even Rob Rossiter slight my sister."
-
-"Still it would be a triumph to have her change his mind--or his
-heart. You know a woman-hater always succumbs to the right girl."
-
-"In books, yes!"
-
-I had been scanning Beth's letter and I laughed derisively as I read
-aloud: "'I am so curious to see those next-door children. When you
-first wrote of the "Polydores" I never once thought of them as
-children.'"
-
-"She thought exactly right," I told Silvia, and then continued
-reading: "'I supposed them to be something like tadpoles or polliwogs.
-I really think I shall enjoy them.'"
-
-"It would serve her right," I said, "to let her come and stay with
-them here in our absence. She'd get the cure for enjoyment all right.
-Rob wrote of them in the same strain and says he, too, is curious to
-meet the missing links."
-
-"Does she know," asked Silvia, "how Rob regards women?"
-
-"No; I've always made some excuse to her for not having them meet. I
-didn't want to hear her make disparaging remarks about him, and she
-is such a flirt, she'd try to draw him out and he would shut up like a
-clam."
-
-"Well, I think," decided Silvia, "that the best way out of it is to
-write Rob to postpone his visit and I will write Beth to come direct
-to Hope Haven."
-
-"Yes," I agreed, "that will be fine. She shall have charge of dear
-little Di and study the evolutions of the Polydores later."
-
-I approved this plan. So we wrote our letters and stealthily, but
-joyously, prepared for our getaway, leaving the house like thieves in
-the night and bearing the sleeping cherub, Diogenes.
-
-Silvia sighed in relief when we were aboard the train.
-
-"I feel quite chesty," she declared, "at being smart enough to outwit
-Ptolemy, the wizard."
-
-"I have the feeling," I observed forebodingly, "that they may be on
-the train or underneath it."
-
-The next morning we reached Windy Creek, the station nearest our
-destination, and continued our journey by stage.
-
-"People will think you have consoled yourself very speedily for the
-death of your first husband," I observed, as we were en route.
-
-"Why, what do you mean, Lucien?"
-
-"You know Diogenes addresses me as stepdaddy. It is the only word he
-speaks plainly."
-
-"Oh!" she exclaimed in perturbation, "I never thought of that! Well,
-we can explain to everyone, or I'll teach them to leave off the
-'step.'"
-
-"Not on your life!" I demurred.
-
-"He had better call you Lucien, then. Emerald calls his father
-'Felix.'"
-
-She at once began her tutelage of the bewildered Diogenes. After
-several stabs at pronouncing Lucien he managed to evolve "Ocean" to
-which he sometimes affixed "step" so that people to whom he was not
-explained doubtless thought me the latest thing in dances.
-
-Hope Haven was like most resorts--a place safe to shun. There was a
-low, flat stretch of woods in which a clearing had been made for a
-barn-like structure called a hotel, with rooms rough and not always
-ready. The beautiful recreation grounds mentioned in the advertising
-matter consisted of a plowed field worked over into a space designated
-as a tennis court and a grass-grown croquet ground.
-
-"Anyway," claimed Silvia hopefully, "it's a treat to see woods, water,
-and sky unconfined."
-
-She devoted the remainder of the morning to unpacking and after
-luncheon set off to explore the woods, borrowing from the landlady a
-little cart for Diogenes to ride in. My plan to go in swimming was
-delayed by my garrulous landlord.
-
-I was just starting for the lake when I heard sounds from the woods
-that alarmed the landlord but which I instantly recognized as the
-Polydore yell. A moment later I saw Silvia emerging at full speed into
-the open, drawing the cart in which Diogenes was doubled up like a
-jackknife. I hastened to meet them.
-
-"Oh, Lucien," exclaimed my wife tearfully, "we are bitten to bits!
-Just look at poor little Di!"
-
-I lifted the howling child from the cart. His face, neck, and hands
-were stringy and purplish--a cross between an eggplant and a round
-steak.
-
-"Mosquitoes!" explained Silvia. "They came in flocks and they
-advertised particularly 'no mosquitoes.'"
-
-A dour-faced guest paused in passing.
-
-"There aren't--many," she declared. "Very few, in fact, compared to
-the number of black flies, sand fleas, and jiggers. However, you'll
-find more discomfort from the poison ivy, I imagine."
-
-"Lucien," began Silvia in lament.
-
-"Never mind!" I hastened to console, "you are out of the woods now,
-and you won't have to go in again. I presume they have an antidote up
-at the house. I'll give you and Diogenes first aid and then we will
-all go down to the lake shore. You can both sit on the dock and watch
-me swim."
-
-They both brightened up, and when we reached the hotel the landlady
-provided a soothing lotion for the bites and stings.
-
-By the time we had started for the lake, the afflicted two were in
-holiday spirit again.
-
-I sought cover in a small shed called a bath-house and got into my
-swimming outfit and shot out from the dipping end of the diving-board
-into the water. When I came to the surface, Silvia, sitting beside
-Diogenes on the dock, shrieked wildly.
-
-"Oh, Lucien, there are snakes all around you! Come out, quick!"
-
-"They are only water snakes," I assured her.
-
-"I don't care what kind they are. They are snakes just the same."
-
-Diogenes instantly began to bellow for me to hand him a snake to play
-with.
-
-"He recognizes his own," I told Silvia, who, however, saw nothing
-amusing in my implication.
-
-When I came out of the water, the temperature had climbed several
-degrees and we were glad to seek the hotel parlor, which was cool and
-damp.
-
-After dinner Silvia put Diogenes to bed and we sat out on the veranda.
-I was enjoying my evening smoke and the feel of the night wind in my
-face. Silvia had just finished telling me that merely to be away from
-the Polydores was Paradise enough for her, and that she didn't care
-very much about the woods, anyway--the lake was sufficient, when her
-optimism was rudely jolted by the shrill, shudder-sending song of the
-festive mosquito.
-
-She fled into the parlor. The landlady, who seemed to have a panacea
-for all ills, suggested that she might tack mosquito netting around
-the little balcony extending from our bedroom, and then she could sit
-there in comfort when the mosquitoes bothered.
-
-"That's what the last lady that had that room did," she said, "but
-when she left, she took the netting with her. We keep a supply in our
-little store."
-
-Silvia immediately sought the hotel store and bought a quantity of the
-netting and a goodly stock of the mosquito lotion.
-
-That night as I was drifting into slumber, Silvia remarked: "Only one
-of the things I heard and read about this place is true."
-
-"Which one?" I asked between winks.
-
-"That it was unfrequented. I have seen only three guests besides us so
-far. How do they make it pay?"
-
-"The hotel is evidently only a side issue," I replied.
-
-"To what?"
-
-"To the store. Think of the quantities of lotion and netting they must
-sell in the season, which, you must know, is in the fall. The hunting,
-the landlord tells me, is very good, and his hotel is quite popular
-in October and November."
-
-"I think we had better stay, Lucien. Mosquitoes don't poison you."
-
-"Even if they did," I declared, "as a choice between them and the
-Polydores I would say, 'Oh, Mosquito, where is thy sting?'"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-_A Flirt and a Woman-Hater_
-
-
-The next morning I arose early and screened in the little birdhouse
-balcony. There was a large piece of netting left and Silvia converted
-it into a robe and headgear for the swaddling of Diogenes.
-
-"He looks like the Bride of Lammermoor," I declared, as he went forth
-in this regalia.
-
-"Well, that's preferable to looking like a pest-house patient, as he
-did yesterday."
-
-His first-aid costume didn't find favor with the landlady, as it would
-seem indicative to the newly arrived of the features of the place.
-However, before another stage-coming was due, Di had rent his garment
-sufficiently to make it useless is a "skeeter skirt."
-
-During the morning I enjoyed my solitary swim with the snakes.
-Diogenes played football with the croquet balls and bruised one of his
-toes, besides hitting the landlady's child in the eye. Silvia went for
-a walk which had been pictured in the advertisements. She speedily
-returned, her ardor dampened.
-
-"There are so many sticks and stones and rocks," she said in a
-discouraged tone, "that there was no pleasure in walking. I nearly
-sprained my ankle."
-
-"Well, the real sport we haven't tried yet," I said. "We'll get a boat
-and take Diogenes and go for a row on the lake."
-
-This proposition met with instant favor. I put Silvia and Diogenes in
-the stern of the boat and pulled for the opposite shore. My endeavors
-to gain this point were balked by Silvia's remarkable conceptions of
-the art of steering craft. She was so serenely satisfied, however,
-with the way she performed her duties and the aid she thought she was
-giving me, that I forbore to criticize.
-
-In order to achieve a few strokes in the right direction, I asked her
-to get me a cigar from an inside pocket of my coat, which was on the
-seat in front of her. Then came the blight to our bliss. She looked in
-the wrong pocket and instead of producing a cigar, she extracted two
-letters with seals unbroken.
-
-[Illustration: "Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to Beth
-and Rob."]
-
-"Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to Beth and Rob.
-Well, it is my fault. I should have known better than to give them to
-you."
-
-"The plot thickens," I replied thoughtfully.
-
-"This is Monday. They must both be at the house now. What will they
-think!"
-
-"They will think we didn't receive their letters."
-
-"Isn't it unfortunate--" she began.
-
-"No," I replied. "I am not sure but what it is a good thing. It will
-give Rob a jolt to see that girls can be as nice as Beth is, and as
-for her, she is quite able to take care of the situation where a man
-is concerned."
-
-"But we must have Beth here. Maybe you'd better telegraph her."
-
-"Huldah understands conditions. She will send Beth on here."
-
-The next morning we took Diogenes and went down the road to meet the
-stage. As it came around the curve, we saw there were three
-passengers.
-
-"Tolly!" cried Diogenes with an ecstatic whoop.
-
-"Beth!" recognized Silvia.
-
-"Rob!" I ejaculated.
-
-The stage stopped to allow us to get in.
-
-Mutual explanations followed. Ours were brief and substantiated by the
-documents in evidence.
-
-"Now," I said turning threateningly to Ptolemy, "what did you come
-here for?"
-
-"To show them," indicating Beth and Rob, "how to get here and to look
-after Di so you and mudder could enjoy your vacation," he replied
-glibly.
-
-Beth laughed mirthfully.
-
-"Check! Lucien."
-
-"Didn't Huldah warn you," I asked her, "that our whereabouts were to
-remain unknown?"
-
-"Ptolemy," she replied, "is evidently a mind reader, for he told me
-where you were before I saw Huldah."
-
-"Why, Ptolemy, how did you know where we were?" asked Silvia.
-
-"I was on top of the porch when you told stepdaddy about coming. I
-didn't tell the others. I won't bother you any. And I know how to look
-after Di. You won't send me back, mudder," he pleaded, looking
-wistfully at the foam-crested water of the little lake.
-
-I wondered mutely if Silvia could resist the appeal in the eyes of the
-neglected boy when he turned his imploring gaze to hers, and the
-delight depicted in Diogenes' eyes at "Tolly's" arrival. She could
-not.
-
-"You may stay as long as we do," she said slowly, "if you are a good
-boy and will not play too rough with Diogenes."
-
-We had reached the hotel by this time, and with a wild "ki yi"
-Ptolemy dashed for the shore, dragging the delighted Diogenes with
-him.
-
-"It's only fair to Huldah to take one more off her hands," Silvia said
-apologetically.
-
-"Them Three is what bothers me," I complained. "If they, too, follow
-after, Heaven help them! I won't."
-
-"It's a good arrangement all around," declared Rob. "I judge it takes
-a Polydore to understand his ilk, so the kids can pair off together.
-Miss Wade will be company for you, while Lucien and I go fishing."
-
-He looked keenly at Beth as he spoke, but Beth was looking demurely
-down and made no sign of having heard him.
-
-Silvia and I went with Beth to her room, and then she told her story.
-
-"Knowing Lucien's failing, I was not surprised at receiving no
-response to my letter. When I got out of the cab in front of your
-house, a wild-looking boy, very bas-relief as to eyes, and who I felt
-sure must be Ptolemy of the Polydores, appeared. As soon as he saw me
-he gave utterance to a blood-curdling yell of--'Here she is!'
-
-"In response to his call three of his understudies came on with
-headlong greeting.
-
-"'You are Beth, aren't you?' Ptolemy asked me. Then he drew me aside
-and in mysterious whispers told me where you were and that you had
-written me to join you here. He added that stepdaddy never remembered
-to mail letters. I went within and interviewed Huldah who confirmed
-his information.
-
-"Presently I saw a taxi stop before the house.
-
-"'That's him!' exclaimed Ptolemy.
-
-"'Him who?' I asked.
-
-"'Rob somebody--stepdaddy's college chum. He wrote he was coming, and
-they thought they had postponed him.'
-
-"With a sprint of speed the four Polydores surrounded your Mr.
-Rossiter, all talking at once. I came to the rescue, of course, and
-explained the situation, and we decided to follow you.
-
-"Ptolemy was promoter for the trip and suggested the advisability of
-his accompanying us as courier and future nursemaid to Diogenes. He
-was intending to come anyway, but thought he'd wait for us. He had all
-his belongings packed."
-
-"He hasn't many except those he had on," said Silvia thoughtfully.
-
-"He has some swimming trunks, two collars, two shirts, some mismated
-socks, homemade fishing tackle and a battered baseball bat. We came
-away surreptitiously to escape detection by the trio left behind. I
-knew you wouldn't welcome his presence--but he said he was coming
-anyway, so we thought we might as well bring him and express him
-back."
-
-After visiting with Beth for a few moments, Silvia and I withdrew to
-talk matters over confidentially.
-
-"All's well that ends well," I quoth.
-
-"It hasn't ended yet," reminded Silvia. "I trust Ptolemy didn't reveal
-what you said about Rob's being a woman-hater and Beth a flirt."
-
-Ptolemy conveniently appeared just then, as he generally did in the
-midst of private interviews. Silvia asked him if he had repeated those
-remarks to Beth or Rob.
-
-"Why, no," he said. "I knew you didn't want her to know, because
-stepdaddy said so, and I thought he wouldn't like to be called that,
-and I wasn't going to give Beth away to him."
-
-"You're all right, Ptolemy!" I exclaimed, for the first time awarding
-him approbation.
-
-Out on the veranda we met Rob.
-
-"Say, those Polydores certainly have the punch and pep," he declared.
-"I'd like to have fetched the whole bunch along with me."
-
-"If you had," I replied dryly, "our life's friendship would have died
-on the spot."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-_In Which Nothing Much Happens_
-
-
-"Why Hope Haven?" asked Rob reflectively, when he had taken inventory
-of the possibilities of the resort.
-
-"Because," sighed Silvia, "so many hopes--vacation hopes--must have
-been buried here."
-
-Rob was of an investigating turn of mind, however, and he had heard
-from a native of H. H., as he had abbreviated the place, that there
-was a smaller lake, abounding in fish, farther on through the forest.
-It was so strongly fortified, however, by the formidable battalions of
-sharp-shooting insects that but few fishermen had ever been able to
-lay siege to it.
-
-Rob and I being poison proof decided to try our luck and pitch camp
-for a few days on the shores of this hidden treasure. As we had to
-send to town by the stage driver for the necessary supplies, we
-remained in H. H. the remainder of the day.
-
-We at once paired off in Noah's most approved style as Rob had
-outlined. Beth and Ptolemy went up shore, sticks and stones and rocks
-being no obstacles to their feet. Rob and I sought the society of the
-snakes, while Silvia and Diogenes, mosquito-netted, watched a game of
-croquet.
-
-We dined without the pleasure of the society of Ptolemy and Diogenes,
-who had been invited to sit at the table with the landlady's
-children. I might state, incidentally, that the invitation was never
-repeated.
-
-Beth was quite excited over her walk.
-
-"Ptolemy and I," she boasted, "made more of a discovery than Mr.
-Rossiter did. We found a haunted house, a perfectly haunted house."
-
-"I am not surprised," declared Silvia. "You couldn't expect any other
-kind of a house in such a region."
-
-"Where is it?" I asked, "and what is it haunted by?"
-
-"Insects," suggested Silvia.
-
-"You go around shore about two miles, only it's farther, as you have
-to make so many ups and downs over the rocks. Then you leave the shore
-and go through a low marshy stretch, sort of a Dismal Swamp, and then
-up a hill. After Ptolemy and I climbed to the top, we looked down and
-saw, hidden in a clump of lonely looking poplars, a small, rudely
-built house. We went down to explore and had hard work making our way
-through a thick growth of--everything. We crawled under some tangled
-vines and came up on the steps. The house was vacant, although there
-were a few old pieces of furniture--a couple of cots, a cook-stove,
-table, and chairs.
-
-"On our way home we met a woman who gave us a history of the house. An
-old miser lived there long ago. One night he was robbed and murdered,
-and his ghost still haunts the place. No one ventures in its vicinity,
-and she said most likely we were the first people who had gone there
-since the tragedy. She told us of a nearer way to reach it. You take
-the road to Windy Creek, and about two miles below here, turn into a
-lane and then go through a grove and over a hill."
-
-"You don't really believe the story, that is, the ghost part of it?"
-asked Rossiter.
-
-"N--o," allowed Beth. "Still, I'd like to. It makes it interesting.
-Ptolemy and I are going down there some night to see if we can find
-the ghost."
-
-"You won't see one," I assured her. "Ptolemy's presence would be
-sufficient to keep even a ghost in the background."
-
-"Ptolemy's a peach," declared Beth emphatically.
-
-"If he were older, you wouldn't think so," said Rob.
-
-"Why not?" asked Beth in surprise, or seeming surprise.
-
-He smiled enigmatically, and irrelevantly asked her if she wouldn't
-really be afraid to go to the haunted house at night with only Ptolemy
-for protection.
-
-She assured him she shouldn't be afraid of a ghost if she saw one, and
-that she shouldn't be afraid to go alone.
-
-Throughout the evening, which we spent in rowing, walking, and later
-at a little impromptu supper, I was interested in observing the
-puzzling behavior of Beth and my chum. I had expected that he would
-avoid her as much as possible and speak to her only when common
-politeness made conversation obligatory, and that she, a born
-coquette, would seek to add his scalp to her collection. Instead, to
-my surprise, their rôles were reversed. He appeared interested in her
-every remark and looked at her often and intently. He was quite
-assiduous in his attentions which, strange to say, she discouraged,
-not with the deep design of a flirt to increase his ardor, but with a
-calm firmness that admitted of no doubt as to her feelings.
-
-"Your sister," he remarked to me as we were walking down to the lake
-for a swim just before going to bed, "is a very unusual type."
-
-"Not at all!" I assured him. "Beth is the true feminine type which you
-have never taken the trouble to know."
-
-"Oh, come, Lucien! Not feminine, you know. Though she is inconsistent."
-
-I resented the imputation hotly, but he only laughed and said that he
-guessed it was true that a man didn't understand the women in his
-family as well as an outsider did.
-
-"You think," I said, "just because she says she isn't afraid of
-ghosts--"
-
-"Not at all," he denied. "That wasn't the reason, but--I like her
-type, though I always supposed I wouldn't. It is a new one to
-me--anyway. I didn't think so young a girl as she--"
-
-Our discussion was cut short by the inevitable, ever-present Ptolemy,
-who came running up to us, clad in about four inches of swimming
-trunks.
-
-"Why aren't you in bed?" I demanded.
-
-"I was in bed, but it was so warm I couldn't sleep, and I went to the
-window and saw you coming down here, so I thought I'd come, too."
-
-I repeated Rob's remarks to Silvia when I returned to our room, and
-she betrayed Beth's confidences in regard to Rob.
-
-"She says she would like him if it were not for one trait that she
-dislikes more than any other in a man and that it was sufficient in
-her estimation to counterbalance all his good qualities."
-
-"What can she mean?" I asked bewildered. "I don't see a flaw in Rob,
-except for his being a woman-hater, and he surely hasn't betrayed that
-fact to her, judging from his manner toward her. I think he is making
-an effort to be nice to her on my account, and she doesn't appreciate
-it."
-
-"I asked her what the flaw was, and she flushed and said she couldn't
-tell me."
-
-"Well, I guess all around it is a good thing we are going off on our
-fishing expedition. I don't want my friend turned down by my sister,
-and I don't want my friend calling my sister a new type and
-unfeminine."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-_Ptolemy Disappears and I Visit a Haunted House_
-
-
-When Rob and I, with our camping outfit, drove off through the woods,
-Ptolemy's eyes followed us so enviously and he pleaded so eloquently
-to be taken with us that Rob was actually on the point of considering
-it.
-
-"See here, Rob Rossiter!" I exclaimed, "This is my vacation and all I
-came to this God-forsaken place for was to escape the Polydores. If he
-goes, I stay. You know I've always tried to meet issues, but this
-antique family has got me going."
-
-"All right," he yielded.
-
-After a drive of a few miles we came to the lake and pitched our tent.
-Two days of ideal camp life followed. The weather was fine, Rob was a
-first-class cook, and the sport was beyond our most optimistic
-expectation. We landed enough of the Friday food to satisfy the most
-fastidious fishing fiend, and the mosquitoes, finding we were
-impervious to their stings, finally let us alone.
-
-I forgot all business cares and disappointments, yes, even the
-Polydores; but on the morning of the third day Rob began to show signs
-of restlessness and spoke of the likelihood of my wife's being
-lonely.
-
-"Not with Beth and Ptolemy in calling distance," I told him.
-
-"But they will be off together," he replied, "and your wife will be
-alone with that _enfant terrible_. I fancy, too, that your sister
-isn't exactly a companion for your wife."
-
-"Well, that shows how little you know her. She and Silvia are great
-friends."
-
-"Oh, yes, of course they are friendly, but I mean their tastes are so
-different, and they are so unlike. Your sister doesn't care for
-domesticity."
-
-"Sure she does. You have turned the wrong searchlight on Beth. If you
-knew her, you'd like her."
-
-"I do like her," he declared. "It's too bad she--"
-
-He stopped abruptly and quickly changed the conversation. In spite of
-my efforts to renew the controversy about Beth, he refused to return
-to the subject.
-
-[Illustration: He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us.]
-
-In the afternoon, when I was doing a little scale work preparatory to
-cooking, a messenger from the hotel drove up with a note from Silvia
-which I read aloud:
-
-"Ptolemy has been missing for twenty-four hours. We are in hopes he
-has joined you. If not, what shall I do?"
-
-"We'll go back with you," said Rob to the man. "Just lend a hand here
-and help us pull up these tent stakes."
-
-"What's Ptolemy to me or I to him?" I asked with a groan, "can't we
-give him absent treatment?"
-
-"You're positively inhuman, Lucien," protested Rob. "The boy may be at
-the bottom of the lake."
-
-"Not he! He was born to be hung."
-
-All this time, however, I had been active in making preparations for
-departure, as I knew that Silvia would feel that we were responsible
-for Ptolemy's safety, and her anxiety was reason enough for me to
-hasten to her.
-
-Rob was quite jubilant on our return trip and declared that the fish
-came too easily and too plentifully to make it real sport, but I felt
-that I had another grudge to be charged up to the fateful family.
-
-We found Silvia pale from anxiety, Beth in tears, and Diogenes loudly
-clamoring for "Tolly." We learned that the afternoon before, Silvia
-and Beth had gone with the landlady for a ride, leaving Diogenes in
-Ptolemy's care, but on their return at dinner time, Diogenes was
-playing alone in the sandpile.
-
-Nothing was thought of Ptolemy's absence until bedtime, and they had
-then sent out searching parties to the woods and the lake shores.
-Finally it occurred to Beth that he might have gone to join Rob and
-me, so they sent the messenger to investigate.
-
-"He must be lost in the woods somewhere," said Beth tearfully, "and
-he will starve to death."
-
-Rob actually touched her hand in his distress at her grief.
-
-"Ptolemy is too smart to get lost anywhere," I declared. "He knows
-fully as much about woodcraft as he does about every other kind of
-craft. He's one of his mother's antiquities personified. But haven't
-you been able to find anyone who saw him after you went for your
-ride?"
-
-"No; even the hotel help were all out on the lake."
-
-"And he left Diogenes here, absolutely unguarded?"
-
-"Well!" admitted Silvia, "he tied Diogenes to a tree near the
-sandpile."
-
-"Then he must have gone away with malice aforethought," I said,
-"and Diogenes is the only one who knows anything about his last
-movements."
-
-I lifted the child to my knee, and speaking more gently to him than I
-had ever done, I asked:
-
-"Di, did you and Tolly play in the sandpile yesterday?"
-
-He was quite emphatic in his affirmative.
-
-"Well, tell Ocean: Did Tolly go away and leave you?"
-
-"Tolly goed away," he confirmed.
-
-"Oh, Lucien!" protested Beth, laughing. "He's too little to know what
-you are talking about or to remember."
-
-"Lucien's ruling passion strong in death," murmured Rob. "He can't
-help cross-examining the cradle even!"
-
-"Which way," I resumed, ignoring these interruptions, "did Tolly
-go--that way?" pointing towards the woods.
-
-"No! Tolly goed--" and he trailed off into his baby jargon which no
-one could understand, but he pointed to the lake.
-
-"What did he say when he went away; when he tied the rope around
-you?"
-
-"Bye-bye."
-
-"What else?"
-
-Diogenes' intentions to be communicative were certainly all right, but
-not a word was intelligible. As he kept picking at his dress and
-pointing to it, I finally prompted:
-
-"Did Tolly pin a paper to Di's dress?"
-
-"'m--h'--m."
-
-"Bravo, Lucien!" applauded Rob. "They say you can induce a witness to
-admit anything."
-
-"What did Di do with the paper?" I continued.
-
-The word he wanted evidently being beyond his vocabulary and speech,
-he made a rotary motion with his fist. The gesture conveyed nothing to
-our minds, but was instantly recognized and interpreted by the
-landlady's little girl, who said he meant a windmill such as she had
-sometimes made for him.
-
-"What did Di do with the windmill?" I asked.
-
-He pointed to the sandpile, which I investigated and found a stick
-planted therein. I pulled it up and saw a pin sticking in the end of
-it. Further excavation revealed a crumpled piece of paper on which was
-written in Ptolemy's round hand:
-
- "Want to see kids. Am going home. Tell Beth I bet she dasent go to
- the haunted house alone at night. Ptolemy."
-
-"Poor Huldah!" sighed Silvia.
-
-"I thought he was having the time of his life here," said Rob.
-
-"He was sore," declared Beth, "because you and Lucien wouldn't take
-him with you on the fishing trip. He was moping by himself all the
-morning."
-
-"Trying to think up some new deviltry," I theorized, "to make us feel
-bad."
-
-"No," asserted Silvia, "I think he really misses the boys. The
-Polydores, for all their scrappings, are very clannish. But how do you
-suppose he got down to Windy Creek?"
-
-"He could catch plenty of rides along the way, but what is puzzling me
-is how he got the money to pay his fare."
-
-"He seemed very well provided with cash," informed Rob. "I tried to
-pay for his ticket down here, but he insisted on buying it himself."
-
-Silvia worried so much about what might happen to him en route that
-after dinner I motored to Windy Creek with some tourists who had
-stopped at the hotel in passing.
-
-I called up long distance and after some delay got in communication
-with our house. Ptolemy himself answered and assured me he had arrived
-all "hunky doory", that Huldah, who was out on an errand, was "hunky
-doory", and that the kids were all "hunky doory." In fact, his
-cheerful tone indicated that the whole universe was in the beatific
-state described by his expressive adjective.
-
-I was really ripping mad at his taking French leave and so giving
-Silvia cause for her anxiety, but I forbore to reprimand him by word
-or tone, lest he get even by "coming back" literally. I did tell him
-how the loss of the note for twenty-four hours had caused a general
-excitement, but he felt no remorse for his share in the situation,
-blaming Diogenes entirely and bidding me "punch the kid's face" for
-unpinning the note.
-
-On my return from Windy Creek I was fortunate enough to fall in with a
-farmer who lived near the hotel. He was driving some sort of a machine
-he called an _autoo_. He was an old-timer in the vicinity and related
-the past, present, and pluperfect of all the residents on the route. I
-had a detailed and vivid account of the midnight visitor of the
-haunted house.
-
-"I'd jest naturally like to see what there is to it," he said. "Not
-that I am afeerd at all, only it's sort of spooky to go to a lonesome
-place like that all alone. If I could git some one to go with me, I'd
-tackle the job, but I vum if every time I perpose it to anyone they
-don't make some excuse."
-
-"I'm on," I declared. "I don't dread ghosts near as much as I do some
-living folks I know."
-
-"Right you air," chuckled the old man. "If you say so we'll go right
-off now jest as sure as shootin'. We may be ghosts ourselves
-tomorrow."
-
-I assured him I was quite ready to encounter the ghost, so he
-jubilantly turned the machine from the road into a grass-grown lane.
-We zigzagged for some distance and then got out and went on foot
-through a grove. The moon and the stars were half veiled by some
-light, misty clouds, so that the little house didn't show up very
-clearly, but as we came to the top of the hill, we saw something that
-shook even my well-behaved nerves.
-
-From a window in the roof-room extended a white arm and hand, with
-index finger pointing threateningly and directly toward us.
-
-My farmer friend turned quickly and fled toward the grove. I followed
-fleetly. "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken him.
-
-"I just happened to remember," he explained gaspingly, "that there's a
-pesky autoo thief in these 'ere parts. Bukins had his stole jest last
-night."
-
-The lights on his machine must have reassured him as to its safety
-when we emerged from the woods into the open, but he didn't lessen his
-speed. We got in the "autoo" and soon said good-by to the lane. At one
-time I believed it was good-by to everything, but at last we gained
-the highway, right side up.
-
-"Well!" I said, when we were running normally again on terra firma,
-"that was some little old ghost,--beckoned to us to come right in,
-too!"
-
-"You seen it then!" he exclaimed excitedly. "I'm mighty glad I had an
-eyewitness. Folks wouldn't believe me."
-
-"They probably won't believe me, either," I assured him. "I am a
-lawyer."
-
-"You don't tell me! Well, it did jest give me a start for a minute.
-I'd like to hev gone in and seen it nigh to, if I hadn't happened to
-think of this 'ere autoo. You see I ain't got it all paid for yet. I'm
-jest clean beat. You don't mind my takin' a leetle pull at a stone
-fence, do you?"
-
-"I guess not," I assented somewhat dubiously, however. "That was a
-rail fence we took a pull at back in the lane, wasn't it? Of course,
-if we shouldn't happen to clear the stone fence as well as we did the
-rail fence, it might be more disastrous."
-
-"Oh, land!" he said with a cackling laugh, "I ain't meanin' that kind
-of a fence. I mean the kind you--Say! You ain't one of them
-teetotalers, be you?"
-
-"Only in theory," I replied, "but this stone fence drink is a new one
-on me. What's it like?"
-
-He stopped the "autoo" and pulled a bottle from an inner pocket.
-
-"You kin taste it better than I kin tell it," he declared. "Take a
-pull--a condumned good one."
-
-I rarely imbibed, confining my indulgences to the demands of
-necessity, but I thought that the flight of Ptolemy, the ghostly
-encounter, and my Mazeppa--wild ride all combined to constitute an
-occasion adequate to call for a bracer in the shape of a stone fence,
-or anything he might produce.
-
-I took what I considered a "condumned good one" from the bottle and it
-nearly strangled me, but I followed the aged stranger's advice to take
-another to "cure the chokes" caused by the first one. On general
-principles I took a third and then reluctantly returned him the
-bottle.
-
-"Here's over the moon," he jovially exclaimed as he proceeded to make
-my attempt at a "condumned good one" appear most niggardly.
-
-"May I ask," I inquired when my feeling of nerve-tense strain had
-vanished, and I felt as if I were treading thin air, "just what is in
-a stone fence?"
-
-"Well, what do you think?" he asked slyly.
-
-"I think the very devil is in it," I replied.
-
-"Well, mebby," he admitted. "It's two-thirds hard cider and one-third
-whisky. It's a healthy, hearting drink and yet it has a leetle come
-back to it--a sort o' kick, you know. But this is where I live,"
-pointing to a farmhouse well back from the road, "but I am goin' to
-run you on to your tavern though."
-
-The hotel was dark, save for a light in my room. I invited him in, but
-he was anxious to "git hum and tell the folks", so I gave him some
-cigars and went in to "tell my folks."
-
-I found them in the room waiting for me. That is, Beth was in the
-room, sitting by the table and pretending to read. Silvia and Rob were
-out in the little balcony. They came inside as soon as they heard my
-voice.
-
-"Oh, was he there?" asked Silvia anxiously.
-
-"Yes," I replied. "He answered the telephone himself."
-
-I was feeling quite exhilarated by this time. My wife looked a perfect
-vision to me. Beth, I thought, was some sister, and Rob the best
-fellow in the world. Even the Polydores at long range, and under the
-ameliorating influence of stone fences, seemed like fine little
-fellows--rather active and strenuous, to be sure, but only as all
-wholesome children should be.
-
-Silvia was relieved at the announcement of Ptolemy's safety, but very
-much disappointed that I did not succeed in interviewing Huldah and
-finding out something about domestic affairs.
-
-I assured her that everything was "hunky doory" at home, praised the
-telephone service, my expedition to town, and painted my return ride
-with "the honest farmer" in glowing terms. I was suddenly halted in my
-eulogy by becoming aware of an amazed expression on my wife's
-countenance, a most suspicious glance in Beth's wide-open eyes, and a
-very knowing wink from Rob.
-
-"Lucien," said Silvia severely, "I believe you've been drinking. I
-certainly smell spirits."
-
-"Maybe you do," I replied jocosely. "I certainly saw spirits. I went
-to the haunted house on my way back."
-
-"I thought Windy Creek was a dry town," remarked Rob innocently.
-
-"It is," I assured him, "but I rode home with an old man--a farmer."
-
-"Does he run a blind pig?" asked Rob.
-
-"It was more like a pig in a poke," I replied.
-
-"Lucien," exclaimed Silvia reproachfully, "you told me two years ago,
-after that banquet to the Bar, that you were never going to touch wine
-or whisky again. What did that horrid old man give you?"
-
-"A stone fence. That's what he said it was anyway."
-
-"It's a new one on me," commented Rob.
-
-"There was a new toast went with it. He drank to 'over the moon.'"
-
-"You must have gone there all right and taken all the shine from the
-moon-man," said Rob.
-
-"Lucien," asked Beth, "did you really go to that haunted house?"
-
-Again I was moved to eloquence, and I told of the farmer's yearning,
-the fulfillment, the beckoning hand and the beating of the retreat at
-length.
-
-"Are you sure," asked Rob, "that you didn't take that stone fence
-before you visited the haunted house?"
-
-"I know," I replied, loftily, "that a lawyer's word is worthless, but
-seeing is believing. We will all visit the haunted house tomorrow
-night and I'll make good on ghosts."
-
-This plan was unanimously approved, and then Silvia suggested that she
-thought I had better go to bed. I had no particular objection to doing
-so.
-
-"Lucien," she said solemnly, when we were alone, "I want you to
-promise me something. I want you to give me your word that you will
-never take another stone wall."
-
-I did this most readily.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-_In Which We See Ghosts_
-
-
-The next morning Rob tried earnestly and vainly to drive a wedge in
-Beth's good graces, but she treated him with a casual tolerance that
-finally put him in an ill humor which he took out on me with many a
-gibe at my "stone fence spirit."
-
-Men of my profession who have to deal with facts rather than fancy are
-not believers in the supernatural. I was sure that the extending arm
-and the beckoning finger were there, but belonged to no ghost. It
-might have been a curtain blowing out the window or a fake of some
-kind. But I knew that unless there was some kind of a showing in a
-ghostly way that night, I should never hear the last of my stone fence
-indulgence, so I resolved to make a preliminary visit alone by
-daylight and rig up something white to substantiate my spectral
-narrative.
-
-I didn't find an opportunity to escape unseen until late in the
-afternoon, when I went, ostensibly, for a solitary row on the lake.
-
-I landed and came by a circuitous route to the haunted house. The calm
-security of sunshine, of course, prevented any shivers of anticipation
-such as I had experienced the night before. On passing one of the
-windows on my way to the front entrance, I glanced in, stopped in
-sheer fright, stooped and backed to the next window, which was
-screened by a labyrinth of vines through which I peered. I am sure I
-lost my Bloom of Youth complexion for a few moments. I babbled
-aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull together and beat it to
-the lake with as much speed as my farmer friend had shown in his
-retreat. I made the boat and the hotel in double quick time.
-
-[Illustration: I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull
-together and beat it to the lake]
-
-I felt no misgivings now as to the promise of a sensation that night,
-and that sustaining thought was all that propped my flagging spirits
-throughout the day, but I resolved to keep my little party at safe
-distance from the house.
-
-"Say we keep our nocturnal noctambulation under our hats," proposed
-Rob.
-
-When this proposition was translated to Silvia, she entirely approved,
-so, committing Diogenes to the Polydores' Providence, we left the
-hotel at half past eleven for a row on the lake by moonlight.
-
-When we descended the slope leading to the House of Mystery, I
-cautioned silence and a "safety-first" distance.
-
-"Ghosts are easily vanished," I informed them. "They don't seek
-limelight, and I want you to be sure to see this one."
-
-As we came to the untrodden undergrowth we heard a weird, wailing
-sound that would have curdled my blood had I not glanced in the window
-that afternoon and so, in a measure, been prepared for this--or
-anything.
-
-"Look!" whispered Beth. "The arm!"
-
-Silvia looked at the roof window and with a stifled shriek of terror
-turned and fled up the hill, Rob chivalrously pursuing her.
-
-Beth was pale, but game.
-
-"What can it be, Lucien?" she whispered. "Do we dare go in to see?"
-
-"I wouldn't, Beth," I vetoed quickly. "Maybe some lunatic or
-half-witted person has taken up abode here."
-
-"Lucien!" called Rob peremptorily.
-
-I turned quickly. He was at the top of the hill, half supporting
-Silvia. I ran toward them, followed by Beth.
-
-"It isn't a ghost, of course, Silvia," I said soothingly, and then
-repeated my supposition about the lunatic.
-
-"Of course I don't believe in ghosts," said Silvia shudderingly, "but
-it's an awful place and those sounds are like those I have heard in
-nightmares."
-
-"We'll hurry back to the hotel and forget all about it," I urged.
-
-I rowed the boat and Silvia sat opposite me. Beth and Rob were in the
-stern and I had to listen to their conversation.
-
-"Of course I felt a little creepy," she admitted, "but then I like to
-feel that way, and I wasn't afraid."
-
-"No, of course, you wouldn't be," he replied somewhat ironically.
-"You're the new woman type."
-
-"No, I am not," she denied. "I wish I were. Silvia's really the
-strong-minded type."
-
-"She didn't act the part when she saw the ghost," he retorted.
-
-"It's very unusual for her nerves to give way. Silvia's quite a
-surprise to me this summer, but I think those funny Polydores have
-upset her more than Lucien realizes."
-
-I wondered if she were right, and once again murderous wishes toward
-the Polydores entered my brain, and I made renewed vows about
-disposing of them on our return home.
-
-One thing, however, had been accomplished by our expedition. Silvia
-was more lenient in her judgment on my indulgences of the preceding
-night.
-
-By the time we pulled in at the landing, Silvia had recovered her
-equilibrium.
-
-"Lucien, what the devil do you suppose was in that house?" asked Rob,
-when we were putting up the boat.
-
-"Loons and things," I allowed.
-
-"But what was that white arm?"
-
-"Some fake thing the village wag has put up to scare the natives."
-
-Next morning's stage brought some new arrivals, and among them were
-two college students who at once were claimed by Beth. She played
-tennis with one and later went rowing with the other. Rob smoked and
-sulked, apart.
-
-My farmer friend had been garrulous and rumors of the ghost and the
-haunted house had come to the ears of the hotel inmates, thereby
-causing a pleasurable stir of excitement. A number of them announced
-their intention of visiting the place. They asked me to be their
-guide, but I refused.
-
-"It was interesting," I said, "but I think it would be a bore to see
-the same ghost twice."
-
-"I am sure I don't care to go again," was Silvia's emphatic reply
-when asked to be one of the party.
-
-"Ghosts are scientifically admitted and explained," growled Rob, "so I
-don't see anything to be excited about."
-
-Beth accepted the offer of escort of one of the students, so Silvia,
-Rob, and I remained at home. The night was quite cool, and we played
-cards in our room. When the party returned, Beth joined us. She looked
-rather out of sorts.
-
-"Oh, yes," she replied in answer to Silvia's eager inquiry. "We saw
-the ghost. I don't know whether it was the same little old last
-night's ghost or a new one. He showed more of himself this time
-though. He had two arms and a veiled head out of the window. As soon
-as our crowd glimpsed it, they all fled quicker than we did last
-night. Those two students fell all over each other and left me in the
-lurch."
-
-"What could you expect," asked Rob, "from such ladylike things? They
-ought to be kept in the confines of the croquet ground. If they are a
-fair specimen of the kind you have met, no wonder you--"
-
-[Illustration: The landlady intears waylaid me]
-
-He stopped abruptly.
-
-"No wonder what?" she asked quickly.
-
-"Nothing," he replied glumly.
-
-When I came down to breakfast the next morning, the landlady in tears
-waylaid me.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Wade," she began in trouble-telling tone, "this affair about
-the ghost is going to hurt my business. Some of those folks say they
-are going home, and they will tell others and--"
-
-"I'll fix the ghost story. Just leave it to me!" I assured her
-optimistically, as we went into the dining-room.
-
-There were only enough guests to fill one long table, and every one
-was excitedly dissecting the ghost.
-
-I took my seat and also the floor.
-
-"I hate to dispel your illusions," I said cheerfully, "but the fact
-is, I made a daylight investigation of the haunted house. First I
-looked in the window and I saw--"
-
-"Oh, what did you see?" chorused a dozen or more expectant voices.
-
-"A lot of--mice."
-
-"Oh!" came in disappointed and skeptical tones.
-
-"But, the ghost, Mr. Wade?"
-
-"Yes! The arms and the head?"
-
-"A fake figure put up by some practical joker for the purpose of
-frightening timid people and encouraging the credulous. I didn't want
-to spoil your little picnic, so I kept still."
-
-"Those sounds, Lucien!" reminded Silvia.
-
-"Were from a cat chorus. They were prowling about the house."
-
-"You're sure some lawyer, Mr. Wade," doubtfully complimented my
-grateful landlady, as we went out of the room after breakfast.
-
-"Lucien," asked Rob _sotto voce_, joining me on the veranda, "why
-don't the cats you speak of catch that lot of mice?"
-
-Fortunately Beth came up to us, and I didn't have to explain.
-
-"Oh!" she said with a shudder. "I'll never go near that awful place!
-I'd rather see a perfectly good ghost, or a loon, or a lunatic any day
-than a mouse."
-
-"You're surely not afraid of a mouse!" exclaimed Rob.
-
-"Why not?" she asked coolly as she walked on.
-
-"I told you she was feminine," I reminded him.
-
-He shook his head.
-
-"I can't understand," he remarked, "why a girl who is afraid of mice
-should be--"
-
-"You don't understand anything about women," I interrupted.
-
-"You're right, Lucien. I don't, but your sister is surely the greatest
-enigma of them all."
-
-I rented the stone fence farmer's "autoo" and took Silvia and
-Diogenes to a neighboring town that afternoon. We didn't get back to
-the hotel until dinner time.
-
-"What have you been up to all day, Rob?" I asked.
-
-"Numerous things. For one, I strolled down to the haunted house."
-
-"What did you see?" cried the women.
-
-"I saw four--"
-
-"Ghosts?" asked Beth.
-
-I shot him a warning glance.
-
-"Young tomcats playing tag with the mice."
-
-I corralled Rob outside after dinner.
-
-"For Heaven's sake!" I implored. "Don't disturb Silvia's peace of
-mind. Did you go inside?"
-
-"No; I was sorely tempted to, but refrained out of deference to the
-evident wishes of my host, but really, Lucien, we should--"
-
-"I have only ten more days off, Rob. Don't make any unpleasant
-suggestions."
-
-"I won't," he said promptly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-_In Which We Make Some Discoveries_
-
-
-Diogenes, who, for a Polydore, had been quite placid since Ptolemy's
-departure, caused a commotion by disappearing the next morning. As he
-was possessed of a deep desire to go in the lake and get a little
-snake, he had been, when not under strict surveillance, tied to a tree
-with enough leeway in the length of rope to allow him to play
-comfortably.
-
-By some means he had managed to work himself loose from the rope and
-had evidently followed Ptolemy's example. I suggested calling up
-Huldah and asking if he had arrived yet, but I met with such chilling
-glances from Silvia and Beth that I got busy and organized searching
-parties, who reluctantly and lukewarmly engaged in the pursuit. Rob
-and I took the shore. After we had walked some little distance, we met
-a woman and stopped for inquiry. She said she had seen a child of
-about two years, clad in a blue and white striped dress and a big hat,
-going over the hill in company with a boy of about eight.
-
-"Are you going on to the hotel?" I asked.
-
-On her replying that she was, I told her to inform them that she had
-met me and that the lost child was located.
-
-Rob and I then kept on over the hill, and when we neared the haunted
-house, we heard hair-raising sounds.
-
-"If I hadn't been here before," remarked Rob, "I should think that
-Sitting Bull had been reincarnated and was reviving the warrior war
-whoops."
-
-We paused on the threshold. A human windmill of whirling legs and
-arms--Polydore legs and arms--flashed before our eyes.
-
-"Stop!" I thundered.
-
-The flying wheel of arms and legs slacked, ran a few times, then
-slowly stopped, and the Polydore quintette assumed normal positions.
-
-"Halloa, stepdaddy!"
-
-A landslide composed of Emerald, Pythagoras, and Demetrius started
-toward me. I side-stepped and let Rob receive the charge.
-
-"Line them up now, for attention," I directed Ptolemy. "I have
-something to say to you all."
-
-Ptolemy knocked the three terrors up against the wall, and I picked up
-Diogenes, who had a bump as big as an egg on his head.
-
-"I told you," said Ptolemy to Pythagoras, "that if you brought Di down
-here they'd get on our trail. He wanted to see Di," he explained, "so
-he sneaked over there and got him."
-
-"We were wise before today," I informed him. "I saw you all day before
-yesterday."
-
-"And I discovered you yesterday," added Rob.
-
-Ptolemy looked rather crestfallen, and then, seeming to consider that
-my discovery had been succeeded by inaction, which must mean
-non-interference, he heartened up.
-
-"Now," I demanded, "I want you to begin at the time you left the hotel
-and tell me everything and why you did it."
-
-"I wasn't having any fun after you two went off camping," he began
-lugubriously. "I couldn't hang around women folks all the time. I
-wanted boys to play with."
-
-I saw a gleam of sympathy and understanding come into Rob's eyes.
-
-"A harem of hens," he muttered.
-
-"I knew we could all have a grand time here and not be a bother to
-mudder, or Huldah or anyone, and it seemed too bad for this nice house
-to be empty, and no one anywhere else wanting us."
-
-I felt my first gleam of pity for a Polydore and wiped Diogenes'
-dirty, moist face carefully with my handkerchief.
-
-"So I went home and told Huldah I had come after the boys to take them
-back with me."
-
-"And told her we had sent for them?" I asked sharply.
-
-He flushed slightly at my tone.
-
-"No; I didn't tell her so. She got that idea herself, and I didn't
-tell her different."
-
-"When did you come?"
-
-"I came the same night that you telephoned, and took the train you and
-mudder came on. We got to Windy Creek in the morning. We fetched all
-our stuff here from home. I bought it."
-
-"Right here," I said, "tell me where you got the money to buy your
-stuff and to pay your fare here."
-
-"I cashed father's check."
-
-"I didn't know he left you one."
-
-"He didn't, except the one he gave me to give you for our board. You
-told mudder you wouldn't touch it, and it seemed a pity not to have it
-working."
-
-Visions of a future Polydore doing the chain and ball step flashed
-before my vision.
-
-"And they cashed it for you at the bank?"
-
-"Sure. Father always has me cash his checks for him."
-
-"What amount did you fill in?" I asked enviously.
-
-"One hundred dollars. There's a lot more in the bank, too."
-
-"How did you get your truck here from Windy Creek?" asked Rob.
-
-"We divided it up and each took a bunch and started on foot, and some
-people in an automobile, going to the town past here, took us in and
-brought us as far as the lane. We've been having a fine time."
-
-"What doing?" asked Rob interestedly.
-
-"Fishing, sailing on a raft, playing in the woods all day and--"
-
-"Playing ghost at night," said Pythagoras with a grin.
-
-"Who made that ghost in the window?" I demanded.
-
-"I did. I rigged up an arm and put it out the window the afternoon I
-left, hoping Beth would come down and see it, but we've got a jim
-dandy one now."
-
-"That was quite a shapely arm," said Rob. "Where did you learn
-sculpturing?"
-
-"Oh, I rigged it up," he said casually.
-
-"What did you bring in the way of supplies?"
-
-"Bacon, crackers, beans, candy, popcorn, gum, peanuts, pickles,
-candles, matches, and butter," was the glib inventory.
-
-"You may stay here," I said, "until we go home, but you are not to
-stir away from the woods about here and not on any account to come
-near the hotel, or let it be known that you are here. And you are to
-end this ghost business right off. Now, Di, we'll go home to mudder."
-
-"No!" bawled Di. "Stay with boys. Mudder come here."
-
-At least this was Ptolemy's interpretation of his protest.
-
-I threatened, Rob coaxed, and Ptolemy cuffed, but every time I started
-to leave and jerk him after me, he uttered such demoniac yells I was
-forced to stop.
-
-"Wish it was night," said Emerald regretfully. "Wouldn't he scare
-folks though! How does he get his voice up so high?"
-
-"Poor little Di!" said a voice commiseratingly from the doorway. "Was
-Ocean plaguing him?"
-
-Beth gathered the child in her arms, and his howls changed to sobs.
-Rob stood petrified with amazement at her appearance.
-
-"Don't want to go," said Diogenes between gulps.
-
-"Needn't go!" promised Beth. "Stay here with me, and we'll have dinner
-with the boys and then we'll go home and get some ice cream."
-
-"All yite," agreed the appeased Polydore.
-
-"May Lucien and I stay to dinner, too?" asked Rob humbly.
-
-"No," she replied icily.
-
-"But, Beth," I remonstrated. "Silvia will be worrying about Di. How
-can we explain?"
-
-"Silvia has gone to Windy Creek for the day. You see, I met that woman
-you sent to the hotel, and she told me she saw Di going over the hill
-with a boy, and I suddenly seemed to smell one of your mice, so I sent
-the woman on her way, and told Silvia you and Rob had found Diogenes.
-Just then some people she knew came along in a car and asked her to go
-to Windy Creek. I made her go and told her I'd look after Di."
-
-"You're a brick, Beth!" applauded Ptolemy.
-
-"If you boys will be very careful and not let anyone besides us know
-you are here, so mudder will not hear of it, for though she'd like to
-see you"--this without a flicker or flinch--"we want her to have a
-nice rest. I'll come over every day except tomorrow and bring things
-from the hotel store, and bake up cookies and cake for you."
-
-A yell of approval went up.
-
-"Why can't you come tomorrow?" asked the greedy Demetrius.
-
-"Because I've promised to go to the other end of the lake on a picnic.
-All the people at the hotel are going."
-
-"I'll come tomorrow and spend the whole day with you," promised Rob.
-"We'll have a ride in the sailboat and do all sorts of things."
-
-"Why, aren't you going on that infernal picnic?" I asked.
-
-"No; I'll have all the picnic I want over here. Like Ptolemy I feel
-that I want to play with some of my own kind."
-
-Beth looked at him approvingly; then she said a little sarcastically:
-
-"Maybe you'll change your mind--about going on the picnic, I
-mean--when you see the new girl who just came to the hotel on the
-morning stage. She's a blonde, and not peroxided, either."
-
-"That would certainly drive him down here, or anywhere," I laughed.
-
-"Oh, don't you like blondes?" she asked innocently.
-
-"He doesn't like--" I began, but Ptolemy rudely interrupted with an
-elaborate description of a new kind of fishing tackle he had bought.
-
-Then Beth bade Pythagoras build a fire in the cook-stove while she
-set the room to rights.
-
-"We'll eat out of doors," she said, "I think it would be more
-appetizing."
-
-"How did you get here?" Rob asked her as we were leaving.
-
-"I rowed over."
-
-"May I come over and row you back?" he asked pleadingly.
-
-She hesitated, and then, realizing that she could scarcely manage a
-boat and Diogenes at the same time, assented, bidding him not come,
-however, until five o'clock.
-
-"She'll have enough of the Polydores by that time," I said to Rob on
-our way home.
-
-"Do you know," he said reflectively, "I like Ptolemy. There's the
-making of a man in him, if he has only half a chance. I didn't suppose
-your sister understood children so well or was so fond of them. She
-looked quite the little housewife, too."
-
-"You'd discover a lot of things you don't know, if you'd cultivate the
-society of women," I informed him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-_A Bad Means to a Good End_
-
-
-When we were setting out on the proposed picnic the next day, Rob made
-himself extremely unpopular by announcing his intention to spend the
-day otherwise. The new blonde girl gave him fetching glances of
-entreaty which he never even saw. He made another sensation by
-proposing to keep Diogenes with him. To Silvia's surprise, Diogenes
-voiced his delight and chattered away, I suppose, about playing with
-the boys, but fortunately no one understood him.
-
-"Won't you change your mind and come, too?" he asked Beth.
-
-She seemed on the point of accepting and then firmly declined.
-
-When we returned at six o'clock, Rob and Diogenes were awaiting us.
-There was something in Rob's eyes I had not seen there before. He had
-the look of one in love with life.
-
-"Did you have a nice time playing solitaire?" asked Silvia.
-
-"I had a very nice time," he replied with a subtle smile, "but I
-didn't play solitaire. You know I had Diogenes."
-
-"Diogenes apparently had a good time, too," said Silvia, looking at
-the child, who was certainly a wreck in the way of garments. "What did
-you do all day, Rob?"
-
-"We went out on the water, played games, and had a picnic dinner
-outdoors."
-
-"You had huckleberry pie for one thing," she observed, with a glance
-at Diogenes' dress, "and jelly for another, and--"
-
-"Chicken, baked potatoes, milk, cake, and ice cream," he finished.
-
-"Where did you get ice cream?" she asked.
-
-"I went down to a dairy farm and got a gallon."
-
-"A gallon!" she exclaimed. "For you and Diogenes?"
-
-"We didn't eat it all," he said guardedly. "I gave what we didn't eat
-to some stray boys."
-
-"I hope Di won't be ill."
-
-"He won't," asserted Rob. "I am sure he is made of cast iron."
-
-Throughout dinner Rob remained in high spirits. He kept eyeing Beth in
-a way that disconcerted her, and then suddenly he would smile with the
-expression of one who knows something funny, but intends to keep it a
-secret.
-
-Presently Silvia left us and went upstairs to give Diogenes a bath
-before she put him to bed.
-
-"You've had two days' freedom from the last of the Polydores," I
-called after her. "Doesn't it seem delightful?"
-
-"Lucien," she answered slowly, "I've really missed the care of him. I
-was lonesome for him all day."
-
-"He isn't such a bad little kid when he is out from Polydore
-environment," I admitted, regretting that he had been restored to it.
-
-"Now tell us all about your day with the boys," Beth asked Rob, when
-we were left alone. "It really does seem too bad to keep a secret from
-Silvia, and yet it is a case of where ignorance is bliss--"
-
-"It would be folly to be otherwise," finished Rob. "Well, Diogenes and
-I left here with a boat load of supplies in the way of provender and
-things for the boys. I had to tie Diogenes in the boat, of course, so
-he would not try some aquatic feat. He objected and yelled like a
-fiend all the way. I was glad there was no one at the hotel to come
-out and arrest me for cruelty to children. Of course before we landed,
-his cries were heard by his brothers and they were all at the water's
-edge. They made mulepacks of themselves and transferred the commissary
-supplies. The ice cream and bats and balls which I found at the store
-made quite a hit.
-
-"We played baseball, fished, and had a spread on the shore. Then
-Ptolemy and I rowed out to where the sailboat was. I explained the
-mysteries of the jib and he caught on instantly. We took in the other
-Polydores and sailed for a couple of hours. Then we all went in
-swimming."
-
-"Not Diogenes!"
-
-"Certainly. I tucked him under my arm and he seemed perfectly at home,
-although greatly disappointed because we didn't succeed in catching a
-snake.
-
-"I finally landed them all safely under the roof of the Haunted House,
-and Ptolemy assured me it was the best day of his young life. In
-appreciation of the diversions I had afforded him, he made a
-confession which proved such good news to me that I was a lenient
-listener and exacted no penalty."
-
-"What was it?" I asked.
-
-"He told me that on the day of Miss Wade's and my arrival at your
-house, he had made a misstatement to each of us and had not repeated
-to us accurately what he had overheard you telling Silvia when he was
-on the porch roof. Miss Wade, what did he tell you about me?"
-
-"He said that Lucien said that your only failing was that you were
-daffy over women and made love to every one you saw."
-
-"Oh, Beth!" I cried, light bursting in, "and you believed that little
-wretch?"
-
-"I did."
-
-"Then that is why you have been so--"
-
-"Yes--so--" repeated Rob grimly.
-
-"Well, I never did have any use for a man-flirt, and I was awfully
-disappointed, for I had thought from what Rob said that you were a
-man's man."
-
-"And then, of course, when for the first time in my life I began being
-interested in a woman--in you--I played right into that little scamp's
-hands."
-
-"He is a man's man, Beth," I said warmly. "What Ptolemy heard me say
-was that Rob was a woman-hater."
-
-"I am not!" declared Rob indignantly--"just a woman-shyer, but I
-haven't finished with Ptolemy's confession. I wonder, now, if either
-of you can guess what he told me was Miss Wade's characteristic."
-
-"I don't dare guess," laughed Beth.
-
-"What I did say about Beth was that she was a born flirt."
-
-"I am not!" protested my sister, in resentment.
-
-"I should prefer that appellation to the one he gave you. He said you
-were strong-minded and a man-hater."
-
-Even Beth saw the irony of this.
-
-"I asked him," continued Rob, "what his motive was, and he said
-'Stepdaddy didn't want Beth to know about the man-hater business,' so
-he took that means of throwing you off the track.
-
-"I took the occasion to talk to him like a Dutch uncle, though I don't
-know exactly what that is. I think it was the first time anything but
-brute force had been tried on him. I must have touched some little
-flicker of the right thing in him, for he was really contrite and
-seemed to sense a different angle of vision when I explained to him
-what havoc could be worked by the misinformation of meddlers. He
-promised me he'd try to overcome his tendency to start things going
-wrong."
-
-I made no comment, but it occurred to me that Ptolemy was a shrewd
-little fellow, and that there had been wisdom back of his strategic
-speeches to Beth and Rob, for he had taken the one sure course to make
-them both "take notice."
-
-"So, Beth," said Rob, and her name seemed to come quite handily to
-him, "can't we cut out the past ten days and begin our acquaintance
-right?"
-
-"I think we can," she answered.
-
-"I had better go upstairs," I suggested, "and tell Silvia that
-Diogenes doesn't need a bath, seeing he has been in swimming."
-
-Neither of them urged me to remain, so I went up to our room and found
-Silvia tucking Diogenes under cover.
-
-"What did you come up for?" she asked. "I was just coming down to join
-you."
-
-"Beth is treating Rob so--differently, that I thought it well to
-retreat."
-
-"I am so glad! Whatever came over the spirit of her dreams?"
-
-"They've just discovered in the course of conversation that Ptolemy as
-usual crossed the wires and told Beth Rob was a flirt, and then
-informed Rob that Beth was strong-minded and a man-hater."
-
-"Oh, the little imp!" she exclaimed indignantly.
-
-"I don't know. It worked, anyway, so Ptolemy was the bad means to a
-good end."
-
-"How did they ever happen to discover what he had done?"
-
-"They caught on from something Rob said," I told her, feeling again
-guilty at keeping my first secret from her.
-
-"It will be a fine match for Beth," said Silvia. "Rob is such a
-splendid man, and then he has plenty of money. He can give her
-anything she wants."
-
-I winced. I think Silvia must have been conscious of it, even though
-the room was dark, for she came to me quickly.
-
-"I wish I could give you--everything--anything--you want, Silvia."
-
-"You have, Lucien. The things that no money could buy--love and
-protection."
-
-Well, maybe I had. I had surely given her protection from the
-Polydores, though she didn't know to what extent.
-
-"I am going to give you more material things, though, Silvia. When we
-go home, I shall start to work in earnest and see if I can't get
-enough ahead to make a good investment I know of."
-
-"I'd rather do without the necessities even, Lucien, than to have you
-work any harder than you have been doing. We must let well enough
-alone."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-"_Too Much Polydores_"
-
-
-The next morning at breakfast, Beth announced that she and Rob were
-going to spend the day camping in the woods.
-
-Silvia and I tried not to look significantly at each other, but Beth
-was very keen.
-
-"We will take Diogenes with us," she instantly added.
-
-"Oh, no!" protested Silvia. "He'll be such a bother. And then he can't
-walk very far, you know."
-
-"He'll be no bother," persisted Beth. "And we'll borrow the little
-cart to draw him in."
-
-"Yes," acquiesced Rob. "We sure want Diogenes with us."
-
-"I'll have them put up a lunch for you," proposed Silvia.
-
-"No," Rob objected. "We are going to forage and cook over a fire in
-the woods."
-
-"Then," I proposed to Silvia with alacrity, "we'll have our first day
-alone together--the first we have had since the Polydores came into
-our lives. I'll rent the 'autoo' again, and we will go through the
-country and dine at some little wayside inn."
-
-"Get the 'autoo', now, Lucien," advised Beth privately, "and make an
-early start, so Rob and I can take supplies from the store without
-arousing Silvia's suspicions."
-
-"I don't believe," said Silvia disappointedly, when we were "autooing"
-on our way, "that they are in love after all, or that he has
-proposed, or that he is going to."
-
-"Where did you draw all those pessimistic inferences from?" I asked.
-
-"From their both being so keen to take Diogenes with them."
-
-"Diogenes would be no barrier to their love-making," I told her. "He
-couldn't repeat what they said; at least, not so anyone could
-understand him."
-
-Many miles away we came upon a picturesque little old-time tavern
-where we had an appetizing dinner, and then continued on our aimless
-way. It was nearly ten o'clock when we returned to the hotel, where
-the owner of the "autoo" was waiting.
-
-Rob came down the roadway.
-
-"Where's Beth?" asked Silvia.
-
-"She has gone to bed. The day in the open made her sleepy."
-
-When Silvia had left us, the old farmer said with a chuckle: "I can't
-offer you another swig of stone fence."
-
-"It's probably just as well you can't," I replied.
-
-"I'd like to be introduced to one," said Rob, who appeared to be
-somewhat downcast. "I sure need a bracer."
-
-"What's the matter, Rob?" I asked when we were lighting our pipes. "A
-strenuous day? Two in rapid 'concussion' with the Polydores must be
-nerve-racking."
-
-"Yes; I admit there seemed to be 'too much Polydores.' We all had a
-happy reunion, and I devoted the forenoon to the entertainment of the
-famous family so I could be entitled to the afternoon off to spend
-with Beth. At noon we built a fire and cooked a sumptuous dinner. Beth
-baked up some things to keep them supplied a couple of days longer.
-After dinner I asked her to go for a row. She insisted on taking
-Diogenes along, and the others all followed us on a raft. So I decided
-to cut the water sports short, and Beth and I started for a walk in
-the woods. Three or more were constantly right on our trail. I begged
-and bribed, but to no avail. They were sticktights all right, and," he
-added morosely, "she seemed covertly to aid and abet them. When we
-started for home, I found that the young fiends had broken the cart,
-so I had to carry Diogenes most of the way, and of course he bellowed
-as usual at being parted from the whelps."
-
-[Illustration: I had to carry Diogenes most of the way]
-
-"They aren't such 'fine little chaps' after all," I couldn't resist
-commenting. "Familiarity breeds contempt, you see. I am sorry Diogenes
-had so much of their society. He'll be unendurable tomorrow. Well, you
-had some day!"
-
-"So did the Polydores. Demetrius and Diogenes fell in the fire twice.
-Emerald threw a finger out of joint, but Ptolemy quickly jerked it
-into place. Pythagoras was kicked off the raft twice, following a
-mutiny. Demetrius threw a lighted match into the vines and set fire to
-the house. They said it was a 'beaut of a day', though, and urged us
-to come tomorrow and repeat the program. By the way, they went across
-the lake on their raft yesterday and bought a tent of some campers.
-They have pitched it in the woods beyond the house."
-
-When I went upstairs Silvia met me disconsolately.
-
-"He didn't propose," she said disappointedly. "She wouldn't let him."
-
-"Did you wake her up to find out?" I asked.
-
-"She hadn't gone to bed and she wasn't sleepy. She was trimming a
-hat."
-
-"Why wouldn't she let him propose, if she cares for him?" I asked
-perplexedly.
-
-"Well, you see," explained Silvia, "that when a girl--a coquette girl
-like Beth--is as sure of a man as she is of Rob, she gets a touch of
-contrariness or offishness or something. She said it would have been
-too prosaic and cut and dried if they had gone away for a day in the
-woods and come back engaged. She wants the unexpected."
-
-"Do you think she loves him?" I asked interestedly.
-
-"She doesn't say so. You can't tell from what she says anyway. Still,
-I think she is hovering around the danger point."
-
-"She'd better watch out. Rob isn't the kind of a man who will stand
-for too much thwarting," I replied.
-
-"If he'd only play up a little bit to some one else, it would bring
-things to a climax," said my wife sagely.
-
-"There's no one else to play up to. The blonde left today because it
-was so slow here."
-
-"Maybe some new girl will come tomorrow," said Silvia, "or there's
-that trim little waitress who is waiting her way through college. He
-gave her a good big tip yesterday. I think I will give him a hint."
-
-"It wouldn't help any. He wouldn't know how to play such a game if you
-could persuade him to try. He'd probably tell the girl his motive in
-being attentive to her and then she'd back out. Maybe, after all, Beth
-doesn't love him."
-
-"I think she does," replied my wife, "because she is getting
-absent-minded. She let Diogenes go too near the fire. His shoes are
-burned, his hair singed, and his dress scorched. He woke up when I
-came in and he was so cross. He acted just the way he does when he is
-with his brothers."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-_Rob's Friend the Reporter_
-
-
-Silvia's vague prophecy was fulfilled. When the event of the day, the
-arrival of the stage, occurred, a solitary passenger alighted, a slim,
-alert, city-cut young woman.
-
-She looked us all over--not boldly, but with a business-like
-directness as if she were taking inventory of stock, or acting as
-judge at a competition. When her blue eyes lighted on Rob, they
-darkened with pleasure.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Rossiter!" she exclaimed, "this is better than I hoped for."
-
-They shook hands with the air of being old acquaintances, and he
-introduced her to us as "Miss Frayne, from my home town."
-
-She went into the office, registered, and sent her bag to her room.
-Then she asked Rob if she might have a talk with him.
-
-They walked away together down to the shore and she was talking to him
-quite excitedly. Rob suddenly stopped, threw back his head and laughed
-in the way that it is good to hear a man laugh.
-
-"Miss Frayne must be a wit," observed Beth dryly.
-
-I looked at her keenly. Something in her eyes as she gazed after the
-retreating couple told me that Silvia's surmise was right, and that
-Miss Frayne might be just the little punch needed to send Beth over
-the danger point.
-
-"I rather incline to the belief that Ptolemy told the truth in the
-first place," she continued, and then looked disappointed because I
-did not contradict her.
-
-I decided not to reveal, for the present anyway, what I knew of Miss
-Frayne, of whom I had often heard Rob speak.
-
-"She can't be going to stay long," said Silvia hopefully. "She didn't
-bring a trunk."
-
-"She doesn't need one," replied Beth. "She is probably one of those
-mannish girls who believe in a skirt and a few waists for a
-wardrobe."
-
-When Rob and the newcomer returned, he seemed to be monopolizing the
-conversation in a very emphatic and earnest manner. As they came up
-the steps to the veranda, we heard her say:
-
-"Very well, Mr. Rossiter, I will do just as you say. I have perfect
-confidence in your judgment."
-
-They passed on into the hotel and Beth jumped up and went down toward
-the lake.
-
-"Did you ever hear Rob speak of this Miss Frayne?" asked Silvia.
-
-"Often. She is engaged to his cousin, and is a reporter on a big
-newspaper."
-
-"Why didn't you say so? Oh, Lucien," she continued before I could
-speak, "were you really shrewd enough to see which way the wind was
-blowing?"
-
-"Sure. After you set my sails for me last night."
-
-Just then Rob came out of the hotel.
-
-"Say, Lucien, I want to see you a minute. Come on down the road."
-
-"We've got some work ahead," he said when we were out of Silvia's
-hearing.
-
-"What's up?" I asked.
-
-"Miss Frayne is up--and doing. What do you suppose her paper sent her
-here for?"
-
-"For a rest, or to write up the mosquitoes of H. H."
-
-"H. H. is all right, only it happens they stand for Haunted House."
-
-"Not really?"
-
-"Yes, really. The rumors of the house and the ghost, greatly
-elaborated, of course, reached the Sunday editor of the paper Miss
-Frayne is on, and he sent her up here to revive the story of the
-murder, translate the ghost, and get snapshots of the house. She was
-quite keen to have me take her there at once, so she could commence
-her article, but I headed her off, so she wouldn't discover the summer
-boarders at the hotel annex. I assured her that daytime was not the
-time to gather material and the only way she could get a proper focus
-on the ghost and acquire the thrills necessary for an inspiration was
-to see the place first by night."
-
-"If she would view Fair Melrose aright," I quoted, "she must visit it
-in the pale moonlight, but you were very clever to delay her visit
-long enough for us to get over there and warn the enemy. If she had
-gone down there and caught the Polydores unawares, she would have come
-back here and revealed our secret, and there would be the end of
-Silvia's vacation."
-
-"To tell the truth, Lucien, I wasn't thinking so much of that as I was
-of Miss Frayne's interests. You see she has come a long ways for a
-story and if it collapsed from her ghostly expectations to a showdown
-of four healthy boys, the blow might mean a good deal to her in a
-business way. I think we had better let Ptolemy plant a ghost just
-once more for her. You know you made him take a reef in the flapping
-of ghostly garments. Can't we resurrect the specter and restore the
-wails just for tonight, and bring her over here at the witching
-hour?"
-
-"Sure we will," I agreed heartily. "She shall have her ghost and all
-the trappings. It will give the Polydores the time of their lives."
-
-"Let's go over there now and put Ptolemy next so he can get busy on
-his spirits." We went down to the shore and pulled off. Midway across
-the lake, Rob suddenly rested on his oars and asked:
-
-"Where did Beth go?"
-
-"Back to first principles," I replied. "She thinks, judging from your
-excited, earnest manner in addressing Miss Frayne and your rushing
-frantically away for a walk with her before she had removed the travel
-dust, that Ptolemy was quite correct, after all, in declaring you to
-be a 'ladies' man.'"
-
-"Didn't you explain to her who Miss Frayne was?" he asked.
-
-"No," I replied. "I am on my vacation and I am not doing any
-explaining, professionally or otherwise."
-
-He swung the boat around.
-
-"Starboard!" I cried. "Don't you know a trump card when you see it?"
-
-Again he rested on his oars and stared at me.
-
-"What do you mean, Lucien? If you have a grain of hope for me, please
-let me in."
-
-I repeated Silvia's theories.
-
-"I am not going to win her that way," he said slowly, "not by playing
-a part."
-
-"Well," I declared, "if you go back to the hotel now, you can't
-explain Miss Frayne to Beth, because she went for a walk with old
-Professor Treadtop."
-
-He turned the boat again.
-
-"Silvia won't come to the Haunted House, will she?" he asked.
-
-"No, indeed. Nothing would induce her to."
-
-"Then you bring Miss Frayne here tonight and I'll bring Beth. And I'll
-be sure that there are no double boats lying around loose. I'll have
-two at the dock, see?"
-
-"I see your system," I replied, "but I am not sure how I can explain
-Miss Frayne to Silvia. Silvia is not in the least narrow-minded, but
-still to leave the hotel at midnight with a perfectly strange young
-woman--"
-
-"You can tell her I want a clear field for Beth. She will see it is in
-a good cause."
-
-The Polydores greeted us rapturously and roughly. When I had restored
-order, and they were once more right side up, I addressed the chief of
-the bandits.
-
-"Ptolemy," I began, "a young lady, who is a reporter for a big
-newspaper, has come from many miles away to write up the haunted house
-and the ghost, and they will be pictured out in the Sunday edition."
-
-Ptolemy's eyes glistened, and "Them Three" were instantly "at
-attention."
-
-"Oh, say, stepdaddy," begged the young chief, "let me play ghost right
-for her, just once, will you?"
-
-"You may for tonight," I said, "but you will have to be very careful
-and not overdo the matter, for she isn't the kind that is easily
-fooled. She's had to keep her eyes and wits sharpened, else she
-wouldn't be on a newspaper, so I want you to be very careful and not
-bungle. Make a neat job of it."
-
-"I'll do it up brown, you bet!" he cried gleefully.
-
-"Naw, do it up white," drawled Pythagoras.
-
-"Show me your ghost stuff by daylight," I demanded, "and let me see
-how you are going to rig him up."
-
-He brought forth a head and shoulders and arms that were ghastly even
-in sunlight, and proceeded to explain them.
-
-"I got this skull out of father's study, and the arms came off a
-skeleton mother had in her antiquities. I dressed them up in a pillow
-case and the white cotton gloves are Huldah's. I can get some
-phosphorus in the woods and put it in the eyes. And Demetrius bought
-two electric flashlights yesterday, and Pythagoras can snap them once
-in a while from the lower windows."
-
-"You are some little property man," said Rob in admiration. "But tell
-me who produces those heart-rending shrieks?"
-
-"That was Pythagoras who did the high ones. And Em came in with low
-groans. Show 'em, boys."
-
-Pythagoras uttered high-trebled, thin-toned whines and ever and anon
-Emerald added a _basso profundo_ accompaniment, making a combination
-that was most trying to the ears at close range.
-
-"I don't know," said Rob, "as I want Beth subjected to such a
-realistic performance. We will loiter in the distance."
-
-"Your rehearsal," I assured Ptolemy, "is very good, but you must
-remember that Miss Frayne is used to encountering things far more
-terrible than ghosts. She may insist on coming right in here to
-investigate. Of course, if she does, I can't refuse or she'll think I
-am afraid, or else that I put up a fake ghost here, myself."
-
-"We'll lock the door with a chair," suggested Emerald.
-
-"She'll be quite capable of breaking into a little house like this,
-but I'll keep her back until you have time to haul in your ghost and
-make a quick and quiet getaway by a back window. Then another thing,
-she'll be over here tomorrow morning to take some pictures of the
-house, so by sunrise I want you all to take up your abode in the tent
-you have in the woods and stay there until I come and tell you the
-coast is clear."
-
-"We're dead on," assured Ptolemy. "I'm glad there's going to be
-something doing. We're getting tired of being here alone. I had to tie
-Demetrius up this morning. He was bound to go over to the hotel and
-see mudder."
-
-"Don't one of you dare to make such an attempt," I said peremptorily.
-"You keep right on here for a few days. Some of us, either Rob, or
-Beth and I will drop over every day. If you play your ghost just as I
-tell you and keep out of sight, I'll bring you over some ice cream
-tomorrow."
-
-"Bring me a bigger bat."
-
-"Bring me a mitt."
-
-"Bring me a boat," came in chorus from Ptolemy, Emerald, and
-Demetrius.
-
-"What'll you give me to stay here?" asked Pythagoras, who was a born
-bargain-driver.
-
-"I'll give you a licking if you don't stay," was the only offer he
-gleaned from me.
-
-"Be good boys," adjured the softhearted Rob, "and I'll bring you
-everything I can find at the hotel."
-
-It was long past the luncheon hour when we returned. We found Miss
-Frayne wondering at Rob's sudden disappearance and Beth was
-accordingly mystified.
-
-I planted myself directly in front of Miss Frayne.
-
-"May I take you to the haunted house tonight at the yawning
-churchyard hour?" I asked. "I am most eminently fitted to be your
-guide, for I was the first one of this assembly to see the ghost _in
-toto_."
-
-"He saw it over a stone fence," remarked Rob.
-
-"Indeed you may, thank you very much," she said enthusiastically.
-
-Silvia's face was a study.
-
-"And will you come with me, Beth?" asked Rob. "Of course, the ghost is
-an old story to us, but we really should hover in Lucien's wake out of
-regard to the conventions."
-
-"Is Miss Frayne interested in ghosts?" asked Beth.
-
-Miss Frayne turned and answered the question.
-
-"Not personally," she admitted frankly, "but the newspaper I am on is,
-and they sent me up here to get a story."
-
-"Oh, you are a reporter?"
-
-"Yes; on the _Times_."
-
-"She won't be one long, though," asserted Rob cheerfully, "because she
-is going to marry my cousin in the fall."
-
-Beth's expression remained neutral at the announcement, but I noticed
-throughout the afternoon that she was extremely affable toward Miss
-Frayne, and that she had the whiphand again with Rob, and meanwhile he
-seemed to be gathering a grim determination to do or die.
-
-"Lucien, how did you come to ask Miss Frayne to go to that awful place
-tonight?" asked Silvia when we had gone to our room for a siesta,
-which seemed impossible by reason of the bellowing of Diogenes, who
-balked at being required to lie down.
-
-"Rob asked me to," I informed her, when I had cowed Diogenes, "so he
-could have a free field for Beth. I believe he planned this
-expedition so he could storm the citadel."
-
-She reflected.
-
-"Well, maybe he is wise. Girls like Beth have to be taken by storm
-sometimes. I shouldn't wonder if Rob could be a bit of a bully, too,
-but--"
-
-She ended her speculations in a shriek.
-
-"Oh, Lucien! Diogenes has jumped out the window."
-
-We rushed down stairs, Silvia informing the guests in transit of the
-awful catastrophe.
-
-Silvia paused at the door opening on to the veranda.
-
-"I can't see him," she said faintly, closing her eyes. "You'll have to
-tend to it alone, Lucien."
-
-Beth was already at the telephone, which connected with the country
-doctor's. Rob joined me. We located our window, and began hunting
-underneath for the pieces.
-
-"Where in the world do you suppose he landed?" asked Rob.
-
-Just then the missing one came around the house clasping a bologna
-sausage in his fist.
-
-"Ye Gods and little Polydores!" exclaimed Rob.
-
-I caught Diogenes by the arm and rushed him in to Silvia.
-
-I found her in company with an old colored mammy, who was laundress
-for the hotel.
-
-"Sho'," she was saying, "I done gwine by de windah with ma baby cab
-full o' cloes, an' dis yer white chile done come tumblin' down an'
-fall right in ma cab. Now, what do you think o' dat? I reckon I was
-nevah so done clean skeert afoah in ma life. An' ef de chile didn't
-grab one of ma bolognas and done git out de cab an' run around de
-house."
-
-"Oh," cried Silvia, "poor little baby! Come to mudder. Lucien, where
-are you going with him?"
-
-I had picked up the acrobatic Polydore and was going up the stairs two
-at a time. I gained our room, locked the door and proceeded to give
-the "poor little baby" all that was coming to him. Now and then above
-his howls, I heard Silvia's plaintive protests outside the door, but I
-finished my job completely and satisfactorily, and laid the penitent
-Polydore in his little bed. Then I went out into the hall, feeling
-better than I had in months.
-
-Silvia essayed to pass me, but I took her arm and led her to a recess
-in the hall.
-
-"I am convinced," I told her, "that we have Diogenes as a permanent
-pensioner on our hands, so it was up to me to show him where to get
-off. You can't go to him for a quarter of an hour."
-
-We went down stairs and I was sure I read suppressed regret in the
-faces of most of the guests at learning of the soft place in which
-Diogenes' lot had been cast. Silvia tearfully told Rob and Beth of my
-cruelty.
-
-[Illustration: Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia's plaintive
-protests outside the door]
-
-"Do him good!" approved Rob heartily.
-
-"How mean men are!" declared Beth indignantly. "I am going up and
-comfort the poor little thing."
-
-I held up the key to the room with a grin, and she had to content
-herself by making unkind remarks about me.
-
-At the expiration of the allotted time, I handed Silvia the key. She
-took it from me without a word or a look. It was quite evident I was
-in wrong.
-
-In half an hour my wife came down, carrying Diogenes, who, dressed in
-fresh white clothes, was a good picture of an angel child. She passed
-me and went to a remote corner of the veranda and sat down. When he
-spied me, he leaped from her arms and ran to me.
-
-"Ocean," he said propitiatingly, "me love oo."
-
-I took him up. His arms clasped about my neck, and over his curly
-head, I winked at Silvia and Beth.
-
-Rob roared.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-_A Midnight Excursion_
-
-
-The night was Satan's own: dark, wind-shrieking, and Polydorish. No
-one saw us leave the hotel when, at a late hour, we started on our
-little excursion. On account of the darkness and the poor landing near
-the haunted house, we decided to go by the overland route. I managed
-to purloin a lantern from the kitchen to light our path.
-
-Rob and Beth kept behind Miss Frayne and myself, and in spite of the
-wildness of the weather, he was evidently pleading his suit, for now
-and then above the roar of the wind, I heard his ardent voice.
-Apparently Beth had not yet given him any encouragement.
-
-Going down the lane my lantern underwent a total eclipse, so we had a
-Jordan-like road to travel. Miss Frayne was quite impervious to
-unfavorable conditions, as it was a matter of bread and butter to her,
-she said, and she was accustomed to braving worse storms than this,
-and anyway she hadn't come here for a summer picnic.
-
-When we came into the grove it was so dark, I lost my bearings.
-
-"Why didn't we bring a flashlight?" asked Beth.
-
-"There were none at the hotel," I told her.
-
-"I know some boys," said Rob with a little laugh, "who would have lent
-us one--maybe."
-
-Fortunately we were well provided with safety matches and after
-striking a box or so, we gained the open. A rise of ground hid the
-house, but when we climbed to the top, the ghost loomed up ghastlier
-than ever.
-
-I felt the business-like Miss Frayne start and shiver as a little
-scream escaped her. I didn't wonder. Even I, knowing that it was an
-illusion and a snare, felt my flesh creeping as I looked at the
-ghastly thing in the window.
-
-Every now and then according to schedule a light flashed from the
-windows below. And then came the blood-curdling sounds--whimpers and
-groans that were rivaling the whistling of the wind.
-
-"This is awful!" said Miss Frayne in a hoarse whisper.
-
-"Do you want to go inside the house?" I asked.
-
-"No--o! I couldn't. Not tonight."
-
-We were some little in advance of Rob and Beth. When one spectral
-sound came like a tense whisper, Miss Frayne turned and fled, and of
-course I followed her. We could not see our two companions, but
-suddenly in an interim of wind and ghost whispers, we heard Beth say:
-
-"Yes, Rob. I think we should really be cosier in a story-and-a-half
-cottage than we should in a bungalow."
-
-"Ye Gods!" muttered Miss Frayne, "did he propose in the face of that
-awful Thing?"
-
-"Ship ahoy!" I called.
-
-"Oh, didn't you go inside?" asked Rob.
-
-"Go in! I wouldn't go inside that place; not if I lose my job on the
-paper. What can it be? You don't seem to mind it, Miss Wade."
-
-"Well, you know," said Beth apologetically, "this is my third
-performance."
-
-We were now down the hill out of sight of the gruesome, ghastly window
-display, and Miss Frayne gained courage as we retreated.
-
-"Of course I don't believe in ghosts," she said, "but what do you
-suppose that is?"
-
-"I had a theory," I said, "that it is the work of a lunatic, but I've
-since concluded it is due to practical jokers. I'll tell you what I'll
-do. If you wait here, I'll investigate and see what I can find out for
-you."
-
-"Oh, would you really dare, Mr. Wade? I don't believe men ever have
-creepy nerves," she exclaimed.
-
-I began to feel ashamed of my deception.
-
-"I wouldn't go, Lucien," warned Rob, coming to my rescue. "There may
-be a gang of desperadoes in there, or counterfeit money-makers, or
-something of that kind. Besides, I have a far more interesting piece
-of news than anything the ghost could give you."
-
-"Rob!" protested Beth.
-
-"We know it already," I laughed. "It's to be a story-and-a-half
-high."
-
-"I think I am getting material for quite a story," declared Miss
-Frayne.
-
-I knew Beth's dislike of scenes and display of emotions--mock
-heroics--she called them, so I made no congratulatory speeches of the
-bless-you-my-children order, but presently under the cover of
-darkness, I felt a little hand slipped in mine, and my clasp was
-eloquent of what I felt.
-
-"I hope," said Miss Frayne, "that daylight will make me so ashamed of
-my cowardice that I can come down here and take some pictures and go
-inside the house."
-
-"We'll all come with you," promised Beth. "There's safety in
-numbers."
-
-When we were back at the hotel I managed to have a few words with Rob
-before we went upstairs.
-
-"Bless the ghost!" he said cheerily. "When Beth first glimpsed it, she
-just turned and fell into my arms. She was really frightened for the
-first time. I shall feel under obligations to Ptolemy for a
-lifetime."
-
-"Thank goodness!" I ejaculated fervently, "that I am under no
-obligations to a Polydore. Ptolemy certainly did put up the most
-ghastly thing in the way of ghosts. The lights in the eyes of the
-skeleton were frightful."
-
-"Did you see the ghost?" asked Silvia sleepily, when I came in.
-
-"Yes; same old ghost, only more of him," I assured her.
-
-She was asleep before I had uttered this reply.
-
-"Silvia," I said, "I have a more startling piece of news for you than
-that."
-
-She sat bolt upright.
-
-"Are they engaged, Lucien?"
-
-"They are. They are building their castle--I mean their story-and-a-half
-cottage already."
-
-Alas for my own desire to sleep! I had so effectually awakened Silvia
-that she planned Beth's trousseau, the wedding, honeymoon, and the
-furnishing of their house before she subsided.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-_What Miss Frayne Found Out_
-
-
-We had planned to go to the haunted house at nine o'clock the next
-morning, but owing to my dissipation of the night before, it was long
-after the appointed hour when Silvia awoke me.
-
-I hurried down stairs and ate my breakfast in solitude. I inquired for
-Beth and Rob, but the waitress told me they had left the dining-room
-at seven o'clock and gone for a walk in the woods. She said it with a
-knowing smile that told me she, too, must be a "sister of the Golden
-Circle."
-
-"And Miss Frayne?" I asked.
-
-"She went down the road over an hour ago."
-
-Evidently her courage had come up with the sun. I was greatly
-disturbed at the chance of her stumbling over one or more Polydores,
-and Rob didn't want to let the cat out of the bag until her article
-was written, as he believed that if the ghostly spell were broken, she
-would lose her "punch."
-
-I was unable to think of any plausible explanation to offer Silvia as
-to why I should start in pursuit, and I wished all sorts of dire
-calamities on Rob's blond head. Lovers were surely blind and selfish.
-
-About ten o'clock they came strolling in.
-
-"We didn't know it was so late," said Beth cheerfully, "but the boys
-will keep in the woods all right."
-
-"With her nose for news, there is no telling how far into the woods
-Miss Frayne's investigation will take her."
-
-"Say we go down by the lane and meet her," proposed Beth, "so that if
-she has run across the boys we can explain to her why we desire
-secrecy from Silvia."
-
-"You and Rob go," I advised. "It would seem odd to Silvia if we didn't
-ask her to go with us."
-
-So the newly engaged couple started down the road, but in their
-self-absorption they didn't notice the turn to the lane, and they got
-half way to Windy Creek before they came back to earth and the hotel.
-Miss Frayne still had not shown up, and I began to have misgivings
-lest the Polydores had locked her up in the house, but finally just as
-we were having a happy family gathering and discussing the new event
-under the shade of the one resort tree, she came excitedly up to us.
-
-"Such an interesting morning as I have had!" she exclaimed
-enthusiastically. "I made some corking pictures of the place, and I've
-found out about not only that ghost, but all ghosts--the whole race of
-ghosts."
-
-I hurriedly interrupted her and made elaborate and jumbled apologies
-for not keeping our engagement, which evidently bored her and
-mystified Silvia.
-
-"I am glad I went alone," she finally replied. "Otherwise I might not
-have got such an interesting interview."
-
-Beth, Rob, and I made frantic and appealing gestures to her behind
-Silvia's back, but she didn't seem to notice them.
-
-"Whom did you interview, the ghost?" asked Silvia.
-
-"No, indeed. Some very interesting and unusual people who are staying
-there."
-
-I threw her a wildly beseeching glance and Beth and Rob began at the
-same time to ply her with distracting questions. I think she seemed to
-divine that there was something in the situation that was not to be
-explained, but Silvia interrupted them.
-
-"Do let Miss Frayne tell us about her interview," she said. "We all
-seem to be very talkative today."
-
-I saw there was no way to dodge the dénouement, so I awaited the
-finale in dread desperation. It proved to be more of a stunner than I
-had expected.
-
-"I went down the lane," she said, "and through the grove, up the
-little hill, and laughed at myself for the hallucinations of the night
-before. There were no ghosts visible and the door to the haunted
-house was hospitably open. I stood on the hill long enough to make
-some pictures and then went on. I walked up the steps fearlessly and
-looked within. A woman, an untidy, disheveled-looking woman, sat at a
-table writing furiously in just the same breathless way I write when I
-have a scoop, and the presses are waiting open-mouthed for my copy.
-
-"She looked up and scowled at my intrusion.
-
-"'Don't bother me,' she said, and continued writing.
-
-"I went through the house and came outside again where I met an
-absent-minded, spectacled man. I told him who I was and of my object
-in coming to the house. Then he showed signs of coming to.
-
-"'Oh, the ghost!' he said. 'That is what brought me here. My wife is
-interested in more tangible, more material things. We have just
-returned from a long journey, and when we were nearly to our
-destination, our place of residence, I happened to read in a paper
-about this haunted house and its apparition, so we came right up here
-this morning to remain overnight and see if the article were true.'
-
-"I told him how successful I had been and he became quite alert and
-enthusiastic. He showed me why I should not have been alarmed, because
-ghosts, he said, were scientific facts. He then explained to me at
-length how the gases from the dead arise and form a nebulous vapor or
-a vaporous nebula. It sounded very simple and plausible when he told
-me, but I can't seem to remember it. Fortunately I have it all down in
-writing."
-
-Silvia's eyes and mine had met in speechless horror since she had
-mentioned the "writing woman."
-
-"Lucien!" Silvia now said in a tragic, hoarse whisper--"the
-Polydores!"
-
-"Oh, do you know them?" asked Miss Frayne. "Dr. Felix Polydore, the
-eminent LL.D. or something like that."
-
-"The whole family are D's," I said.
-
-"His wife is the highest of high-brows, and they are averse to
-interviews. They moved to a small city sometime ago to be secluded.
-Just think of my opportunity! I have them headlined! 'The Haunted
-House of Hope Haven. Ghost that appears at midnight scientifically
-explained by the distinguished Dr. Felix Polydore.'"
-
-"I think we are in luck," I said to Silvia, on second thoughts. "We
-will take them home by the nape of the neck and deliver their children
-into their keeping to have and to hold."
-
-"I can't turn Diogenes over to them," she said plaintively.
-
-"Diogenes!" repeated Miss Frayne in astonishment.
-
-I then narrated to her the history of our next-door neighbors, and how
-they planted their five children upon us.
-
-"We had better go down at once and see them," said Silvia, "before
-they escape. No telling where they might take it in their heads to
-go."
-
-"We will," I said, "we'll go soon after luncheon."
-
-"Thrice blessed haunted house," quoted Rob. "It gave me Beth, and it
-has restored the parents of the wise Ptolemy and 'Them Three.'"
-
-"And gave me a ripping story," said Miss Frayne.
-
-Just then the gong sounded, and after luncheon while I was comfortably
-tipped back in a chair, my feet on the veranda rail, seeing in the
-smoke from my pipe dream visions of Polydoreless days, a faint cry
-from Silvia brought me back to earth.
-
-"Lucien, look!"
-
-I looked.
-
-My chair came down to all fours and my feet slipped from the rail.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-_Ptolemy's Tale_
-
-
-Four defiant, determined-looking Polydores came up the steps and bore
-down upon us. Then Silvia as usual thought she saw land ahead.
-
-"Oh, boys," she asked hopefully, "did your father send for you to meet
-him here? And when is he going to take you home?"
-
-"Didn't I tell you," I thundered at Ptolemy, "that you were not to
-leave that house--"
-
-"It left us," interrupted Emerald with a grin.
-
-"Went up in smoke," added Pythagoras blithely, "ghost and all."
-
-"Four minutes quicker," said Demetrius, "and it would have took father
-and mother, too."
-
-"Oh, is it the haunted house they are talking about?" asked Miss
-Frayne joyfully. "What a story I'll have!"
-
-Life to Miss Frayne seemed to be one story after another. Well, it was
-certainly becoming the same way to us.
-
-"Did the ghost set fire to the house?" asked Beth.
-
-"What are you all talking about," demanded Silvia, "and how did you
-know these boys were there? How long have you been here?" she asked,
-turning to Ptolemy.
-
-"I told you," I repeated angrily to the subdued boy, "not to leave.
-Those were plain orders. If the house did burn up, you could have
-stayed in your tent in the woods."
-
-Ptolemy's lips twitched faintly.
-
-"The house burned up and all our clothes and our stuff to eat, and our
-bats and things, and father and mother went away and I didn't know
-what to do, so--I came here. But we'll go back to our own house. We
-have learned to cook. Come on, boys."
-
-"You'll stay right here with me, son," and Rob's hand came down
-intimately on Ptolemy's shoulder.
-
-"It isn't likely we'll turn them out into the woods, when they haven't
-a roof over their heads," declared Silvia, drawing Emerald to her
-side.
-
-"I think you are absolutely inhuman, Lucien," cried Beth. "I don't see
-what has changed you so," and she proceeded to make room for
-Pythagoras in the porch swing.
-
-"Did the fire scare you?" asked Miss Frayne gently, as she put her
-arms about Demetrius.
-
-"Et tu, Brute? Well, I plainly see this is no place for an inhuman,
-childless, married man," I said with a laugh, walking down the
-veranda.
-
-In the doorway I met Diogenes, who raised his chubby arms invitingly.
-
-"Up, up, Ocean!" he begged sweetly.
-
-I lifted him to my shoulder, and then turned and walked triumphantly
-back to the family group.
-
-"Now," I said, "here is the whole d-dashed family. And I propose that
-each keep unto his charge the child he has now under his wing."
-
-Miss Frayne quickly relinquished the dirty Demetrius. Beth shrank away
-from Pythagoras.
-
-As I seated myself still holding Diogenes, his brothers sprang toward
-him in greeting, but he spat at one, kicked at another, and pulled the
-hair of a third, although he patted Ptolemy's cheek gently.
-
-"Now, we'll have this affair thrashed out," I declared in my most
-authoritative, professional manner, and I then proceeded to explain to
-Silvia the housing of the Polydores, and our strategies to keep their
-arrival a secret simply on her account.
-
-"Because you know," interpolated Beth, with a consideration for the
-feelings of the young Polydores--a consideration they had never before
-encountered--"we wanted you to have a nice rest."
-
-Silvia looked quite penitent and remorseful for her seeming lack of
-appreciation of our combined efforts. When I had answered all her
-inquiries satisfactorily, Miss Frayne's curiosity regarding the
-progeny of the eminent Polydores had to be fully relieved.
-
-"And do you mean that the scribbling lady I saw at the table is really
-the mother of these five boys?" she asked, unable to grasp the fact.
-
-"Yes; and the father hereof is the man who explained the ghosts to you
-so scientifically that you cannot remember what he said. Now, Ptolemy,
-we'll hear your story of the fire and the whereabouts of your parents.
-Take your time and tell it accurately."
-
-"Well, you see we did just as you said to, and took the ghost out of
-the window and went out to the woods early this morning so as not to
-let the paper lady see us."
-
-"Oh!" cried Miss Frayne, "am I the paper lady? I begin to see
-daylight. Are these boys the ghost perpetrators, and were you in on
-the put-up job?"
-
-"You're a good guesser," I replied.
-
-"And why wasn't I taken into your confidence?"
-
-"For two reasons. First, because your friend Rob said you'd get better
-results for copy--more inspirations and thrills, if you weren't behind
-the scenes on the ghost business,--and then we didn't want to tell you
-about the presence of the Polydores lest inadvertently you betray the
-fact to my wife. Now, proceed, Ptolemy."
-
-"After we were in the woods, I heard an automobile coming down the
-lane, and I went up near the edge of the woods and peeked out behind a
-tree, and pretty soon I saw father and mother come over the hill and
-go in our haunted house, so I came up there and hid under the window
-and heard mother say: 'What an ideal place to write this is. It looks
-as if I might really get a chance to write unmo--'
-
-"'--lested,'" I finished for him.
-
-"I guess so," he allowed. "Well, she began writing, so I didn't go in,
-but when father came outside I went up to him and told him you and
-mudder were at the hotel and that we were all with you. He told me
-they came up here to write an article for some big magazine about the
-ghost. He hired an automobile down at Windy Creek to bring them up to
-the house and the man was going to come back for them tomorrow
-morning. I didn't let on the ghost was a fake, because I thought he'd
-be so disappointed to have all his trouble for nothing, and he'd be
-mad at me for swiping his skull. I told him a paper lady was coming
-and then I went back to the woods. He went down with me to see the
-boys, and he said he would come back and have lunch with us. Mother
-doesn't ever stop to eat at noon when she is writing.
-
-"He went back and talked to the paper lady and pretty soon he came
-down and ate with us. I told him all about how we couldn't get any
-girl to do the work for us and so we had been living with you, and how
-Di got sick and mudder was all worn out taking care of him and came
-down here to rest, and that you wouldn't cash the check, so I did and
-was spending it and he said that was all right." Here Ptolemy flashed
-me a most triumphant glance.
-
-"He said you must be paid for all your expense and trouble, so he made
-out a check and gave it to me and told me to make mudder a nice
-present. He ain't so bad when he ain't thinking about dead stuff. When
-he felt in his pocket for his check book, he found a letter he had got
-yesterday and forgotten to open, so he read it then and found it was
-from some magazine, and the man said he'd pay his and mother's
-expenses to go to Chili and write up some stuff about--something. So
-father said they must go at once."
-
-"Not to Chili!" I exclaimed.
-
-"Yes; we all went up to the house with him and I took mother's pencil
-and paper away so she would have to listen. She was wild for Chili,
-and I had to go and hunt up a farmer who had a machine to take them
-down to Windy Creek. Father signed another blank check for you and
-said you could board us with it or do anything you thought best.
-
-"Then mother took a lot of papers out of her bag, some stuff she had
-written and didn't get suited with, and she stuffed them in the stove
-and set fire to them. Then we all went down to the lane to see father
-and mother off and when we got back the house was on fire. The chimney
-burned out."
-
-"Guess mother must have written some hot stuff," said Emerald.
-
-"It was burning so fast," continued Ptolemy, "that we didn't dast go
-in to save anything and all our food and clothes and balls and bats
-and fishing tackle are gone, and we didn't know what to do, or what to
-eat, and so--we came here."
-
-"You did just right, Ptolemy," I admitted. "I shouldn't have called
-you down--not until I heard your story, anyway."
-
-I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an injured air.
-
-"Do you mean to tell me," asked Miss Frayne, "that your father and
-mother went away without seeing the baby?"
-
-Ptolemy flushed a little.
-
-"You see," he explained apologetically, "mother gets woolly when she
-writes and she's forgotten there's Di. She thinks Demetrius is the
-youngest. She's mad about writing. If she sees a blank paper
-anywhere, she ain't happy until she has written something on it, and
-the sight of a pencil makes her fingers itch."
-
-[Illustration: I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an
-injured air]
-
-"Take warning, Miss Frayne," I said, "and don't get too literary."
-
-"Some day," resumed Ptolemy, "mother'll get the antiques all out of
-her system and then she'll remember us."
-
-I liked the boy's defense of his mother, and I began to see that Rob
-was right in thinking there were possibilities in the lad, but it was
-Silvia's influence that had developed them, for in the days when he
-borrowed soup plates of us, there had been no redeeming trait that I
-could discern.
-
-And while I was recalling this, I heard Silvia saying to him kindly:
-"And in the meantime, I'll be 'mudder' to you."
-
-"So will I," chimed in Beth.
-
-"I'll be a big brother," offered Rob.
-
-"I'll be next friend, Ptolemy," I contributed.
-
-Strange to say, my offer seemed to make the most impression on him. He
-came to me and gazed into my eyes earnestly.
-
-"I'll do just as you say," he promised.
-
-"Where do we'uns come in?" asked Pythagoras, with one of his satanic
-grins.
-
-Miss Frayne saved the day.
-
-"You all come in with me," she said, "and have lunch. I haven't eaten
-since breakfast, and I understand there is warm ginger cake and
-huckleberry pie. Aren't you hungry?"
-
-"You bet," spoke up Pythagoras. "We only had coffee, peanuts, and
-beans down in the woods, and father ate the beans and drank all the
-coffee."
-
-"We're out of the frying pan into the fire," said Silvia woefully,
-when we were alone.
-
-"I wish the Polydore parents had gone up in smoke," I declared.
-
-"Then your last hope of getting rid of the children would have gone up
-in smoke, too," argued Beth.
-
-"No; in case of the demise of their parents, we could have turned them
-over body and soul to the probate court," I informed her.
-
-"We will fill out this blank check for any amount, Lucien," declared
-Silvia, "that will induce a housekeeper to take charge of their house.
-I shall keep Diogenes, though, until he is older."
-
-"I wouldn't mind Ptolemy, either," I admitted. "I shall be interested
-in seeing what I can make of him, and he hasn't a bad influence over
-Diogenes, but I'll be hanged if anything would induce me to have 'Them
-Three' Chessy cats running wild over us. They can live in their house
-alone, or be put in a reformatory. We won't have them. We're under no
-obligations, pecuniary or moral, to look after them."
-
-"I think, Lucien, we might as well go home now. We've had a good rest
-and a good time, and I am anxious to be back and see how Huldah is
-getting on."
-
-As Huldah had never mastered two of the three R's, we had not been
-able to receive any reports from her.
-
-"I'll tell you what we'll do," proposed Beth. "Rob and I will take all
-the Polydores save Diogenes, and go home tomorrow and prepare the
-house and Huldah for the overflow. Then you two can come on with
-Diogenes the next day."
-
-"Good idea, Beth!" I approved. "I'd hate to face Huldah, unprepared,
-with the return of the Polydores _en masse_."
-
-"I am glad," said Silvia, "that Huldah has been having a rest from
-them for a few days."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-_All About Uncle Issachar's Visit_
-
-
-The next morning's stage carried seven passengers to Windy Creek, as
-Miss Frayne with a big roll of "copy" also took her departure.
-
-Diogenes had been quite docile and amenable to my rule since the
-licking I gave him, so we had a pleasant and comfortable return
-journey on the following day.
-
-"I hope, Lucien," said Silvia, "you won't refuse to cash this check
-for a good amount. The Polydore parents may never show up, and it's
-only right we should be reimbursed for their keep."
-
-"I will cash it," I assured her, "and use it for a housekeeper or else
-send the boys off to a school. I should like very much to have it out
-with Felix Polydore, but, as you suggest, I may never have the
-opportunity to see him at close range."
-
-Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy met us at the station.
-
-"Where are 'Them Three'?" I asked hopefully.
-
-"Huldah is feeding them little pies hot from the kettle--the kind she
-cooks like doughnuts, you know."
-
-"Huldah cooking for 'Them Three'!" I exclaimed. "She must have passed
-into her second childhood. She grudged them even an apple to piece
-on."
-
-"She has pampered them ever since our return," said Rob.
-
-"Poor Huldah! She must indeed be afflicted with softening of the
-brain," I decided.
-
-"She has probably been so lonely, shut in here by herself," said
-Silvia, "that even 'Them Three' looked good to her."
-
-In the hallway Huldah met us. She was beaming with pleasure, but
-except in her bearing toward the children, she was quite normal.
-
-"We've all had a real good rest," she observed, "and you do look so
-well, Mrs. Wade. My! but this place has been lonesome. I'm glad we're
-all together again."
-
-"Now, Silvia, shut your eyes," directed Beth, "and come into the
-library. Ptolemy has bought you a present with the check his father
-gave him."
-
-"Beth helped me pick it out," said Ptolemy.
-
-Beth led the way into the library, and we followed.
-
-"Open your eyes."
-
-Silvia gave a little cry of pleasure, and looking over her shoulder, I
-beheld a baby grand piano.
-
-"Oh, Ptolemy!" she cried, giving him a fervent kiss and fond hug, "I
-can never let you do so much."
-
-"Oh, yes," he said, flushing a little under the endearments which were
-doubtless the first ever bestowed upon him. "Father's got a whole lot
-of money grandpa left him and it's fixed so he can't draw out only so
-much each year. He said the board and bother of us was worth more than
-this and we'll all enjoy the music. But Thag and Em and Dem ain't to
-touch it. I'll knock tar out of the first one that comes near it."
-
-I was disconsolate. I didn't see how we could return it and I didn't
-want the Polydore web woven any tighter. To think of Silvia's
-receiving from them what it had been my longing to give her! But as I
-was to learn later, she was to acquire much more than a piano from the
-eminent family.
-
-After dinner Silvia asked Huldah to come in and hear the music, and
-when Silvia's repertoire was exhausted, we gave our faithful servant
-all the little details of our trip which Beth had not supplied.
-
-"Now tell us, Huldah, how things went along here," said Silvia.
-
-"Well, you think some wonderful things happened to you all on your
-trip mebby--ghosts and proposals," looking at Beth and Rob, "and fires
-and Polydores, but back here in this quiet house something happened
-that has your ghosts and things skinned by a mile."
-
-"Oh, dear!" cried Silvia apprehensively, "what is it?"
-
-"Break it very gently, Huldah," I cautioned. "You know we've borne a
-good deal."
-
-"Your uncle Issachar was here for a couple of days."
-
-She certainly had made a sensation.
-
-"Not Uncle Issachar! Not here?" exclaimed Silvia incredulously.
-
-"Yes, ma'am. He came the next day after Beth and Mr. Rossiter and
-Polly left. I told him you'd gone away for a little vacation and rest.
-I didn't let on that I knew where you had gone, because I didn't want
-him straggling up there, too, or sending for you to come back. He said
-your absence would make no difference to his plans; that he never let
-nothing do that. He come to pay a visit and he should pay one."
-
-"Yes," said Silvia feebly. "That sounds like Uncle Issachar."
-
-"I told him to make himself perfectly at home; that every one did that
-to this place, and he said he would. I'd just slicked up the big front
-room upstairs and I seen to it that he had everything all right. I
-cooked the best dinner I knew how, and he said it was the first white
-man's meal he had eat since his ma died, so I found out what she used
-to cook and fed him on it. Them three kids and him eat like they was
-holler. I guess if Polly hadn't took them away your grocery bill would
-'a looked like Barb'ry Allen's grave.
-
-"Well, as I was saying, your uncle he eat till he got over his
-grouches, and like enough he'd be here eating yet, if he hadn't got a
-telegraph to hit the line for home, some big business deal, he said,
-and I guess it was a great deal, for he licked his chops and smacked
-his lips over it, and he give me a ten dollar bill to get a new dress
-and each of Them Three one dollar fer candy."
-
-"The old tightwad!" I exclaimed. "It was your cooking, sure, that made
-him loosen up that way."
-
-"Tightwad nothing!" she declared indignantly. "You won't think he was
-tight-wadded when you read this here letter he left for you. He told
-me what was in it, and I've just been busting to tell it to Beth, but
-I waited for you to know it first."
-
-With great excitement Silvia opened the letter, read it, gasped,
-re-read it, and then in consternation handed it to me.
-
-"Read it aloud, Lucien," she bade. "Maybe I can believe it then."
-
-This was the letter.
-
- "My dear Niece:
-
- "I was sorry not to see you, but glad to learn that, as every wise
- and good woman should do, you are raising a fine family--a family
- of _sons_, which is what our country most needs. Your son
- Pythagoras informed me that you had taken your oldest child,
- Ptolemy, and your youngest, Diogenes, with you, I am glad you left
- three such promising samples for me to see.
-
- "As you have five sons, I have, agreeable to my promise, placed in
- your name in the First National Bank of your city the sum of
- twenty-five thousand dollars.
-
- "Your affectionate uncle,
- "Issachar Innes."
-
-"Huldah," I asked, "did you tell him the Polydores were our
-children?"
-
-"Me?" she repeated indignantly. "Me tell a lie like that! No; I didn't
-get no chance to tell him anything about them. 'Them Three' done the
-telling. The first thing that one"--pointing to Pythagoras--"said was,
-'Mudder went away and took the baby, Diogenes, with her.' And then
-that next one"--indicating Emerald--"said: 'Yes, and our oldest
-brother, Ptolemy, went on with Beth to see them.'
-
-"The old gent asked them all their names and ages and he was so
-pleased and said he thought it was just fine for you to raise five
-sons, so I didn't have no heart to tell him no different. 'Twan't none
-of my business anyhow. Then 'Them Three' kept talking about stepdaddy,
-and your Uncle Issachar asks 'Who the devil is he? Did my niece marry
-again?' And I told him as how Mr. Wade was all the husband you ever
-had, and that stepdaddy was nothing but a sort of pet-name the kids
-had give Mr. Wade."
-
-"I told him," said Demetrius, "that stepdaddy was cross to us
-sometimes and not as nice as mudder, and he said--"
-
-"You shut up," commanded Huldah quickly, "and let me talk."
-
-"No," I intercepted, "I'd really be interested in hearing what he told
-Uncle Issachar. What was it, Demetrius, that your great-uncle said to
-you?"
-
-"He said," stated the imp, darting his tongue out in triumph at his
-victory over Huldah, "that he always thought you was a stiff."
-
-"He didn't say nothing of the kind!" declared Huldah. "He said you was
-stiff-necked, and that he presumed you would act more like a
-stepfather than the real thing. Well, as I was saying, he asked their
-names, and he liked them fine. Said they were so classy."
-
-"Didn't he say classic, Huldah?" inquired Rob.
-
-"Mebby. What's the difference?" snapped Huldah.
-
-"None," I assured her quickly, dodging a definition.
-
-"She told him--" began Emerald.
-
-"You shut up," again adjured Huldah, "or I'll never bake you one of
-those small pies no more."
-
-"Oh, please, Huldah," I coaxed. "Let us hear everything. I've always
-told you my life's secrets, and I don't mind what you or the boys told
-him."
-
-"Well, I suppose what he was going to tattle was that I thought the
-old gent might feel hurt, 'cause none of them was named after him, so
-I told him Polly's middle name was Issachar."
-
-"Why, Huldah," remonstrated Silvia.
-
-"Well, he's always wanted a middle name, and he's never been baptized,
-so you can stick it in and have him ducked next Sunday and then that
-will square that. 'Them Three' stuck to him like a hive of bees, and I
-was scairt for fear they'd let the cat out of the bag, and so long as
-they had put it in, I thought it might just as well stay in, but they
-were just as slick as grease in all they said. They'll hang in that
-rogues' gallery yet."
-
-"I suppose they were pretty--strenuous," said Silvia with a sigh.
-
-"They was more than that. The first afternoon right after dinner when
-he was sitting on the front porch, sleeping peaceful and snoring, that
-there one--" pointing to Pythagoras--
-
-"Tattle-tale!" he began, but I administered a cuff and he subsided
-into surprised silence.
-
-[Illustration: "He went to the front window and dropped a young kitten
-down on the old gent's head."]
-
-"He," said Huldah, looking pleased at this little attention to the
-boy, "went to the front window and dropped a young kitten down on the
-old gent's head. It clawed something fierce. We had just got things
-going smooth again when Emmy got one of his earaches. I roasted an
-onion and put in his ear, and what did he do but take it out of his
-ear and slip it down your poor uncle's back."
-
-"Why didn't you beat them?" I asked indignantly.
-
-"Because the old gent did that. He put 'em across his knee, and
-believe me, it was some licking they caught. They didn't let out a
-whimper and that pleased him."
-
-"Huh!" said Emerald. "Thag don't know how to cry. He hasn't got any
-tears, and old Uncle Iz didn't hurt me, because, you see, when I heard
-Thag getting his, I went and stuffed the Declaration of Independence,
-that book of stepdaddy's that Demetrius tore the pictures out of, in
-my pants."
-
-"Go on!" urged Rob delightedly. "What else did you all do? Uncle must
-have had some time. It would make a fine scenario. 'The first visit of
-the rich uncle.'"
-
-"Well," resumed Huldah. "One of 'em put red pepper in the old man's
-bed, and he like to sneeze his head off, but he said as how sneezing
-was healthy, and showed you'd got rid of a cold."
-
-"He never got on to the pepper," said Demetrius gleefully.
-
-"In the morning, that second one put a toad in his new uncle's pocket,
-and Emmy broke his specs. Then Meetie he dropped his watch. They used
-his razor to cut the lawn with. And then they took him down to the
-creek to go fishing, and they put the fish in Uncle's silk hat, and
-and----"
-
-"Stop!" implored Silvia, who was now in tears. "Uncle Issachar
-believes them mine! Ours! And that I brought them up! Oh, why did we
-ever go away?"
-
-"Oh, pshaw," exclaimed Huldah comfortingly, "he said you had brung
-them up fine; that they were no mollycoddles or Lizzie boys, and he
-didn't suppose you had so much sense as to leave them natural."
-
-"A left-handed one for mudder," laughed Beth.
-
-"He must be a very peculiar man--ready for the asylum, I should say,"
-commented Rob.
-
-"He would have been if he'd stayed any longer, or else I would have
-been," declared Huldah.
-
-"Couldn't you make them behave, someway?" asked Silvia.
-
-"Well, at first I tried to, and every time I pinched one of 'em when
-the old gent wasn't looking, or knocked 'em down when I got 'em alone,
-they would threaten to tell who they was, and then when I seen how
-your uncle liked the way they acted, I just let 'em go it, head on.
-And seeing as how they each brung you five thousand, I've treated 'em
-best I know how. They're worth it, now. They done one thing more that
-was awful. Could you stand it to hear?" turning to Silvia.
-
-"Please, Silvia," implored Rob.
-
-"Well," argued Silvia faintly. "I suppose we might as well know the
-worst."
-
-"You see the old gent didn't always get up to breakfast with the kids
-and one morning when I brought in the cakes Emmy looked up and
-grinned. I nearly dropped the plate. He had both sets of the old man's
-false teeth in his mouth. I got 'em back in his room without his
-waking, but I'd have liked a picture of Emmy."
-
-"Pythagoras," I demanded, when we had recovered from this recital,
-"why didn't you tell him who you were, and how you all came to be
-here with us?"
-
-"Because she is our mudder, and we are going to stay with her, always.
-We've got a snap. So has father and mother. And Ptolemy told us that
-if you ever got any kids, you'd get five thousand each for them, and I
-thought we'd just make that much for you. So we played Uncle Iz for
-it. Easy money, all right, all right."
-
-"Talk about fine financiering," quoth Rob. "'Them Three' will surely
-land on Wall Street."
-
-But poor Silvia had no heart for humor and was weeping silently.
-
-"Why, look here, my dear," I said in consolation, "this is a very
-simple matter to adjust. In the morning when you feel better, just
-write a full explanation of the affair and inclose your check for
-twenty-five thousand."
-
-Silvia quickly wiped away her tears.
-
-"I'll do it tonight, Lucien. I feel better now. I never thought of
-writing."
-
-Huldah and "Them Three" looked most lugubrious.
-
-"The old skinflint won't miss it as much as I would a penny," declared
-our faithful handmaiden. "And I'm sure you've earnt that twenty-five
-thousand if anyone ever did. You've had as much care and worry about
-them brats as you would if they'd been your own."
-
-"Huldah," I said severely, "there is a pretty stiff penalty for
-obtaining money under false pretences."
-
-"After all the pains we took to make things lively for him, so he
-wouldn't get bored and think he was having a poor time!" regretted
-Pythagoras.
-
-"And us watching every word we spoke so as not to give it away,"
-wailed Emerald.
-
-"Cake's all dough," muttered Demetrius.
-
-Ptolemy regarded the three disapprovingly. He had the old inscrutable
-look, the look that foreboded mischief, in his eyes.
-
-"You bungled, you fool kids!" he said in disgust, "and Huldah, what
-did you want to let on to mudder for that he thought we was hers? You
-ought to have torn up the note he left and just said he'd put
-twenty-five thousand in the bank for her."
-
-"Huh! you're just jealous because you weren't in the Uncle Izzy deal
-yourself," jeered Pythagoras. "You always think you're the only one
-that can do anything right."
-
-"I wish you had been here, Polly," said Huldah, "I am sure you could
-have worked it through somehow."
-
-"I wish I had stayed and put it across," he answered. "If you and the
-kids would only learn not to blab everything you know. It's the only
-way to work anything. Minute you tell a thing, it's all off."
-
-There was still a great deal of development work to be put on
-Ptolemy's moral standard.
-
-"You'll find, my lad," remonstrated Rob, "that honesty is the best
-policy."
-
-"I'd have been perfectly honest about it," he defended. "I would have
-told him the truth, and how our parents had deserted us, and how
-mudder took us in when we were homeless and was bringing us up like
-her own because she hadn't got any, and how stepdaddy wanted to turn
-us out, and she wouldn't let him, and then he would have decided
-against stepdaddy and given mudder the money so she could keep us."
-
-"Ptolemy," I said warningly, "there is a way of telling the truth, or
-rather of coloring white lies with enough truth to make them deceive,
-that is more dishonorable than an out and out lie."
-
-"Tell me, Ptolemy," asked Silvia, "how did you know about that offer
-of five thousand dollars for each child?"
-
-"I overheard it," he said guardedly; "but I can't remember where."
-
-"He heard me say so," confessed Huldah.
-
-"It was when he first come here and he was making us so much trouble,
-and I told him it was too bad we had to have other folks' brats around
-when, if we only had our own, they'd be bringing in something."
-
-The recital now broke up and Silvia sat down to write a long
-explanatory letter to Uncle Issachar. The next morning I procured her
-a check from the First National Bank and she filled it out.
-
-"Oh!" she said with indrawn breath, when she had asked me how to write
-twenty-five thousand dollars, "I never expected to be able to sign my
-name to a check for such an amount."
-
-"You never will again, I fear," was my sad prophecy.
-
-"It must feel rich," said Beth, "just to have a large check pass
-through your fingers."
-
-"Them Three" came the nearest to tears that they were able to do.
-
-"We worked so hard for it," they sighed.
-
-"So did I!" muttered Huldah.
-
-"I couldn't live a double life," declared Silvia.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-_In Which I Decide on Extreme Measures_
-
-
-Everyone in our house, which was now filled to overflowing--in fact,
-there were Polydores on sofas and in beds on the floor--save Silvia
-and myself, was on the alert for a response to the letter during the
-succeeding few days. Knowing Uncle Issachar, we felt sure he would
-make no response, or notice the matter in any way save to cash the
-check promptly.
-
-The monotony was somewhat relieved by the difficulties under which
-Beth and Rob were pursuing their courtship. On the third evening
-succeeding our return, Silvia and I started upstairs early to give
-them a chance to have the exclusive use of the library, the Polydores
-having all been sent to bed. As we were making some plausible excuse
-for going to our room, Beth remarked with a smile:
-
-"Your motive in retiring so early is commendable, but of no particular
-benefit to Rob and me. The Polydores, like the poor, we always have
-with us."
-
-"I saw that every one of them except Ptolemy was in bed at eight
-o'clock last night and the night before," said Silvia. "You don't mean
-to tell me--"
-
-"Yes, I do mean," laughed Beth. "Not Ptolemy, though. He has become
-too dignified to spy on us, but last night as we sat here on the
-settee, we heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from
-underneath."
-
-"How in the world did he ever squeeze under there?" I asked, gazing at
-the slight space between the floor and settee.
-
-[Illustration: "We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from
-underneath."]
-
-"He did look a little flattened, as if he had been put in a letter
-press," said Rob. "I gave him a dime to go to bed and stay there. Beth
-and I had just resumed our conversation when a still, small voice
-said: 'I'll go to bed for a dime, too.' I then hauled Demetrius from
-behind the davenport."
-
-"And the night before," said Beth, "when we were sitting on the porch,
-Pythagoras rolled off the roof, where he had been listening to us, and
-came down into the vines."
-
-"Now I'll stop that," I declared. "I'll tie them in their beds and
-lock the doors and windows."
-
-"No," refused Rob. "I'd like to try to circumvent them by their own
-weapons of wits. I have a little plan which I don't dare whisper to
-you lest their long-range ears get in their work. We are just about to
-start for a walk."
-
-"In this pouring rain!" protested Silvia.
-
-"We like the rain," he replied, "and we--are not going far."
-
-Pythagoras entered the room just then and looked astounded and
-disappointed when he saw Beth and Rob departing.
-
-"We are going out to a small party," Rob remarked to me, casually.
-
-It was after eleven when we heard them returning.
-
-"Do you suppose they have been walking all this time?" said Silvia in
-concern. "Beth wore no rubbers."
-
-The next day was Sunday and Huldah put into execution a plan for
-procuring one happy hour each week. This plan was the admission of the
-Polydores, _en masse_, to one of the Sunday schools. She chose the
-church most remote from home so they would be a long time going and
-coming, which she said would "help some."
-
-"Now," said Beth, as she watched them march away, "I can dare to tell
-you where we spent last evening. We were at the Polydore house next
-door. There is a little vine-screened porch on the other side of the
-house. Rob managed to open one of the windows and brought out a couple
-of chairs. It was as snug as could be."
-
-"I'll corral them every night," I said, "until you make your getaway,
-and I'll give you the key so you can go inside when it is cool or
-stormy."
-
-"We'll go around the block by way of precaution," said Rob.
-
-Presently Huldah returned from the Sunday school with triumphant
-mien.
-
-"They made them all into one class and put a redheaded woman with
-spectacles in for their teacher. I gave them street car tickets to
-come home on."
-
-When the Polydores returned, however, they were dragging Diogenes
-along and he looked quite weary.
-
-"Didn't you come home on the street car?" I asked Ptolemy.
-
-"No; we sold our tickets and got ice cream sodas," he explained. "We
-took turns carrying Diogenes on our backs."
-
-"You only had one ticket for yourself, and two half fares for Thag and
-Emmy," said Huldah suspiciously. "I thought Meetie and Di could ride
-free. You couldn't have sold them tickets for enough for sodies."
-
-"Rob gave us three nickels to put in the plate," said Pythagoras. "We
-only put in one of them, seeing we were all in one family and one
-class. That gave us four nickels for ice cream sodas and the clerk
-gave Di half a glass some one had left."
-
-"I gave you a penny for Di to put in," said Huldah. "What did you do
-with that?"
-
-"We wanted him to put it in, and when they took up the collection, he
-wouldn't give it," said Emerald. "I tried to take it away from him
-and he swallowed it. The redhead teacher was awful scared, but I told
-her he was used to swallowing things and that you said he carried a
-whole department store in his insides."
-
-"Poor little Di," said Silvia; "it's the only way he has of keeping
-things away from you all."
-
-That night I saw to it personally that each and every Polydore was in
-his little bed. It should have aroused my suspicions that none of them
-rebelled, or had evinced the slightest degree of interest or curiosity
-when Beth and Rob announced their intention of going out for the
-evening.
-
-At ten-thirty the lovers returned, bringing in Pythagoras, who was
-clad in his pajamas.
-
-"Where did you pick him up?" I asked in astonishment.
-
-"He picked us up," said Beth.
-
-"He was wise, maybe, in discovering where we were," said Rob, "but he
-fell down when he tried to work off the ghost screeches on us. We
-recognized them at once, and ran him down inside, so our party broke
-up."
-
-"Come here, Pythagoras," I commanded.
-
-He obeyed promptly and fearlessly.
-
-"How did you know they were there, and when did you go over there?"
-
-"I was playing over in our house today," he replied, "and I found one
-of Beth's hairpins with the little stones in, in the big chair, so I
-knew that was where they hid last night. As soon as you went down
-stairs tonight, I got out the window and slid down the roof and came
-over to scare them."
-
-"You've missed a lot of sleep the last few nights," I said quietly,
-"so you will have to make it up. You can stay in bed all day
-tomorrow."
-
-"Hold on, Lucien!" exclaimed Rob. "Tomorrow's the big baseball game of
-the season, and I promised to take them all."
-
-"So much the better," I said. "He will learn to mind."
-
-Pythagoras looked as if he had been struck, and quickly put his arms
-across his eyes. In a moment his shoulders were heaving. At last I had
-found a vulnerable spot in the stoic, and I began to relent.
-
-"See here, Pythagoras," I said, "if I let you up in time to go to the
-game, will you promise me something?"
-
-"Anything," came in a muffled voice.
-
-"Will you promise not to spy on Beth and Rob and keep Emerald and
-Demetrius from doing it?"
-
-"Yes," he promised quickly, his arm coming down and his face
-brightening. "Sure I will, but I did want to hear what they said."
-
-"Why?" asked Rob interestedly.
-
-"We're getting up a show, and Em is going to take the part of a girl
-and he spoons with Tolly, and we didn't know what to have them say to
-each other."
-
-"I'll rehearse you on the play, and prompt you," said Beth with a
-little giggle.
-
-"Come on upstairs with me now," I said to Pythagoras.
-
-When I landed him at his door, he leaned up against me, and rubbed his
-cheek against my arm.
-
-"Thank you for letting me go to the game," he said.
-
-I found myself responding to his affectionate advance. This would
-clearly never do. I couldn't let another Polydore squeeze himself into
-my regard.
-
-"Silvia," I said abruptly, as I came into our room, "we must really
-make some immediate plan for disposing of the Polydores, or, at
-least, of 'Them Three.'"
-
-"Huldah is managing them tolerably well," demurred Silvia. "Since they
-depreciated in market value from five thousand per to nothing, she has
-resumed her former harsh treatment of them."
-
-"Well, we are not going to keep them," I replied with finality. "We
-are under no obligations to do so. I am going to put them in a school
-for boys and use the blank check Felix Polydore left to pay for their
-tuition."
-
-"I suppose that is what we will have to do," she admitted with a
-little sigh. "Yet, Lucien, it doesn't seem quite right. If they are in
-a boys' school, they will keep on right along the same lines. They
-need home influence and contact with women. Demetrius is fond of music
-and will sit still and listen when I play. Emerald obeyed me today the
-first time I spoke, and I even thought I saw a glimmer of good in
-Pythagoras."
-
-I didn't tell her that this glimmer was what had decided me to dispose
-of him.
-
-"It would, doubtless, be better for them to stay," I admitted, "but I
-am not going to be a martyr to the cause. They are going."
-
-The next morning I wrote for catalogues and prospectus to the
-different schools, and I felt as if three old men of the sea had been
-lifted from my shoulders.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-_Which Has to Do with Some Letters_
-
-
-One morning when I came down to my office, I found a letter postmarked
-from the city in which Uncle Issachar lived addressed to me. I opened
-it and found inclosed, with seal unbroken, the letter Silvia had
-mailed to her uncle and which she had marked "personal." There was a
-note addressed to me accompanying it:
-
- "Dear Sir:
-
- "I am returning herewith your personal letter to Mr. Innes, as he
- has gone to South America and left no forwarding address. Should
- such be received from him at any future date, you will be duly
- notified thereof.
-
- "Very truly yours,
- "Chester K. Winslow,
- "Secretary."
-
-I read the above to Silvia at luncheon. She was grievously disappointed
-because her uncle had not received her letter of explanation.
-
-"It is most fortunate," she said, "that I sent it in one of your
-office envelopes."
-
-As usual, she had found the bright spot she always looked for and
-generally discovered.
-
-"I wouldn't care," she said, "to have Uncle Issachar's private
-secretary or the dead-letter office know all our private affairs, but
-I shall feel like an impostor until Uncle Issachar is undeceived."
-
-"I feel a hunch," said Rob, "that Uncle Issachar will run across
-Doctor Felix and his wife down there in Chili and find you out."
-
-"He may run across the Polydores," I replied, "but he'll never find
-out from them that they are the parents of Silvia's children. They
-would not mention a subject in which they have so little interest."
-
-"But," argued Beth, "naturally they'd tell him where they lived, and
-then, of course, he'd say he had a niece living in the same town. They
-would inquire her name and inform him that they were her near
-neighbors, and then he'd tell them what fine sons you have, and then,
-of course, the Polydores would claim their own."
-
-"Which theory goes to show," said Silvia, "how little you know Uncle
-Issachar and the Polydore seniors. He would not think of speaking to
-strangers, and if he did, he wouldn't say any of those usual
-conversational things you mentioned. The Polydores wouldn't be
-interested, in the least, in knowing he had a niece unless she
-happened to know something about antiques, and if he should describe
-her children, she wouldn't recognize them."
-
-After luncheon I went out on the porch. While I sat there, the mail
-carrier came along and handed me a letter--a returned letter. It was
-directed in Ptolemy's round hand to Mr. Issachar Innes. He had
-evidently used the envelope to Silvia's letter to her uncle as his
-model, for the address was written in the same way. "Personal" was
-added in the left-hand corner, and his name and our house number was
-in the upper left-hand corner.
-
-I went into the library where my wife, Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy were
-sitting.
-
-"Ptolemy," I said, handing him the letter, "here is your communication
-to Uncle Issachar, returned."
-
-He lost some of his usual _sang froid_ and appeared quite disconcerted.
-
-"Why, Ptolemy," exclaimed Silvia in consternation, "what in the world
-did you write to Uncle Issachar about?"
-
-Ptolemy had recovered and was quite himself again.
-
-"About us," he said innocently. "As the oldest of our family, I
-thought I ought to do a little explaining."
-
-"And I think," I said, looking at him keenly, "that we have the right
-to know what your explanation was."
-
-Ptolemy handed me over the letter.
-
-"Read it aloud," he said, with the air of one who is proud of his
-productions.
-
-Rob's eyes shone in anticipation.
-
-I broke the seal. A note from the secretary fell out. It was an
-apology for not returning the letter sooner, but it had been
-inadvertently mislaid. I then read aloud the letter Ptolemy had
-written:
-
- "Dear Uncle Issachar
-
- "I am sorry Diogenes and I were away when you were here. You
- thought the others were fine, but you should have seen--Diogenes.
- I hope you will send mudder back her check, because there is lots
- of things she needs, and it takes a lot of money to take care of
- all us. You see our own father and mother don't want to be
- bothered with us and they went away and left us, and so we are
- living with mudder the same as if we were really her adopted
- children, and if her own would have been worth five thousand per
- to you, I think her adopted children ought to be worth half as
- much anyway, so it would only be fair to send her a check for
- $12,500 anyway, and if you are a good sport like the kids said you
- were, you'll send back her check.
-
- "Yours truly,
- "P. Issachar Polydore Wade."
-
-Rob's laughter was so free and spontaneous that I had to join in
-against my will. Ptolemy, who had seemed a little apprehensive of the
-verdict, looked accordingly relieved.
-
-"That's a fine letter, young man," approved Rob. "Stepdaddy ought to
-take you into his law firm."
-
-"No," declared Beth. "I think Ptolemy has inherited his mother's gift.
-He should be a writer."
-
-"Not on your life!" cried Ptolemy with feeling. "I want to live
-things instead of writing about them."
-
-A tear or two came into Silvia's eyes.
-
-"It was very sweet in you, Ptolemy, to try to get the money for
-mudder."
-
-I felt that all this commendation was bad for Ptolemy, and that it was
-up to me to take a reef in his sails.
-
-"It was a well-meant letter, Ptolemy," I said, "and I know that your
-motive was unselfish, but it is very poor policy to meddle in other
-people's affairs. Meddlers are mischief makers in spite of their good
-intentions. I am very glad it did not fall into Uncle Issachar's
-hands."
-
-Ptolemy looked sufficiently squelched.
-
-"By the way, Silvia," I said. "I wrote Mr. Winslow and told him not to
-forget to forward Uncle Issachar's address as soon as he possibly
-could do so, as I had matters of importance to communicate to him."
-
-"He may travel about like father and mother," said Ptolemy, again
-regaining confidence, "so why don't you put that check for twenty-five
-thousand in the Savings Department and get the interest on it
-anyway?"
-
-"I think, Ptolemy," said Rob, "that you are too good a financier,
-after all, to become a lawyer. I will go back to my first conviction
-that you should be a promoter."
-
-"We'll give him to Uncle Issachar," I proposed, "for a partner."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-_"The Money We Earnt for You"_
-
-
-Life went on uneventfully save for the dire doings of "Them Three."
-Knowing that they were to be sent to school, they were having their
-last fling at life untrammeled. September came, and Rob set the day
-for his departure, as he was going home to arrange his affairs, so he
-and Beth could leave for an extended honeymoon trip. I planned to go
-with Rob and install the Polydore three in their distant school. They
-were so despondent at leaving, as the time drew near, that a feeling
-of gloom hung over the household, all the members of which, even to
-Huldah, urged me to relent. But I remained adamant until the evening
-before the day set for the dissolution of the Polydore family, when
-something happened that changed all our plans.
-
-We were assembled in the library in a state of forced cheerfulness
-when the doorbell rang. I answered it, and receipted for a telegram
-which I opened and read in the hall. It was from Chester K. Winslow.
-
-"Silvia," I said gravely, as I returned to the library, "your Uncle
-Issachar is dead. Died in South America. Heart disease. Very sudden."
-
-Conflicting emotions were depicted in Silvia's expression.
-
-The thought uppermost in all our minds was expressed simultaneously by
-"Them Three."
-
-"Gee! Then you can keep the money we earnt for you."
-
-"You know," interpolated Rob in soft-pedaled tone, "they are going to
-train school children toward the military--teach the young ideas how
-to shoot, as it were. It won't be long before they are ordered to
-Mexico to protect us."
-
-"If Them Three ever meets that there Viller man," commented Huldah
-confidently, "the fur will fly some."
-
-"Lucien," said Silvia thoughtfully, "we are under obligations to these
-children, you see, after all."
-
-"Yes," I acknowledged with a sigh, "seeing they are now ours, bought
-and paid for, I suppose we'll have to treat them as such."
-
-"You wouldn't send your own kids away to school," said Pythagoras
-significantly.
-
-"No," I reluctantly allowed, answering the protest of Pythagoras, "and
-we won't send you. You will all go to the public school tomorrow."
-
-The deafening Polydore powwow that followed made me hope that Uncle
-Issachar had met with his just deserts.
-
-
-
-
-"By the author of Mildew Manse."
-
-AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY
-
-By BELLE K. MANIATES
-
-Illustrated. 12mo. $1.00 net.
-
-A book for the many who are weary of problem novels. How prosperity came
-to the Jenkins family, how Amarilly got an education, how the Boarder
-married Lily Rose and built the Annex, and the adventures of the rector's
-surplice, are told in a wholesome little story, between whose covers await
-many laughs, and a tear or two as well.
-
-Amarilly is blessed with a large family and amiable neighbors, and their
-doings are amusing, but her fancies and devices are captivating.... The
-little heroine is all right.--_New York Sun._
-
-The sort of story which pulls at the heartstrings of all readers who like
-a real and genuine character.... No one can afford to miss the sweet humor
-and helpful cheeriness which the author serves in generous
-measure.--_Boston Globe_.
-
-"Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley" is a dear companion for vacation days
-and comes deservedly under the books of real amusement.... Dear Amarilly!
-she brightens every hour spent with her.--_Buffalo News_.
-
-LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Publishers
-
-34 Beacon Street, Boston
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Our Next-Door Neighbors, by Belle Kanaris Maniates
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30075 ***
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30075 ***
+
+OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
+
+
+
+
+By Belle K. Maniates
+
+AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY
+
+MILDEW MANCE
+
+OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken him.
+FRONTISPIECE. _See page 114._]
+
+
+
+
+OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
+
+By
+
+Belle Kanaris Maniates
+
+With illustrations by
+
+Tony Sarg
+
+Boston
+
+Little, Brown, and Company
+
+1917
+
+
+
+
+Copyright, 1917,
+
+By Little, Brown, and Company.
+
+All rights reserved
+
+Published February, 1917
+
+Norwood Press
+
+Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+Presswork by The Colonial Press, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I ABOUT SILVIA AND MYSELF 1
+ II INTRODUCING OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS 9
+ III IN WHICH WE ARE PESTERED BY POLYDORES 28
+ IV IN WHICH WE TAKE BOARDERS 45
+ V IN WHICH WE TAKE A VACATION 61
+ VI A FLIRT AND A WOMAN-HATER 77
+ VII IN WHICH NOTHING MUCH HAPPENS 90
+ VIII PTOLEMY DISAPPEARS AND I VISIT A HAUNTED HOUSE 99
+ IX IN WHICH WE SEE GHOSTS 123
+ X IN WHICH WE MAKE SOME DISCOVERIES 138
+ XI A BAD MEANS TO A GOOD END 152
+ XII "TOO MUCH POLYDORES" 164
+ XIII ROB'S FRIEND THE REPORTER 173
+ XIV A MIDNIGHT EXCURSION 195
+ XV WHAT MISS FRAYNE FOUND OUT 203
+ XVI PTOLEMY'S TALE 213
+ XVII ALL ABOUT UNCLE ISSACHAR'S VISIT 229
+ XVIII IN WHICH I DECIDE ON EXTREME MEASURES 254
+ XIX WHICH HAS TO DO WITH SOME LETTERS 267
+ XX "THE MONEY WE EARNT FOR YOU" 276
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken
+ him. _Frontispiece_
+ Uncle Issachar 10
+ Dr. Felix Polydore 23
+ "Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to
+ Beth and Rob." 80
+ He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us. 102
+ I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to
+ pull together and beat it to the lake 126
+ The landlady intears waylaid me 132
+ I had to carry Diogenes most of the way 168
+ Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia's
+ plaintive protests outside the door 192
+ I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but
+ with an injured air 224
+ "He went to the front window and dropped a young
+ kitten down on the old gent's head." 242
+ "We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled
+ Emerald from underneath." 256
+
+
+
+
+OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOURS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+_About Silvia and Myself_
+
+
+Some people have children born unto them, some acquire children and
+others have children thrust upon them. Silvia and I are of the last
+named class. We have no offspring of our own, but yesterday, today,
+and forever we have those of our neighbor.
+
+We were born and bred in the same little home-grown city and as a
+small boy, even, I was Silvia's worshiper, but perforce a worshiper
+from afar.
+
+Her upcoming had been supervised by a grimalkin governess who drew
+around the form of her young charge the awful circle of exclusiveness,
+intercourse with child-kind being strictly prohibited.
+
+Children are naturally gregarious little creatures, however, and
+Silvia on rare occasions managed to break parole and make adroit
+escape from surveillance. Then she would speed to the top of the
+boundary wall that separated the stable precincts from an alluring
+alley which was the playground of the plebeian progeny of the humble
+born.
+
+To the circle of dirty but fascinating ragamuffins she became an
+interested tangent, a silent observer. Here I had my first meeting
+with her. I was not of her class, neither was I to the alley born, but
+sailed in the sane mid-channel that ameliorates the distinction
+between high and low life.
+
+On this eventful day I was taking a short cut on my way to school. One
+of the group of alleyites, with the inherent friendliness of the
+unchartered but big-hearted members of the silt of the stream of
+humans, had proffered to little Silvia a chip on which was a patch of
+mud designed to become a fruitcake stuffed with pebbles in lieu of
+raisins and frosted with moistened ashes. Before the enticing pastime
+of transformation was begun, however, Silvia was swiftly snatched from
+the contaminating midst and borne away over the ramparts.
+
+Thereafter I haunted the alley, hoping for another glimpse of the
+little picture girl on the wall. At last I attained my desire. One
+Saturday afternoon I saw her coming, alone, down a long rosebush
+bordered path. A thrill ran through me. Our eyes met. Yet all I found
+to say was: "C'mon over."
+
+She responded to this invitation and I helped her over the wall. She
+looked longingly at the Irish playing in the mud, but a clean sandpile
+in my own backyard not far away seemed to me a more fitting
+environment for one so daintily clad.
+
+We played undisturbed for a never-to-be-forgotten half hour and then
+they found her out. Reprimanding voices jangled and the whole world
+was out of tune.
+
+Thereafter a strict watch was kept on little Silvia's movements and I
+saw her only at rare intervals, when she was going into church or as
+she rode past our house. She always remembered me and on such
+meetings a faint, reminiscent smile lighted the somber little face and
+her eyes met mine as if in a mysterious promise.
+
+She grew up an outlawed, isolated child deprived of her birthright,
+but in spite of the handicaps of so barren a childhood, she achieved
+young womanhood unspoiled and in possession of her early democratic
+tendencies.
+
+When I was making a modest start in a legal way, her parents died and
+left her with that most unprofitable of legacies, an encumbered
+estate. Then I dared to renew our acquaintance begun on the sandpile.
+She went to live with a poor but practical relation and was initiated
+into the science of stretching an inadequate income to meet everyday
+needs. In time I wooed and won her.
+
+We set up housekeeping in a small, thriving mid-Western city where I
+secured a partnership in a legal firm. Silvia had all the requisites
+of mind and manner and Domestic Science necessary to a "hearth-and
+home-" maker.
+
+We lived in a house which was one of many made to the same measure
+with the inevitable street porch, big window, trimmed lawn in front
+and garden in the rear. We had attained the standard of prosperity
+maintained in our home town by keeping "hired help" and installing a
+telephone, so our social status was fixed.
+
+There was but one adjunct missing to our little Arcadia. While at a
+word or look children flocked to me like friendly puppies in response
+to a call, to Silvia they were still an unknown quantity.
+
+I had hoped that her understanding and love for children might be
+developed in the usual and natural way, but we had now been married
+ten years and this hope had not been realized.
+
+She had tried most assiduously to cultivate an acquaintance with
+members of child-world, but into that kingdom there is no open sesame.
+The sure keen intuition of a child recognizes on sight a kindred
+spirit and Silvia's forced advances met with but indifferent response.
+She wistfully proposed to me one day that we adopt a child. My doubts
+as to the advisability of such a course were confirmed by Huldah, our
+strong staff in household help. In our section of the country servants
+were generally quite conversant with the intimate and personal affairs
+of the home.
+
+"Don't you never do it, Mr. Wade," she counseled. "Ready-mades ain't
+for the likes of her."
+
+When, in acting on this advice, I vetoed Silvia's lukewarm
+proposition, I was convinced of Huldah's wisdom by seeing the look of
+relief that flashed into my wife's troubled countenance, and I knew
+that her suggestion had been but a perfunctory prompting of duty.
+
+Time alone could overcome the effects of her early environment!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+_Introducing Our Next-door Neighbors_
+
+
+One morning Silvia and I lingered over our coffee cups discussing our
+plans for the coming summer, which included visits from my sister Beth
+and my college chum, Rob Rossiter. We wished to avoid having their
+arrivals occur simultaneously, however, because Rob was a woman-hater,
+or thought he was. We decided to have Beth pay her visit first and
+later take Rob with us on our vacation trip to some place where the
+fishing facilities would be to our liking. However, summer vacation
+time like our plans was yet far, vague and dim.
+
+[Illustration: Uncle Issachar]
+
+While I was putting on my overcoat, Silvia had gone to the window and
+was looking pensively at the vacant house next to ours.
+
+"I fear," she said abruptly and irrelevantly, "that we are destined
+to receive no part of Uncle Issachar's fortune."
+
+Uncle Issachar was a wealthy but eccentric relative of my wife. He had
+made us no wedding gift beyond his best wishes, but he had then
+informed us that at the birth of each of our prospective sons he
+should place in the bank to Silvia's account the sum of five thousand
+dollars. We had never invited him to visit us or made any overtures in
+the way of communication with him, lest he should think we were
+cultivating his acquaintance from mercenary motives.
+
+While I was debating whether the lament in Silvia's tone was for the
+loss of the money or the lack of children, she again spoke; this time
+in a tone which had lost its languor.
+
+"There is a big moving van in front of the house next door. At last we
+will have some near neighbors."
+
+"Are they unloading furniture?" I asked inanely, crossing to the
+window.
+
+"No; course not," came cheerfully from Huldah, who had come in to
+remove the dishes. "Most likely they are unloading lions and tigers."
+
+As I have already intimated, Huldah was a privileged servant.
+
+"They are unloading children!" explained Silvia, in a tone implying
+that Huldah's sarcastic implication would be infinitely more
+preferable. "The van seems to be overflowing with them--a perfect
+crowd. Do you suppose the house is to be used as an orphan asylum?"
+
+"I think not," I assured her as I counted the flock. Five children
+would seem like a crowd to Silvia.
+
+"Boys!" exclaimed Huldah tragically, as she joined us for a survey.
+"I'll see that they don't keep the grass off our lawn."
+
+Late that afternoon I opened the outer door of the dining-room in
+response to the rap of strenuously applied knuckles.
+
+A lad of about eleven years with the sardonic face of a satyr and
+diabolically bright eyes peered into the room.
+
+"We're going to have soup for dinner," he announced, "and mother wants
+to borrow a soup plate for father to eat his out of."
+
+Silvia stared at him aghast. She seemed to feel something compelling
+in the boy's personnel, however, and she went to the china closet and
+brought forth a soup plate which she handed to him without comment.
+
+In silence we watched him run across the lawn, twirling the plate
+deftly above his head in juggler fashion.
+
+The next day when we sat down to dinner our new young neighbor again
+appeared on our threshold.
+
+"Halloa!" he called chummily. "We are going to have soup again and we
+want a soup plate for father."
+
+"Where is the one I loaned you yesterday?" demanded Silvia in a tone
+far below thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit, while her features assumed a
+frigidity that would have congealed father's favorite sustenance had
+it been in her vicinity.
+
+"Oh, we broke that!" he casually and cheerfully explained.
+
+With much reluctance Silvia bestowed another plate upon the young
+applicant.
+
+"Wait!" I said as he started to leave, "don't you want the soup
+tureen, too, or the ladle and some soup spoons?"
+
+"No, thank you," he answered politely. "None of the rest of us like
+soup, so we dish father's up in the kitchen. He doesn't like soup
+particularly, but he eats it because it goes down quick and lets him
+have more time for work."
+
+This time as he sped homeward, he didn't spin the plate in air, but
+tried out a new plan of balancing it on a stick.
+
+"I think," I suggested gently, when our young neighbor was lost to our
+sorrowful sight, "that it might be well to invest in another dozen or
+so of soup plates. I will see about getting them at wholesale rates.
+Our supply will soon give out if our new neighbors continue to
+cultivate the soup and borrowing habit."
+
+"I will buy some at the five cent store," replied Silvia. "I think I
+had better call upon them tomorrow and see what manner of people they
+can be."
+
+When I came home the next day it was quite evident that she had
+called.
+
+"Well," I inquired, "what do they keep--a soup house?"
+
+"They are literary people, the highest of high-brows. Their name is
+Polydore, and the head of the house----"
+
+"Mr. or Mrs.?" I interrupted.
+
+"The head of the house," pursued Silvia, ignoring my question, "is a
+collector."
+
+"So I inferred. Has he a large collection of soup plates?"
+
+"She collects antiquities and writes their history. He pursues
+science."
+
+"They were seemingly communicative. What did they look like?"
+
+"I didn't see them. After I rang I heard a woman's voice bidding some
+one not to answer the bell. She said she couldn't be bothered with
+interruptions, so I went on up the street to call on Mrs. Fleming, who
+told me all about them. She was also refused admittance when she
+called. On my way home I met that boy--that awful boy----"
+
+She paused, evidently overcome by the consideration of his awfulness.
+
+"He had been digging bait--"
+
+Again she paused as if words were inadequate for her climax.
+
+"Well," I encouraged.
+
+"He was carrying his bait--horrid, wriggling angleworms--in our soup
+plate!"
+
+"Then it is not broken yet!" I exclaimed joyfully. "Let us hope it is
+given an antiseptic bath before father's next indulgence in consommé.
+After dinner I will go over and try my luck at paying my respects to
+the soup savant."
+
+"They won't let you in."
+
+"In that case I shall follow their lead of setting aside all ceremony
+and formality and admit myself, as their heir apparent does here."
+
+After dinner and my twilight smoke, I went next door, first asking
+Silvia if there was anything we needed that I could borrow, just to
+show them there were no hard feelings.
+
+My third vigorous ring brought results. A slipshod servant appeared
+and reluctantly seated me in the hall. She read with seeming interest
+the card I handed to her and then, pushing aside some mangy looking
+portières, vanished from view.
+
+She evidently delivered my card, for I heard a woman's voice read my
+name, "Mr. Lucien Wade."
+
+After another short interval the slovenly servant returned and offered
+me my card.
+
+"She seen it," she assured me in answer to my look of surprise.
+
+She again put the portières between us and I was obliged to own myself
+baffled in my efforts to break in. I was showing myself out when my
+onward course was deflected by a troop of noisy children leaded by
+the soup plate skirmisher, who was the oldest and apparently the
+leader of the brood.
+
+"Oh, halloa!" he greeted me with the air of an old acquaintance,
+"didn't you see the folks?"
+
+On my informing him that I had seen no one but the servant, he
+exclaimed:
+
+"Oh, that chicken wouldn't know enough to ask you in! Just follow us.
+Mother wouldn't remember to come out."
+
+I was loth to force my presence on mother, but by this time my
+hospitable young friend had pulled the portières so strenuously that
+they parted from the pole, and I was presented willy nilly to the
+collector of antiquities, who had the angular sharp-cut face and form
+of a rocking horse. She was seated at a table strewn with books and
+papers, writing at a rate of speed that convinced me she was in the
+throes of an inspiration. I forebore to interrupt. My scruples,
+however, were not shared by her eldest son. He gave her elbow a jog of
+reminder which sent her pencil to the floor.
+
+"Mother!" he shouted in megaphone voice, "here's the man next
+door--the one we get our soup plates from."
+
+She looked up abstractedly.
+
+"Oh," she said in dismayed tone, "I thought you had gone. I am very
+much engaged in writing a paper on modern antiquities."
+
+I murmured some sort of an apology for my untimely interruption.
+
+"I am so absorbed in my great work," she explained, "that I am
+oblivious to all else. I have the rare and great gift of concentration
+in a marked degree."
+
+I was quite sure of this fact. She took another pencil from a supply
+box and resumed her literary occupation. As my presence seemed of so
+little moment, I lingered.
+
+"Mother," shouted one of the boys, snatching the pencil from her
+grasp, "I'm hungry. I didn't have any supper."
+
+"Yes, you did!" she asserted. "I saw Gladys give you a bowl of bread
+and milk."
+
+"Emerald took it away from me and drank it up."
+
+"Didn't neither!" denied a shaggy looking boy. "I spilled it."
+
+He accompanied this denial by a fierce punch in his accuser's ribs.
+
+"Here!" said the author of Modern Antiquities, taking a nickel from
+her pocket, "go get yourself some popcorn, Demetrius."
+
+"I ain't Demetrius! I'm Pythagoras."
+
+"It makes no difference. Go and get it and don't speak to me again
+tonight."
+
+The boy had already snatched the coin, and he now started for the
+exit, but his outgoing way was instantly blocked by a promiscuous pack
+of pugilistic Polydores, and an ardent and general onslaught
+followed.
+
+I endeavored to untangle the arms and legs of the attackers and the
+attacked in a desire to rescue the youngest, a child of two, but I
+soon beat a retreat, having no mind to become a punching bag for
+Polydores.
+
+The concentrator at the writing table, looking up vaguely, perceived
+the general joust.
+
+"How provoking!" she exclaimed indignantly. "I was in search of an
+antonym and now they've driven it out of my memory."
+
+I politely offered my sympathy for her loss.
+
+"Did you ever see such misbehaved children?" she asked casually and
+impersonally as she calmly surveyed the free-for-all fight.
+
+[Illustration: Dr. Felix Polydore]
+
+"Children always misbehave before company," I remarked propitiatingly.
+"Of course they know better."
+
+"Why no, they don't!" she declared, looking at me in surprise,
+"they----"
+
+At this instant the errant antonym evidently flashed upon her mental
+vision and her pencil hastened to record it and then flew on at
+lightning speed.
+
+I was about to try to make an escape when a momentary cessation of
+hostilities was caused by the entrance of a moth-eaten, abstracted-looking
+man. As the _two-year-old_ hailed him as "fadder", I gathered that he
+was the person responsible for the family now fighting at his feet.
+
+"What's the trouble?" he asked helplessly.
+
+"She gave Thag a nickel," explained the eldest boy, "and we want it."
+
+The man drew a sigh of relief. The solution of this family problem was
+instantly and satisfactorily met by an impartial distribution of
+nickels.
+
+With demoniac whoops of delight, the contestants fled from the room.
+
+I introduced myself to the man of the house, who seemed to realize
+that some sort of compulsory conventionalities must be observed. He
+looked hopelessly at his wife, and seeing that she was beyond response
+to an S O S call to things mundane, he frankly but impressively
+informed me that I must expect nothing of them socially as their lives
+were devoted to research and study. The children, however, he assured
+me, could run over frequently to see us.
+
+I instinctively felt that my call was considered ended, so I took my
+departure. I related the details of my neighborly visit to Silvia, but
+her sense of humor was not stirred. It was entirely dominated by her
+dread of the young Polydores.
+
+"How many children are there?" she asked faintly. "More than the five
+you said you counted that first day?"
+
+"They seemed not so many as much. That is, though I suppose in round
+numbers there are but five, yet each of those five is equal to at
+least three ordinary children."
+
+"Are they all boys? Huldah says the youngest wears dresses."
+
+"Nevertheless he is a boy. They are all unmistakably boys. I think
+they must have been born with boots on and," conscious of the imprints
+of my shins, "hobnail boots at that. Even the youngest, a two-year
+old, seems to have been graduated from Home Rule."
+
+"I can't bear to think of their going to bed hungry," she said
+wistfully. "Think of that unnatural mother expecting them to satisfy
+their hunger by popcorn."
+
+"They didn't though," I assured her. "I saw them stop a street vender
+below here and invest their nickels in hot dogs."
+
+"Hot dogs!" repeated Silvia in horror.
+
+"Wienerwursts," I hastened to interpret.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+_In Which We Are Pestered by Polydores_
+
+
+Our life now became one long round of Polydores. They were with us
+burr-tight, and attached themselves to me with dog-like devotion,
+remaining utterly impervious to Silvia's aloofness and repulses. At
+last, however, she succumbed to their presence as one of the things
+inevitable.
+
+"The Polydores are here to stay," she acknowledged in a
+calmness-of-despair voice.
+
+"They don't seem to be homebodies," I allowed.
+
+The children were not literary like the other productions of their
+profound parents, but were a band of robust, active youngsters
+unburdened with brains, excepting Ptolemy of soup plate fame. Not that
+he betrayed any tendencies toward a learned line, but he was possessed
+of an occult, uncanny, wizard-like wisdom that was disconcerting. His
+contemplative eyes seemed to search my soul and read my inmost
+thoughts.
+
+Pythagoras, Emerald, and Demetrius, aged respectively nine, eight, and
+seven, were very much alike in looks and size, being so many pinched
+caricatures of their mother. To Silvia they were bewildering
+whirlwinds, but Huldah, who seemed to have difficulty in telling them
+apart, always classified them as "Them three", and Silvia and I fell
+into the habit of referring to them in the same way. Huldah could not
+master the Polydore given names either by memory or pronunciation.
+Ptolemy, whose name was shortened to "Tolly" by Diogenes, she called
+"Polly." When she was on speaking terms with "Them three" she
+nicknamed them "Thaggy, Emmy, and Meetie."
+
+Diogenes, the two-year old, was a Tartar when emulating his brothers.
+Alone, he was sometimes normal and a shade more like ordinary
+children.
+
+When they first began swarming in upon us, Silvia drew many lines
+which, however, the Polydores promptly effaced.
+
+"They shall not eat here, anyway," she emphatically declared.
+
+This was her last stand and she went down ingloriously.
+
+One day while we were seated at the table enjoying some of Huldah's
+most palatable dishes, Ptolemy came in. There ensued on our part a
+silence which the lad made no effort to break. Silvia and I each
+slipped him a side glance. He stood statuesque, watching us with the
+mute wistfulness of a hungry animal. There were unwonted small red
+specks high upon his cheekbones, symptoms, Silvia thought, of
+starvation.
+
+She was moved to ask, though reluctantly and perfunctorily:
+
+"Haven't you been to dinner, Ptolemy?"
+
+"Yes," he admitted quickly, "but I could eat another."
+
+Assuming that the forced inquiry was an invitation, before protest
+could be entered he supplied himself with a plate and helped
+himself to food. His need and relish of the meal weakened Silvia's
+fortifications.
+
+This opening, of course, was the wedge that let in other Polydores,
+and thereafter we seldom sat down to a meal without the presence of
+one or more members of the illustrious and famished family, who made
+themselves as entirely at home as would a troop of foraging soldiers.
+Silvia gazed upon their devouring of food with the same surprised,
+shocked, and yet interested manner in which one watches the feeding of
+animals.
+
+"I suppose he ought not to eat so many pickles," she remarked one day,
+as Emerald consumed his ninth Dill.
+
+"You can't kill a Polydore," I assured her.
+
+I never opened a door but more or less Polydores fell in. They were at
+the left of us and at the right of us, with Diogenes always under
+foot. We had no privacy. I found myself waking suddenly in the night
+with the uncomfortable feeling that Ptolemy lurked in a dark corner or
+two of my bedroom.
+
+Even Silvia's boudoir was not free from their invasion. But one door
+in our house remained closed to them. They found no open sesame to
+Huldah's apartment.
+
+"I wish she would let me in on her system," I said. "I wonder how she
+manages to keep them on the outside?"
+
+"I can tell you," confided Silvia. "Emerald and Demetrius went in one
+day and she dropped Demetrius out the window and kicked Emerald out
+the door. You know, Lucien, you are too softhearted to resort to such
+measures."
+
+"I was once," I confessed, "but I think under Polydore régime I am
+getting stoical enough to follow in Huldah's footsteps and go her one
+better."
+
+Our conversation was interrupted by the entrance of Diogenes.
+
+Silvia screamed.
+
+Turning to see what the latest Polydore perpetration might be, I saw
+that Diogenes was frothing at the mouth.
+
+"Oh, he's having a fit!" exclaimed Silvia frantically. "Call Huldah!
+Put him in a hot bath. Quick, Lucien, turn on the hot water."
+
+"Not I," I refused grimly. "Let him have a fit and fall in it."
+
+"He ain't got no fit," was the cheerful assurance of Pythagoras, as he
+sauntered in.
+
+"Your mother would have one," I told him, "if she could hear your
+English."
+
+"What is the matter with him?" asked Silvia. "Does he often foam in
+this way?"
+
+"He's been eating your tooth powder," explained Pythagoras. "He likes
+it 'cause it tastes like peppermint, and then he drank some water
+before he swallowed the powder and it all fizzed up and run out his
+mouth."
+
+"I wondered," said Silvia ruefully, "what made my tooth powder
+disappear so rapidly. What shall I do!"
+
+"Resort to strategy!" I advised. "Lock up your powder hereafter and
+fill an empty bottle with powdered alum or something worse and leave
+it around handy."
+
+"Lucien!" exclaimed my wife, who could not seem to recover from this
+latest annoyance, "I don't see how you can be so fond of children. I
+did hope--for your sake and--on account of Uncle Issachar's offer that
+I'd like to have one--but I'd rather go to the poorhouse! I'd almost
+lose your affection rather than have a child."
+
+"But, Silvia!" I remonstrated in dismay, "you shouldn't judge all by
+these. They're not fair samples. They're not children--not home-grown
+children."
+
+"I should say not!" agreed Huldah, who had come into the room. "They
+are imps--imps of the devil."
+
+I believe she was right. They had a generally demoralizing effect on
+our household. I was growing irritable, Silvia careworn. Even Huldah
+showed their influence by acquiring the very latest in slang from
+them. Once in a while to my amusement I heard Silvia unconsciously
+adopting the Polydore argot.
+
+As the result of their better nourishment at our table, the imps of
+the devil daily grew more obstreperous and life became so burdensome
+to Silvia that I proposed moving away to a childless neighborhood.
+
+"They'd find us out," said Silvia wearily, "wherever we went. Distance
+would be no obstacle to them."
+
+"Then we might move out of town, as a last resort," I suggested. "Rob
+says he thinks there is a good legal field in----"
+
+"No, Lucien," vetoed Silvia. "You've a fine practice here, and then
+there's that attorneyship for the Bartwell Manufacturing Company."
+
+My hope of securing this appointment meant a good deal to us. We were
+now living up to every cent of my income and though we had the
+necessities, it was the luxuries of life I craved--for Silvia's sake.
+She was a lover of music and we had no piano. She yearned to ride and
+she had no horse. We both had longings for a touring-car and we wanted
+to travel.
+
+"I've thought of a scheme for a little respite from the sight and
+sound of the Polydores," I remarked one day. "We'll enter them in the
+public school. There are four more weeks yet before the long summer
+vacation."
+
+"That would be too good to be true," declared Silvia. "Five or six
+hours each day, and then, too, their deportment will be so dreadful
+that they will have to stay after school hours."
+
+I thought more likely their deportment would lead to suspension, but
+forbore to wet-blanket Silvia's hopes.
+
+I made my second call upon the male head of the House of Polydore to
+recommend and urge that its young scions be sent to the public school.
+I had misgivings as to the outcome of my proposition, as the Polydore
+parents believed themselves to be the only fount of learning in the
+town. To my surprise and intense gratification, my suggestion met with
+no objections whatever. Felix Polydore referred me to his wife and
+said he would abide by her decision. I found her, of course, buried in
+books, but remembering Ptolemy's mode of gaining attention, I
+peremptorily closed the volume she was studying.
+
+My audacity attained its object and I proferred my request, laying
+great stress on the quietude she would gain thereby. She replied that
+attendance at school would doubtless do them no harm, although she
+expressed her belief that the most thorough educations were those
+obtained outside of schools.
+
+Silvia was wafted into the eighth heaven of bliss and then some, as
+the result of my diplomatic mission. Of course the task of preparing
+pupils out of the pestiferous Polydores devolved upon her, but she was
+actively aided by the eager and willing Huldah and between them they
+pushed the project that promised such an elysium with all speed. The
+prospective pupils themselves were not wildly enthusiastic over this
+curtailment of their liberty, but Huldah won the day by proposing that
+they carry their luncheon with them, promising an abundant supply of
+sugared doughnuts and small pies.
+
+Pythagoras foresaw recreation ahead in the opportunity to "lick all
+the kids," and I assumed that Ptolemy had deep laid schemes for the
+outmaneuvering of teachers, but as his left hand never made confidant
+of his right, I could not expect to fathom the workings of his mind.
+
+Early on a Monday morning, therefore, our household arose to lick our
+Polydore protégés into a shape presentable for admission to school.
+It took two hours to pull up stockings and make them stay pulled,
+tie shoestrings, comb out tangles, adjust collars and neckties, to
+say nothing of vigorous scrubbings to five grimy faces and ten
+dirt-stained hands.
+
+At last with an air of achievement Silvia corralled her round-up and
+unloaded the four eldest upon the public school and then proceeded to
+install the protesting Diogenes in a nursery kindergarten. Huldah
+stood in the doorway as they marched off and sped the parting guests
+with a muttered "Good riddance to bad rubbish."
+
+Silvia returned radiant, but her rejoicing was shortlived. She had
+scarcely taken off her hat and gloves when the four oldest came
+trooping and whooping into the house.
+
+"What's the matter?" gasped Silvia.
+
+"Got to be vaccinated," explained Ptolemy with an appreciative
+grin. Of all the Polydores he was the one who had least objected
+to scholastic pursuits, but he seemed quite jubilant at our
+discomfiture.
+
+We were somewhat reluctant to undertake the responsibility of their
+inoculation, especially after Ptolemy told us that his mother didn't
+believe in vaccination.
+
+"I'll take 'em down and get 'em vaccinated right," declared Huldah.
+"Their ma won't never notice the scars, and if one of you young uns
+blabs about it," she added, turning upon them ferociously, "I'll cut
+your tongue out."
+
+"Suppose there should be some ill result from it," said Silvia
+apprehensively.
+
+"Don't you worry!" exclaimed Huldah. "Most likely it won't amount to
+anything. It'll take some new kind of scabs to work in these brats.
+They're too tough to take anything. Come on now with me," she
+commanded, "and after it's done, I'll get you each an ice cream
+sody."
+
+Through Huldah's efficiency the vaccination was quickly accomplished
+and the children of our neighbor were reluctantly accepted by the
+school authorities.
+
+The Polydores were not parted by reason of dissimilarity of age or
+learning, as they were put into the ungraded room. To keep them there
+enrolled taxed to the utmost our ingenuity in the way of framing
+excuses for their repeated cases of tardiness and suspension.
+
+Silvia felt a little remorseful when she listened to the tale of woe
+recited to her by their teacher at a card party one Saturday
+afternoon.
+
+"She said," my wife repeated, "that yesterday Pythagoras brought two
+mice to school in his marble-bag and let them loose. She doesn't
+believe in corporal punishment, but she determined to experiment with
+its effect on Pythagoras, so she kept him and Emerald, who was
+slightly implicated, after school and sent the latter out to get a
+whip. When he came back he said: 'I couldn't find any stick, but
+here's some rocks you can throw at him,' and handed her a hat full of
+stones. This made her too hysterical to try her experiment, so she
+took away his recess for a week."
+
+"We ought to make her a present," I observed.
+
+"She said," continued Silvia, "that they had given her nervous
+prostration, but she had no time to prostrate, and if she didn't
+succeed in getting them graded by the coming fall term, she should
+accept an offer of marriage she had received from a cross-eyed man,
+and you know how unlucky that would be, Lucien!"
+
+"We may be driven to worse things than that by fall," I replied
+ruefully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+_In Which We Take Boarders_
+
+
+Four weeks of unalloyed bliss and then the summer vacation times
+arrived, bringing joy to the heart of the Polydores and the teacher of
+the ungraded room, but deep gloom to the hearthside of the Wades.
+
+One misfortune always brings another. A rival applicant received
+the coveted attorneyship and we bade a sad farewell to piano,
+saddle-horse, automobile and journey, the furnishings to our Little
+House of Dreams.
+
+"I did want you to have a car, Lucien," sighed Silvia, regretfully,
+"and you worked so hard this last year, you need a trip. Won't you go
+somewhere with Rob--without me?"
+
+I assured her it would be no vacation without her.
+
+"Do you know, Lucien," she proposed diffidently, "I think it would be
+an excellent plan to invite Uncle Issachar to visit us. He knows no
+more about children than I do--than I did, I mean, and if he should
+see the Polydores he'd give us five thousand each for the children we
+didn't have."
+
+I wouldn't consent to this plan. I had met Uncle Issachar once. He was
+a crusty old bachelor with a morbid suspicion that everyone was
+working him for his money. I don't wonder he thought so. He had no
+other attractions.
+
+Perceiving the strength of my opposition Silvia sweetly and
+sagaciously refrained from further pressure.
+
+"We should not repine," she said. "We have health and happiness and
+love. What are pianos and cars and trips compared to such assets?"
+
+What, indeed! I admitted that things might be worse.
+
+Alas! All too soon was my statement substantiated. That night after we
+had gone to bed, I heard a taxicab sputtering away at the house next
+door.
+
+"The Polydores must have unexpected guests," I remarked.
+
+"I trust they brought no children with them," murmured Silvia
+drowsily.
+
+The next morning while we were at breakfast, the odor of June roses
+wafting in through the open window, the delicious flavor of red-ripe
+strawberries tickling our palate, and the anticipation of rice
+griddle-cakes exhilarating us, the millennium came.
+
+For the five young Polydores bore down upon us _en masse_.
+
+"Father and mother have gone away," proclaimed Ptolemy, who was always
+spokesman for the quintette.
+
+This intelligence was of no particular interest to us--not then, at
+least. We rarely saw father and mother Polydore, and they were
+apparently of no need to their offspring.
+
+Ptolemy's next announcement, however, was startling and effective in
+its dramatic intensity.
+
+"We've come over to stay with you while they are away."
+
+I laughed; jocosely, I thought.
+
+Silvia paid no heed to my forced hilarity, but ejaculated gaspingly:
+
+"Why, what do you mean!"
+
+"They have gone away somewhere," enlightened our oracle. "They went to
+the train last night in a taxi. They have gone somewhere to find out
+something about some kind of aborigines."
+
+"Which reminds me," I remarked reminiscently, "of the man who traveled
+far and vainly in search of a certain plant which, on his return, he
+found growing beside his own doorstep."
+
+Silvia paid no heed to my misplaced pleasantry. She was right--as
+usual. It was no time for levity.
+
+"I don't see," spoke my unappreciative wife, addressing Ptolemy, "why
+their absence should make any difference in your remaining at home.
+Gladys can cook your meals and put Diogenes to bed as usual."
+
+"Gladys has gone," piped Demetrius. "She left yesterday afternoon. She
+was only staying till she could get her pay."
+
+"Father forgot to get another girl in her place," informed Ptolemy,
+"and he forgot to tell mother he had forgotten until just before they
+went to the train. She said it didn't matter--that we could just as
+well come over here and stay with you."
+
+"She said," added Pythagoras, "that you were so crazy over children,
+that probably you'd be glad to have us stay with you all the time."
+
+My last strawberry remained poised in mid-air. It was quite apparent
+to me now that there was nothing funny about this situation.
+
+"Milk, milk!" whimpered Diogenes, pulling at Silvia's dress and making
+frantic efforts to reach the cream pitcher.
+
+Huldah had come in with the griddle-cakes during this avalanche of
+news.
+
+"Here, all you kids!" commanded our field marshal, as she picked up
+Diogenes, "beat it to the kitchen, and I'll give you some breakfast.
+Hustle up!"
+
+The Polydores, whose eyes were bulging with expectancy and
+semi-starvation, tumbled over each other in their eagerness to "hustle
+up and beat it to the kitchen." Our oiler of troubled waters followed,
+and there was assurance of a brief lull.
+
+"What shall we do!" I exclaimed helplessly when the door had closed on
+the last Polydore. I felt too limp and impotent to cope with the
+situation. Not so Silvia.
+
+"Do!" she echoed with an intensity of tone and feeling I had never
+known her to display. "Do! We'll do something, I am sure! I will not
+for a moment submit to such an imposition. Who ever heard of such
+colossal nerve! That father and mother should be brought back and
+prosecuted. I shall report them to the Society for the Prevention of
+Cruelty to Children. But we won't wait for such procedure. We'll
+express each and every Polydore to them at once."
+
+"I should certainly do that P.D.Q. and C.O.D.," I acquiesced, "if the
+Polydore parents could be located, but you know the abodes of
+aborigines are many and scattered."
+
+My remarks seemed to fall as flat as the flapjacks I was siruping.
+
+Silvia arose, determination in every lineament and muscle, and crossed
+the room. She opened the door leading into the kitchen.
+
+"Ptolemy," she demanded, "where have your father and mother gone?"
+
+He came forward and replied in a voice somewhat smothered by cakes and
+sirup.
+
+"I don't know. They didn't say."
+
+"We can find out from the ticket-agent," I optimistically assured
+her.
+
+"They never bother to buy tickets. Pay on the train," Ptolemy
+explained.
+
+My legal habit of counter-argument asserted itself.
+
+"We can easily ascertain to what point their baggage was checked," I
+remarked, again essaying to maintain a rôle of good cheer.
+
+But the pessimistic Ptolemy was right there with another of his
+gloom-casting retaliations.
+
+"They only took suit-cases and they always keep them in the car.
+Here's a check father said to give you to pay for our board. He said
+you could write in any amount you wanted to."
+
+"He got a lot of dough yesterday," informed Pythagoras, "and he put
+half of it in the bank here."
+
+Ptolemy handed over a check which was blank except for Felix
+Polydore's signature.
+
+"I don't see," I weakly exclaimed when my wife had closed the kitchen
+door, "why she put them off on _us_. Why didn't she trade her brats
+off for antiques?"
+
+Silvia eyed the check wistfully. I could read the unspoken thought
+that here, perhaps, was the opportunity for our much-desired trip.
+
+"No, Silvia," I answered quickly, "not for any number of blank checks
+or vacation trips shall you have the care and annoyance of those wild
+Comanches."
+
+"I know what I'll do!" she exclaimed suddenly. "I'll go right down to
+the intelligence office and get anything in the shape of a maid and
+put her in charge of the Polydore caravansary with double wages and
+every night out and any other privileges she requests."
+
+This seemed a sane and sensible arrangement, and I wended my way to
+my office feeling that we were out of the woods.
+
+When I returned home at noon, I found that we had only exchanged the
+woods for water--and deep water at that.
+
+I beheld a strange sight. Silvia sat by our bedroom window twittering
+soft, cooing nonsensical nothings to Diogenes, who was clasped in her
+arms, his flushed little face pressed close to her shoulder.
+
+"He's been quite ill, Lucien. I was frightened and called the doctor.
+He said it was only the slight fever that children are subject to. He
+thought with good care that he'd be all right in a few days."
+
+"Did you succeed in getting a cook to go to the Polydores?" I asked
+anxiously. "You'll need a nurse to go there, too, to take care of
+Diogenes."
+
+She looked at me reproachfully and rebukingly.
+
+"Why, Lucien! You don't suppose I could send this sick baby back to
+that uninviting house with only hired help in charge! Besides, I don't
+believe he'd stay with a stranger. He seems to have taken a fancy to
+me."
+
+Diogenes confirmed this belief by a languid lifting of his eyelids, as
+he feelingly patted her cheek with his baby fingers.
+
+I forebore to suggest that the fancy seemed to be mutual. Diogenes,
+sick, was no longer an "imp of the devil", but a normal, appealing
+little child. It occurred to me that possibly the care of a sick
+Polydore might develop Silvia's tiny germ of child-ken.
+
+"Keep him here of course," I agreed, "but--the other children must
+return home."
+
+"Diogenes would miss them," she said quickly, "and the doctor says his
+whims must be humored while he is sick. He is almost asleep now. I
+think he will let me put him down in his own little bed. Ptolemy
+brought it over here. Pull back the covers for me, Lucien. There!"
+
+Diogenes half opened his eyes, as she laid him in the bed and smiled
+wanly.
+
+"Mudder!" he cooed.
+
+Silvia flushed and looked as if she dreaded some expression of mirth
+from me. Relieved by my silence and a suggestion of moisture in the
+region of my eyes--the day was quite warm--she confessed:
+
+"He has called me that all the morning."
+
+"It would be a wise Polydore that knows its own parents," I observed.
+
+The slight illness of Diogenes lasted three or four days. I still
+shudder to recall the memory of that hideous period. Silvia's time and
+attention were devoted to the sick child. Huldah was putting in all
+her leisure moments at the dentist's, where she was acquiring her
+third set of teeth, and joy rode unconfined and unrestrained with our
+"boarders."
+
+Polydore proclivities made the Reign of Terror formerly known as the
+French Revolution seem like an ice cream festival. I don't regard
+myself as a particularly nervous man, but there's a limit! Their war
+whoops and screeches got on my nerves and temper to the extent of
+sending me into their midst one evening brandishing a whip and
+commanding immediate silence. I got it. Not through fear of
+chastisement, for fear was an emotion unknown to a Polydore, but from
+astonishment at so unexpected a procedure from so unexpected a source.
+Heretofore I had either ignored them or frolicked with them. Before
+they had recovered from their shock, Silvia appeared on the scene.
+
+"Diogenes," she informed them, "was not used to such unwonted quiet,
+and was fretting at the unaccustomed stillness. Would the boys please
+play Indian or some of their games again?"
+
+The boys would. I backed from the room, the whip behind me, carefully
+kept without Silvia's angle of vision. Before Ptolemy resumed his rôle
+of chief, he bestowed a knowing and maddening wink upon me.
+
+I wished that we had remained neighbor-less. I wished that the
+aborigines would scalp Felix Polydore and the writer of Modern
+Antiquities. Then we could land their brats on the Probate Court. I
+wished that this were the reign of Herod. I vowed I would backslide
+from the Presbyterian faith since it no longer included in its
+articles of belief the eternal damnation of infants. How long, O
+Catiline, would--
+
+A paralyzing suspicion flashed into the maelstrom of my vituperative
+maledictions. I rushed wildly upstairs to our combination bedroom,
+sickroom, and nursery, where Silvia sat like a guardian angel beside
+the Polydore patient.
+
+"Silvia," I shouted excitedly, "do you suppose those diabolical
+Polydore parents purposely played this trick on us? Was it a
+premeditated Polydore plan to abandon their young? And can you blame
+them for playing us for easy marks? Could any parents, Polydore, or
+otherwise, ever come back to such fiends as these?"
+
+"Hush!" she cautioned, without so much as a glance in my direction.
+"You'll wake Diogenes!"
+
+Wake Diogenes! Ye Gods! And she had also implored the brothers of
+Diogenes to continue their anvil chorus! This took the last stitch of
+starch from my manly bosom. Spiritless and spineless I bore all
+things, believed all things--but hoped for nothing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+_In Which We Take a Vacation_
+
+
+Diogenes finally convalesced to his former state of ruggedness and
+obstreperousness. He continued, however, to cling to Silvia and to
+call her "mudder." To my amusement the other children followed suit
+and she was now "muddered" by all the Polydores.
+
+"I am glad," I remarked, "that they scorn to include me in their
+adoption. I wouldn't fancy being 'faddered' by the Polydores."
+
+"You won't be," Ptolemy, appearing seemingly from nowhere, assured me.
+"We've named you stepdaddy."
+
+"If it be possible, Silvia," I implored, "let this cup pass from me."
+
+"I am going down to the intelligence office today," replied Silvia
+soothingly. "Diogenes is well enough to go home now, and I can run
+over there every evening and see that he is properly put to bed."
+
+I went down town feeling like a mule relieved of his pack.
+
+When I came home that afternoon, I found Silvia sitting on the shaded
+porch serenely sewing. A Sabbath-like stillness pervaded. Not a
+Polydore in sight or sound.
+
+"Oh!" I cried buoyantly. "The Polydores have been returned to their
+home station!"
+
+"No," she replied calmly. "They told me at the intelligence office
+that it would be absolutely impossible to persuade, bribe, or hire a
+servant to assume the charge of the Polydore place."
+
+"I suppose," I said glumly, "that Gladys gave the job a double cross.
+But will you please account for the phenomenon of the utter absence of
+Polydores at the present period? Has Huldah at last carried out her
+oft-repeated threat of exterminating the Polydore race?"
+
+"Pythagoras," explained Silvia dejectedly, "has gone to the doctor's.
+He broke his wrist this morning. Diogenes is lost and Emerald has gone
+to look for him--"
+
+"Oh, why hunt him up?" I remonstrated. "Maybe Emerald, too, will get
+lost or strayed or stolen."
+
+"Huldah," continued Silvia, "has locked Demetrius in the cellar. I am
+unable to report on Ptolemy. Huldah is half sick, but she won't go to
+bed. She said no beds in Bedlamite for her. But I have a wonderful
+plan to suggest. There is relief in sight if you will consent."
+
+"I will consent to any committable crime on the calendar," I assured
+her, "that will lead to the parting of the Polydore path from ours.
+Divulge."
+
+"We both need a change and rest. Today I heard of a most alluring,
+inexpensive, unfrequented resort called Hope Haven. Unfashionable,
+fine fishing, beautiful scenery, twelve miles from a railroad, and a
+stage stops there but once a day."
+
+"If there is such a place, we'll go there at once, though why such an
+enticing spot should be unfrequented is beyond me. Do we leave the
+Polydores to their fate, or as a town charge?"
+
+"We'll leave them to Huldah. She offered to keep them here if we'd
+take the outing. She said she'd either give them free rein or beat
+their brains out."
+
+"Then I see where the Polydores land in a juvenile jail, or else I
+return to defend Huldah for a charge of murder. We'll take our
+departure by night--tomorrow night--and like the Arabs, or the
+Polydore parents, silently steal away."
+
+"Lucien," said Silvia constrainedly, when we had arranged the details
+of our plan, "if you wouldn't object too much, I should like to take
+Diogenes with us. He hasn't missed his mother, but I really believe
+he'd be homesick without me."
+
+"Take him, of course," I said. "He's manageable away from the others.
+I plainly see you've formed the Polydore habit, and maybe a partial
+parting from the Polydores would be wiser, but we'll take Diogenes as
+an antidote against too perfect a time. But I forgot to tell you that
+I had a letter from Rob today. He plans to come and make his visit
+now and will arrive next Monday. I'll write him to join us at Hope
+Haven. You must write down again for me the route we take to get
+there."
+
+Silvia laughed hopelessly.
+
+"It never rains but it pours. I had a letter from Beth this afternoon,
+and she says she would like to come to us now. She arrives Monday.
+Here is her letter."
+
+"Great minds! It is quite a coincidence," I declared.
+
+"I thought it would be so nice to have Beth go with us to this
+resort."
+
+"It can't be done," I said. "That is, they can't both go. I am not
+going to let even Rob Rossiter slight my sister."
+
+"Still it would be a triumph to have her change his mind--or his
+heart. You know a woman-hater always succumbs to the right girl."
+
+"In books, yes!"
+
+I had been scanning Beth's letter and I laughed derisively as I read
+aloud: "'I am so curious to see those next-door children. When you
+first wrote of the "Polydores" I never once thought of them as
+children.'"
+
+"She thought exactly right," I told Silvia, and then continued
+reading: "'I supposed them to be something like tadpoles or polliwogs.
+I really think I shall enjoy them.'"
+
+"It would serve her right," I said, "to let her come and stay with
+them here in our absence. She'd get the cure for enjoyment all right.
+Rob wrote of them in the same strain and says he, too, is curious to
+meet the missing links."
+
+"Does she know," asked Silvia, "how Rob regards women?"
+
+"No; I've always made some excuse to her for not having them meet. I
+didn't want to hear her make disparaging remarks about him, and she
+is such a flirt, she'd try to draw him out and he would shut up like a
+clam."
+
+"Well, I think," decided Silvia, "that the best way out of it is to
+write Rob to postpone his visit and I will write Beth to come direct
+to Hope Haven."
+
+"Yes," I agreed, "that will be fine. She shall have charge of dear
+little Di and study the evolutions of the Polydores later."
+
+I approved this plan. So we wrote our letters and stealthily, but
+joyously, prepared for our getaway, leaving the house like thieves in
+the night and bearing the sleeping cherub, Diogenes.
+
+Silvia sighed in relief when we were aboard the train.
+
+"I feel quite chesty," she declared, "at being smart enough to outwit
+Ptolemy, the wizard."
+
+"I have the feeling," I observed forebodingly, "that they may be on
+the train or underneath it."
+
+The next morning we reached Windy Creek, the station nearest our
+destination, and continued our journey by stage.
+
+"People will think you have consoled yourself very speedily for the
+death of your first husband," I observed, as we were en route.
+
+"Why, what do you mean, Lucien?"
+
+"You know Diogenes addresses me as stepdaddy. It is the only word he
+speaks plainly."
+
+"Oh!" she exclaimed in perturbation, "I never thought of that! Well,
+we can explain to everyone, or I'll teach them to leave off the
+'step.'"
+
+"Not on your life!" I demurred.
+
+"He had better call you Lucien, then. Emerald calls his father
+'Felix.'"
+
+She at once began her tutelage of the bewildered Diogenes. After
+several stabs at pronouncing Lucien he managed to evolve "Ocean" to
+which he sometimes affixed "step" so that people to whom he was not
+explained doubtless thought me the latest thing in dances.
+
+Hope Haven was like most resorts--a place safe to shun. There was a
+low, flat stretch of woods in which a clearing had been made for a
+barn-like structure called a hotel, with rooms rough and not always
+ready. The beautiful recreation grounds mentioned in the advertising
+matter consisted of a plowed field worked over into a space designated
+as a tennis court and a grass-grown croquet ground.
+
+"Anyway," claimed Silvia hopefully, "it's a treat to see woods, water,
+and sky unconfined."
+
+She devoted the remainder of the morning to unpacking and after
+luncheon set off to explore the woods, borrowing from the landlady a
+little cart for Diogenes to ride in. My plan to go in swimming was
+delayed by my garrulous landlord.
+
+I was just starting for the lake when I heard sounds from the woods
+that alarmed the landlord but which I instantly recognized as the
+Polydore yell. A moment later I saw Silvia emerging at full speed into
+the open, drawing the cart in which Diogenes was doubled up like a
+jackknife. I hastened to meet them.
+
+"Oh, Lucien," exclaimed my wife tearfully, "we are bitten to bits!
+Just look at poor little Di!"
+
+I lifted the howling child from the cart. His face, neck, and hands
+were stringy and purplish--a cross between an eggplant and a round
+steak.
+
+"Mosquitoes!" explained Silvia. "They came in flocks and they
+advertised particularly 'no mosquitoes.'"
+
+A dour-faced guest paused in passing.
+
+"There aren't--many," she declared. "Very few, in fact, compared to
+the number of black flies, sand fleas, and jiggers. However, you'll
+find more discomfort from the poison ivy, I imagine."
+
+"Lucien," began Silvia in lament.
+
+"Never mind!" I hastened to console, "you are out of the woods now,
+and you won't have to go in again. I presume they have an antidote up
+at the house. I'll give you and Diogenes first aid and then we will
+all go down to the lake shore. You can both sit on the dock and watch
+me swim."
+
+They both brightened up, and when we reached the hotel the landlady
+provided a soothing lotion for the bites and stings.
+
+By the time we had started for the lake, the afflicted two were in
+holiday spirit again.
+
+I sought cover in a small shed called a bath-house and got into my
+swimming outfit and shot out from the dipping end of the diving-board
+into the water. When I came to the surface, Silvia, sitting beside
+Diogenes on the dock, shrieked wildly.
+
+"Oh, Lucien, there are snakes all around you! Come out, quick!"
+
+"They are only water snakes," I assured her.
+
+"I don't care what kind they are. They are snakes just the same."
+
+Diogenes instantly began to bellow for me to hand him a snake to play
+with.
+
+"He recognizes his own," I told Silvia, who, however, saw nothing
+amusing in my implication.
+
+When I came out of the water, the temperature had climbed several
+degrees and we were glad to seek the hotel parlor, which was cool and
+damp.
+
+After dinner Silvia put Diogenes to bed and we sat out on the veranda.
+I was enjoying my evening smoke and the feel of the night wind in my
+face. Silvia had just finished telling me that merely to be away from
+the Polydores was Paradise enough for her, and that she didn't care
+very much about the woods, anyway--the lake was sufficient, when her
+optimism was rudely jolted by the shrill, shudder-sending song of the
+festive mosquito.
+
+She fled into the parlor. The landlady, who seemed to have a panacea
+for all ills, suggested that she might tack mosquito netting around
+the little balcony extending from our bedroom, and then she could sit
+there in comfort when the mosquitoes bothered.
+
+"That's what the last lady that had that room did," she said, "but
+when she left, she took the netting with her. We keep a supply in our
+little store."
+
+Silvia immediately sought the hotel store and bought a quantity of the
+netting and a goodly stock of the mosquito lotion.
+
+That night as I was drifting into slumber, Silvia remarked: "Only one
+of the things I heard and read about this place is true."
+
+"Which one?" I asked between winks.
+
+"That it was unfrequented. I have seen only three guests besides us so
+far. How do they make it pay?"
+
+"The hotel is evidently only a side issue," I replied.
+
+"To what?"
+
+"To the store. Think of the quantities of lotion and netting they must
+sell in the season, which, you must know, is in the fall. The hunting,
+the landlord tells me, is very good, and his hotel is quite popular
+in October and November."
+
+"I think we had better stay, Lucien. Mosquitoes don't poison you."
+
+"Even if they did," I declared, "as a choice between them and the
+Polydores I would say, 'Oh, Mosquito, where is thy sting?'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+_A Flirt and a Woman-Hater_
+
+
+The next morning I arose early and screened in the little birdhouse
+balcony. There was a large piece of netting left and Silvia converted
+it into a robe and headgear for the swaddling of Diogenes.
+
+"He looks like the Bride of Lammermoor," I declared, as he went forth
+in this regalia.
+
+"Well, that's preferable to looking like a pest-house patient, as he
+did yesterday."
+
+His first-aid costume didn't find favor with the landlady, as it would
+seem indicative to the newly arrived of the features of the place.
+However, before another stage-coming was due, Di had rent his garment
+sufficiently to make it useless is a "skeeter skirt."
+
+During the morning I enjoyed my solitary swim with the snakes.
+Diogenes played football with the croquet balls and bruised one of his
+toes, besides hitting the landlady's child in the eye. Silvia went for
+a walk which had been pictured in the advertisements. She speedily
+returned, her ardor dampened.
+
+"There are so many sticks and stones and rocks," she said in a
+discouraged tone, "that there was no pleasure in walking. I nearly
+sprained my ankle."
+
+"Well, the real sport we haven't tried yet," I said. "We'll get a boat
+and take Diogenes and go for a row on the lake."
+
+This proposition met with instant favor. I put Silvia and Diogenes in
+the stern of the boat and pulled for the opposite shore. My endeavors
+to gain this point were balked by Silvia's remarkable conceptions of
+the art of steering craft. She was so serenely satisfied, however,
+with the way she performed her duties and the aid she thought she was
+giving me, that I forbore to criticize.
+
+In order to achieve a few strokes in the right direction, I asked her
+to get me a cigar from an inside pocket of my coat, which was on the
+seat in front of her. Then came the blight to our bliss. She looked in
+the wrong pocket and instead of producing a cigar, she extracted two
+letters with seals unbroken.
+
+[Illustration: "Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to Beth
+and Rob."]
+
+"Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to Beth and Rob.
+Well, it is my fault. I should have known better than to give them to
+you."
+
+"The plot thickens," I replied thoughtfully.
+
+"This is Monday. They must both be at the house now. What will they
+think!"
+
+"They will think we didn't receive their letters."
+
+"Isn't it unfortunate--" she began.
+
+"No," I replied. "I am not sure but what it is a good thing. It will
+give Rob a jolt to see that girls can be as nice as Beth is, and as
+for her, she is quite able to take care of the situation where a man
+is concerned."
+
+"But we must have Beth here. Maybe you'd better telegraph her."
+
+"Huldah understands conditions. She will send Beth on here."
+
+The next morning we took Diogenes and went down the road to meet the
+stage. As it came around the curve, we saw there were three
+passengers.
+
+"Tolly!" cried Diogenes with an ecstatic whoop.
+
+"Beth!" recognized Silvia.
+
+"Rob!" I ejaculated.
+
+The stage stopped to allow us to get in.
+
+Mutual explanations followed. Ours were brief and substantiated by the
+documents in evidence.
+
+"Now," I said turning threateningly to Ptolemy, "what did you come
+here for?"
+
+"To show them," indicating Beth and Rob, "how to get here and to look
+after Di so you and mudder could enjoy your vacation," he replied
+glibly.
+
+Beth laughed mirthfully.
+
+"Check! Lucien."
+
+"Didn't Huldah warn you," I asked her, "that our whereabouts were to
+remain unknown?"
+
+"Ptolemy," she replied, "is evidently a mind reader, for he told me
+where you were before I saw Huldah."
+
+"Why, Ptolemy, how did you know where we were?" asked Silvia.
+
+"I was on top of the porch when you told stepdaddy about coming. I
+didn't tell the others. I won't bother you any. And I know how to look
+after Di. You won't send me back, mudder," he pleaded, looking
+wistfully at the foam-crested water of the little lake.
+
+I wondered mutely if Silvia could resist the appeal in the eyes of the
+neglected boy when he turned his imploring gaze to hers, and the
+delight depicted in Diogenes' eyes at "Tolly's" arrival. She could
+not.
+
+"You may stay as long as we do," she said slowly, "if you are a good
+boy and will not play too rough with Diogenes."
+
+We had reached the hotel by this time, and with a wild "ki yi"
+Ptolemy dashed for the shore, dragging the delighted Diogenes with
+him.
+
+"It's only fair to Huldah to take one more off her hands," Silvia said
+apologetically.
+
+"Them Three is what bothers me," I complained. "If they, too, follow
+after, Heaven help them! I won't."
+
+"It's a good arrangement all around," declared Rob. "I judge it takes
+a Polydore to understand his ilk, so the kids can pair off together.
+Miss Wade will be company for you, while Lucien and I go fishing."
+
+He looked keenly at Beth as he spoke, but Beth was looking demurely
+down and made no sign of having heard him.
+
+Silvia and I went with Beth to her room, and then she told her story.
+
+"Knowing Lucien's failing, I was not surprised at receiving no
+response to my letter. When I got out of the cab in front of your
+house, a wild-looking boy, very bas-relief as to eyes, and who I felt
+sure must be Ptolemy of the Polydores, appeared. As soon as he saw me
+he gave utterance to a blood-curdling yell of--'Here she is!'
+
+"In response to his call three of his understudies came on with
+headlong greeting.
+
+"'You are Beth, aren't you?' Ptolemy asked me. Then he drew me aside
+and in mysterious whispers told me where you were and that you had
+written me to join you here. He added that stepdaddy never remembered
+to mail letters. I went within and interviewed Huldah who confirmed
+his information.
+
+"Presently I saw a taxi stop before the house.
+
+"'That's him!' exclaimed Ptolemy.
+
+"'Him who?' I asked.
+
+"'Rob somebody--stepdaddy's college chum. He wrote he was coming, and
+they thought they had postponed him.'
+
+"With a sprint of speed the four Polydores surrounded your Mr.
+Rossiter, all talking at once. I came to the rescue, of course, and
+explained the situation, and we decided to follow you.
+
+"Ptolemy was promoter for the trip and suggested the advisability of
+his accompanying us as courier and future nursemaid to Diogenes. He
+was intending to come anyway, but thought he'd wait for us. He had all
+his belongings packed."
+
+"He hasn't many except those he had on," said Silvia thoughtfully.
+
+"He has some swimming trunks, two collars, two shirts, some mismated
+socks, homemade fishing tackle and a battered baseball bat. We came
+away surreptitiously to escape detection by the trio left behind. I
+knew you wouldn't welcome his presence--but he said he was coming
+anyway, so we thought we might as well bring him and express him
+back."
+
+After visiting with Beth for a few moments, Silvia and I withdrew to
+talk matters over confidentially.
+
+"All's well that ends well," I quoth.
+
+"It hasn't ended yet," reminded Silvia. "I trust Ptolemy didn't reveal
+what you said about Rob's being a woman-hater and Beth a flirt."
+
+Ptolemy conveniently appeared just then, as he generally did in the
+midst of private interviews. Silvia asked him if he had repeated those
+remarks to Beth or Rob.
+
+"Why, no," he said. "I knew you didn't want her to know, because
+stepdaddy said so, and I thought he wouldn't like to be called that,
+and I wasn't going to give Beth away to him."
+
+"You're all right, Ptolemy!" I exclaimed, for the first time awarding
+him approbation.
+
+Out on the veranda we met Rob.
+
+"Say, those Polydores certainly have the punch and pep," he declared.
+"I'd like to have fetched the whole bunch along with me."
+
+"If you had," I replied dryly, "our life's friendship would have died
+on the spot."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+_In Which Nothing Much Happens_
+
+
+"Why Hope Haven?" asked Rob reflectively, when he had taken inventory
+of the possibilities of the resort.
+
+"Because," sighed Silvia, "so many hopes--vacation hopes--must have
+been buried here."
+
+Rob was of an investigating turn of mind, however, and he had heard
+from a native of H. H., as he had abbreviated the place, that there
+was a smaller lake, abounding in fish, farther on through the forest.
+It was so strongly fortified, however, by the formidable battalions of
+sharp-shooting insects that but few fishermen had ever been able to
+lay siege to it.
+
+Rob and I being poison proof decided to try our luck and pitch camp
+for a few days on the shores of this hidden treasure. As we had to
+send to town by the stage driver for the necessary supplies, we
+remained in H. H. the remainder of the day.
+
+We at once paired off in Noah's most approved style as Rob had
+outlined. Beth and Ptolemy went up shore, sticks and stones and rocks
+being no obstacles to their feet. Rob and I sought the society of the
+snakes, while Silvia and Diogenes, mosquito-netted, watched a game of
+croquet.
+
+We dined without the pleasure of the society of Ptolemy and Diogenes,
+who had been invited to sit at the table with the landlady's
+children. I might state, incidentally, that the invitation was never
+repeated.
+
+Beth was quite excited over her walk.
+
+"Ptolemy and I," she boasted, "made more of a discovery than Mr.
+Rossiter did. We found a haunted house, a perfectly haunted house."
+
+"I am not surprised," declared Silvia. "You couldn't expect any other
+kind of a house in such a region."
+
+"Where is it?" I asked, "and what is it haunted by?"
+
+"Insects," suggested Silvia.
+
+"You go around shore about two miles, only it's farther, as you have
+to make so many ups and downs over the rocks. Then you leave the shore
+and go through a low marshy stretch, sort of a Dismal Swamp, and then
+up a hill. After Ptolemy and I climbed to the top, we looked down and
+saw, hidden in a clump of lonely looking poplars, a small, rudely
+built house. We went down to explore and had hard work making our way
+through a thick growth of--everything. We crawled under some tangled
+vines and came up on the steps. The house was vacant, although there
+were a few old pieces of furniture--a couple of cots, a cook-stove,
+table, and chairs.
+
+"On our way home we met a woman who gave us a history of the house. An
+old miser lived there long ago. One night he was robbed and murdered,
+and his ghost still haunts the place. No one ventures in its vicinity,
+and she said most likely we were the first people who had gone there
+since the tragedy. She told us of a nearer way to reach it. You take
+the road to Windy Creek, and about two miles below here, turn into a
+lane and then go through a grove and over a hill."
+
+"You don't really believe the story, that is, the ghost part of it?"
+asked Rossiter.
+
+"N--o," allowed Beth. "Still, I'd like to. It makes it interesting.
+Ptolemy and I are going down there some night to see if we can find
+the ghost."
+
+"You won't see one," I assured her. "Ptolemy's presence would be
+sufficient to keep even a ghost in the background."
+
+"Ptolemy's a peach," declared Beth emphatically.
+
+"If he were older, you wouldn't think so," said Rob.
+
+"Why not?" asked Beth in surprise, or seeming surprise.
+
+He smiled enigmatically, and irrelevantly asked her if she wouldn't
+really be afraid to go to the haunted house at night with only Ptolemy
+for protection.
+
+She assured him she shouldn't be afraid of a ghost if she saw one, and
+that she shouldn't be afraid to go alone.
+
+Throughout the evening, which we spent in rowing, walking, and later
+at a little impromptu supper, I was interested in observing the
+puzzling behavior of Beth and my chum. I had expected that he would
+avoid her as much as possible and speak to her only when common
+politeness made conversation obligatory, and that she, a born
+coquette, would seek to add his scalp to her collection. Instead, to
+my surprise, their rôles were reversed. He appeared interested in her
+every remark and looked at her often and intently. He was quite
+assiduous in his attentions which, strange to say, she discouraged,
+not with the deep design of a flirt to increase his ardor, but with a
+calm firmness that admitted of no doubt as to her feelings.
+
+"Your sister," he remarked to me as we were walking down to the lake
+for a swim just before going to bed, "is a very unusual type."
+
+"Not at all!" I assured him. "Beth is the true feminine type which you
+have never taken the trouble to know."
+
+"Oh, come, Lucien! Not feminine, you know. Though she is inconsistent."
+
+I resented the imputation hotly, but he only laughed and said that he
+guessed it was true that a man didn't understand the women in his
+family as well as an outsider did.
+
+"You think," I said, "just because she says she isn't afraid of
+ghosts--"
+
+"Not at all," he denied. "That wasn't the reason, but--I like her
+type, though I always supposed I wouldn't. It is a new one to
+me--anyway. I didn't think so young a girl as she--"
+
+Our discussion was cut short by the inevitable, ever-present Ptolemy,
+who came running up to us, clad in about four inches of swimming
+trunks.
+
+"Why aren't you in bed?" I demanded.
+
+"I was in bed, but it was so warm I couldn't sleep, and I went to the
+window and saw you coming down here, so I thought I'd come, too."
+
+I repeated Rob's remarks to Silvia when I returned to our room, and
+she betrayed Beth's confidences in regard to Rob.
+
+"She says she would like him if it were not for one trait that she
+dislikes more than any other in a man and that it was sufficient in
+her estimation to counterbalance all his good qualities."
+
+"What can she mean?" I asked bewildered. "I don't see a flaw in Rob,
+except for his being a woman-hater, and he surely hasn't betrayed that
+fact to her, judging from his manner toward her. I think he is making
+an effort to be nice to her on my account, and she doesn't appreciate
+it."
+
+"I asked her what the flaw was, and she flushed and said she couldn't
+tell me."
+
+"Well, I guess all around it is a good thing we are going off on our
+fishing expedition. I don't want my friend turned down by my sister,
+and I don't want my friend calling my sister a new type and
+unfeminine."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+_Ptolemy Disappears and I Visit a Haunted House_
+
+
+When Rob and I, with our camping outfit, drove off through the woods,
+Ptolemy's eyes followed us so enviously and he pleaded so eloquently
+to be taken with us that Rob was actually on the point of considering
+it.
+
+"See here, Rob Rossiter!" I exclaimed, "This is my vacation and all I
+came to this God-forsaken place for was to escape the Polydores. If he
+goes, I stay. You know I've always tried to meet issues, but this
+antique family has got me going."
+
+"All right," he yielded.
+
+After a drive of a few miles we came to the lake and pitched our tent.
+Two days of ideal camp life followed. The weather was fine, Rob was a
+first-class cook, and the sport was beyond our most optimistic
+expectation. We landed enough of the Friday food to satisfy the most
+fastidious fishing fiend, and the mosquitoes, finding we were
+impervious to their stings, finally let us alone.
+
+I forgot all business cares and disappointments, yes, even the
+Polydores; but on the morning of the third day Rob began to show signs
+of restlessness and spoke of the likelihood of my wife's being
+lonely.
+
+"Not with Beth and Ptolemy in calling distance," I told him.
+
+"But they will be off together," he replied, "and your wife will be
+alone with that _enfant terrible_. I fancy, too, that your sister
+isn't exactly a companion for your wife."
+
+"Well, that shows how little you know her. She and Silvia are great
+friends."
+
+"Oh, yes, of course they are friendly, but I mean their tastes are so
+different, and they are so unlike. Your sister doesn't care for
+domesticity."
+
+"Sure she does. You have turned the wrong searchlight on Beth. If you
+knew her, you'd like her."
+
+"I do like her," he declared. "It's too bad she--"
+
+He stopped abruptly and quickly changed the conversation. In spite of
+my efforts to renew the controversy about Beth, he refused to return
+to the subject.
+
+[Illustration: He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us.]
+
+In the afternoon, when I was doing a little scale work preparatory to
+cooking, a messenger from the hotel drove up with a note from Silvia
+which I read aloud:
+
+"Ptolemy has been missing for twenty-four hours. We are in hopes he
+has joined you. If not, what shall I do?"
+
+"We'll go back with you," said Rob to the man. "Just lend a hand here
+and help us pull up these tent stakes."
+
+"What's Ptolemy to me or I to him?" I asked with a groan, "can't we
+give him absent treatment?"
+
+"You're positively inhuman, Lucien," protested Rob. "The boy may be at
+the bottom of the lake."
+
+"Not he! He was born to be hung."
+
+All this time, however, I had been active in making preparations for
+departure, as I knew that Silvia would feel that we were responsible
+for Ptolemy's safety, and her anxiety was reason enough for me to
+hasten to her.
+
+Rob was quite jubilant on our return trip and declared that the fish
+came too easily and too plentifully to make it real sport, but I felt
+that I had another grudge to be charged up to the fateful family.
+
+We found Silvia pale from anxiety, Beth in tears, and Diogenes loudly
+clamoring for "Tolly." We learned that the afternoon before, Silvia
+and Beth had gone with the landlady for a ride, leaving Diogenes in
+Ptolemy's care, but on their return at dinner time, Diogenes was
+playing alone in the sandpile.
+
+Nothing was thought of Ptolemy's absence until bedtime, and they had
+then sent out searching parties to the woods and the lake shores.
+Finally it occurred to Beth that he might have gone to join Rob and
+me, so they sent the messenger to investigate.
+
+"He must be lost in the woods somewhere," said Beth tearfully, "and
+he will starve to death."
+
+Rob actually touched her hand in his distress at her grief.
+
+"Ptolemy is too smart to get lost anywhere," I declared. "He knows
+fully as much about woodcraft as he does about every other kind of
+craft. He's one of his mother's antiquities personified. But haven't
+you been able to find anyone who saw him after you went for your
+ride?"
+
+"No; even the hotel help were all out on the lake."
+
+"And he left Diogenes here, absolutely unguarded?"
+
+"Well!" admitted Silvia, "he tied Diogenes to a tree near the
+sandpile."
+
+"Then he must have gone away with malice aforethought," I said,
+"and Diogenes is the only one who knows anything about his last
+movements."
+
+I lifted the child to my knee, and speaking more gently to him than I
+had ever done, I asked:
+
+"Di, did you and Tolly play in the sandpile yesterday?"
+
+He was quite emphatic in his affirmative.
+
+"Well, tell Ocean: Did Tolly go away and leave you?"
+
+"Tolly goed away," he confirmed.
+
+"Oh, Lucien!" protested Beth, laughing. "He's too little to know what
+you are talking about or to remember."
+
+"Lucien's ruling passion strong in death," murmured Rob. "He can't
+help cross-examining the cradle even!"
+
+"Which way," I resumed, ignoring these interruptions, "did Tolly
+go--that way?" pointing towards the woods.
+
+"No! Tolly goed--" and he trailed off into his baby jargon which no
+one could understand, but he pointed to the lake.
+
+"What did he say when he went away; when he tied the rope around
+you?"
+
+"Bye-bye."
+
+"What else?"
+
+Diogenes' intentions to be communicative were certainly all right, but
+not a word was intelligible. As he kept picking at his dress and
+pointing to it, I finally prompted:
+
+"Did Tolly pin a paper to Di's dress?"
+
+"'m--h'--m."
+
+"Bravo, Lucien!" applauded Rob. "They say you can induce a witness to
+admit anything."
+
+"What did Di do with the paper?" I continued.
+
+The word he wanted evidently being beyond his vocabulary and speech,
+he made a rotary motion with his fist. The gesture conveyed nothing to
+our minds, but was instantly recognized and interpreted by the
+landlady's little girl, who said he meant a windmill such as she had
+sometimes made for him.
+
+"What did Di do with the windmill?" I asked.
+
+He pointed to the sandpile, which I investigated and found a stick
+planted therein. I pulled it up and saw a pin sticking in the end of
+it. Further excavation revealed a crumpled piece of paper on which was
+written in Ptolemy's round hand:
+
+ "Want to see kids. Am going home. Tell Beth I bet she dasent go to
+ the haunted house alone at night. Ptolemy."
+
+"Poor Huldah!" sighed Silvia.
+
+"I thought he was having the time of his life here," said Rob.
+
+"He was sore," declared Beth, "because you and Lucien wouldn't take
+him with you on the fishing trip. He was moping by himself all the
+morning."
+
+"Trying to think up some new deviltry," I theorized, "to make us feel
+bad."
+
+"No," asserted Silvia, "I think he really misses the boys. The
+Polydores, for all their scrappings, are very clannish. But how do you
+suppose he got down to Windy Creek?"
+
+"He could catch plenty of rides along the way, but what is puzzling me
+is how he got the money to pay his fare."
+
+"He seemed very well provided with cash," informed Rob. "I tried to
+pay for his ticket down here, but he insisted on buying it himself."
+
+Silvia worried so much about what might happen to him en route that
+after dinner I motored to Windy Creek with some tourists who had
+stopped at the hotel in passing.
+
+I called up long distance and after some delay got in communication
+with our house. Ptolemy himself answered and assured me he had arrived
+all "hunky doory", that Huldah, who was out on an errand, was "hunky
+doory", and that the kids were all "hunky doory." In fact, his
+cheerful tone indicated that the whole universe was in the beatific
+state described by his expressive adjective.
+
+I was really ripping mad at his taking French leave and so giving
+Silvia cause for her anxiety, but I forbore to reprimand him by word
+or tone, lest he get even by "coming back" literally. I did tell him
+how the loss of the note for twenty-four hours had caused a general
+excitement, but he felt no remorse for his share in the situation,
+blaming Diogenes entirely and bidding me "punch the kid's face" for
+unpinning the note.
+
+On my return from Windy Creek I was fortunate enough to fall in with a
+farmer who lived near the hotel. He was driving some sort of a machine
+he called an _autoo_. He was an old-timer in the vicinity and related
+the past, present, and pluperfect of all the residents on the route. I
+had a detailed and vivid account of the midnight visitor of the
+haunted house.
+
+"I'd jest naturally like to see what there is to it," he said. "Not
+that I am afeerd at all, only it's sort of spooky to go to a lonesome
+place like that all alone. If I could git some one to go with me, I'd
+tackle the job, but I vum if every time I perpose it to anyone they
+don't make some excuse."
+
+"I'm on," I declared. "I don't dread ghosts near as much as I do some
+living folks I know."
+
+"Right you air," chuckled the old man. "If you say so we'll go right
+off now jest as sure as shootin'. We may be ghosts ourselves
+tomorrow."
+
+I assured him I was quite ready to encounter the ghost, so he
+jubilantly turned the machine from the road into a grass-grown lane.
+We zigzagged for some distance and then got out and went on foot
+through a grove. The moon and the stars were half veiled by some
+light, misty clouds, so that the little house didn't show up very
+clearly, but as we came to the top of the hill, we saw something that
+shook even my well-behaved nerves.
+
+From a window in the roof-room extended a white arm and hand, with
+index finger pointing threateningly and directly toward us.
+
+My farmer friend turned quickly and fled toward the grove. I followed
+fleetly. "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken him.
+
+"I just happened to remember," he explained gaspingly, "that there's a
+pesky autoo thief in these 'ere parts. Bukins had his stole jest last
+night."
+
+The lights on his machine must have reassured him as to its safety
+when we emerged from the woods into the open, but he didn't lessen his
+speed. We got in the "autoo" and soon said good-by to the lane. At one
+time I believed it was good-by to everything, but at last we gained
+the highway, right side up.
+
+"Well!" I said, when we were running normally again on terra firma,
+"that was some little old ghost,--beckoned to us to come right in,
+too!"
+
+"You seen it then!" he exclaimed excitedly. "I'm mighty glad I had an
+eyewitness. Folks wouldn't believe me."
+
+"They probably won't believe me, either," I assured him. "I am a
+lawyer."
+
+"You don't tell me! Well, it did jest give me a start for a minute.
+I'd like to hev gone in and seen it nigh to, if I hadn't happened to
+think of this 'ere autoo. You see I ain't got it all paid for yet. I'm
+jest clean beat. You don't mind my takin' a leetle pull at a stone
+fence, do you?"
+
+"I guess not," I assented somewhat dubiously, however. "That was a
+rail fence we took a pull at back in the lane, wasn't it? Of course,
+if we shouldn't happen to clear the stone fence as well as we did the
+rail fence, it might be more disastrous."
+
+"Oh, land!" he said with a cackling laugh, "I ain't meanin' that kind
+of a fence. I mean the kind you--Say! You ain't one of them
+teetotalers, be you?"
+
+"Only in theory," I replied, "but this stone fence drink is a new one
+on me. What's it like?"
+
+He stopped the "autoo" and pulled a bottle from an inner pocket.
+
+"You kin taste it better than I kin tell it," he declared. "Take a
+pull--a condumned good one."
+
+I rarely imbibed, confining my indulgences to the demands of
+necessity, but I thought that the flight of Ptolemy, the ghostly
+encounter, and my Mazeppa--wild ride all combined to constitute an
+occasion adequate to call for a bracer in the shape of a stone fence,
+or anything he might produce.
+
+I took what I considered a "condumned good one" from the bottle and it
+nearly strangled me, but I followed the aged stranger's advice to take
+another to "cure the chokes" caused by the first one. On general
+principles I took a third and then reluctantly returned him the
+bottle.
+
+"Here's over the moon," he jovially exclaimed as he proceeded to make
+my attempt at a "condumned good one" appear most niggardly.
+
+"May I ask," I inquired when my feeling of nerve-tense strain had
+vanished, and I felt as if I were treading thin air, "just what is in
+a stone fence?"
+
+"Well, what do you think?" he asked slyly.
+
+"I think the very devil is in it," I replied.
+
+"Well, mebby," he admitted. "It's two-thirds hard cider and one-third
+whisky. It's a healthy, hearting drink and yet it has a leetle come
+back to it--a sort o' kick, you know. But this is where I live,"
+pointing to a farmhouse well back from the road, "but I am goin' to
+run you on to your tavern though."
+
+The hotel was dark, save for a light in my room. I invited him in, but
+he was anxious to "git hum and tell the folks", so I gave him some
+cigars and went in to "tell my folks."
+
+I found them in the room waiting for me. That is, Beth was in the
+room, sitting by the table and pretending to read. Silvia and Rob were
+out in the little balcony. They came inside as soon as they heard my
+voice.
+
+"Oh, was he there?" asked Silvia anxiously.
+
+"Yes," I replied. "He answered the telephone himself."
+
+I was feeling quite exhilarated by this time. My wife looked a perfect
+vision to me. Beth, I thought, was some sister, and Rob the best
+fellow in the world. Even the Polydores at long range, and under the
+ameliorating influence of stone fences, seemed like fine little
+fellows--rather active and strenuous, to be sure, but only as all
+wholesome children should be.
+
+Silvia was relieved at the announcement of Ptolemy's safety, but very
+much disappointed that I did not succeed in interviewing Huldah and
+finding out something about domestic affairs.
+
+I assured her that everything was "hunky doory" at home, praised the
+telephone service, my expedition to town, and painted my return ride
+with "the honest farmer" in glowing terms. I was suddenly halted in my
+eulogy by becoming aware of an amazed expression on my wife's
+countenance, a most suspicious glance in Beth's wide-open eyes, and a
+very knowing wink from Rob.
+
+"Lucien," said Silvia severely, "I believe you've been drinking. I
+certainly smell spirits."
+
+"Maybe you do," I replied jocosely. "I certainly saw spirits. I went
+to the haunted house on my way back."
+
+"I thought Windy Creek was a dry town," remarked Rob innocently.
+
+"It is," I assured him, "but I rode home with an old man--a farmer."
+
+"Does he run a blind pig?" asked Rob.
+
+"It was more like a pig in a poke," I replied.
+
+"Lucien," exclaimed Silvia reproachfully, "you told me two years ago,
+after that banquet to the Bar, that you were never going to touch wine
+or whisky again. What did that horrid old man give you?"
+
+"A stone fence. That's what he said it was anyway."
+
+"It's a new one on me," commented Rob.
+
+"There was a new toast went with it. He drank to 'over the moon.'"
+
+"You must have gone there all right and taken all the shine from the
+moon-man," said Rob.
+
+"Lucien," asked Beth, "did you really go to that haunted house?"
+
+Again I was moved to eloquence, and I told of the farmer's yearning,
+the fulfillment, the beckoning hand and the beating of the retreat at
+length.
+
+"Are you sure," asked Rob, "that you didn't take that stone fence
+before you visited the haunted house?"
+
+"I know," I replied, loftily, "that a lawyer's word is worthless, but
+seeing is believing. We will all visit the haunted house tomorrow
+night and I'll make good on ghosts."
+
+This plan was unanimously approved, and then Silvia suggested that she
+thought I had better go to bed. I had no particular objection to doing
+so.
+
+"Lucien," she said solemnly, when we were alone, "I want you to
+promise me something. I want you to give me your word that you will
+never take another stone wall."
+
+I did this most readily.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+_In Which We See Ghosts_
+
+
+The next morning Rob tried earnestly and vainly to drive a wedge in
+Beth's good graces, but she treated him with a casual tolerance that
+finally put him in an ill humor which he took out on me with many a
+gibe at my "stone fence spirit."
+
+Men of my profession who have to deal with facts rather than fancy are
+not believers in the supernatural. I was sure that the extending arm
+and the beckoning finger were there, but belonged to no ghost. It
+might have been a curtain blowing out the window or a fake of some
+kind. But I knew that unless there was some kind of a showing in a
+ghostly way that night, I should never hear the last of my stone fence
+indulgence, so I resolved to make a preliminary visit alone by
+daylight and rig up something white to substantiate my spectral
+narrative.
+
+I didn't find an opportunity to escape unseen until late in the
+afternoon, when I went, ostensibly, for a solitary row on the lake.
+
+I landed and came by a circuitous route to the haunted house. The calm
+security of sunshine, of course, prevented any shivers of anticipation
+such as I had experienced the night before. On passing one of the
+windows on my way to the front entrance, I glanced in, stopped in
+sheer fright, stooped and backed to the next window, which was
+screened by a labyrinth of vines through which I peered. I am sure I
+lost my Bloom of Youth complexion for a few moments. I babbled
+aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull together and beat it to
+the lake with as much speed as my farmer friend had shown in his
+retreat. I made the boat and the hotel in double quick time.
+
+[Illustration: I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull
+together and beat it to the lake]
+
+I felt no misgivings now as to the promise of a sensation that night,
+and that sustaining thought was all that propped my flagging spirits
+throughout the day, but I resolved to keep my little party at safe
+distance from the house.
+
+"Say we keep our nocturnal noctambulation under our hats," proposed
+Rob.
+
+When this proposition was translated to Silvia, she entirely approved,
+so, committing Diogenes to the Polydores' Providence, we left the
+hotel at half past eleven for a row on the lake by moonlight.
+
+When we descended the slope leading to the House of Mystery, I
+cautioned silence and a "safety-first" distance.
+
+"Ghosts are easily vanished," I informed them. "They don't seek
+limelight, and I want you to be sure to see this one."
+
+As we came to the untrodden undergrowth we heard a weird, wailing
+sound that would have curdled my blood had I not glanced in the window
+that afternoon and so, in a measure, been prepared for this--or
+anything.
+
+"Look!" whispered Beth. "The arm!"
+
+Silvia looked at the roof window and with a stifled shriek of terror
+turned and fled up the hill, Rob chivalrously pursuing her.
+
+Beth was pale, but game.
+
+"What can it be, Lucien?" she whispered. "Do we dare go in to see?"
+
+"I wouldn't, Beth," I vetoed quickly. "Maybe some lunatic or
+half-witted person has taken up abode here."
+
+"Lucien!" called Rob peremptorily.
+
+I turned quickly. He was at the top of the hill, half supporting
+Silvia. I ran toward them, followed by Beth.
+
+"It isn't a ghost, of course, Silvia," I said soothingly, and then
+repeated my supposition about the lunatic.
+
+"Of course I don't believe in ghosts," said Silvia shudderingly, "but
+it's an awful place and those sounds are like those I have heard in
+nightmares."
+
+"We'll hurry back to the hotel and forget all about it," I urged.
+
+I rowed the boat and Silvia sat opposite me. Beth and Rob were in the
+stern and I had to listen to their conversation.
+
+"Of course I felt a little creepy," she admitted, "but then I like to
+feel that way, and I wasn't afraid."
+
+"No, of course, you wouldn't be," he replied somewhat ironically.
+"You're the new woman type."
+
+"No, I am not," she denied. "I wish I were. Silvia's really the
+strong-minded type."
+
+"She didn't act the part when she saw the ghost," he retorted.
+
+"It's very unusual for her nerves to give way. Silvia's quite a
+surprise to me this summer, but I think those funny Polydores have
+upset her more than Lucien realizes."
+
+I wondered if she were right, and once again murderous wishes toward
+the Polydores entered my brain, and I made renewed vows about
+disposing of them on our return home.
+
+One thing, however, had been accomplished by our expedition. Silvia
+was more lenient in her judgment on my indulgences of the preceding
+night.
+
+By the time we pulled in at the landing, Silvia had recovered her
+equilibrium.
+
+"Lucien, what the devil do you suppose was in that house?" asked Rob,
+when we were putting up the boat.
+
+"Loons and things," I allowed.
+
+"But what was that white arm?"
+
+"Some fake thing the village wag has put up to scare the natives."
+
+Next morning's stage brought some new arrivals, and among them were
+two college students who at once were claimed by Beth. She played
+tennis with one and later went rowing with the other. Rob smoked and
+sulked, apart.
+
+My farmer friend had been garrulous and rumors of the ghost and the
+haunted house had come to the ears of the hotel inmates, thereby
+causing a pleasurable stir of excitement. A number of them announced
+their intention of visiting the place. They asked me to be their
+guide, but I refused.
+
+"It was interesting," I said, "but I think it would be a bore to see
+the same ghost twice."
+
+"I am sure I don't care to go again," was Silvia's emphatic reply
+when asked to be one of the party.
+
+"Ghosts are scientifically admitted and explained," growled Rob, "so I
+don't see anything to be excited about."
+
+Beth accepted the offer of escort of one of the students, so Silvia,
+Rob, and I remained at home. The night was quite cool, and we played
+cards in our room. When the party returned, Beth joined us. She looked
+rather out of sorts.
+
+"Oh, yes," she replied in answer to Silvia's eager inquiry. "We saw
+the ghost. I don't know whether it was the same little old last
+night's ghost or a new one. He showed more of himself this time
+though. He had two arms and a veiled head out of the window. As soon
+as our crowd glimpsed it, they all fled quicker than we did last
+night. Those two students fell all over each other and left me in the
+lurch."
+
+"What could you expect," asked Rob, "from such ladylike things? They
+ought to be kept in the confines of the croquet ground. If they are a
+fair specimen of the kind you have met, no wonder you--"
+
+[Illustration: The landlady intears waylaid me]
+
+He stopped abruptly.
+
+"No wonder what?" she asked quickly.
+
+"Nothing," he replied glumly.
+
+When I came down to breakfast the next morning, the landlady in tears
+waylaid me.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Wade," she began in trouble-telling tone, "this affair about
+the ghost is going to hurt my business. Some of those folks say they
+are going home, and they will tell others and--"
+
+"I'll fix the ghost story. Just leave it to me!" I assured her
+optimistically, as we went into the dining-room.
+
+There were only enough guests to fill one long table, and every one
+was excitedly dissecting the ghost.
+
+I took my seat and also the floor.
+
+"I hate to dispel your illusions," I said cheerfully, "but the fact
+is, I made a daylight investigation of the haunted house. First I
+looked in the window and I saw--"
+
+"Oh, what did you see?" chorused a dozen or more expectant voices.
+
+"A lot of--mice."
+
+"Oh!" came in disappointed and skeptical tones.
+
+"But, the ghost, Mr. Wade?"
+
+"Yes! The arms and the head?"
+
+"A fake figure put up by some practical joker for the purpose of
+frightening timid people and encouraging the credulous. I didn't want
+to spoil your little picnic, so I kept still."
+
+"Those sounds, Lucien!" reminded Silvia.
+
+"Were from a cat chorus. They were prowling about the house."
+
+"You're sure some lawyer, Mr. Wade," doubtfully complimented my
+grateful landlady, as we went out of the room after breakfast.
+
+"Lucien," asked Rob _sotto voce_, joining me on the veranda, "why
+don't the cats you speak of catch that lot of mice?"
+
+Fortunately Beth came up to us, and I didn't have to explain.
+
+"Oh!" she said with a shudder. "I'll never go near that awful place!
+I'd rather see a perfectly good ghost, or a loon, or a lunatic any day
+than a mouse."
+
+"You're surely not afraid of a mouse!" exclaimed Rob.
+
+"Why not?" she asked coolly as she walked on.
+
+"I told you she was feminine," I reminded him.
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I can't understand," he remarked, "why a girl who is afraid of mice
+should be--"
+
+"You don't understand anything about women," I interrupted.
+
+"You're right, Lucien. I don't, but your sister is surely the greatest
+enigma of them all."
+
+I rented the stone fence farmer's "autoo" and took Silvia and
+Diogenes to a neighboring town that afternoon. We didn't get back to
+the hotel until dinner time.
+
+"What have you been up to all day, Rob?" I asked.
+
+"Numerous things. For one, I strolled down to the haunted house."
+
+"What did you see?" cried the women.
+
+"I saw four--"
+
+"Ghosts?" asked Beth.
+
+I shot him a warning glance.
+
+"Young tomcats playing tag with the mice."
+
+I corralled Rob outside after dinner.
+
+"For Heaven's sake!" I implored. "Don't disturb Silvia's peace of
+mind. Did you go inside?"
+
+"No; I was sorely tempted to, but refrained out of deference to the
+evident wishes of my host, but really, Lucien, we should--"
+
+"I have only ten more days off, Rob. Don't make any unpleasant
+suggestions."
+
+"I won't," he said promptly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+_In Which We Make Some Discoveries_
+
+
+Diogenes, who, for a Polydore, had been quite placid since Ptolemy's
+departure, caused a commotion by disappearing the next morning. As he
+was possessed of a deep desire to go in the lake and get a little
+snake, he had been, when not under strict surveillance, tied to a tree
+with enough leeway in the length of rope to allow him to play
+comfortably.
+
+By some means he had managed to work himself loose from the rope and
+had evidently followed Ptolemy's example. I suggested calling up
+Huldah and asking if he had arrived yet, but I met with such chilling
+glances from Silvia and Beth that I got busy and organized searching
+parties, who reluctantly and lukewarmly engaged in the pursuit. Rob
+and I took the shore. After we had walked some little distance, we met
+a woman and stopped for inquiry. She said she had seen a child of
+about two years, clad in a blue and white striped dress and a big hat,
+going over the hill in company with a boy of about eight.
+
+"Are you going on to the hotel?" I asked.
+
+On her replying that she was, I told her to inform them that she had
+met me and that the lost child was located.
+
+Rob and I then kept on over the hill, and when we neared the haunted
+house, we heard hair-raising sounds.
+
+"If I hadn't been here before," remarked Rob, "I should think that
+Sitting Bull had been reincarnated and was reviving the warrior war
+whoops."
+
+We paused on the threshold. A human windmill of whirling legs and
+arms--Polydore legs and arms--flashed before our eyes.
+
+"Stop!" I thundered.
+
+The flying wheel of arms and legs slacked, ran a few times, then
+slowly stopped, and the Polydore quintette assumed normal positions.
+
+"Halloa, stepdaddy!"
+
+A landslide composed of Emerald, Pythagoras, and Demetrius started
+toward me. I side-stepped and let Rob receive the charge.
+
+"Line them up now, for attention," I directed Ptolemy. "I have
+something to say to you all."
+
+Ptolemy knocked the three terrors up against the wall, and I picked up
+Diogenes, who had a bump as big as an egg on his head.
+
+"I told you," said Ptolemy to Pythagoras, "that if you brought Di down
+here they'd get on our trail. He wanted to see Di," he explained, "so
+he sneaked over there and got him."
+
+"We were wise before today," I informed him. "I saw you all day before
+yesterday."
+
+"And I discovered you yesterday," added Rob.
+
+Ptolemy looked rather crestfallen, and then, seeming to consider that
+my discovery had been succeeded by inaction, which must mean
+non-interference, he heartened up.
+
+"Now," I demanded, "I want you to begin at the time you left the hotel
+and tell me everything and why you did it."
+
+"I wasn't having any fun after you two went off camping," he began
+lugubriously. "I couldn't hang around women folks all the time. I
+wanted boys to play with."
+
+I saw a gleam of sympathy and understanding come into Rob's eyes.
+
+"A harem of hens," he muttered.
+
+"I knew we could all have a grand time here and not be a bother to
+mudder, or Huldah or anyone, and it seemed too bad for this nice house
+to be empty, and no one anywhere else wanting us."
+
+I felt my first gleam of pity for a Polydore and wiped Diogenes'
+dirty, moist face carefully with my handkerchief.
+
+"So I went home and told Huldah I had come after the boys to take them
+back with me."
+
+"And told her we had sent for them?" I asked sharply.
+
+He flushed slightly at my tone.
+
+"No; I didn't tell her so. She got that idea herself, and I didn't
+tell her different."
+
+"When did you come?"
+
+"I came the same night that you telephoned, and took the train you and
+mudder came on. We got to Windy Creek in the morning. We fetched all
+our stuff here from home. I bought it."
+
+"Right here," I said, "tell me where you got the money to buy your
+stuff and to pay your fare here."
+
+"I cashed father's check."
+
+"I didn't know he left you one."
+
+"He didn't, except the one he gave me to give you for our board. You
+told mudder you wouldn't touch it, and it seemed a pity not to have it
+working."
+
+Visions of a future Polydore doing the chain and ball step flashed
+before my vision.
+
+"And they cashed it for you at the bank?"
+
+"Sure. Father always has me cash his checks for him."
+
+"What amount did you fill in?" I asked enviously.
+
+"One hundred dollars. There's a lot more in the bank, too."
+
+"How did you get your truck here from Windy Creek?" asked Rob.
+
+"We divided it up and each took a bunch and started on foot, and some
+people in an automobile, going to the town past here, took us in and
+brought us as far as the lane. We've been having a fine time."
+
+"What doing?" asked Rob interestedly.
+
+"Fishing, sailing on a raft, playing in the woods all day and--"
+
+"Playing ghost at night," said Pythagoras with a grin.
+
+"Who made that ghost in the window?" I demanded.
+
+"I did. I rigged up an arm and put it out the window the afternoon I
+left, hoping Beth would come down and see it, but we've got a jim
+dandy one now."
+
+"That was quite a shapely arm," said Rob. "Where did you learn
+sculpturing?"
+
+"Oh, I rigged it up," he said casually.
+
+"What did you bring in the way of supplies?"
+
+"Bacon, crackers, beans, candy, popcorn, gum, peanuts, pickles,
+candles, matches, and butter," was the glib inventory.
+
+"You may stay here," I said, "until we go home, but you are not to
+stir away from the woods about here and not on any account to come
+near the hotel, or let it be known that you are here. And you are to
+end this ghost business right off. Now, Di, we'll go home to mudder."
+
+"No!" bawled Di. "Stay with boys. Mudder come here."
+
+At least this was Ptolemy's interpretation of his protest.
+
+I threatened, Rob coaxed, and Ptolemy cuffed, but every time I started
+to leave and jerk him after me, he uttered such demoniac yells I was
+forced to stop.
+
+"Wish it was night," said Emerald regretfully. "Wouldn't he scare
+folks though! How does he get his voice up so high?"
+
+"Poor little Di!" said a voice commiseratingly from the doorway. "Was
+Ocean plaguing him?"
+
+Beth gathered the child in her arms, and his howls changed to sobs.
+Rob stood petrified with amazement at her appearance.
+
+"Don't want to go," said Diogenes between gulps.
+
+"Needn't go!" promised Beth. "Stay here with me, and we'll have dinner
+with the boys and then we'll go home and get some ice cream."
+
+"All yite," agreed the appeased Polydore.
+
+"May Lucien and I stay to dinner, too?" asked Rob humbly.
+
+"No," she replied icily.
+
+"But, Beth," I remonstrated. "Silvia will be worrying about Di. How
+can we explain?"
+
+"Silvia has gone to Windy Creek for the day. You see, I met that woman
+you sent to the hotel, and she told me she saw Di going over the hill
+with a boy, and I suddenly seemed to smell one of your mice, so I sent
+the woman on her way, and told Silvia you and Rob had found Diogenes.
+Just then some people she knew came along in a car and asked her to go
+to Windy Creek. I made her go and told her I'd look after Di."
+
+"You're a brick, Beth!" applauded Ptolemy.
+
+"If you boys will be very careful and not let anyone besides us know
+you are here, so mudder will not hear of it, for though she'd like to
+see you"--this without a flicker or flinch--"we want her to have a
+nice rest. I'll come over every day except tomorrow and bring things
+from the hotel store, and bake up cookies and cake for you."
+
+A yell of approval went up.
+
+"Why can't you come tomorrow?" asked the greedy Demetrius.
+
+"Because I've promised to go to the other end of the lake on a picnic.
+All the people at the hotel are going."
+
+"I'll come tomorrow and spend the whole day with you," promised Rob.
+"We'll have a ride in the sailboat and do all sorts of things."
+
+"Why, aren't you going on that infernal picnic?" I asked.
+
+"No; I'll have all the picnic I want over here. Like Ptolemy I feel
+that I want to play with some of my own kind."
+
+Beth looked at him approvingly; then she said a little sarcastically:
+
+"Maybe you'll change your mind--about going on the picnic, I
+mean--when you see the new girl who just came to the hotel on the
+morning stage. She's a blonde, and not peroxided, either."
+
+"That would certainly drive him down here, or anywhere," I laughed.
+
+"Oh, don't you like blondes?" she asked innocently.
+
+"He doesn't like--" I began, but Ptolemy rudely interrupted with an
+elaborate description of a new kind of fishing tackle he had bought.
+
+Then Beth bade Pythagoras build a fire in the cook-stove while she
+set the room to rights.
+
+"We'll eat out of doors," she said, "I think it would be more
+appetizing."
+
+"How did you get here?" Rob asked her as we were leaving.
+
+"I rowed over."
+
+"May I come over and row you back?" he asked pleadingly.
+
+She hesitated, and then, realizing that she could scarcely manage a
+boat and Diogenes at the same time, assented, bidding him not come,
+however, until five o'clock.
+
+"She'll have enough of the Polydores by that time," I said to Rob on
+our way home.
+
+"Do you know," he said reflectively, "I like Ptolemy. There's the
+making of a man in him, if he has only half a chance. I didn't suppose
+your sister understood children so well or was so fond of them. She
+looked quite the little housewife, too."
+
+"You'd discover a lot of things you don't know, if you'd cultivate the
+society of women," I informed him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+_A Bad Means to a Good End_
+
+
+When we were setting out on the proposed picnic the next day, Rob made
+himself extremely unpopular by announcing his intention to spend the
+day otherwise. The new blonde girl gave him fetching glances of
+entreaty which he never even saw. He made another sensation by
+proposing to keep Diogenes with him. To Silvia's surprise, Diogenes
+voiced his delight and chattered away, I suppose, about playing with
+the boys, but fortunately no one understood him.
+
+"Won't you change your mind and come, too?" he asked Beth.
+
+She seemed on the point of accepting and then firmly declined.
+
+When we returned at six o'clock, Rob and Diogenes were awaiting us.
+There was something in Rob's eyes I had not seen there before. He had
+the look of one in love with life.
+
+"Did you have a nice time playing solitaire?" asked Silvia.
+
+"I had a very nice time," he replied with a subtle smile, "but I
+didn't play solitaire. You know I had Diogenes."
+
+"Diogenes apparently had a good time, too," said Silvia, looking at
+the child, who was certainly a wreck in the way of garments. "What did
+you do all day, Rob?"
+
+"We went out on the water, played games, and had a picnic dinner
+outdoors."
+
+"You had huckleberry pie for one thing," she observed, with a glance
+at Diogenes' dress, "and jelly for another, and--"
+
+"Chicken, baked potatoes, milk, cake, and ice cream," he finished.
+
+"Where did you get ice cream?" she asked.
+
+"I went down to a dairy farm and got a gallon."
+
+"A gallon!" she exclaimed. "For you and Diogenes?"
+
+"We didn't eat it all," he said guardedly. "I gave what we didn't eat
+to some stray boys."
+
+"I hope Di won't be ill."
+
+"He won't," asserted Rob. "I am sure he is made of cast iron."
+
+Throughout dinner Rob remained in high spirits. He kept eyeing Beth in
+a way that disconcerted her, and then suddenly he would smile with the
+expression of one who knows something funny, but intends to keep it a
+secret.
+
+Presently Silvia left us and went upstairs to give Diogenes a bath
+before she put him to bed.
+
+"You've had two days' freedom from the last of the Polydores," I
+called after her. "Doesn't it seem delightful?"
+
+"Lucien," she answered slowly, "I've really missed the care of him. I
+was lonesome for him all day."
+
+"He isn't such a bad little kid when he is out from Polydore
+environment," I admitted, regretting that he had been restored to it.
+
+"Now tell us all about your day with the boys," Beth asked Rob, when
+we were left alone. "It really does seem too bad to keep a secret from
+Silvia, and yet it is a case of where ignorance is bliss--"
+
+"It would be folly to be otherwise," finished Rob. "Well, Diogenes and
+I left here with a boat load of supplies in the way of provender and
+things for the boys. I had to tie Diogenes in the boat, of course, so
+he would not try some aquatic feat. He objected and yelled like a
+fiend all the way. I was glad there was no one at the hotel to come
+out and arrest me for cruelty to children. Of course before we landed,
+his cries were heard by his brothers and they were all at the water's
+edge. They made mulepacks of themselves and transferred the commissary
+supplies. The ice cream and bats and balls which I found at the store
+made quite a hit.
+
+"We played baseball, fished, and had a spread on the shore. Then
+Ptolemy and I rowed out to where the sailboat was. I explained the
+mysteries of the jib and he caught on instantly. We took in the other
+Polydores and sailed for a couple of hours. Then we all went in
+swimming."
+
+"Not Diogenes!"
+
+"Certainly. I tucked him under my arm and he seemed perfectly at home,
+although greatly disappointed because we didn't succeed in catching a
+snake.
+
+"I finally landed them all safely under the roof of the Haunted House,
+and Ptolemy assured me it was the best day of his young life. In
+appreciation of the diversions I had afforded him, he made a
+confession which proved such good news to me that I was a lenient
+listener and exacted no penalty."
+
+"What was it?" I asked.
+
+"He told me that on the day of Miss Wade's and my arrival at your
+house, he had made a misstatement to each of us and had not repeated
+to us accurately what he had overheard you telling Silvia when he was
+on the porch roof. Miss Wade, what did he tell you about me?"
+
+"He said that Lucien said that your only failing was that you were
+daffy over women and made love to every one you saw."
+
+"Oh, Beth!" I cried, light bursting in, "and you believed that little
+wretch?"
+
+"I did."
+
+"Then that is why you have been so--"
+
+"Yes--so--" repeated Rob grimly.
+
+"Well, I never did have any use for a man-flirt, and I was awfully
+disappointed, for I had thought from what Rob said that you were a
+man's man."
+
+"And then, of course, when for the first time in my life I began being
+interested in a woman--in you--I played right into that little scamp's
+hands."
+
+"He is a man's man, Beth," I said warmly. "What Ptolemy heard me say
+was that Rob was a woman-hater."
+
+"I am not!" declared Rob indignantly--"just a woman-shyer, but I
+haven't finished with Ptolemy's confession. I wonder, now, if either
+of you can guess what he told me was Miss Wade's characteristic."
+
+"I don't dare guess," laughed Beth.
+
+"What I did say about Beth was that she was a born flirt."
+
+"I am not!" protested my sister, in resentment.
+
+"I should prefer that appellation to the one he gave you. He said you
+were strong-minded and a man-hater."
+
+Even Beth saw the irony of this.
+
+"I asked him," continued Rob, "what his motive was, and he said
+'Stepdaddy didn't want Beth to know about the man-hater business,' so
+he took that means of throwing you off the track.
+
+"I took the occasion to talk to him like a Dutch uncle, though I don't
+know exactly what that is. I think it was the first time anything but
+brute force had been tried on him. I must have touched some little
+flicker of the right thing in him, for he was really contrite and
+seemed to sense a different angle of vision when I explained to him
+what havoc could be worked by the misinformation of meddlers. He
+promised me he'd try to overcome his tendency to start things going
+wrong."
+
+I made no comment, but it occurred to me that Ptolemy was a shrewd
+little fellow, and that there had been wisdom back of his strategic
+speeches to Beth and Rob, for he had taken the one sure course to make
+them both "take notice."
+
+"So, Beth," said Rob, and her name seemed to come quite handily to
+him, "can't we cut out the past ten days and begin our acquaintance
+right?"
+
+"I think we can," she answered.
+
+"I had better go upstairs," I suggested, "and tell Silvia that
+Diogenes doesn't need a bath, seeing he has been in swimming."
+
+Neither of them urged me to remain, so I went up to our room and found
+Silvia tucking Diogenes under cover.
+
+"What did you come up for?" she asked. "I was just coming down to join
+you."
+
+"Beth is treating Rob so--differently, that I thought it well to
+retreat."
+
+"I am so glad! Whatever came over the spirit of her dreams?"
+
+"They've just discovered in the course of conversation that Ptolemy as
+usual crossed the wires and told Beth Rob was a flirt, and then
+informed Rob that Beth was strong-minded and a man-hater."
+
+"Oh, the little imp!" she exclaimed indignantly.
+
+"I don't know. It worked, anyway, so Ptolemy was the bad means to a
+good end."
+
+"How did they ever happen to discover what he had done?"
+
+"They caught on from something Rob said," I told her, feeling again
+guilty at keeping my first secret from her.
+
+"It will be a fine match for Beth," said Silvia. "Rob is such a
+splendid man, and then he has plenty of money. He can give her
+anything she wants."
+
+I winced. I think Silvia must have been conscious of it, even though
+the room was dark, for she came to me quickly.
+
+"I wish I could give you--everything--anything--you want, Silvia."
+
+"You have, Lucien. The things that no money could buy--love and
+protection."
+
+Well, maybe I had. I had surely given her protection from the
+Polydores, though she didn't know to what extent.
+
+"I am going to give you more material things, though, Silvia. When we
+go home, I shall start to work in earnest and see if I can't get
+enough ahead to make a good investment I know of."
+
+"I'd rather do without the necessities even, Lucien, than to have you
+work any harder than you have been doing. We must let well enough
+alone."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+"_Too Much Polydores_"
+
+
+The next morning at breakfast, Beth announced that she and Rob were
+going to spend the day camping in the woods.
+
+Silvia and I tried not to look significantly at each other, but Beth
+was very keen.
+
+"We will take Diogenes with us," she instantly added.
+
+"Oh, no!" protested Silvia. "He'll be such a bother. And then he can't
+walk very far, you know."
+
+"He'll be no bother," persisted Beth. "And we'll borrow the little
+cart to draw him in."
+
+"Yes," acquiesced Rob. "We sure want Diogenes with us."
+
+"I'll have them put up a lunch for you," proposed Silvia.
+
+"No," Rob objected. "We are going to forage and cook over a fire in
+the woods."
+
+"Then," I proposed to Silvia with alacrity, "we'll have our first day
+alone together--the first we have had since the Polydores came into
+our lives. I'll rent the 'autoo' again, and we will go through the
+country and dine at some little wayside inn."
+
+"Get the 'autoo', now, Lucien," advised Beth privately, "and make an
+early start, so Rob and I can take supplies from the store without
+arousing Silvia's suspicions."
+
+"I don't believe," said Silvia disappointedly, when we were "autooing"
+on our way, "that they are in love after all, or that he has
+proposed, or that he is going to."
+
+"Where did you draw all those pessimistic inferences from?" I asked.
+
+"From their both being so keen to take Diogenes with them."
+
+"Diogenes would be no barrier to their love-making," I told her. "He
+couldn't repeat what they said; at least, not so anyone could
+understand him."
+
+Many miles away we came upon a picturesque little old-time tavern
+where we had an appetizing dinner, and then continued on our aimless
+way. It was nearly ten o'clock when we returned to the hotel, where
+the owner of the "autoo" was waiting.
+
+Rob came down the roadway.
+
+"Where's Beth?" asked Silvia.
+
+"She has gone to bed. The day in the open made her sleepy."
+
+When Silvia had left us, the old farmer said with a chuckle: "I can't
+offer you another swig of stone fence."
+
+"It's probably just as well you can't," I replied.
+
+"I'd like to be introduced to one," said Rob, who appeared to be
+somewhat downcast. "I sure need a bracer."
+
+"What's the matter, Rob?" I asked when we were lighting our pipes. "A
+strenuous day? Two in rapid 'concussion' with the Polydores must be
+nerve-racking."
+
+"Yes; I admit there seemed to be 'too much Polydores.' We all had a
+happy reunion, and I devoted the forenoon to the entertainment of the
+famous family so I could be entitled to the afternoon off to spend
+with Beth. At noon we built a fire and cooked a sumptuous dinner. Beth
+baked up some things to keep them supplied a couple of days longer.
+After dinner I asked her to go for a row. She insisted on taking
+Diogenes along, and the others all followed us on a raft. So I decided
+to cut the water sports short, and Beth and I started for a walk in
+the woods. Three or more were constantly right on our trail. I begged
+and bribed, but to no avail. They were sticktights all right, and," he
+added morosely, "she seemed covertly to aid and abet them. When we
+started for home, I found that the young fiends had broken the cart,
+so I had to carry Diogenes most of the way, and of course he bellowed
+as usual at being parted from the whelps."
+
+[Illustration: I had to carry Diogenes most of the way]
+
+"They aren't such 'fine little chaps' after all," I couldn't resist
+commenting. "Familiarity breeds contempt, you see. I am sorry Diogenes
+had so much of their society. He'll be unendurable tomorrow. Well, you
+had some day!"
+
+"So did the Polydores. Demetrius and Diogenes fell in the fire twice.
+Emerald threw a finger out of joint, but Ptolemy quickly jerked it
+into place. Pythagoras was kicked off the raft twice, following a
+mutiny. Demetrius threw a lighted match into the vines and set fire to
+the house. They said it was a 'beaut of a day', though, and urged us
+to come tomorrow and repeat the program. By the way, they went across
+the lake on their raft yesterday and bought a tent of some campers.
+They have pitched it in the woods beyond the house."
+
+When I went upstairs Silvia met me disconsolately.
+
+"He didn't propose," she said disappointedly. "She wouldn't let him."
+
+"Did you wake her up to find out?" I asked.
+
+"She hadn't gone to bed and she wasn't sleepy. She was trimming a
+hat."
+
+"Why wouldn't she let him propose, if she cares for him?" I asked
+perplexedly.
+
+"Well, you see," explained Silvia, "that when a girl--a coquette girl
+like Beth--is as sure of a man as she is of Rob, she gets a touch of
+contrariness or offishness or something. She said it would have been
+too prosaic and cut and dried if they had gone away for a day in the
+woods and come back engaged. She wants the unexpected."
+
+"Do you think she loves him?" I asked interestedly.
+
+"She doesn't say so. You can't tell from what she says anyway. Still,
+I think she is hovering around the danger point."
+
+"She'd better watch out. Rob isn't the kind of a man who will stand
+for too much thwarting," I replied.
+
+"If he'd only play up a little bit to some one else, it would bring
+things to a climax," said my wife sagely.
+
+"There's no one else to play up to. The blonde left today because it
+was so slow here."
+
+"Maybe some new girl will come tomorrow," said Silvia, "or there's
+that trim little waitress who is waiting her way through college. He
+gave her a good big tip yesterday. I think I will give him a hint."
+
+"It wouldn't help any. He wouldn't know how to play such a game if you
+could persuade him to try. He'd probably tell the girl his motive in
+being attentive to her and then she'd back out. Maybe, after all, Beth
+doesn't love him."
+
+"I think she does," replied my wife, "because she is getting
+absent-minded. She let Diogenes go too near the fire. His shoes are
+burned, his hair singed, and his dress scorched. He woke up when I
+came in and he was so cross. He acted just the way he does when he is
+with his brothers."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+_Rob's Friend the Reporter_
+
+
+Silvia's vague prophecy was fulfilled. When the event of the day, the
+arrival of the stage, occurred, a solitary passenger alighted, a slim,
+alert, city-cut young woman.
+
+She looked us all over--not boldly, but with a business-like
+directness as if she were taking inventory of stock, or acting as
+judge at a competition. When her blue eyes lighted on Rob, they
+darkened with pleasure.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Rossiter!" she exclaimed, "this is better than I hoped for."
+
+They shook hands with the air of being old acquaintances, and he
+introduced her to us as "Miss Frayne, from my home town."
+
+She went into the office, registered, and sent her bag to her room.
+Then she asked Rob if she might have a talk with him.
+
+They walked away together down to the shore and she was talking to him
+quite excitedly. Rob suddenly stopped, threw back his head and laughed
+in the way that it is good to hear a man laugh.
+
+"Miss Frayne must be a wit," observed Beth dryly.
+
+I looked at her keenly. Something in her eyes as she gazed after the
+retreating couple told me that Silvia's surmise was right, and that
+Miss Frayne might be just the little punch needed to send Beth over
+the danger point.
+
+"I rather incline to the belief that Ptolemy told the truth in the
+first place," she continued, and then looked disappointed because I
+did not contradict her.
+
+I decided not to reveal, for the present anyway, what I knew of Miss
+Frayne, of whom I had often heard Rob speak.
+
+"She can't be going to stay long," said Silvia hopefully. "She didn't
+bring a trunk."
+
+"She doesn't need one," replied Beth. "She is probably one of those
+mannish girls who believe in a skirt and a few waists for a
+wardrobe."
+
+When Rob and the newcomer returned, he seemed to be monopolizing the
+conversation in a very emphatic and earnest manner. As they came up
+the steps to the veranda, we heard her say:
+
+"Very well, Mr. Rossiter, I will do just as you say. I have perfect
+confidence in your judgment."
+
+They passed on into the hotel and Beth jumped up and went down toward
+the lake.
+
+"Did you ever hear Rob speak of this Miss Frayne?" asked Silvia.
+
+"Often. She is engaged to his cousin, and is a reporter on a big
+newspaper."
+
+"Why didn't you say so? Oh, Lucien," she continued before I could
+speak, "were you really shrewd enough to see which way the wind was
+blowing?"
+
+"Sure. After you set my sails for me last night."
+
+Just then Rob came out of the hotel.
+
+"Say, Lucien, I want to see you a minute. Come on down the road."
+
+"We've got some work ahead," he said when we were out of Silvia's
+hearing.
+
+"What's up?" I asked.
+
+"Miss Frayne is up--and doing. What do you suppose her paper sent her
+here for?"
+
+"For a rest, or to write up the mosquitoes of H. H."
+
+"H. H. is all right, only it happens they stand for Haunted House."
+
+"Not really?"
+
+"Yes, really. The rumors of the house and the ghost, greatly
+elaborated, of course, reached the Sunday editor of the paper Miss
+Frayne is on, and he sent her up here to revive the story of the
+murder, translate the ghost, and get snapshots of the house. She was
+quite keen to have me take her there at once, so she could commence
+her article, but I headed her off, so she wouldn't discover the summer
+boarders at the hotel annex. I assured her that daytime was not the
+time to gather material and the only way she could get a proper focus
+on the ghost and acquire the thrills necessary for an inspiration was
+to see the place first by night."
+
+"If she would view Fair Melrose aright," I quoted, "she must visit it
+in the pale moonlight, but you were very clever to delay her visit
+long enough for us to get over there and warn the enemy. If she had
+gone down there and caught the Polydores unawares, she would have come
+back here and revealed our secret, and there would be the end of
+Silvia's vacation."
+
+"To tell the truth, Lucien, I wasn't thinking so much of that as I was
+of Miss Frayne's interests. You see she has come a long ways for a
+story and if it collapsed from her ghostly expectations to a showdown
+of four healthy boys, the blow might mean a good deal to her in a
+business way. I think we had better let Ptolemy plant a ghost just
+once more for her. You know you made him take a reef in the flapping
+of ghostly garments. Can't we resurrect the specter and restore the
+wails just for tonight, and bring her over here at the witching
+hour?"
+
+"Sure we will," I agreed heartily. "She shall have her ghost and all
+the trappings. It will give the Polydores the time of their lives."
+
+"Let's go over there now and put Ptolemy next so he can get busy on
+his spirits." We went down to the shore and pulled off. Midway across
+the lake, Rob suddenly rested on his oars and asked:
+
+"Where did Beth go?"
+
+"Back to first principles," I replied. "She thinks, judging from your
+excited, earnest manner in addressing Miss Frayne and your rushing
+frantically away for a walk with her before she had removed the travel
+dust, that Ptolemy was quite correct, after all, in declaring you to
+be a 'ladies' man.'"
+
+"Didn't you explain to her who Miss Frayne was?" he asked.
+
+"No," I replied. "I am on my vacation and I am not doing any
+explaining, professionally or otherwise."
+
+He swung the boat around.
+
+"Starboard!" I cried. "Don't you know a trump card when you see it?"
+
+Again he rested on his oars and stared at me.
+
+"What do you mean, Lucien? If you have a grain of hope for me, please
+let me in."
+
+I repeated Silvia's theories.
+
+"I am not going to win her that way," he said slowly, "not by playing
+a part."
+
+"Well," I declared, "if you go back to the hotel now, you can't
+explain Miss Frayne to Beth, because she went for a walk with old
+Professor Treadtop."
+
+He turned the boat again.
+
+"Silvia won't come to the Haunted House, will she?" he asked.
+
+"No, indeed. Nothing would induce her to."
+
+"Then you bring Miss Frayne here tonight and I'll bring Beth. And I'll
+be sure that there are no double boats lying around loose. I'll have
+two at the dock, see?"
+
+"I see your system," I replied, "but I am not sure how I can explain
+Miss Frayne to Silvia. Silvia is not in the least narrow-minded, but
+still to leave the hotel at midnight with a perfectly strange young
+woman--"
+
+"You can tell her I want a clear field for Beth. She will see it is in
+a good cause."
+
+The Polydores greeted us rapturously and roughly. When I had restored
+order, and they were once more right side up, I addressed the chief of
+the bandits.
+
+"Ptolemy," I began, "a young lady, who is a reporter for a big
+newspaper, has come from many miles away to write up the haunted house
+and the ghost, and they will be pictured out in the Sunday edition."
+
+Ptolemy's eyes glistened, and "Them Three" were instantly "at
+attention."
+
+"Oh, say, stepdaddy," begged the young chief, "let me play ghost right
+for her, just once, will you?"
+
+"You may for tonight," I said, "but you will have to be very careful
+and not overdo the matter, for she isn't the kind that is easily
+fooled. She's had to keep her eyes and wits sharpened, else she
+wouldn't be on a newspaper, so I want you to be very careful and not
+bungle. Make a neat job of it."
+
+"I'll do it up brown, you bet!" he cried gleefully.
+
+"Naw, do it up white," drawled Pythagoras.
+
+"Show me your ghost stuff by daylight," I demanded, "and let me see
+how you are going to rig him up."
+
+He brought forth a head and shoulders and arms that were ghastly even
+in sunlight, and proceeded to explain them.
+
+"I got this skull out of father's study, and the arms came off a
+skeleton mother had in her antiquities. I dressed them up in a pillow
+case and the white cotton gloves are Huldah's. I can get some
+phosphorus in the woods and put it in the eyes. And Demetrius bought
+two electric flashlights yesterday, and Pythagoras can snap them once
+in a while from the lower windows."
+
+"You are some little property man," said Rob in admiration. "But tell
+me who produces those heart-rending shrieks?"
+
+"That was Pythagoras who did the high ones. And Em came in with low
+groans. Show 'em, boys."
+
+Pythagoras uttered high-trebled, thin-toned whines and ever and anon
+Emerald added a _basso profundo_ accompaniment, making a combination
+that was most trying to the ears at close range.
+
+"I don't know," said Rob, "as I want Beth subjected to such a
+realistic performance. We will loiter in the distance."
+
+"Your rehearsal," I assured Ptolemy, "is very good, but you must
+remember that Miss Frayne is used to encountering things far more
+terrible than ghosts. She may insist on coming right in here to
+investigate. Of course, if she does, I can't refuse or she'll think I
+am afraid, or else that I put up a fake ghost here, myself."
+
+"We'll lock the door with a chair," suggested Emerald.
+
+"She'll be quite capable of breaking into a little house like this,
+but I'll keep her back until you have time to haul in your ghost and
+make a quick and quiet getaway by a back window. Then another thing,
+she'll be over here tomorrow morning to take some pictures of the
+house, so by sunrise I want you all to take up your abode in the tent
+you have in the woods and stay there until I come and tell you the
+coast is clear."
+
+"We're dead on," assured Ptolemy. "I'm glad there's going to be
+something doing. We're getting tired of being here alone. I had to tie
+Demetrius up this morning. He was bound to go over to the hotel and
+see mudder."
+
+"Don't one of you dare to make such an attempt," I said peremptorily.
+"You keep right on here for a few days. Some of us, either Rob, or
+Beth and I will drop over every day. If you play your ghost just as I
+tell you and keep out of sight, I'll bring you over some ice cream
+tomorrow."
+
+"Bring me a bigger bat."
+
+"Bring me a mitt."
+
+"Bring me a boat," came in chorus from Ptolemy, Emerald, and
+Demetrius.
+
+"What'll you give me to stay here?" asked Pythagoras, who was a born
+bargain-driver.
+
+"I'll give you a licking if you don't stay," was the only offer he
+gleaned from me.
+
+"Be good boys," adjured the softhearted Rob, "and I'll bring you
+everything I can find at the hotel."
+
+It was long past the luncheon hour when we returned. We found Miss
+Frayne wondering at Rob's sudden disappearance and Beth was
+accordingly mystified.
+
+I planted myself directly in front of Miss Frayne.
+
+"May I take you to the haunted house tonight at the yawning
+churchyard hour?" I asked. "I am most eminently fitted to be your
+guide, for I was the first one of this assembly to see the ghost _in
+toto_."
+
+"He saw it over a stone fence," remarked Rob.
+
+"Indeed you may, thank you very much," she said enthusiastically.
+
+Silvia's face was a study.
+
+"And will you come with me, Beth?" asked Rob. "Of course, the ghost is
+an old story to us, but we really should hover in Lucien's wake out of
+regard to the conventions."
+
+"Is Miss Frayne interested in ghosts?" asked Beth.
+
+Miss Frayne turned and answered the question.
+
+"Not personally," she admitted frankly, "but the newspaper I am on is,
+and they sent me up here to get a story."
+
+"Oh, you are a reporter?"
+
+"Yes; on the _Times_."
+
+"She won't be one long, though," asserted Rob cheerfully, "because she
+is going to marry my cousin in the fall."
+
+Beth's expression remained neutral at the announcement, but I noticed
+throughout the afternoon that she was extremely affable toward Miss
+Frayne, and that she had the whiphand again with Rob, and meanwhile he
+seemed to be gathering a grim determination to do or die.
+
+"Lucien, how did you come to ask Miss Frayne to go to that awful place
+tonight?" asked Silvia when we had gone to our room for a siesta,
+which seemed impossible by reason of the bellowing of Diogenes, who
+balked at being required to lie down.
+
+"Rob asked me to," I informed her, when I had cowed Diogenes, "so he
+could have a free field for Beth. I believe he planned this
+expedition so he could storm the citadel."
+
+She reflected.
+
+"Well, maybe he is wise. Girls like Beth have to be taken by storm
+sometimes. I shouldn't wonder if Rob could be a bit of a bully, too,
+but--"
+
+She ended her speculations in a shriek.
+
+"Oh, Lucien! Diogenes has jumped out the window."
+
+We rushed down stairs, Silvia informing the guests in transit of the
+awful catastrophe.
+
+Silvia paused at the door opening on to the veranda.
+
+"I can't see him," she said faintly, closing her eyes. "You'll have to
+tend to it alone, Lucien."
+
+Beth was already at the telephone, which connected with the country
+doctor's. Rob joined me. We located our window, and began hunting
+underneath for the pieces.
+
+"Where in the world do you suppose he landed?" asked Rob.
+
+Just then the missing one came around the house clasping a bologna
+sausage in his fist.
+
+"Ye Gods and little Polydores!" exclaimed Rob.
+
+I caught Diogenes by the arm and rushed him in to Silvia.
+
+I found her in company with an old colored mammy, who was laundress
+for the hotel.
+
+"Sho'," she was saying, "I done gwine by de windah with ma baby cab
+full o' cloes, an' dis yer white chile done come tumblin' down an'
+fall right in ma cab. Now, what do you think o' dat? I reckon I was
+nevah so done clean skeert afoah in ma life. An' ef de chile didn't
+grab one of ma bolognas and done git out de cab an' run around de
+house."
+
+"Oh," cried Silvia, "poor little baby! Come to mudder. Lucien, where
+are you going with him?"
+
+I had picked up the acrobatic Polydore and was going up the stairs two
+at a time. I gained our room, locked the door and proceeded to give
+the "poor little baby" all that was coming to him. Now and then above
+his howls, I heard Silvia's plaintive protests outside the door, but I
+finished my job completely and satisfactorily, and laid the penitent
+Polydore in his little bed. Then I went out into the hall, feeling
+better than I had in months.
+
+Silvia essayed to pass me, but I took her arm and led her to a recess
+in the hall.
+
+"I am convinced," I told her, "that we have Diogenes as a permanent
+pensioner on our hands, so it was up to me to show him where to get
+off. You can't go to him for a quarter of an hour."
+
+We went down stairs and I was sure I read suppressed regret in the
+faces of most of the guests at learning of the soft place in which
+Diogenes' lot had been cast. Silvia tearfully told Rob and Beth of my
+cruelty.
+
+[Illustration: Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia's plaintive
+protests outside the door]
+
+"Do him good!" approved Rob heartily.
+
+"How mean men are!" declared Beth indignantly. "I am going up and
+comfort the poor little thing."
+
+I held up the key to the room with a grin, and she had to content
+herself by making unkind remarks about me.
+
+At the expiration of the allotted time, I handed Silvia the key. She
+took it from me without a word or a look. It was quite evident I was
+in wrong.
+
+In half an hour my wife came down, carrying Diogenes, who, dressed in
+fresh white clothes, was a good picture of an angel child. She passed
+me and went to a remote corner of the veranda and sat down. When he
+spied me, he leaped from her arms and ran to me.
+
+"Ocean," he said propitiatingly, "me love oo."
+
+I took him up. His arms clasped about my neck, and over his curly
+head, I winked at Silvia and Beth.
+
+Rob roared.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+_A Midnight Excursion_
+
+
+The night was Satan's own: dark, wind-shrieking, and Polydorish. No
+one saw us leave the hotel when, at a late hour, we started on our
+little excursion. On account of the darkness and the poor landing near
+the haunted house, we decided to go by the overland route. I managed
+to purloin a lantern from the kitchen to light our path.
+
+Rob and Beth kept behind Miss Frayne and myself, and in spite of the
+wildness of the weather, he was evidently pleading his suit, for now
+and then above the roar of the wind, I heard his ardent voice.
+Apparently Beth had not yet given him any encouragement.
+
+Going down the lane my lantern underwent a total eclipse, so we had a
+Jordan-like road to travel. Miss Frayne was quite impervious to
+unfavorable conditions, as it was a matter of bread and butter to her,
+she said, and she was accustomed to braving worse storms than this,
+and anyway she hadn't come here for a summer picnic.
+
+When we came into the grove it was so dark, I lost my bearings.
+
+"Why didn't we bring a flashlight?" asked Beth.
+
+"There were none at the hotel," I told her.
+
+"I know some boys," said Rob with a little laugh, "who would have lent
+us one--maybe."
+
+Fortunately we were well provided with safety matches and after
+striking a box or so, we gained the open. A rise of ground hid the
+house, but when we climbed to the top, the ghost loomed up ghastlier
+than ever.
+
+I felt the business-like Miss Frayne start and shiver as a little
+scream escaped her. I didn't wonder. Even I, knowing that it was an
+illusion and a snare, felt my flesh creeping as I looked at the
+ghastly thing in the window.
+
+Every now and then according to schedule a light flashed from the
+windows below. And then came the blood-curdling sounds--whimpers and
+groans that were rivaling the whistling of the wind.
+
+"This is awful!" said Miss Frayne in a hoarse whisper.
+
+"Do you want to go inside the house?" I asked.
+
+"No--o! I couldn't. Not tonight."
+
+We were some little in advance of Rob and Beth. When one spectral
+sound came like a tense whisper, Miss Frayne turned and fled, and of
+course I followed her. We could not see our two companions, but
+suddenly in an interim of wind and ghost whispers, we heard Beth say:
+
+"Yes, Rob. I think we should really be cosier in a story-and-a-half
+cottage than we should in a bungalow."
+
+"Ye Gods!" muttered Miss Frayne, "did he propose in the face of that
+awful Thing?"
+
+"Ship ahoy!" I called.
+
+"Oh, didn't you go inside?" asked Rob.
+
+"Go in! I wouldn't go inside that place; not if I lose my job on the
+paper. What can it be? You don't seem to mind it, Miss Wade."
+
+"Well, you know," said Beth apologetically, "this is my third
+performance."
+
+We were now down the hill out of sight of the gruesome, ghastly window
+display, and Miss Frayne gained courage as we retreated.
+
+"Of course I don't believe in ghosts," she said, "but what do you
+suppose that is?"
+
+"I had a theory," I said, "that it is the work of a lunatic, but I've
+since concluded it is due to practical jokers. I'll tell you what I'll
+do. If you wait here, I'll investigate and see what I can find out for
+you."
+
+"Oh, would you really dare, Mr. Wade? I don't believe men ever have
+creepy nerves," she exclaimed.
+
+I began to feel ashamed of my deception.
+
+"I wouldn't go, Lucien," warned Rob, coming to my rescue. "There may
+be a gang of desperadoes in there, or counterfeit money-makers, or
+something of that kind. Besides, I have a far more interesting piece
+of news than anything the ghost could give you."
+
+"Rob!" protested Beth.
+
+"We know it already," I laughed. "It's to be a story-and-a-half
+high."
+
+"I think I am getting material for quite a story," declared Miss
+Frayne.
+
+I knew Beth's dislike of scenes and display of emotions--mock
+heroics--she called them, so I made no congratulatory speeches of the
+bless-you-my-children order, but presently under the cover of
+darkness, I felt a little hand slipped in mine, and my clasp was
+eloquent of what I felt.
+
+"I hope," said Miss Frayne, "that daylight will make me so ashamed of
+my cowardice that I can come down here and take some pictures and go
+inside the house."
+
+"We'll all come with you," promised Beth. "There's safety in
+numbers."
+
+When we were back at the hotel I managed to have a few words with Rob
+before we went upstairs.
+
+"Bless the ghost!" he said cheerily. "When Beth first glimpsed it, she
+just turned and fell into my arms. She was really frightened for the
+first time. I shall feel under obligations to Ptolemy for a
+lifetime."
+
+"Thank goodness!" I ejaculated fervently, "that I am under no
+obligations to a Polydore. Ptolemy certainly did put up the most
+ghastly thing in the way of ghosts. The lights in the eyes of the
+skeleton were frightful."
+
+"Did you see the ghost?" asked Silvia sleepily, when I came in.
+
+"Yes; same old ghost, only more of him," I assured her.
+
+She was asleep before I had uttered this reply.
+
+"Silvia," I said, "I have a more startling piece of news for you than
+that."
+
+She sat bolt upright.
+
+"Are they engaged, Lucien?"
+
+"They are. They are building their castle--I mean their story-and-a-half
+cottage already."
+
+Alas for my own desire to sleep! I had so effectually awakened Silvia
+that she planned Beth's trousseau, the wedding, honeymoon, and the
+furnishing of their house before she subsided.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+_What Miss Frayne Found Out_
+
+
+We had planned to go to the haunted house at nine o'clock the next
+morning, but owing to my dissipation of the night before, it was long
+after the appointed hour when Silvia awoke me.
+
+I hurried down stairs and ate my breakfast in solitude. I inquired for
+Beth and Rob, but the waitress told me they had left the dining-room
+at seven o'clock and gone for a walk in the woods. She said it with a
+knowing smile that told me she, too, must be a "sister of the Golden
+Circle."
+
+"And Miss Frayne?" I asked.
+
+"She went down the road over an hour ago."
+
+Evidently her courage had come up with the sun. I was greatly
+disturbed at the chance of her stumbling over one or more Polydores,
+and Rob didn't want to let the cat out of the bag until her article
+was written, as he believed that if the ghostly spell were broken, she
+would lose her "punch."
+
+I was unable to think of any plausible explanation to offer Silvia as
+to why I should start in pursuit, and I wished all sorts of dire
+calamities on Rob's blond head. Lovers were surely blind and selfish.
+
+About ten o'clock they came strolling in.
+
+"We didn't know it was so late," said Beth cheerfully, "but the boys
+will keep in the woods all right."
+
+"With her nose for news, there is no telling how far into the woods
+Miss Frayne's investigation will take her."
+
+"Say we go down by the lane and meet her," proposed Beth, "so that if
+she has run across the boys we can explain to her why we desire
+secrecy from Silvia."
+
+"You and Rob go," I advised. "It would seem odd to Silvia if we didn't
+ask her to go with us."
+
+So the newly engaged couple started down the road, but in their
+self-absorption they didn't notice the turn to the lane, and they got
+half way to Windy Creek before they came back to earth and the hotel.
+Miss Frayne still had not shown up, and I began to have misgivings
+lest the Polydores had locked her up in the house, but finally just as
+we were having a happy family gathering and discussing the new event
+under the shade of the one resort tree, she came excitedly up to us.
+
+"Such an interesting morning as I have had!" she exclaimed
+enthusiastically. "I made some corking pictures of the place, and I've
+found out about not only that ghost, but all ghosts--the whole race of
+ghosts."
+
+I hurriedly interrupted her and made elaborate and jumbled apologies
+for not keeping our engagement, which evidently bored her and
+mystified Silvia.
+
+"I am glad I went alone," she finally replied. "Otherwise I might not
+have got such an interesting interview."
+
+Beth, Rob, and I made frantic and appealing gestures to her behind
+Silvia's back, but she didn't seem to notice them.
+
+"Whom did you interview, the ghost?" asked Silvia.
+
+"No, indeed. Some very interesting and unusual people who are staying
+there."
+
+I threw her a wildly beseeching glance and Beth and Rob began at the
+same time to ply her with distracting questions. I think she seemed to
+divine that there was something in the situation that was not to be
+explained, but Silvia interrupted them.
+
+"Do let Miss Frayne tell us about her interview," she said. "We all
+seem to be very talkative today."
+
+I saw there was no way to dodge the dénouement, so I awaited the
+finale in dread desperation. It proved to be more of a stunner than I
+had expected.
+
+"I went down the lane," she said, "and through the grove, up the
+little hill, and laughed at myself for the hallucinations of the night
+before. There were no ghosts visible and the door to the haunted
+house was hospitably open. I stood on the hill long enough to make
+some pictures and then went on. I walked up the steps fearlessly and
+looked within. A woman, an untidy, disheveled-looking woman, sat at a
+table writing furiously in just the same breathless way I write when I
+have a scoop, and the presses are waiting open-mouthed for my copy.
+
+"She looked up and scowled at my intrusion.
+
+"'Don't bother me,' she said, and continued writing.
+
+"I went through the house and came outside again where I met an
+absent-minded, spectacled man. I told him who I was and of my object
+in coming to the house. Then he showed signs of coming to.
+
+"'Oh, the ghost!' he said. 'That is what brought me here. My wife is
+interested in more tangible, more material things. We have just
+returned from a long journey, and when we were nearly to our
+destination, our place of residence, I happened to read in a paper
+about this haunted house and its apparition, so we came right up here
+this morning to remain overnight and see if the article were true.'
+
+"I told him how successful I had been and he became quite alert and
+enthusiastic. He showed me why I should not have been alarmed, because
+ghosts, he said, were scientific facts. He then explained to me at
+length how the gases from the dead arise and form a nebulous vapor or
+a vaporous nebula. It sounded very simple and plausible when he told
+me, but I can't seem to remember it. Fortunately I have it all down in
+writing."
+
+Silvia's eyes and mine had met in speechless horror since she had
+mentioned the "writing woman."
+
+"Lucien!" Silvia now said in a tragic, hoarse whisper--"the
+Polydores!"
+
+"Oh, do you know them?" asked Miss Frayne. "Dr. Felix Polydore, the
+eminent LL.D. or something like that."
+
+"The whole family are D's," I said.
+
+"His wife is the highest of high-brows, and they are averse to
+interviews. They moved to a small city sometime ago to be secluded.
+Just think of my opportunity! I have them headlined! 'The Haunted
+House of Hope Haven. Ghost that appears at midnight scientifically
+explained by the distinguished Dr. Felix Polydore.'"
+
+"I think we are in luck," I said to Silvia, on second thoughts. "We
+will take them home by the nape of the neck and deliver their children
+into their keeping to have and to hold."
+
+"I can't turn Diogenes over to them," she said plaintively.
+
+"Diogenes!" repeated Miss Frayne in astonishment.
+
+I then narrated to her the history of our next-door neighbors, and how
+they planted their five children upon us.
+
+"We had better go down at once and see them," said Silvia, "before
+they escape. No telling where they might take it in their heads to
+go."
+
+"We will," I said, "we'll go soon after luncheon."
+
+"Thrice blessed haunted house," quoted Rob. "It gave me Beth, and it
+has restored the parents of the wise Ptolemy and 'Them Three.'"
+
+"And gave me a ripping story," said Miss Frayne.
+
+Just then the gong sounded, and after luncheon while I was comfortably
+tipped back in a chair, my feet on the veranda rail, seeing in the
+smoke from my pipe dream visions of Polydoreless days, a faint cry
+from Silvia brought me back to earth.
+
+"Lucien, look!"
+
+I looked.
+
+My chair came down to all fours and my feet slipped from the rail.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+_Ptolemy's Tale_
+
+
+Four defiant, determined-looking Polydores came up the steps and bore
+down upon us. Then Silvia as usual thought she saw land ahead.
+
+"Oh, boys," she asked hopefully, "did your father send for you to meet
+him here? And when is he going to take you home?"
+
+"Didn't I tell you," I thundered at Ptolemy, "that you were not to
+leave that house--"
+
+"It left us," interrupted Emerald with a grin.
+
+"Went up in smoke," added Pythagoras blithely, "ghost and all."
+
+"Four minutes quicker," said Demetrius, "and it would have took father
+and mother, too."
+
+"Oh, is it the haunted house they are talking about?" asked Miss
+Frayne joyfully. "What a story I'll have!"
+
+Life to Miss Frayne seemed to be one story after another. Well, it was
+certainly becoming the same way to us.
+
+"Did the ghost set fire to the house?" asked Beth.
+
+"What are you all talking about," demanded Silvia, "and how did you
+know these boys were there? How long have you been here?" she asked,
+turning to Ptolemy.
+
+"I told you," I repeated angrily to the subdued boy, "not to leave.
+Those were plain orders. If the house did burn up, you could have
+stayed in your tent in the woods."
+
+Ptolemy's lips twitched faintly.
+
+"The house burned up and all our clothes and our stuff to eat, and our
+bats and things, and father and mother went away and I didn't know
+what to do, so--I came here. But we'll go back to our own house. We
+have learned to cook. Come on, boys."
+
+"You'll stay right here with me, son," and Rob's hand came down
+intimately on Ptolemy's shoulder.
+
+"It isn't likely we'll turn them out into the woods, when they haven't
+a roof over their heads," declared Silvia, drawing Emerald to her
+side.
+
+"I think you are absolutely inhuman, Lucien," cried Beth. "I don't see
+what has changed you so," and she proceeded to make room for
+Pythagoras in the porch swing.
+
+"Did the fire scare you?" asked Miss Frayne gently, as she put her
+arms about Demetrius.
+
+"Et tu, Brute? Well, I plainly see this is no place for an inhuman,
+childless, married man," I said with a laugh, walking down the
+veranda.
+
+In the doorway I met Diogenes, who raised his chubby arms invitingly.
+
+"Up, up, Ocean!" he begged sweetly.
+
+I lifted him to my shoulder, and then turned and walked triumphantly
+back to the family group.
+
+"Now," I said, "here is the whole d-dashed family. And I propose that
+each keep unto his charge the child he has now under his wing."
+
+Miss Frayne quickly relinquished the dirty Demetrius. Beth shrank away
+from Pythagoras.
+
+As I seated myself still holding Diogenes, his brothers sprang toward
+him in greeting, but he spat at one, kicked at another, and pulled the
+hair of a third, although he patted Ptolemy's cheek gently.
+
+"Now, we'll have this affair thrashed out," I declared in my most
+authoritative, professional manner, and I then proceeded to explain to
+Silvia the housing of the Polydores, and our strategies to keep their
+arrival a secret simply on her account.
+
+"Because you know," interpolated Beth, with a consideration for the
+feelings of the young Polydores--a consideration they had never before
+encountered--"we wanted you to have a nice rest."
+
+Silvia looked quite penitent and remorseful for her seeming lack of
+appreciation of our combined efforts. When I had answered all her
+inquiries satisfactorily, Miss Frayne's curiosity regarding the
+progeny of the eminent Polydores had to be fully relieved.
+
+"And do you mean that the scribbling lady I saw at the table is really
+the mother of these five boys?" she asked, unable to grasp the fact.
+
+"Yes; and the father hereof is the man who explained the ghosts to you
+so scientifically that you cannot remember what he said. Now, Ptolemy,
+we'll hear your story of the fire and the whereabouts of your parents.
+Take your time and tell it accurately."
+
+"Well, you see we did just as you said to, and took the ghost out of
+the window and went out to the woods early this morning so as not to
+let the paper lady see us."
+
+"Oh!" cried Miss Frayne, "am I the paper lady? I begin to see
+daylight. Are these boys the ghost perpetrators, and were you in on
+the put-up job?"
+
+"You're a good guesser," I replied.
+
+"And why wasn't I taken into your confidence?"
+
+"For two reasons. First, because your friend Rob said you'd get better
+results for copy--more inspirations and thrills, if you weren't behind
+the scenes on the ghost business,--and then we didn't want to tell you
+about the presence of the Polydores lest inadvertently you betray the
+fact to my wife. Now, proceed, Ptolemy."
+
+"After we were in the woods, I heard an automobile coming down the
+lane, and I went up near the edge of the woods and peeked out behind a
+tree, and pretty soon I saw father and mother come over the hill and
+go in our haunted house, so I came up there and hid under the window
+and heard mother say: 'What an ideal place to write this is. It looks
+as if I might really get a chance to write unmo--'
+
+"'--lested,'" I finished for him.
+
+"I guess so," he allowed. "Well, she began writing, so I didn't go in,
+but when father came outside I went up to him and told him you and
+mudder were at the hotel and that we were all with you. He told me
+they came up here to write an article for some big magazine about the
+ghost. He hired an automobile down at Windy Creek to bring them up to
+the house and the man was going to come back for them tomorrow
+morning. I didn't let on the ghost was a fake, because I thought he'd
+be so disappointed to have all his trouble for nothing, and he'd be
+mad at me for swiping his skull. I told him a paper lady was coming
+and then I went back to the woods. He went down with me to see the
+boys, and he said he would come back and have lunch with us. Mother
+doesn't ever stop to eat at noon when she is writing.
+
+"He went back and talked to the paper lady and pretty soon he came
+down and ate with us. I told him all about how we couldn't get any
+girl to do the work for us and so we had been living with you, and how
+Di got sick and mudder was all worn out taking care of him and came
+down here to rest, and that you wouldn't cash the check, so I did and
+was spending it and he said that was all right." Here Ptolemy flashed
+me a most triumphant glance.
+
+"He said you must be paid for all your expense and trouble, so he made
+out a check and gave it to me and told me to make mudder a nice
+present. He ain't so bad when he ain't thinking about dead stuff. When
+he felt in his pocket for his check book, he found a letter he had got
+yesterday and forgotten to open, so he read it then and found it was
+from some magazine, and the man said he'd pay his and mother's
+expenses to go to Chili and write up some stuff about--something. So
+father said they must go at once."
+
+"Not to Chili!" I exclaimed.
+
+"Yes; we all went up to the house with him and I took mother's pencil
+and paper away so she would have to listen. She was wild for Chili,
+and I had to go and hunt up a farmer who had a machine to take them
+down to Windy Creek. Father signed another blank check for you and
+said you could board us with it or do anything you thought best.
+
+"Then mother took a lot of papers out of her bag, some stuff she had
+written and didn't get suited with, and she stuffed them in the stove
+and set fire to them. Then we all went down to the lane to see father
+and mother off and when we got back the house was on fire. The chimney
+burned out."
+
+"Guess mother must have written some hot stuff," said Emerald.
+
+"It was burning so fast," continued Ptolemy, "that we didn't dast go
+in to save anything and all our food and clothes and balls and bats
+and fishing tackle are gone, and we didn't know what to do, or what to
+eat, and so--we came here."
+
+"You did just right, Ptolemy," I admitted. "I shouldn't have called
+you down--not until I heard your story, anyway."
+
+I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an injured air.
+
+"Do you mean to tell me," asked Miss Frayne, "that your father and
+mother went away without seeing the baby?"
+
+Ptolemy flushed a little.
+
+"You see," he explained apologetically, "mother gets woolly when she
+writes and she's forgotten there's Di. She thinks Demetrius is the
+youngest. She's mad about writing. If she sees a blank paper
+anywhere, she ain't happy until she has written something on it, and
+the sight of a pencil makes her fingers itch."
+
+[Illustration: I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an
+injured air]
+
+"Take warning, Miss Frayne," I said, "and don't get too literary."
+
+"Some day," resumed Ptolemy, "mother'll get the antiques all out of
+her system and then she'll remember us."
+
+I liked the boy's defense of his mother, and I began to see that Rob
+was right in thinking there were possibilities in the lad, but it was
+Silvia's influence that had developed them, for in the days when he
+borrowed soup plates of us, there had been no redeeming trait that I
+could discern.
+
+And while I was recalling this, I heard Silvia saying to him kindly:
+"And in the meantime, I'll be 'mudder' to you."
+
+"So will I," chimed in Beth.
+
+"I'll be a big brother," offered Rob.
+
+"I'll be next friend, Ptolemy," I contributed.
+
+Strange to say, my offer seemed to make the most impression on him. He
+came to me and gazed into my eyes earnestly.
+
+"I'll do just as you say," he promised.
+
+"Where do we'uns come in?" asked Pythagoras, with one of his satanic
+grins.
+
+Miss Frayne saved the day.
+
+"You all come in with me," she said, "and have lunch. I haven't eaten
+since breakfast, and I understand there is warm ginger cake and
+huckleberry pie. Aren't you hungry?"
+
+"You bet," spoke up Pythagoras. "We only had coffee, peanuts, and
+beans down in the woods, and father ate the beans and drank all the
+coffee."
+
+"We're out of the frying pan into the fire," said Silvia woefully,
+when we were alone.
+
+"I wish the Polydore parents had gone up in smoke," I declared.
+
+"Then your last hope of getting rid of the children would have gone up
+in smoke, too," argued Beth.
+
+"No; in case of the demise of their parents, we could have turned them
+over body and soul to the probate court," I informed her.
+
+"We will fill out this blank check for any amount, Lucien," declared
+Silvia, "that will induce a housekeeper to take charge of their house.
+I shall keep Diogenes, though, until he is older."
+
+"I wouldn't mind Ptolemy, either," I admitted. "I shall be interested
+in seeing what I can make of him, and he hasn't a bad influence over
+Diogenes, but I'll be hanged if anything would induce me to have 'Them
+Three' Chessy cats running wild over us. They can live in their house
+alone, or be put in a reformatory. We won't have them. We're under no
+obligations, pecuniary or moral, to look after them."
+
+"I think, Lucien, we might as well go home now. We've had a good rest
+and a good time, and I am anxious to be back and see how Huldah is
+getting on."
+
+As Huldah had never mastered two of the three R's, we had not been
+able to receive any reports from her.
+
+"I'll tell you what we'll do," proposed Beth. "Rob and I will take all
+the Polydores save Diogenes, and go home tomorrow and prepare the
+house and Huldah for the overflow. Then you two can come on with
+Diogenes the next day."
+
+"Good idea, Beth!" I approved. "I'd hate to face Huldah, unprepared,
+with the return of the Polydores _en masse_."
+
+"I am glad," said Silvia, "that Huldah has been having a rest from
+them for a few days."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+_All About Uncle Issachar's Visit_
+
+
+The next morning's stage carried seven passengers to Windy Creek, as
+Miss Frayne with a big roll of "copy" also took her departure.
+
+Diogenes had been quite docile and amenable to my rule since the
+licking I gave him, so we had a pleasant and comfortable return
+journey on the following day.
+
+"I hope, Lucien," said Silvia, "you won't refuse to cash this check
+for a good amount. The Polydore parents may never show up, and it's
+only right we should be reimbursed for their keep."
+
+"I will cash it," I assured her, "and use it for a housekeeper or else
+send the boys off to a school. I should like very much to have it out
+with Felix Polydore, but, as you suggest, I may never have the
+opportunity to see him at close range."
+
+Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy met us at the station.
+
+"Where are 'Them Three'?" I asked hopefully.
+
+"Huldah is feeding them little pies hot from the kettle--the kind she
+cooks like doughnuts, you know."
+
+"Huldah cooking for 'Them Three'!" I exclaimed. "She must have passed
+into her second childhood. She grudged them even an apple to piece
+on."
+
+"She has pampered them ever since our return," said Rob.
+
+"Poor Huldah! She must indeed be afflicted with softening of the
+brain," I decided.
+
+"She has probably been so lonely, shut in here by herself," said
+Silvia, "that even 'Them Three' looked good to her."
+
+In the hallway Huldah met us. She was beaming with pleasure, but
+except in her bearing toward the children, she was quite normal.
+
+"We've all had a real good rest," she observed, "and you do look so
+well, Mrs. Wade. My! but this place has been lonesome. I'm glad we're
+all together again."
+
+"Now, Silvia, shut your eyes," directed Beth, "and come into the
+library. Ptolemy has bought you a present with the check his father
+gave him."
+
+"Beth helped me pick it out," said Ptolemy.
+
+Beth led the way into the library, and we followed.
+
+"Open your eyes."
+
+Silvia gave a little cry of pleasure, and looking over her shoulder, I
+beheld a baby grand piano.
+
+"Oh, Ptolemy!" she cried, giving him a fervent kiss and fond hug, "I
+can never let you do so much."
+
+"Oh, yes," he said, flushing a little under the endearments which were
+doubtless the first ever bestowed upon him. "Father's got a whole lot
+of money grandpa left him and it's fixed so he can't draw out only so
+much each year. He said the board and bother of us was worth more than
+this and we'll all enjoy the music. But Thag and Em and Dem ain't to
+touch it. I'll knock tar out of the first one that comes near it."
+
+I was disconsolate. I didn't see how we could return it and I didn't
+want the Polydore web woven any tighter. To think of Silvia's
+receiving from them what it had been my longing to give her! But as I
+was to learn later, she was to acquire much more than a piano from the
+eminent family.
+
+After dinner Silvia asked Huldah to come in and hear the music, and
+when Silvia's repertoire was exhausted, we gave our faithful servant
+all the little details of our trip which Beth had not supplied.
+
+"Now tell us, Huldah, how things went along here," said Silvia.
+
+"Well, you think some wonderful things happened to you all on your
+trip mebby--ghosts and proposals," looking at Beth and Rob, "and fires
+and Polydores, but back here in this quiet house something happened
+that has your ghosts and things skinned by a mile."
+
+"Oh, dear!" cried Silvia apprehensively, "what is it?"
+
+"Break it very gently, Huldah," I cautioned. "You know we've borne a
+good deal."
+
+"Your uncle Issachar was here for a couple of days."
+
+She certainly had made a sensation.
+
+"Not Uncle Issachar! Not here?" exclaimed Silvia incredulously.
+
+"Yes, ma'am. He came the next day after Beth and Mr. Rossiter and
+Polly left. I told him you'd gone away for a little vacation and rest.
+I didn't let on that I knew where you had gone, because I didn't want
+him straggling up there, too, or sending for you to come back. He said
+your absence would make no difference to his plans; that he never let
+nothing do that. He come to pay a visit and he should pay one."
+
+"Yes," said Silvia feebly. "That sounds like Uncle Issachar."
+
+"I told him to make himself perfectly at home; that every one did that
+to this place, and he said he would. I'd just slicked up the big front
+room upstairs and I seen to it that he had everything all right. I
+cooked the best dinner I knew how, and he said it was the first white
+man's meal he had eat since his ma died, so I found out what she used
+to cook and fed him on it. Them three kids and him eat like they was
+holler. I guess if Polly hadn't took them away your grocery bill would
+'a looked like Barb'ry Allen's grave.
+
+"Well, as I was saying, your uncle he eat till he got over his
+grouches, and like enough he'd be here eating yet, if he hadn't got a
+telegraph to hit the line for home, some big business deal, he said,
+and I guess it was a great deal, for he licked his chops and smacked
+his lips over it, and he give me a ten dollar bill to get a new dress
+and each of Them Three one dollar fer candy."
+
+"The old tightwad!" I exclaimed. "It was your cooking, sure, that made
+him loosen up that way."
+
+"Tightwad nothing!" she declared indignantly. "You won't think he was
+tight-wadded when you read this here letter he left for you. He told
+me what was in it, and I've just been busting to tell it to Beth, but
+I waited for you to know it first."
+
+With great excitement Silvia opened the letter, read it, gasped,
+re-read it, and then in consternation handed it to me.
+
+"Read it aloud, Lucien," she bade. "Maybe I can believe it then."
+
+This was the letter.
+
+ "My dear Niece:
+
+ "I was sorry not to see you, but glad to learn that, as every wise
+ and good woman should do, you are raising a fine family--a family
+ of _sons_, which is what our country most needs. Your son
+ Pythagoras informed me that you had taken your oldest child,
+ Ptolemy, and your youngest, Diogenes, with you, I am glad you left
+ three such promising samples for me to see.
+
+ "As you have five sons, I have, agreeable to my promise, placed in
+ your name in the First National Bank of your city the sum of
+ twenty-five thousand dollars.
+
+ "Your affectionate uncle,
+ "Issachar Innes."
+
+"Huldah," I asked, "did you tell him the Polydores were our
+children?"
+
+"Me?" she repeated indignantly. "Me tell a lie like that! No; I didn't
+get no chance to tell him anything about them. 'Them Three' done the
+telling. The first thing that one"--pointing to Pythagoras--"said was,
+'Mudder went away and took the baby, Diogenes, with her.' And then
+that next one"--indicating Emerald--"said: 'Yes, and our oldest
+brother, Ptolemy, went on with Beth to see them.'
+
+"The old gent asked them all their names and ages and he was so
+pleased and said he thought it was just fine for you to raise five
+sons, so I didn't have no heart to tell him no different. 'Twan't none
+of my business anyhow. Then 'Them Three' kept talking about stepdaddy,
+and your Uncle Issachar asks 'Who the devil is he? Did my niece marry
+again?' And I told him as how Mr. Wade was all the husband you ever
+had, and that stepdaddy was nothing but a sort of pet-name the kids
+had give Mr. Wade."
+
+"I told him," said Demetrius, "that stepdaddy was cross to us
+sometimes and not as nice as mudder, and he said--"
+
+"You shut up," commanded Huldah quickly, "and let me talk."
+
+"No," I intercepted, "I'd really be interested in hearing what he told
+Uncle Issachar. What was it, Demetrius, that your great-uncle said to
+you?"
+
+"He said," stated the imp, darting his tongue out in triumph at his
+victory over Huldah, "that he always thought you was a stiff."
+
+"He didn't say nothing of the kind!" declared Huldah. "He said you was
+stiff-necked, and that he presumed you would act more like a
+stepfather than the real thing. Well, as I was saying, he asked their
+names, and he liked them fine. Said they were so classy."
+
+"Didn't he say classic, Huldah?" inquired Rob.
+
+"Mebby. What's the difference?" snapped Huldah.
+
+"None," I assured her quickly, dodging a definition.
+
+"She told him--" began Emerald.
+
+"You shut up," again adjured Huldah, "or I'll never bake you one of
+those small pies no more."
+
+"Oh, please, Huldah," I coaxed. "Let us hear everything. I've always
+told you my life's secrets, and I don't mind what you or the boys told
+him."
+
+"Well, I suppose what he was going to tattle was that I thought the
+old gent might feel hurt, 'cause none of them was named after him, so
+I told him Polly's middle name was Issachar."
+
+"Why, Huldah," remonstrated Silvia.
+
+"Well, he's always wanted a middle name, and he's never been baptized,
+so you can stick it in and have him ducked next Sunday and then that
+will square that. 'Them Three' stuck to him like a hive of bees, and I
+was scairt for fear they'd let the cat out of the bag, and so long as
+they had put it in, I thought it might just as well stay in, but they
+were just as slick as grease in all they said. They'll hang in that
+rogues' gallery yet."
+
+"I suppose they were pretty--strenuous," said Silvia with a sigh.
+
+"They was more than that. The first afternoon right after dinner when
+he was sitting on the front porch, sleeping peaceful and snoring, that
+there one--" pointing to Pythagoras--
+
+"Tattle-tale!" he began, but I administered a cuff and he subsided
+into surprised silence.
+
+[Illustration: "He went to the front window and dropped a young kitten
+down on the old gent's head."]
+
+"He," said Huldah, looking pleased at this little attention to the
+boy, "went to the front window and dropped a young kitten down on the
+old gent's head. It clawed something fierce. We had just got things
+going smooth again when Emmy got one of his earaches. I roasted an
+onion and put in his ear, and what did he do but take it out of his
+ear and slip it down your poor uncle's back."
+
+"Why didn't you beat them?" I asked indignantly.
+
+"Because the old gent did that. He put 'em across his knee, and
+believe me, it was some licking they caught. They didn't let out a
+whimper and that pleased him."
+
+"Huh!" said Emerald. "Thag don't know how to cry. He hasn't got any
+tears, and old Uncle Iz didn't hurt me, because, you see, when I heard
+Thag getting his, I went and stuffed the Declaration of Independence,
+that book of stepdaddy's that Demetrius tore the pictures out of, in
+my pants."
+
+"Go on!" urged Rob delightedly. "What else did you all do? Uncle must
+have had some time. It would make a fine scenario. 'The first visit of
+the rich uncle.'"
+
+"Well," resumed Huldah. "One of 'em put red pepper in the old man's
+bed, and he like to sneeze his head off, but he said as how sneezing
+was healthy, and showed you'd got rid of a cold."
+
+"He never got on to the pepper," said Demetrius gleefully.
+
+"In the morning, that second one put a toad in his new uncle's pocket,
+and Emmy broke his specs. Then Meetie he dropped his watch. They used
+his razor to cut the lawn with. And then they took him down to the
+creek to go fishing, and they put the fish in Uncle's silk hat, and
+and----"
+
+"Stop!" implored Silvia, who was now in tears. "Uncle Issachar
+believes them mine! Ours! And that I brought them up! Oh, why did we
+ever go away?"
+
+"Oh, pshaw," exclaimed Huldah comfortingly, "he said you had brung
+them up fine; that they were no mollycoddles or Lizzie boys, and he
+didn't suppose you had so much sense as to leave them natural."
+
+"A left-handed one for mudder," laughed Beth.
+
+"He must be a very peculiar man--ready for the asylum, I should say,"
+commented Rob.
+
+"He would have been if he'd stayed any longer, or else I would have
+been," declared Huldah.
+
+"Couldn't you make them behave, someway?" asked Silvia.
+
+"Well, at first I tried to, and every time I pinched one of 'em when
+the old gent wasn't looking, or knocked 'em down when I got 'em alone,
+they would threaten to tell who they was, and then when I seen how
+your uncle liked the way they acted, I just let 'em go it, head on.
+And seeing as how they each brung you five thousand, I've treated 'em
+best I know how. They're worth it, now. They done one thing more that
+was awful. Could you stand it to hear?" turning to Silvia.
+
+"Please, Silvia," implored Rob.
+
+"Well," argued Silvia faintly. "I suppose we might as well know the
+worst."
+
+"You see the old gent didn't always get up to breakfast with the kids
+and one morning when I brought in the cakes Emmy looked up and
+grinned. I nearly dropped the plate. He had both sets of the old man's
+false teeth in his mouth. I got 'em back in his room without his
+waking, but I'd have liked a picture of Emmy."
+
+"Pythagoras," I demanded, when we had recovered from this recital,
+"why didn't you tell him who you were, and how you all came to be
+here with us?"
+
+"Because she is our mudder, and we are going to stay with her, always.
+We've got a snap. So has father and mother. And Ptolemy told us that
+if you ever got any kids, you'd get five thousand each for them, and I
+thought we'd just make that much for you. So we played Uncle Iz for
+it. Easy money, all right, all right."
+
+"Talk about fine financiering," quoth Rob. "'Them Three' will surely
+land on Wall Street."
+
+But poor Silvia had no heart for humor and was weeping silently.
+
+"Why, look here, my dear," I said in consolation, "this is a very
+simple matter to adjust. In the morning when you feel better, just
+write a full explanation of the affair and inclose your check for
+twenty-five thousand."
+
+Silvia quickly wiped away her tears.
+
+"I'll do it tonight, Lucien. I feel better now. I never thought of
+writing."
+
+Huldah and "Them Three" looked most lugubrious.
+
+"The old skinflint won't miss it as much as I would a penny," declared
+our faithful handmaiden. "And I'm sure you've earnt that twenty-five
+thousand if anyone ever did. You've had as much care and worry about
+them brats as you would if they'd been your own."
+
+"Huldah," I said severely, "there is a pretty stiff penalty for
+obtaining money under false pretences."
+
+"After all the pains we took to make things lively for him, so he
+wouldn't get bored and think he was having a poor time!" regretted
+Pythagoras.
+
+"And us watching every word we spoke so as not to give it away,"
+wailed Emerald.
+
+"Cake's all dough," muttered Demetrius.
+
+Ptolemy regarded the three disapprovingly. He had the old inscrutable
+look, the look that foreboded mischief, in his eyes.
+
+"You bungled, you fool kids!" he said in disgust, "and Huldah, what
+did you want to let on to mudder for that he thought we was hers? You
+ought to have torn up the note he left and just said he'd put
+twenty-five thousand in the bank for her."
+
+"Huh! you're just jealous because you weren't in the Uncle Izzy deal
+yourself," jeered Pythagoras. "You always think you're the only one
+that can do anything right."
+
+"I wish you had been here, Polly," said Huldah, "I am sure you could
+have worked it through somehow."
+
+"I wish I had stayed and put it across," he answered. "If you and the
+kids would only learn not to blab everything you know. It's the only
+way to work anything. Minute you tell a thing, it's all off."
+
+There was still a great deal of development work to be put on
+Ptolemy's moral standard.
+
+"You'll find, my lad," remonstrated Rob, "that honesty is the best
+policy."
+
+"I'd have been perfectly honest about it," he defended. "I would have
+told him the truth, and how our parents had deserted us, and how
+mudder took us in when we were homeless and was bringing us up like
+her own because she hadn't got any, and how stepdaddy wanted to turn
+us out, and she wouldn't let him, and then he would have decided
+against stepdaddy and given mudder the money so she could keep us."
+
+"Ptolemy," I said warningly, "there is a way of telling the truth, or
+rather of coloring white lies with enough truth to make them deceive,
+that is more dishonorable than an out and out lie."
+
+"Tell me, Ptolemy," asked Silvia, "how did you know about that offer
+of five thousand dollars for each child?"
+
+"I overheard it," he said guardedly; "but I can't remember where."
+
+"He heard me say so," confessed Huldah.
+
+"It was when he first come here and he was making us so much trouble,
+and I told him it was too bad we had to have other folks' brats around
+when, if we only had our own, they'd be bringing in something."
+
+The recital now broke up and Silvia sat down to write a long
+explanatory letter to Uncle Issachar. The next morning I procured her
+a check from the First National Bank and she filled it out.
+
+"Oh!" she said with indrawn breath, when she had asked me how to write
+twenty-five thousand dollars, "I never expected to be able to sign my
+name to a check for such an amount."
+
+"You never will again, I fear," was my sad prophecy.
+
+"It must feel rich," said Beth, "just to have a large check pass
+through your fingers."
+
+"Them Three" came the nearest to tears that they were able to do.
+
+"We worked so hard for it," they sighed.
+
+"So did I!" muttered Huldah.
+
+"I couldn't live a double life," declared Silvia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+_In Which I Decide on Extreme Measures_
+
+
+Everyone in our house, which was now filled to overflowing--in fact,
+there were Polydores on sofas and in beds on the floor--save Silvia
+and myself, was on the alert for a response to the letter during the
+succeeding few days. Knowing Uncle Issachar, we felt sure he would
+make no response, or notice the matter in any way save to cash the
+check promptly.
+
+The monotony was somewhat relieved by the difficulties under which
+Beth and Rob were pursuing their courtship. On the third evening
+succeeding our return, Silvia and I started upstairs early to give
+them a chance to have the exclusive use of the library, the Polydores
+having all been sent to bed. As we were making some plausible excuse
+for going to our room, Beth remarked with a smile:
+
+"Your motive in retiring so early is commendable, but of no particular
+benefit to Rob and me. The Polydores, like the poor, we always have
+with us."
+
+"I saw that every one of them except Ptolemy was in bed at eight
+o'clock last night and the night before," said Silvia. "You don't mean
+to tell me--"
+
+"Yes, I do mean," laughed Beth. "Not Ptolemy, though. He has become
+too dignified to spy on us, but last night as we sat here on the
+settee, we heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from
+underneath."
+
+"How in the world did he ever squeeze under there?" I asked, gazing at
+the slight space between the floor and settee.
+
+[Illustration: "We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from
+underneath."]
+
+"He did look a little flattened, as if he had been put in a letter
+press," said Rob. "I gave him a dime to go to bed and stay there. Beth
+and I had just resumed our conversation when a still, small voice
+said: 'I'll go to bed for a dime, too.' I then hauled Demetrius from
+behind the davenport."
+
+"And the night before," said Beth, "when we were sitting on the porch,
+Pythagoras rolled off the roof, where he had been listening to us, and
+came down into the vines."
+
+"Now I'll stop that," I declared. "I'll tie them in their beds and
+lock the doors and windows."
+
+"No," refused Rob. "I'd like to try to circumvent them by their own
+weapons of wits. I have a little plan which I don't dare whisper to
+you lest their long-range ears get in their work. We are just about to
+start for a walk."
+
+"In this pouring rain!" protested Silvia.
+
+"We like the rain," he replied, "and we--are not going far."
+
+Pythagoras entered the room just then and looked astounded and
+disappointed when he saw Beth and Rob departing.
+
+"We are going out to a small party," Rob remarked to me, casually.
+
+It was after eleven when we heard them returning.
+
+"Do you suppose they have been walking all this time?" said Silvia in
+concern. "Beth wore no rubbers."
+
+The next day was Sunday and Huldah put into execution a plan for
+procuring one happy hour each week. This plan was the admission of the
+Polydores, _en masse_, to one of the Sunday schools. She chose the
+church most remote from home so they would be a long time going and
+coming, which she said would "help some."
+
+"Now," said Beth, as she watched them march away, "I can dare to tell
+you where we spent last evening. We were at the Polydore house next
+door. There is a little vine-screened porch on the other side of the
+house. Rob managed to open one of the windows and brought out a couple
+of chairs. It was as snug as could be."
+
+"I'll corral them every night," I said, "until you make your getaway,
+and I'll give you the key so you can go inside when it is cool or
+stormy."
+
+"We'll go around the block by way of precaution," said Rob.
+
+Presently Huldah returned from the Sunday school with triumphant
+mien.
+
+"They made them all into one class and put a redheaded woman with
+spectacles in for their teacher. I gave them street car tickets to
+come home on."
+
+When the Polydores returned, however, they were dragging Diogenes
+along and he looked quite weary.
+
+"Didn't you come home on the street car?" I asked Ptolemy.
+
+"No; we sold our tickets and got ice cream sodas," he explained. "We
+took turns carrying Diogenes on our backs."
+
+"You only had one ticket for yourself, and two half fares for Thag and
+Emmy," said Huldah suspiciously. "I thought Meetie and Di could ride
+free. You couldn't have sold them tickets for enough for sodies."
+
+"Rob gave us three nickels to put in the plate," said Pythagoras. "We
+only put in one of them, seeing we were all in one family and one
+class. That gave us four nickels for ice cream sodas and the clerk
+gave Di half a glass some one had left."
+
+"I gave you a penny for Di to put in," said Huldah. "What did you do
+with that?"
+
+"We wanted him to put it in, and when they took up the collection, he
+wouldn't give it," said Emerald. "I tried to take it away from him
+and he swallowed it. The redhead teacher was awful scared, but I told
+her he was used to swallowing things and that you said he carried a
+whole department store in his insides."
+
+"Poor little Di," said Silvia; "it's the only way he has of keeping
+things away from you all."
+
+That night I saw to it personally that each and every Polydore was in
+his little bed. It should have aroused my suspicions that none of them
+rebelled, or had evinced the slightest degree of interest or curiosity
+when Beth and Rob announced their intention of going out for the
+evening.
+
+At ten-thirty the lovers returned, bringing in Pythagoras, who was
+clad in his pajamas.
+
+"Where did you pick him up?" I asked in astonishment.
+
+"He picked us up," said Beth.
+
+"He was wise, maybe, in discovering where we were," said Rob, "but he
+fell down when he tried to work off the ghost screeches on us. We
+recognized them at once, and ran him down inside, so our party broke
+up."
+
+"Come here, Pythagoras," I commanded.
+
+He obeyed promptly and fearlessly.
+
+"How did you know they were there, and when did you go over there?"
+
+"I was playing over in our house today," he replied, "and I found one
+of Beth's hairpins with the little stones in, in the big chair, so I
+knew that was where they hid last night. As soon as you went down
+stairs tonight, I got out the window and slid down the roof and came
+over to scare them."
+
+"You've missed a lot of sleep the last few nights," I said quietly,
+"so you will have to make it up. You can stay in bed all day
+tomorrow."
+
+"Hold on, Lucien!" exclaimed Rob. "Tomorrow's the big baseball game of
+the season, and I promised to take them all."
+
+"So much the better," I said. "He will learn to mind."
+
+Pythagoras looked as if he had been struck, and quickly put his arms
+across his eyes. In a moment his shoulders were heaving. At last I had
+found a vulnerable spot in the stoic, and I began to relent.
+
+"See here, Pythagoras," I said, "if I let you up in time to go to the
+game, will you promise me something?"
+
+"Anything," came in a muffled voice.
+
+"Will you promise not to spy on Beth and Rob and keep Emerald and
+Demetrius from doing it?"
+
+"Yes," he promised quickly, his arm coming down and his face
+brightening. "Sure I will, but I did want to hear what they said."
+
+"Why?" asked Rob interestedly.
+
+"We're getting up a show, and Em is going to take the part of a girl
+and he spoons with Tolly, and we didn't know what to have them say to
+each other."
+
+"I'll rehearse you on the play, and prompt you," said Beth with a
+little giggle.
+
+"Come on upstairs with me now," I said to Pythagoras.
+
+When I landed him at his door, he leaned up against me, and rubbed his
+cheek against my arm.
+
+"Thank you for letting me go to the game," he said.
+
+I found myself responding to his affectionate advance. This would
+clearly never do. I couldn't let another Polydore squeeze himself into
+my regard.
+
+"Silvia," I said abruptly, as I came into our room, "we must really
+make some immediate plan for disposing of the Polydores, or, at
+least, of 'Them Three.'"
+
+"Huldah is managing them tolerably well," demurred Silvia. "Since they
+depreciated in market value from five thousand per to nothing, she has
+resumed her former harsh treatment of them."
+
+"Well, we are not going to keep them," I replied with finality. "We
+are under no obligations to do so. I am going to put them in a school
+for boys and use the blank check Felix Polydore left to pay for their
+tuition."
+
+"I suppose that is what we will have to do," she admitted with a
+little sigh. "Yet, Lucien, it doesn't seem quite right. If they are in
+a boys' school, they will keep on right along the same lines. They
+need home influence and contact with women. Demetrius is fond of music
+and will sit still and listen when I play. Emerald obeyed me today the
+first time I spoke, and I even thought I saw a glimmer of good in
+Pythagoras."
+
+I didn't tell her that this glimmer was what had decided me to dispose
+of him.
+
+"It would, doubtless, be better for them to stay," I admitted, "but I
+am not going to be a martyr to the cause. They are going."
+
+The next morning I wrote for catalogues and prospectus to the
+different schools, and I felt as if three old men of the sea had been
+lifted from my shoulders.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+_Which Has to Do with Some Letters_
+
+
+One morning when I came down to my office, I found a letter postmarked
+from the city in which Uncle Issachar lived addressed to me. I opened
+it and found inclosed, with seal unbroken, the letter Silvia had
+mailed to her uncle and which she had marked "personal." There was a
+note addressed to me accompanying it:
+
+ "Dear Sir:
+
+ "I am returning herewith your personal letter to Mr. Innes, as he
+ has gone to South America and left no forwarding address. Should
+ such be received from him at any future date, you will be duly
+ notified thereof.
+
+ "Very truly yours,
+ "Chester K. Winslow,
+ "Secretary."
+
+I read the above to Silvia at luncheon. She was grievously disappointed
+because her uncle had not received her letter of explanation.
+
+"It is most fortunate," she said, "that I sent it in one of your
+office envelopes."
+
+As usual, she had found the bright spot she always looked for and
+generally discovered.
+
+"I wouldn't care," she said, "to have Uncle Issachar's private
+secretary or the dead-letter office know all our private affairs, but
+I shall feel like an impostor until Uncle Issachar is undeceived."
+
+"I feel a hunch," said Rob, "that Uncle Issachar will run across
+Doctor Felix and his wife down there in Chili and find you out."
+
+"He may run across the Polydores," I replied, "but he'll never find
+out from them that they are the parents of Silvia's children. They
+would not mention a subject in which they have so little interest."
+
+"But," argued Beth, "naturally they'd tell him where they lived, and
+then, of course, he'd say he had a niece living in the same town. They
+would inquire her name and inform him that they were her near
+neighbors, and then he'd tell them what fine sons you have, and then,
+of course, the Polydores would claim their own."
+
+"Which theory goes to show," said Silvia, "how little you know Uncle
+Issachar and the Polydore seniors. He would not think of speaking to
+strangers, and if he did, he wouldn't say any of those usual
+conversational things you mentioned. The Polydores wouldn't be
+interested, in the least, in knowing he had a niece unless she
+happened to know something about antiques, and if he should describe
+her children, she wouldn't recognize them."
+
+After luncheon I went out on the porch. While I sat there, the mail
+carrier came along and handed me a letter--a returned letter. It was
+directed in Ptolemy's round hand to Mr. Issachar Innes. He had
+evidently used the envelope to Silvia's letter to her uncle as his
+model, for the address was written in the same way. "Personal" was
+added in the left-hand corner, and his name and our house number was
+in the upper left-hand corner.
+
+I went into the library where my wife, Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy were
+sitting.
+
+"Ptolemy," I said, handing him the letter, "here is your communication
+to Uncle Issachar, returned."
+
+He lost some of his usual _sang froid_ and appeared quite disconcerted.
+
+"Why, Ptolemy," exclaimed Silvia in consternation, "what in the world
+did you write to Uncle Issachar about?"
+
+Ptolemy had recovered and was quite himself again.
+
+"About us," he said innocently. "As the oldest of our family, I
+thought I ought to do a little explaining."
+
+"And I think," I said, looking at him keenly, "that we have the right
+to know what your explanation was."
+
+Ptolemy handed me over the letter.
+
+"Read it aloud," he said, with the air of one who is proud of his
+productions.
+
+Rob's eyes shone in anticipation.
+
+I broke the seal. A note from the secretary fell out. It was an
+apology for not returning the letter sooner, but it had been
+inadvertently mislaid. I then read aloud the letter Ptolemy had
+written:
+
+ "Dear Uncle Issachar
+
+ "I am sorry Diogenes and I were away when you were here. You
+ thought the others were fine, but you should have seen--Diogenes.
+ I hope you will send mudder back her check, because there is lots
+ of things she needs, and it takes a lot of money to take care of
+ all us. You see our own father and mother don't want to be
+ bothered with us and they went away and left us, and so we are
+ living with mudder the same as if we were really her adopted
+ children, and if her own would have been worth five thousand per
+ to you, I think her adopted children ought to be worth half as
+ much anyway, so it would only be fair to send her a check for
+ $12,500 anyway, and if you are a good sport like the kids said you
+ were, you'll send back her check.
+
+ "Yours truly,
+ "P. Issachar Polydore Wade."
+
+Rob's laughter was so free and spontaneous that I had to join in
+against my will. Ptolemy, who had seemed a little apprehensive of the
+verdict, looked accordingly relieved.
+
+"That's a fine letter, young man," approved Rob. "Stepdaddy ought to
+take you into his law firm."
+
+"No," declared Beth. "I think Ptolemy has inherited his mother's gift.
+He should be a writer."
+
+"Not on your life!" cried Ptolemy with feeling. "I want to live
+things instead of writing about them."
+
+A tear or two came into Silvia's eyes.
+
+"It was very sweet in you, Ptolemy, to try to get the money for
+mudder."
+
+I felt that all this commendation was bad for Ptolemy, and that it was
+up to me to take a reef in his sails.
+
+"It was a well-meant letter, Ptolemy," I said, "and I know that your
+motive was unselfish, but it is very poor policy to meddle in other
+people's affairs. Meddlers are mischief makers in spite of their good
+intentions. I am very glad it did not fall into Uncle Issachar's
+hands."
+
+Ptolemy looked sufficiently squelched.
+
+"By the way, Silvia," I said. "I wrote Mr. Winslow and told him not to
+forget to forward Uncle Issachar's address as soon as he possibly
+could do so, as I had matters of importance to communicate to him."
+
+"He may travel about like father and mother," said Ptolemy, again
+regaining confidence, "so why don't you put that check for twenty-five
+thousand in the Savings Department and get the interest on it
+anyway?"
+
+"I think, Ptolemy," said Rob, "that you are too good a financier,
+after all, to become a lawyer. I will go back to my first conviction
+that you should be a promoter."
+
+"We'll give him to Uncle Issachar," I proposed, "for a partner."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+_"The Money We Earnt for You"_
+
+
+Life went on uneventfully save for the dire doings of "Them Three."
+Knowing that they were to be sent to school, they were having their
+last fling at life untrammeled. September came, and Rob set the day
+for his departure, as he was going home to arrange his affairs, so he
+and Beth could leave for an extended honeymoon trip. I planned to go
+with Rob and install the Polydore three in their distant school. They
+were so despondent at leaving, as the time drew near, that a feeling
+of gloom hung over the household, all the members of which, even to
+Huldah, urged me to relent. But I remained adamant until the evening
+before the day set for the dissolution of the Polydore family, when
+something happened that changed all our plans.
+
+We were assembled in the library in a state of forced cheerfulness
+when the doorbell rang. I answered it, and receipted for a telegram
+which I opened and read in the hall. It was from Chester K. Winslow.
+
+"Silvia," I said gravely, as I returned to the library, "your Uncle
+Issachar is dead. Died in South America. Heart disease. Very sudden."
+
+Conflicting emotions were depicted in Silvia's expression.
+
+The thought uppermost in all our minds was expressed simultaneously by
+"Them Three."
+
+"Gee! Then you can keep the money we earnt for you."
+
+"You know," interpolated Rob in soft-pedaled tone, "they are going to
+train school children toward the military--teach the young ideas how
+to shoot, as it were. It won't be long before they are ordered to
+Mexico to protect us."
+
+"If Them Three ever meets that there Viller man," commented Huldah
+confidently, "the fur will fly some."
+
+"Lucien," said Silvia thoughtfully, "we are under obligations to these
+children, you see, after all."
+
+"Yes," I acknowledged with a sigh, "seeing they are now ours, bought
+and paid for, I suppose we'll have to treat them as such."
+
+"You wouldn't send your own kids away to school," said Pythagoras
+significantly.
+
+"No," I reluctantly allowed, answering the protest of Pythagoras, "and
+we won't send you. You will all go to the public school tomorrow."
+
+The deafening Polydore powwow that followed made me hope that Uncle
+Issachar had met with his just deserts.
+
+
+
+
+"By the author of Mildew Manse."
+
+AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY
+
+By BELLE K. MANIATES
+
+Illustrated. 12mo. $1.00 net.
+
+A book for the many who are weary of problem novels. How prosperity came
+to the Jenkins family, how Amarilly got an education, how the Boarder
+married Lily Rose and built the Annex, and the adventures of the rector's
+surplice, are told in a wholesome little story, between whose covers await
+many laughs, and a tear or two as well.
+
+Amarilly is blessed with a large family and amiable neighbors, and their
+doings are amusing, but her fancies and devices are captivating.... The
+little heroine is all right.--_New York Sun._
+
+The sort of story which pulls at the heartstrings of all readers who like
+a real and genuine character.... No one can afford to miss the sweet humor
+and helpful cheeriness which the author serves in generous
+measure.--_Boston Globe_.
+
+"Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley" is a dear companion for vacation days
+and comes deservedly under the books of real amusement.... Dear Amarilly!
+she brightens every hour spent with her.--_Buffalo News_.
+
+LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Publishers
+
+34 Beacon Street, Boston
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Our Next-Door Neighbors, by Belle Kanaris Maniates
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30075 ***
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-<body>
-<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30075 ***</div>
-
-<h1>OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS</h1>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:10px;'>By Belle K. Maniates</p>
-<table summary=''><tr><td>
-<p class='cg'>AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY<br />
-MILDEW MANCE<br />
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS</p>
-</td></tr></table>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-000.jpg' alt='' title='' width='338' height='453' /><br />
-<p class='caption'>
-&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your rush?&rdquo; I asked, when I had overtaken him.<br />
-<span class='smcap'>Frontispiece.</span> <i>See page 114.</i><br />
-</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:2.2em;margin-top:40px;margin-bottom:20px;'>Our Next-Door<br />Neighbors</p>
-<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:10px;'>By</p>
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:20px;'>Belle Kanaris Maniates</p>
-<p class='tp' >With illustrations by</p>
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:larger;'>Tony Sarg</p>
-<div style='margin:25px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-001.jpg' />
-</div>
-<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:40px;font-size:1.3em;'>Boston<br />
-Little, Brown, and Company<br />
-1917</p>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<p class='tp' ><i>Copyright, 1917</i>,</p>
-<p class='tp' ><span class='smcap'>By Little, Brown, and Company.</span></p>
-<hr class='p10' />
-<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:20px;'><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
-<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:60px;'>Published February, 1917</p>
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.8em;margin-bottom:40px;'>Norwood Press<br />
-Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.<br />
-Presswork by The Colonial Press, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.</p>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-002.jpg' />
-</div>
-<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>I</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>About Silvia and Myself</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_I__ABOUT_SILVIA_AND_MYSELF'>1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>II</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Introducing Our Next-door Neighbors</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_II__INTRODUCING_OUR_NEXTDOOR_NEIGHBORS'>9</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>III</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Are Pestered by Polydores</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_III__IN_WHICH_WE_ARE_PESTERED_BY_POLYDORES'>28</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IV</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Take Boarders</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IV__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_BOARDERS'>45</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>V</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Take a Vacation</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_V__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_A_VACATION'>62</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VI</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Flirt and a Woman-Hater</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VI__A_FLIRT_AND_A_WOMANHATER'>78</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which Nothing Much Happens</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VII__IN_WHICH_NOTHING_MUCH_HAPPENS'>91</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VIII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Ptolemy Disappears and I Visit a Haunted House</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VIII__PTOLEMY_DISAPPEARS_AND_I_VISIT_A_HAUNTED_HOUSE'>100</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IX</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We See Ghosts</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IX__IN_WHICH_WE_SEE_GHOSTS'>124</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>X</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Make Some Discoveries</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_X_IN_WHICH_WE_MAKE_SOME_DISCOVERIES'>139</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XI</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Bad Means to a Good End</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XI__A_BAD_MEANS_TO_A_GOOD_END'>153</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>Too Much Polydores</span>&rdquo;</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XII__TOO_MUCH_POLYDORES'>165</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Rob&rsquo;s Friend the Reporter</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIII__ROBS_FRIEND_THE_REPORTER'>174</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIV</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Midnight Excursion</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIV__A_MIDNIGHT_EXCURSION'>196</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XV</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>What Miss Frayne Found Out</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XV__WHAT_MISS_FRAYNE_FOUND_OUT'>204</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVI</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Ptolemy&rsquo;s Tale</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVI__PTOLEMYS_TALE'>214</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>All About Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s Visit</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVII__ALL_ABOUT_UNCLE_ISSACHARS_VISIT'>230</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVIII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which I Decide on Extreme Measures</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVIII__IN_WHICH_I_DECIDE_ON_EXTREME_MEASURES'>255</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIX</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Which Has to Do with Some Letters</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIX_WHICH_HAS_TO_DO_WITH_SOME_LETTERS'>268</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XX</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>&ldquo;The Money We Earnt for You&rdquo;</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XX_THE_MONEY_WE_EARNT_FOR_YOU'>277</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-003.jpg' />
-</div>
-<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Illustrations' style='margin:1em auto;'>
-<col style='width:75%;' />
-<col style='width:25%;' />
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your rush?&rdquo; I asked, when I had overtaken him.</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_1'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>Uncle Issachar</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_2'>10</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>Dr. Felix Polydore</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_3'>23</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;Lucien Wade!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Here are our letters to Beth and Rob.&rdquo;</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_12'>81</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us.</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_17'>103</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull together and beat it to the lake</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_20'>127</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>The landlady intears waylaid me</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_21'>133</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>I had to carry Diogenes most of the way</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_28'>169</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia&rsquo;s plaintive protests outside the door</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_31'>193</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an injured air</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_38'>225</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;He went to the front window and dropped a young kitten down on the old gent&rsquo;s head.&rdquo;</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_41'>243</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from underneath.&rdquo;</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_44'>257</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_1' name='page_1'></a>1</span></div>
-<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1.5em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:1.4em;'>OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOURS</p>
-<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-004.jpg' />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_I__ABOUT_SILVIA_AND_MYSELF' id='CHAPTER_I__ABOUT_SILVIA_AND_MYSELF'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter I</span></h2>
-<h3><i>About Silvia and Myself</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Some people have children born unto
-them, some acquire children and
-others have children thrust upon
-them. Silvia and I are of the last named
-class. We have no offspring of our own,
-but yesterday, today, and forever we have
-those of our neighbor.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_2' name='page_2'></a>2</span></div>
-<p>We were born and bred in the same little
-home-grown city and as a small boy, even,
-I was Silvia&rsquo;s worshiper, but perforce a
-worshiper from afar.</p>
-<p>Her upcoming had been supervised by a
-grimalkin governess who drew around the
-form of her young charge the awful circle
-of exclusiveness, intercourse with child-kind
-being strictly prohibited.</p>
-<p>Children are naturally gregarious little
-creatures, however, and Silvia on rare
-occasions managed to break parole and
-make adroit escape from surveillance.
-Then she would speed to the top of the
-boundary wall that separated the stable
-precincts from an alluring alley which
-was the playground of the plebeian progeny
-of the humble born.</p>
-<p>To the circle of dirty but fascinating
-ragamuffins she became an interested tangent,
-a silent observer. Here I had my
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3' name='page_3'></a>3</span>
-first meeting with her. I was not of her
-class, neither was I to the alley born, but
-sailed in the sane mid-channel that ameliorates
-the distinction between high and
-low life.</p>
-<p>On this eventful day I was taking a
-short cut on my way to school. One of
-the group of alleyites, with the inherent
-friendliness of the unchartered but big-hearted
-members of the silt of the stream
-of humans, had proffered to little Silvia
-a chip on which was a patch of mud designed
-to become a fruitcake stuffed with
-pebbles in lieu of raisins and frosted with
-moistened ashes. Before the enticing
-pastime of transformation was begun,
-however, Silvia was swiftly snatched from
-the contaminating midst and borne away
-over the ramparts.</p>
-<p>Thereafter I haunted the alley, hoping
-for another glimpse of the little picture
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4' name='page_4'></a>4</span>
-girl on the wall. At last I attained my
-desire. One Saturday afternoon I saw her
-coming, alone, down a long rosebush bordered
-path. A thrill ran through me.
-Our eyes met. Yet all I found to say
-was: &ldquo;C&rsquo;mon over.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She responded to this invitation and I
-helped her over the wall. She looked
-longingly at the Irish playing in the mud,
-but a clean sandpile in my own backyard
-not far away seemed to me a more fitting
-environment for one so daintily clad.</p>
-<p>We played undisturbed for a never-to-be-forgotten
-half hour and then they found
-her out. Reprimanding voices jangled and
-the whole world was out of tune.</p>
-<p>Thereafter a strict watch was kept on
-little Silvia&rsquo;s movements and I saw her
-only at rare intervals, when she was
-going into church or as she rode past our
-house. She always remembered me and
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5' name='page_5'></a>5</span>
-on such meetings a faint, reminiscent smile
-lighted the somber little face and her
-eyes met mine as if in a mysterious promise.</p>
-<p>She grew up an outlawed, isolated child
-deprived of her birthright, but in spite of
-the handicaps of so barren a childhood,
-she achieved young womanhood unspoiled
-and in possession of her early democratic
-tendencies.</p>
-<p>When I was making a modest start
-in a legal way, her parents died and left
-her with that most unprofitable of legacies,
-an encumbered estate. Then I dared
-to renew our acquaintance begun on the
-sandpile. She went to live with a poor
-but practical relation and was initiated
-into the science of stretching an inadequate
-income to meet everyday needs.
-In time I wooed and won her.</p>
-<p>We set up housekeeping in a small,
-thriving mid-Western city where I secured
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6' name='page_6'></a>6</span>
-a partnership in a legal firm. Silvia
-had all the requisites of mind and manner
-and Domestic Science necessary to a
-&ldquo;hearth-and home-&rdquo; maker.</p>
-<p>We lived in a house which was one of
-many made to the same measure with
-the inevitable street porch, big window,
-trimmed lawn in front and garden in
-the rear. We had attained the standard of
-prosperity maintained in our home town
-by keeping &ldquo;hired help&rdquo; and installing
-a telephone, so our social status was
-fixed.</p>
-<p>There was but one adjunct missing to
-our little Arcadia. While at a word or
-look children flocked to me like friendly
-puppies in response to a call, to Silvia
-they were still an unknown quantity.</p>
-<p>I had hoped that her understanding
-and love for children might be developed
-in the usual and natural way, but we had
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7' name='page_7'></a>7</span>
-now been married ten years and this hope
-had not been realized.</p>
-<p>She had tried most assiduously to cultivate
-an acquaintance with members of
-child-world, but into that kingdom there
-is no open sesame. The sure keen intuition
-of a child recognizes on sight a kindred
-spirit and Silvia&rsquo;s forced advances
-met with but indifferent response. She
-wistfully proposed to me one day that we
-adopt a child. My doubts as to the
-advisability of such a course were confirmed
-by Huldah, our strong staff in
-household help. In our section of the
-country servants were generally quite conversant
-with the intimate and personal
-affairs of the home.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you never do it, Mr. Wade,&rdquo; she
-counseled. &ldquo;Ready-mades ain&rsquo;t for the
-likes of her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When, in acting on this advice, I vetoed
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8' name='page_8'></a>8</span>
-Silvia&rsquo;s lukewarm proposition, I was convinced
-of Huldah&rsquo;s wisdom by seeing the
-look of relief that flashed into my wife&rsquo;s
-troubled countenance, and I knew that
-her suggestion had been but a perfunctory
-prompting of duty.</p>
-<p>Time alone could overcome the effects of
-her early environment!</p>
-<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-005.jpg' />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9' name='page_9'></a>9</span></div>
-<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-006.jpg' />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_II__INTRODUCING_OUR_NEXTDOOR_NEIGHBORS' id='CHAPTER_II__INTRODUCING_OUR_NEXTDOOR_NEIGHBORS'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter II</span></h2>
-<h3><i>Introducing Our Next-door Neighbors</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>One morning Silvia and I lingered
-over our coffee cups discussing our
-plans for the coming summer, which
-included visits from my sister Beth and my
-college chum, Rob Rossiter. We wished
-to avoid having their arrivals occur
-simultaneously, however, because Rob was
-a woman-hater, or thought he was. We
-decided to have Beth pay her visit first
-and later take Rob with us on our vacation
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10' name='page_10'></a>10</span>
-trip to some place where the fishing facilities
-would be to our liking. However,
-summer vacation time like our plans was
-yet far, vague and dim.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-007.jpg' alt='' title='' width='210' height='278' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>While I was putting on my overcoat,
-Silvia had gone to the window and was
-looking pensively at the vacant house next
-to ours.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I fear,&rdquo; she said abruptly and irrelevantly,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span>
-&ldquo;that we are destined to receive
-no part of Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s fortune.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Uncle Issachar was a wealthy but eccentric
-relative of my wife. He had made us
-no wedding gift beyond his best wishes,
-but he had then informed us that at the
-birth of each of our prospective sons he
-should place in the bank to Silvia&rsquo;s account
-the sum of five thousand dollars. We had
-never invited him to visit us or made any
-overtures in the way of communication with
-him, lest he should think we were cultivating
-his acquaintance from mercenary motives.</p>
-<p>While I was debating whether the
-lament in Silvia&rsquo;s tone was for the loss of
-the money or the lack of children, she
-again spoke; this time in a tone which
-had lost its languor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There is a big moving van in front of
-the house next door. At last we will
-have some near neighbors.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Are they unloading furniture?&rdquo; I
-asked inanely, crossing to the window.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; course not,&rdquo; came cheerfully from
-Huldah, who had come in to remove the
-dishes. &ldquo;Most likely they are unloading
-lions and tigers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As I have already intimated, Huldah
-was a privileged servant.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They are unloading children!&rdquo; explained
-Silvia, in a tone implying that
-Huldah&rsquo;s sarcastic implication would be
-infinitely more preferable. &ldquo;The van
-seems to be overflowing with them&ndash;&ndash;a
-perfect crowd. Do you suppose the house
-is to be used as an orphan asylum?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; I assured her as I counted
-the flock. Five children would seem like
-a crowd to Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Boys!&rdquo; exclaimed Huldah tragically,
-as she joined us for a survey. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see that
-they don&rsquo;t keep the grass off our lawn.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span></div>
-<p>Late that afternoon I opened the outer
-door of the dining-room in response to the
-rap of strenuously applied knuckles.</p>
-<p>A lad of about eleven years with the
-sardonic face of a satyr and diabolically
-bright eyes peered into the room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re going to have soup for dinner,&rdquo;
-he announced, &ldquo;and mother wants to borrow
-a soup plate for father to eat his out of.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia stared at him aghast. She seemed
-to feel something compelling in the boy&rsquo;s
-personnel, however, and she went to the
-china closet and brought forth a soup plate
-which she handed to him without comment.</p>
-<p>In silence we watched him run across
-the lawn, twirling the plate deftly above
-his head in juggler fashion.</p>
-<p>The next day when we sat down to
-dinner our new young neighbor again
-appeared on our threshold.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Halloa!&rdquo; he called chummily. &ldquo;We
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span>
-are going to have soup again and we want
-a soup plate for father.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where is the one I loaned you yesterday?&rdquo;
-demanded Silvia in a tone far
-below thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit, while
-her features assumed a frigidity that would
-have congealed father&rsquo;s favorite sustenance
-had it been in her vicinity.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, we broke that!&rdquo; he casually and
-cheerfully explained.</p>
-<p>With much reluctance Silvia bestowed
-another plate upon the young applicant.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; I said as he started to leave,
-&ldquo;don&rsquo;t you want the soup tureen, too, or
-the ladle and some soup spoons?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, thank you,&rdquo; he answered politely.
-&ldquo;None of the rest of us like soup, so we
-dish father&rsquo;s up in the kitchen. He
-doesn&rsquo;t like soup particularly, but he eats
-it because it goes down quick and lets him
-have more time for work.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span></div>
-<p>This time as he sped homeward, he
-didn&rsquo;t spin the plate in air, but tried
-out a new plan of balancing it on a
-stick.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; I suggested gently, when our
-young neighbor was lost to our sorrowful
-sight, &ldquo;that it might be well to invest in
-another dozen or so of soup plates. I will
-see about getting them at wholesale rates.
-Our supply will soon give out if our new
-neighbors continue to cultivate the soup
-and borrowing habit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will buy some at the five cent store,&rdquo;
-replied Silvia. &ldquo;I think I had better call
-upon them tomorrow and see what manner
-of people they can be.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When I came home the next day it was
-quite evident that she had called.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I inquired, &ldquo;what do they keep&ndash;&ndash;a
-soup house?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They are literary people, the highest of
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span>
-high-brows. Their name is Polydore, and
-the head of the house&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. or Mrs.?&rdquo; I interrupted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The head of the house,&rdquo; pursued Silvia,
-ignoring my question, &ldquo;is a collector.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So I inferred. Has he a large collection
-of soup plates?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She collects antiquities and writes their
-history. He pursues science.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They were seemingly communicative.
-What did they look like?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t see them. After I rang I heard
-a woman&rsquo;s voice bidding some one not to
-answer the bell. She said she couldn&rsquo;t be
-bothered with interruptions, so I went on
-up the street to call on Mrs. Fleming, who
-told me all about them. She was also refused
-admittance when she called. On my way
-home I met that boy&ndash;&ndash;that awful boy&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She paused, evidently overcome by the
-consideration of his awfulness.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;He had been digging bait&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Again she paused as if words were inadequate
-for her climax.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I encouraged.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He was carrying his bait&ndash;&ndash;horrid,
-wriggling angleworms&ndash;&ndash;in our soup
-plate!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then it is not broken yet!&rdquo; I exclaimed
-joyfully. &ldquo;Let us hope it is given
-an antiseptic bath before father&rsquo;s next
-indulgence in consomm&eacute;. After dinner I
-will go over and try my luck at paying my
-respects to the soup savant.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They won&rsquo;t let you in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In that case I shall follow their lead of
-setting aside all ceremony and formality
-and admit myself, as their heir apparent
-does here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After dinner and my twilight smoke, I
-went next door, first asking Silvia if there
-was anything we needed that I could
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
-borrow, just to show them there were no
-hard feelings.</p>
-<p>My third vigorous ring brought results.
-A slipshod servant appeared and
-reluctantly seated me in the hall. She
-read with seeming interest the card I
-handed to her and then, pushing aside
-some mangy looking porti&egrave;res, vanished
-from view.</p>
-<p>She evidently delivered my card, for I
-heard a woman&rsquo;s voice read my name,
-&ldquo;Mr. Lucien Wade.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After another short interval the slovenly
-servant returned and offered me my
-card.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She seen it,&rdquo; she assured me in answer
-to my look of surprise.</p>
-<p>She again put the porti&egrave;res between us
-and I was obliged to own myself baffled
-in my efforts to break in. I was showing
-myself out when my onward course was
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span>
-deflected by a troop of noisy children
-leaded by the soup plate skirmisher, who
-was the oldest and apparently the leader
-of the brood.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, halloa!&rdquo; he greeted me with the
-air of an old acquaintance, &ldquo;didn&rsquo;t you
-see the folks?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On my informing him that I had seen
-no one but the servant, he exclaimed:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, that chicken wouldn&rsquo;t know
-enough to ask you in! Just follow us.
-Mother wouldn&rsquo;t remember to come out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I was loth to force my presence on
-mother, but by this time my hospitable
-young friend had pulled the porti&egrave;res so
-strenuously that they parted from the pole,
-and I was presented willy nilly to the
-collector of antiquities, who had the
-angular sharp-cut face and form of a
-rocking horse. She was seated at a table
-strewn with books and papers, writing at
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span>
-a rate of speed that convinced me she was
-in the throes of an inspiration. I forebore
-to interrupt. My scruples, however, were
-not shared by her eldest son. He gave
-her elbow a jog of reminder which sent her
-pencil to the floor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mother!&rdquo; he shouted in megaphone
-voice, &ldquo;here&rsquo;s the man next door&ndash;&ndash;the
-one we get our soup plates from.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She looked up abstractedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she said in dismayed tone, &ldquo;I
-thought you had gone. I am very much
-engaged in writing a paper on modern
-antiquities.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I murmured some sort of an apology for
-my untimely interruption.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am so absorbed in my great work,&rdquo;
-she explained, &ldquo;that I am oblivious to all
-else. I have the rare and great gift of
-concentration in a marked degree.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I was quite sure of this fact. She took
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
-another pencil from a supply box and
-resumed her literary occupation. As my
-presence seemed of so little moment, I
-lingered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; shouted one of the boys,
-snatching the pencil from her grasp, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
-hungry. I didn&rsquo;t have any supper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, you did!&rdquo; she asserted. &ldquo;I saw
-Gladys give you a bowl of bread and
-milk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Emerald took it away from me and
-drank it up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t neither!&rdquo; denied a shaggy looking
-boy. &ldquo;I spilled it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He accompanied this denial by a fierce
-punch in his accuser&rsquo;s ribs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here!&rdquo; said the author of Modern
-Antiquities, taking a nickel from her
-pocket, &ldquo;go get yourself some popcorn,
-Demetrius.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t Demetrius! I&rsquo;m Pythagoras.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;It makes no difference. Go and get it
-and don&rsquo;t speak to me again tonight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The boy had already snatched the coin,
-and he now started for the exit, but his
-outgoing way was instantly blocked by a
-promiscuous pack of pugilistic Polydores,
-and an ardent and general onslaught
-followed.</p>
-<p>I endeavored to untangle the arms and
-legs of the attackers and the attacked in
-a desire to rescue the youngest, a child
-of two, but I soon beat a retreat, having
-no mind to become a punching bag for
-Polydores.</p>
-<p>The concentrator at the writing table,
-looking up vaguely, perceived the general
-joust.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How provoking!&rdquo; she exclaimed indignantly.
-&ldquo;I was in search of an antonym
-and now they&rsquo;ve driven it out of my
-memory.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span></div>
-<p>I politely offered my sympathy for her loss.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you ever see such misbehaved
-children?&rdquo; she asked casually and impersonally
-as she calmly surveyed the
-free-for-all fight.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-008.jpg' alt='' title='' width='157' height='293' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Children always misbehave before company,&rdquo;
-I remarked propitiatingly. &ldquo;Of
-course they know better.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why no, they don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; she declared,
-looking at me in surprise, &ldquo;they&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At this instant the errant antonym
-evidently flashed upon her mental vision
-and her pencil hastened to record it and
-then flew on at lightning speed.</p>
-<p>I was about to try to make an escape
-when a momentary cessation of hostilities
-was caused by the entrance of a moth-eaten,
-abstracted-looking man. As the
-<i>two-year-old</i> hailed him as &ldquo;fadder&rdquo;, I
-gathered that he was the person responsible
-for the family now fighting at his feet.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the trouble?&rdquo; he asked helplessly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She gave Thag a nickel,&rdquo; explained the
-eldest boy, &ldquo;and we want it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The man drew a sigh of relief. The
-solution of this family problem was instantly
-and satisfactorily met by an impartial
-distribution of nickels.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span></div>
-<p>With demoniac whoops of delight, the
-contestants fled from the room.</p>
-<p>I introduced myself to the man of the
-house, who seemed to realize that some
-sort of compulsory conventionalities must
-be observed. He looked hopelessly at his
-wife, and seeing that she was beyond response
-to an S O S call to things mundane,
-he frankly but impressively informed me
-that I must expect nothing of them socially
-as their lives were devoted to research
-and study. The children, however,
-he assured me, could run over frequently
-to see us.</p>
-<p>I instinctively felt that my call was considered
-ended, so I took my departure. I
-related the details of my neighborly visit
-to Silvia, but her sense of humor was not
-stirred. It was entirely dominated by her
-dread of the young Polydores.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How many children are there?&rdquo; she
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span>
-asked faintly. &ldquo;More than the five you
-said you counted that first day?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They seemed not so many as much.
-That is, though I suppose in round
-numbers there are but five, yet each of
-those five is equal to at least three ordinary
-children.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are they all boys? Huldah says the
-youngest wears dresses.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nevertheless he is a boy. They are all
-unmistakably boys. I think they must
-have been born with boots on and,&rdquo; conscious
-of the imprints of my shins, &ldquo;hobnail
-boots at that. Even the youngest, a
-two-year old, seems to have been graduated
-from Home Rule.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t bear to think of their going to
-bed hungry,&rdquo; she said wistfully. &ldquo;Think
-of that unnatural mother expecting them
-to satisfy their hunger by popcorn.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They didn&rsquo;t though,&rdquo; I assured her.
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span>
-&ldquo;I saw them stop a street vender below
-here and invest their nickels in hot
-dogs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hot dogs!&rdquo; repeated Silvia in horror.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wienerwursts,&rdquo; I hastened to interpret.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_4' id='linki_4'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-009.jpg' alt='' title='' width='323' height='257' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_5' id='linki_5'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-010.jpg' alt='' title='' width='344' height='116' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_III__IN_WHICH_WE_ARE_PESTERED_BY_POLYDORES' id='CHAPTER_III__IN_WHICH_WE_ARE_PESTERED_BY_POLYDORES'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter III</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which We Are Pestered by Polydores</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Our life now became one long round
-of Polydores. They were with us
-burr-tight, and attached themselves
-to me with dog-like devotion, remaining
-utterly impervious to Silvia&rsquo;s aloofness
-and repulses. At last, however, she succumbed
-to their presence as one of the
-things inevitable.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Polydores are here to stay,&rdquo; she
-acknowledged in a calmness-of-despair voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They don&rsquo;t seem to be homebodies,&rdquo;
-I allowed.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span></div>
-<p>The children were not literary like the
-other productions of their profound
-parents, but were a band of robust, active
-youngsters unburdened with brains, excepting
-Ptolemy of soup plate fame. Not
-that he betrayed any tendencies toward a
-learned line, but he was possessed of an
-occult, uncanny, wizard-like wisdom that
-was disconcerting. His contemplative eyes
-seemed to search my soul and read my inmost
-thoughts.</p>
-<p>Pythagoras, Emerald, and Demetrius,
-aged respectively nine, eight, and seven,
-were very much alike in looks and size,
-being so many pinched caricatures of their
-mother. To Silvia they were bewildering
-whirlwinds, but Huldah, who seemed to
-have difficulty in telling them apart, always
-classified them as &ldquo;Them three&rdquo;, and
-Silvia and I fell into the habit of referring
-to them in the same way. Huldah could
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
-not master the Polydore given names either
-by memory or pronunciation. Ptolemy,
-whose name was shortened to &ldquo;Tolly&rdquo; by
-Diogenes, she called &ldquo;Polly.&rdquo; When she
-was on speaking terms with &ldquo;Them three&rdquo;
-she nicknamed them &ldquo;Thaggy, Emmy, and
-Meetie.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Diogenes, the two-year old, was a Tartar
-when emulating his brothers. Alone, he
-was sometimes normal and a shade more
-like ordinary children.</p>
-<p>When they first began swarming in
-upon us, Silvia drew many lines which,
-however, the Polydores promptly effaced.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They shall not eat here, anyway,&rdquo;
-she emphatically declared.</p>
-<p>This was her last stand and she went
-down ingloriously.</p>
-<p>One day while we were seated at the
-table enjoying some of Huldah&rsquo;s most
-palatable dishes, Ptolemy came in. There
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span>
-ensued on our part a silence which the lad
-made no effort to break. Silvia and I
-each slipped him a side glance. He stood
-statuesque, watching us with the mute
-wistfulness of a hungry animal. There
-were unwonted small red specks high upon
-his cheekbones, symptoms, Silvia thought,
-of starvation.</p>
-<p>She was moved to ask, though reluctantly
-and perfunctorily:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t you been to dinner, Ptolemy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he admitted quickly, &ldquo;but I
-could eat another.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Assuming that the forced inquiry was
-an invitation, before protest could be
-entered he supplied himself with a plate
-and helped himself to food. His need and
-relish of the meal weakened Silvia&rsquo;s fortifications.</p>
-<p>This opening, of course, was the wedge
-that let in other Polydores, and thereafter
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span>
-we seldom sat down to a meal without the
-presence of one or more members of the
-illustrious and famished family, who made
-themselves as entirely at home as would
-a troop of foraging soldiers. Silvia gazed
-upon their devouring of food with the
-same surprised, shocked, and yet interested
-manner in which one watches the
-feeding of animals.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose he ought not to eat so many
-pickles,&rdquo; she remarked one day, as Emerald
-consumed his ninth Dill.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t kill a Polydore,&rdquo; I assured her.</p>
-<p>I never opened a door but more or less
-Polydores fell in. They were at the left
-of us and at the right of us, with Diogenes
-always under foot. We had no privacy.
-I found myself waking suddenly in the
-night with the uncomfortable feeling that
-Ptolemy lurked in a dark corner or two
-of my bedroom.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span></div>
-<p>Even Silvia&rsquo;s boudoir was not free from
-their invasion. But one door in our house
-remained closed to them. They found no
-open sesame to Huldah&rsquo;s apartment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish she would let me in on her system,&rdquo;
-I said. &ldquo;I wonder how she manages
-to keep them on the outside?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can tell you,&rdquo; confided Silvia. &ldquo;Emerald
-and Demetrius went in one day and
-she dropped Demetrius out the window
-and kicked Emerald out the door. You
-know, Lucien, you are too softhearted to
-resort to such measures.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was once,&rdquo; I confessed, &ldquo;but I think
-under Polydore r&eacute;gime I am getting stoical
-enough to follow in Huldah&rsquo;s footsteps
-and go her one better.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Our conversation was interrupted by
-the entrance of Diogenes.</p>
-<p>Silvia screamed.</p>
-<p>Turning to see what the latest Polydore
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
-perpetration might be, I saw that Diogenes
-was frothing at the mouth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s having a fit!&rdquo; exclaimed
-Silvia frantically. &ldquo;Call Huldah! Put
-him in a hot bath. Quick, Lucien, turn
-on the hot water.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not I,&rdquo; I refused grimly. &ldquo;Let him
-have a fit and fall in it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He ain&rsquo;t got no fit,&rdquo; was the cheerful
-assurance of Pythagoras, as he sauntered in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your mother would have one,&rdquo; I told
-him, &ldquo;if she could hear your English.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is the matter with him?&rdquo; asked
-Silvia. &ldquo;Does he often foam in this way?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s been eating your tooth powder,&rdquo;
-explained Pythagoras. &ldquo;He likes it &rsquo;cause
-it tastes like peppermint, and then he
-drank some water before he swallowed
-the powder and it all fizzed up and run out
-his mouth.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wondered,&rdquo; said Silvia ruefully,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
-&ldquo;what made my tooth powder disappear
-so rapidly. What shall I do!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Resort to strategy!&rdquo; I advised. &ldquo;Lock
-up your powder hereafter and fill an empty
-bottle with powdered alum or something
-worse and leave it around handy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien!&rdquo; exclaimed my wife, who could
-not seem to recover from this latest annoyance,
-&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see how you can be so
-fond of children. I did hope&ndash;&ndash;for your
-sake and&ndash;&ndash;on account of Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s
-offer that I&rsquo;d like to have one&ndash;&ndash;but I&rsquo;d
-rather go to the poorhouse! I&rsquo;d almost lose
-your affection rather than have a child.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But, Silvia!&rdquo; I remonstrated in dismay,
-&ldquo;you shouldn&rsquo;t judge all by these.
-They&rsquo;re not fair samples. They&rsquo;re not
-children&ndash;&ndash;not home-grown children.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I should say not!&rdquo; agreed Huldah,
-who had come into the room. &ldquo;They are
-imps&ndash;&ndash;imps of the devil.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span></div>
-<p>I believe she was right. They had a
-generally demoralizing effect on our household.
-I was growing irritable, Silvia careworn.
-Even Huldah showed their influence
-by acquiring the very latest in slang
-from them. Once in a while to my amusement
-I heard Silvia unconsciously adopting
-the Polydore argot.</p>
-<p>As the result of their better nourishment
-at our table, the imps of the devil
-daily grew more obstreperous and life
-became so burdensome to Silvia that I
-proposed moving away to a childless neighborhood.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;d find us out,&rdquo; said Silvia wearily,
-&ldquo;wherever we went. Distance would be
-no obstacle to them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then we might move out of town, as a
-last resort,&rdquo; I suggested. &ldquo;Rob says he
-thinks there is a good legal field in&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, Lucien,&rdquo; vetoed Silvia. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span>
-a fine practice here, and then there&rsquo;s that
-attorneyship for the Bartwell Manufacturing
-Company.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>My hope of securing this appointment
-meant a good deal to us. We were now
-living up to every cent of my income
-and though we had the necessities, it was
-the luxuries of life I craved&ndash;&ndash;for Silvia&rsquo;s
-sake. She was a lover of music and we
-had no piano. She yearned to ride and
-she had no horse. We both had longings
-for a touring-car and we wanted to travel.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve thought of a scheme for a little
-respite from the sight and sound of the
-Polydores,&rdquo; I remarked one day. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll
-enter them in the public school. There
-are four more weeks yet before the long
-summer vacation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That would be too good to be true,&rdquo;
-declared Silvia. &ldquo;Five or six hours each
-day, and then, too, their deportment will
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span>
-be so dreadful that they will have to stay
-after school hours.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I thought more likely their deportment
-would lead to suspension, but forbore to
-wet-blanket Silvia&rsquo;s hopes.</p>
-<p>I made my second call upon the male
-head of the House of Polydore to recommend
-and urge that its young scions be
-sent to the public school. I had misgivings
-as to the outcome of my proposition,
-as the Polydore parents believed
-themselves to be the only fount of learning
-in the town. To my surprise and
-intense gratification, my suggestion met
-with no objections whatever. Felix Polydore
-referred me to his wife and said he
-would abide by her decision. I found her,
-of course, buried in books, but remembering
-Ptolemy&rsquo;s mode of gaining attention,
-I peremptorily closed the volume she was
-studying.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span></div>
-<p>My audacity attained its object and I
-proferred my request, laying great stress
-on the quietude she would gain thereby.
-She replied that attendance at school would
-doubtless do them no harm, although she
-expressed her belief that the most thorough
-educations were those obtained outside of
-schools.</p>
-<p>Silvia was wafted into the eighth heaven
-of bliss and then some, as the result of my
-diplomatic mission. Of course the task of
-preparing pupils out of the pestiferous
-Polydores devolved upon her, but she was
-actively aided by the eager and willing
-Huldah and between them they pushed the
-project that promised such an elysium with
-all speed. The prospective pupils themselves
-were not wildly enthusiastic over this
-curtailment of their liberty, but Huldah
-won the day by proposing that they carry
-their luncheon with them, promising an
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span>
-abundant supply of sugared doughnuts
-and small pies.</p>
-<p>Pythagoras foresaw recreation ahead in
-the opportunity to &ldquo;lick all the kids,&rdquo;
-and I assumed that Ptolemy had deep
-laid schemes for the outmaneuvering of
-teachers, but as his left hand never made
-confidant of his right, I could not expect to
-fathom the workings of his mind.</p>
-<p>Early on a Monday morning, therefore,
-our household arose to lick our Polydore
-prot&eacute;g&eacute;s into a shape presentable for admission
-to school. It took two hours to
-pull up stockings and make them stay
-pulled, tie shoestrings, comb out tangles,
-adjust collars and neckties, to say nothing
-of vigorous scrubbings to five grimy faces
-and ten dirt-stained hands.</p>
-<p>At last with an air of achievement Silvia
-corralled her round-up and unloaded the
-four eldest upon the public school and then
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span>
-proceeded to install the protesting Diogenes
-in a nursery kindergarten. Huldah
-stood in the doorway as they marched off
-and sped the parting guests with a muttered
-&ldquo;Good riddance to bad rubbish.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia returned radiant, but her rejoicing
-was shortlived. She had scarcely taken
-off her hat and gloves when the four oldest
-came trooping and whooping into the house.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; gasped Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Got to be vaccinated,&rdquo; explained
-Ptolemy with an appreciative grin. Of all
-the Polydores he was the one who had least
-objected to scholastic pursuits, but he
-seemed quite jubilant at our discomfiture.</p>
-<p>We were somewhat reluctant to undertake
-the responsibility of their inoculation,
-especially after Ptolemy told us that his
-mother didn&rsquo;t believe in vaccination.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll take &rsquo;em down and get &rsquo;em vaccinated
-right,&rdquo; declared Huldah. &ldquo;Their
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span>
-ma won&rsquo;t never notice the scars, and if
-one of you young uns blabs about it,&rdquo;
-she added, turning upon them ferociously,
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll cut your tongue out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Suppose there should be some ill result
-from it,&rdquo; said Silvia apprehensively.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you worry!&rdquo; exclaimed Huldah.
-&ldquo;Most likely it won&rsquo;t amount to anything.
-It&rsquo;ll take some new kind of scabs to work
-in these brats. They&rsquo;re too tough to take
-anything. Come on now with me,&rdquo; she
-commanded, &ldquo;and after it&rsquo;s done, I&rsquo;ll
-get you each an ice cream sody.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Through Huldah&rsquo;s efficiency the vaccination
-was quickly accomplished and
-the children of our neighbor were reluctantly
-accepted by the school authorities.</p>
-<p>The Polydores were not parted by reason
-of dissimilarity of age or learning, as
-they were put into the ungraded room.
-To keep them there enrolled taxed to the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span>
-utmost our ingenuity in the way of framing
-excuses for their repeated cases of
-tardiness and suspension.</p>
-<p>Silvia felt a little remorseful when she
-listened to the tale of woe recited to her
-by their teacher at a card party one Saturday
-afternoon.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She said,&rdquo; my wife repeated, &ldquo;that
-yesterday Pythagoras brought two mice to
-school in his marble-bag and let them loose.
-She doesn&rsquo;t believe in corporal punishment,
-but she determined to experiment with its
-effect on Pythagoras, so she kept him and
-Emerald, who was slightly implicated, after
-school and sent the latter out to get a
-whip. When he came back he said: &lsquo;I
-couldn&rsquo;t find any stick, but here&rsquo;s some
-rocks you can throw at him,&rsquo; and handed
-her a hat full of stones. This made her
-too hysterical to try her experiment, so
-she took away his recess for a week.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;We ought to make her a present,&rdquo; I
-observed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She said,&rdquo; continued Silvia, &ldquo;that they
-had given her nervous prostration, but
-she had no time to prostrate, and if she
-didn&rsquo;t succeed in getting them graded by
-the coming fall term, she should accept an
-offer of marriage she had received from a
-cross-eyed man, and you know how unlucky
-that would be, Lucien!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We may be driven to worse things than
-that by fall,&rdquo; I replied ruefully.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_6' id='linki_6'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-011.jpg' alt='' title='' width='337' height='143' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_7' id='linki_7'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-012.jpg' alt='' title='' width='299' height='194' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_IV__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_BOARDERS' id='CHAPTER_IV__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_BOARDERS'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter IV</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which We Take Boarders</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Four weeks of unalloyed bliss and
-then the summer vacation times
-arrived, bringing joy to the heart
-of the Polydores and the teacher of the
-ungraded room, but deep gloom to the
-hearthside of the Wades.</p>
-<p>One misfortune always brings another.
-A rival applicant received the coveted attorneyship
-and we bade a sad farewell to piano,
-saddle-horse, automobile and journey, the
-furnishings to our Little House of Dreams.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I did want you to have a car, Lucien,&rdquo;
-sighed Silvia, regretfully, &ldquo;and you worked
-so hard this last year, you need a trip.
-Won&rsquo;t you go somewhere with Rob&ndash;&ndash;without
-me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I assured her it would be no vacation
-without her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you know, Lucien,&rdquo; she proposed
-diffidently, &ldquo;I think it would be an excellent
-plan to invite Uncle Issachar to visit
-us. He knows no more about children than
-I do&ndash;&ndash;than I did, I mean, and if he should
-see the Polydores he&rsquo;d give us five thousand
-each for the children we didn&rsquo;t have.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I wouldn&rsquo;t consent to this plan. I had
-met Uncle Issachar once. He was a crusty
-old bachelor with a morbid suspicion that
-everyone was working him for his money.
-I don&rsquo;t wonder he thought so. He had no
-other attractions.</p>
-<p>Perceiving the strength of my opposition
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span>
-Silvia sweetly and sagaciously refrained
-from further pressure.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We should not repine,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We
-have health and happiness and love.
-What are pianos and cars and trips compared
-to such assets?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>What, indeed! I admitted that things
-might be worse.</p>
-<p>Alas! All too soon was my statement
-substantiated. That night after we had
-gone to bed, I heard a taxicab sputtering
-away at the house next door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Polydores must have unexpected
-guests,&rdquo; I remarked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I trust they brought no children with
-them,&rdquo; murmured Silvia drowsily.</p>
-<p>The next morning while we were at
-breakfast, the odor of June roses wafting
-in through the open window, the delicious
-flavor of red-ripe strawberries tickling our
-palate, and the anticipation of rice griddle-cakes
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span>
-exhilarating us, the millennium
-came.</p>
-<p>For the five young Polydores bore down
-upon us <i>en masse</i>.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Father and mother have gone away,&rdquo;
-proclaimed Ptolemy, who was always
-spokesman for the quintette.</p>
-<p>This intelligence was of no particular
-interest to us&ndash;&ndash;not then, at least. We
-rarely saw father and mother Polydore,
-and they were apparently of no need to
-their offspring.</p>
-<p>Ptolemy&rsquo;s next announcement, however,
-was startling and effective in its dramatic
-intensity.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve come over to stay with you
-while they are away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I laughed; jocosely, I thought.</p>
-<p>Silvia paid no heed to my forced hilarity,
-but ejaculated gaspingly:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, what do you mean!&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;They have gone away somewhere,&rdquo;
-enlightened our oracle. &ldquo;They went to the
-train last night in a taxi. They have gone
-somewhere to find out something about
-some kind of aborigines.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which reminds me,&rdquo; I remarked reminiscently,
-&ldquo;of the man who traveled far
-and vainly in search of a certain plant
-which, on his return, he found growing
-beside his own doorstep.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia paid no heed to my misplaced
-pleasantry. She was right&ndash;&ndash;as usual. It
-was no time for levity.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see,&rdquo; spoke my unappreciative
-wife, addressing Ptolemy, &ldquo;why their absence
-should make any difference in your
-remaining at home. Gladys can cook your
-meals and put Diogenes to bed as usual.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gladys has gone,&rdquo; piped Demetrius.
-&ldquo;She left yesterday afternoon. She was
-only staying till she could get her pay.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Father forgot to get another girl in her
-place,&rdquo; informed Ptolemy, &ldquo;and he forgot
-to tell mother he had forgotten until just
-before they went to the train. She said it
-didn&rsquo;t matter&ndash;&ndash;that we could just as well
-come over here and stay with you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She said,&rdquo; added Pythagoras, &ldquo;that
-you were so crazy over children, that
-probably you&rsquo;d be glad to have us stay
-with you all the time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>My last strawberry remained poised in
-mid-air. It was quite apparent to me now
-that there was nothing funny about this
-situation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Milk, milk!&rdquo; whimpered Diogenes, pulling
-at Silvia&rsquo;s dress and making frantic
-efforts to reach the cream pitcher.</p>
-<p>Huldah had come in with the griddle-cakes
-during this avalanche of news.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here, all you kids!&rdquo; commanded our
-field marshal, as she picked up Diogenes,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span>
-&ldquo;beat it to the kitchen, and I&rsquo;ll give you
-some breakfast. Hustle up!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Polydores, whose eyes were bulging
-with expectancy and semi-starvation, tumbled
-over each other in their eagerness to
-&ldquo;hustle up and beat it to the kitchen.&rdquo;
-Our oiler of troubled waters followed, and
-there was assurance of a brief lull.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What shall we do!&rdquo; I exclaimed helplessly
-when the door had closed on the
-last Polydore. I felt too limp and impotent
-to cope with the situation. Not so
-Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do!&rdquo; she echoed with an intensity of
-tone and feeling I had never known her to
-display. &ldquo;Do! We&rsquo;ll do something, I am
-sure! I will not for a moment submit to
-such an imposition. Who ever heard of
-such colossal nerve! That father and
-mother should be brought back and prosecuted.
-I shall report them to the Society
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span>
-for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.
-But we won&rsquo;t wait for such procedure.
-We&rsquo;ll express each and every Polydore to
-them at once.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I should certainly do that P.D.Q. and
-C.O.D.,&rdquo; I acquiesced, &ldquo;if the Polydore
-parents could be located, but you know
-the abodes of aborigines are many and
-scattered.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>My remarks seemed to fall as flat as
-the flapjacks I was siruping.</p>
-<p>Silvia arose, determination in every lineament
-and muscle, and crossed the room.
-She opened the door leading into the kitchen.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; she demanded, &ldquo;where have
-your father and mother gone?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He came forward and replied in a voice
-somewhat smothered by cakes and sirup.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. They didn&rsquo;t say.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We can find out from the ticket-agent,&rdquo;
-I optimistically assured her.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;They never bother to buy tickets. Pay
-on the train,&rdquo; Ptolemy explained.</p>
-<p>My legal habit of counter-argument asserted
-itself.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We can easily ascertain to what point
-their baggage was checked,&rdquo; I remarked,
-again essaying to maintain a r&ocirc;le of good
-cheer.</p>
-<p>But the pessimistic Ptolemy was right
-there with another of his gloom-casting
-retaliations.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They only took suit-cases and they
-always keep them in the car. Here&rsquo;s a
-check father said to give you to pay for
-our board. He said you could write in
-any amount you wanted to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He got a lot of dough yesterday,&rdquo; informed
-Pythagoras, &ldquo;and he put half of it
-in the bank here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy handed over a check which was
-blank except for Felix Polydore&rsquo;s signature.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see,&rdquo; I weakly exclaimed when
-my wife had closed the kitchen door, &ldquo;why
-she put them off on <i>us</i>. Why didn&rsquo;t she
-trade her brats off for antiques?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia eyed the check wistfully. I could
-read the unspoken thought that here, perhaps,
-was the opportunity for our much-desired
-trip.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, Silvia,&rdquo; I answered quickly, &ldquo;not
-for any number of blank checks or vacation
-trips shall you have the care and annoyance
-of those wild Comanches.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know what I&rsquo;ll do!&rdquo; she exclaimed
-suddenly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go right down to the intelligence
-office and get anything in the
-shape of a maid and put her in charge of
-the Polydore caravansary with double
-wages and every night out and any other
-privileges she requests.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This seemed a sane and sensible arrangement,
-and I wended my way to my
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span>
-office feeling that we were out of the
-woods.</p>
-<p>When I returned home at noon, I found
-that we had only exchanged the woods for
-water&ndash;&ndash;and deep water at that.</p>
-<p>I beheld a strange sight. Silvia sat by
-our bedroom window twittering soft, cooing
-nonsensical nothings to Diogenes, who
-was clasped in her arms, his flushed little
-face pressed close to her shoulder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s been quite ill, Lucien. I was
-frightened and called the doctor. He said
-it was only the slight fever that children are
-subject to. He thought with good care
-that he&rsquo;d be all right in a few days.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you succeed in getting a cook to
-go to the Polydores?&rdquo; I asked anxiously.
-&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll need a nurse to go there, too, to
-take care of Diogenes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She looked at me reproachfully and rebukingly.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, Lucien! You don&rsquo;t suppose I
-could send this sick baby back to that uninviting
-house with only hired help in
-charge! Besides, I don&rsquo;t believe he&rsquo;d stay
-with a stranger. He seems to have taken
-a fancy to me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Diogenes confirmed this belief by a
-languid lifting of his eyelids, as he feelingly
-patted her cheek with his baby fingers.</p>
-<p>I forebore to suggest that the fancy
-seemed to be mutual. Diogenes, sick, was
-no longer an &ldquo;imp of the devil&rdquo;, but a
-normal, appealing little child. It occurred
-to me that possibly the care of a sick
-Polydore might develop Silvia&rsquo;s tiny germ
-of child-ken.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Keep him here of course,&rdquo; I agreed,
-&ldquo;but&ndash;&ndash;the other children must return
-home.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Diogenes would miss them,&rdquo; she said
-quickly, &ldquo;and the doctor says his whims
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span>
-must be humored while he is sick. He is
-almost asleep now. I think he will let me
-put him down in his own little bed. Ptolemy
-brought it over here. Pull back the
-covers for me, Lucien. There!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Diogenes half opened his eyes, as she
-laid him in the bed and smiled wanly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mudder!&rdquo; he cooed.</p>
-<p>Silvia flushed and looked as if she dreaded
-some expression of mirth from me. Relieved
-by my silence and a suggestion of
-moisture in the region of my eyes&ndash;&ndash;the
-day was quite warm&ndash;&ndash;she confessed:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He has called me that all the morning.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It would be a wise Polydore that knows
-its own parents,&rdquo; I observed.</p>
-<p>The slight illness of Diogenes lasted three
-or four days. I still shudder to recall the
-memory of that hideous period. Silvia&rsquo;s
-time and attention were devoted to the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span>
-sick child. Huldah was putting in all her
-leisure moments at the dentist&rsquo;s, where
-she was acquiring her third set of teeth,
-and joy rode unconfined and unrestrained
-with our &ldquo;boarders.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Polydore proclivities made the Reign of
-Terror formerly known as the French
-Revolution seem like an ice cream festival.
-I don&rsquo;t regard myself as a particularly
-nervous man, but there&rsquo;s a limit! Their
-war whoops and screeches got on my
-nerves and temper to the extent of sending
-me into their midst one evening brandishing
-a whip and commanding immediate
-silence. I got it. Not through fear of
-chastisement, for fear was an emotion
-unknown to a Polydore, but from astonishment
-at so unexpected a procedure
-from so unexpected a source. Heretofore
-I had either ignored them or frolicked
-with them. Before they had recovered
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span>
-from their shock, Silvia appeared on the
-scene.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Diogenes,&rdquo; she informed them, &ldquo;was
-not used to such unwonted quiet, and was
-fretting at the unaccustomed stillness.
-Would the boys please play Indian or some
-of their games again?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The boys would. I backed from the
-room, the whip behind me, carefully kept
-without Silvia&rsquo;s angle of vision. Before
-Ptolemy resumed his r&ocirc;le of chief, he bestowed
-a knowing and maddening wink
-upon me.</p>
-<p>I wished that we had remained neighbor-less.
-I wished that the aborigines would
-scalp Felix Polydore and the writer of
-Modern Antiquities. Then we could land
-their brats on the Probate Court. I wished
-that this were the reign of Herod. I vowed
-I would backslide from the Presbyterian
-faith since it no longer included in its
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span>
-articles of belief the eternal damnation of
-infants. How long, O Catiline, would&ndash;&ndash;</p>
-<p>A paralyzing suspicion flashed into the
-maelstrom of my vituperative maledictions.
-I rushed wildly upstairs to our combination
-bedroom, sickroom, and nursery, where
-Silvia sat like a guardian angel beside the
-Polydore patient.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I shouted excitedly, &ldquo;do you
-suppose those diabolical Polydore parents
-purposely played this trick on us? Was
-it a premeditated Polydore plan to abandon
-their young? And can you blame
-them for playing us for easy marks? Could
-any parents, Polydore, or otherwise, ever
-come back to such fiends as these?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; she cautioned, without so much
-as a glance in my direction. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll wake
-Diogenes!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Wake Diogenes! Ye Gods! And she
-had also implored the brothers of Diogenes
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span>
-to continue their anvil chorus! This took
-the last stitch of starch from my manly
-bosom. Spiritless and spineless I bore all
-things, believed all things&ndash;&ndash;but hoped
-for nothing.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_8' id='linki_8'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-013.jpg' alt='' title='' width='228' height='246' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_9' id='linki_9'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span>
-<img src='images/illus-014.jpg' alt='' title='' width='341' height='181' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_V__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_A_VACATION' id='CHAPTER_V__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_A_VACATION'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter V</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which We Take a Vacation</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Diogenes finally convalesced to
-his former state of ruggedness and
-obstreperousness. He continued,
-however, to cling to Silvia and to call her
-&ldquo;mudder.&rdquo; To my amusement the other
-children followed suit and she was now
-&ldquo;muddered&rdquo; by all the Polydores.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am glad,&rdquo; I remarked, &ldquo;that they
-scorn to include me in their adoption. I
-wouldn&rsquo;t fancy being &lsquo;faddered&rsquo; by the
-Polydores.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t be,&rdquo; Ptolemy, appearing
-seemingly from nowhere, assured me.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve named you stepdaddy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If it be possible, Silvia,&rdquo; I implored,
-&ldquo;let this cup pass from me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am going down to the intelligence
-office today,&rdquo; replied Silvia soothingly.
-&ldquo;Diogenes is well enough to go home now,
-and I can run over there every evening
-and see that he is properly put to bed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I went down town feeling like a mule
-relieved of his pack.</p>
-<p>When I came home that afternoon, I found
-Silvia sitting on the shaded porch serenely
-sewing. A Sabbath-like stillness pervaded.
-Not a Polydore in sight or sound.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; I cried buoyantly. &ldquo;The Polydores
-have been returned to their home
-station!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she replied calmly. &ldquo;They told
-me at the intelligence office that it would
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span>
-be absolutely impossible to persuade, bribe,
-or hire a servant to assume the charge of
-the Polydore place.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; I said glumly, &ldquo;that Gladys
-gave the job a double cross. But will you
-please account for the phenomenon of the
-utter absence of Polydores at the present
-period? Has Huldah at last carried out
-her oft-repeated threat of exterminating
-the Polydore race?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pythagoras,&rdquo; explained Silvia dejectedly,
-&ldquo;has gone to the doctor&rsquo;s. He broke
-his wrist this morning. Diogenes is lost
-and Emerald has gone to look for him&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, why hunt him up?&rdquo; I remonstrated.
-&ldquo;Maybe Emerald, too, will get lost or
-strayed or stolen.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah,&rdquo; continued Silvia, &ldquo;has locked
-Demetrius in the cellar. I am unable to
-report on Ptolemy. Huldah is half sick,
-but she won&rsquo;t go to bed. She said no beds
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span>
-in Bedlamite for her. But I have a wonderful
-plan to suggest. There is relief in sight
-if you will consent.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will consent to any committable
-crime on the calendar,&rdquo; I assured her,
-&ldquo;that will lead to the parting of the Polydore
-path from ours. Divulge.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We both need a change and rest. Today
-I heard of a most alluring, inexpensive,
-unfrequented resort called Hope Haven.
-Unfashionable, fine fishing, beautiful scenery,
-twelve miles from a railroad, and a
-stage stops there but once a day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If there is such a place, we&rsquo;ll go there
-at once, though why such an enticing spot
-should be unfrequented is beyond me. Do
-we leave the Polydores to their fate, or as
-a town charge?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll leave them to Huldah. She
-offered to keep them here if we&rsquo;d take
-the outing. She said she&rsquo;d either give
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span>
-them free rein or beat their brains out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then I see where the Polydores land
-in a juvenile jail, or else I return to defend
-Huldah for a charge of murder. We&rsquo;ll
-take our departure by night&ndash;&ndash;tomorrow
-night&ndash;&ndash;and like the Arabs, or the Polydore
-parents, silently steal away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia constrainedly, when
-we had arranged the details of our plan, &ldquo;if
-you wouldn&rsquo;t object too much, I should
-like to take Diogenes with us. He hasn&rsquo;t
-missed his mother, but I really believe he&rsquo;d
-be homesick without me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Take him, of course,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
-manageable away from the others. I
-plainly see you&rsquo;ve formed the Polydore
-habit, and maybe a partial parting from
-the Polydores would be wiser, but we&rsquo;ll
-take Diogenes as an antidote against
-too perfect a time. But I forgot to tell
-you that I had a letter from Rob today.
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
-He plans to come and make his visit now
-and will arrive next Monday. I&rsquo;ll write
-him to join us at Hope Haven. You must
-write down again for me the route we take
-to get there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia laughed hopelessly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It never rains but it pours. I had a
-letter from Beth this afternoon, and she
-says she would like to come to us now.
-She arrives Monday. Here is her letter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Great minds! It is quite a coincidence,&rdquo;
-I declared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought it would be so nice to have
-Beth go with us to this resort.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It can&rsquo;t be done,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;That is,
-they can&rsquo;t both go. I am not going to let
-even Rob Rossiter slight my sister.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Still it would be a triumph to have her
-change his mind&ndash;&ndash;or his heart. You
-know a woman-hater always succumbs to
-the right girl.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;In books, yes!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I had been scanning Beth&rsquo;s letter and I
-laughed derisively as I read aloud: &ldquo;&lsquo;I am
-so curious to see those next-door children.
-When you first wrote of the &ldquo;Polydores&rdquo;
-I never once thought of them as children.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She thought exactly right,&rdquo; I told
-Silvia, and then continued reading: &ldquo;&lsquo;I
-supposed them to be something like tadpoles
-or polliwogs. I really think I shall
-enjoy them.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It would serve her right,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;to
-let her come and stay with them here in
-our absence. She&rsquo;d get the cure for enjoyment
-all right. Rob wrote of them in
-the same strain and says he, too, is curious
-to meet the missing links.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Does she know,&rdquo; asked Silvia, &ldquo;how
-Rob regards women?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; I&rsquo;ve always made some excuse to
-her for not having them meet. I didn&rsquo;t
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span>
-want to hear her make disparaging remarks
-about him, and she is such a flirt, she&rsquo;d try
-to draw him out and he would shut up like
-a clam.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I think,&rdquo; decided Silvia, &ldquo;that the
-best way out of it is to write Rob to postpone
-his visit and I will write Beth to come
-direct to Hope Haven.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I agreed, &ldquo;that will be fine. She
-shall have charge of dear little Di and
-study the evolutions of the Polydores later.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I approved this plan. So we wrote our
-letters and stealthily, but joyously, prepared
-for our getaway, leaving the house
-like thieves in the night and bearing the
-sleeping cherub, Diogenes.</p>
-<p>Silvia sighed in relief when we were
-aboard the train.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I feel quite chesty,&rdquo; she declared, &ldquo;at
-being smart enough to outwit Ptolemy, the
-wizard.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I have the feeling,&rdquo; I observed forebodingly,
-&ldquo;that they may be on the train
-or underneath it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The next morning we reached Windy
-Creek, the station nearest our destination,
-and continued our journey by stage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;People will think you have consoled
-yourself very speedily for the death of
-your first husband,&rdquo; I observed, as we were
-en route.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, what do you mean, Lucien?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You know Diogenes addresses me as
-stepdaddy. It is the only word he speaks
-plainly.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she exclaimed in perturbation,
-&ldquo;I never thought of that! Well, we can
-explain to everyone, or I&rsquo;ll teach them to
-leave off the &lsquo;step.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not on your life!&rdquo; I demurred.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He had better call you Lucien, then.
-Emerald calls his father &lsquo;Felix.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span></div>
-<p>She at once began her tutelage of the bewildered
-Diogenes. After several stabs at
-pronouncing Lucien he managed to evolve
-&ldquo;Ocean&rdquo; to which he sometimes affixed
-&ldquo;step&rdquo; so that people to whom he was not
-explained doubtless thought me the latest
-thing in dances.</p>
-<p>Hope Haven was like most resorts&ndash;&ndash;a
-place safe to shun. There was a low, flat
-stretch of woods in which a clearing had
-been made for a barn-like structure called
-a hotel, with rooms rough and not always
-ready. The beautiful recreation grounds
-mentioned in the advertising matter consisted
-of a plowed field worked over into a
-space designated as a tennis court and a
-grass-grown croquet ground.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anyway,&rdquo; claimed Silvia hopefully,
-&ldquo;it&rsquo;s a treat to see woods, water, and sky
-unconfined.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She devoted the remainder of the morning
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span>
-to unpacking and after luncheon set
-off to explore the woods, borrowing from
-the landlady a little cart for Diogenes to
-ride in. My plan to go in swimming was
-delayed by my garrulous landlord.</p>
-<p>I was just starting for the lake when I
-heard sounds from the woods that alarmed
-the landlord but which I instantly recognized
-as the Polydore yell. A moment
-later I saw Silvia emerging at full speed
-into the open, drawing the cart in which
-Diogenes was doubled up like a jackknife.
-I hastened to meet them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien,&rdquo; exclaimed my wife tearfully,
-&ldquo;we are bitten to bits! Just look
-at poor little Di!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I lifted the howling child from the cart.
-His face, neck, and hands were stringy and
-purplish&ndash;&ndash;a cross between an eggplant
-and a round steak.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mosquitoes!&rdquo; explained Silvia. &ldquo;They
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span>
-came in flocks and they advertised particularly
-&lsquo;no mosquitoes.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A dour-faced guest paused in passing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There aren&rsquo;t&ndash;&ndash;many,&rdquo; she declared.
-&ldquo;Very few, in fact, compared to the number
-of black flies, sand fleas, and jiggers. However,
-you&rsquo;ll find more discomfort from the
-poison ivy, I imagine.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; began Silvia in lament.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never mind!&rdquo; I hastened to console,
-&ldquo;you are out of the woods now, and you
-won&rsquo;t have to go in again. I presume they
-have an antidote up at the house. I&rsquo;ll
-give you and Diogenes first aid and then
-we will all go down to the lake shore. You
-can both sit on the dock and watch me
-swim.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They both brightened up, and when we
-reached the hotel the landlady provided
-a soothing lotion for the bites and stings.</p>
-<p>By the time we had started for the lake,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span>
-the afflicted two were in holiday spirit
-again.</p>
-<p>I sought cover in a small shed called a
-bath-house and got into my swimming outfit
-and shot out from the dipping end of the
-diving-board into the water. When I came
-to the surface, Silvia, sitting beside Diogenes
-on the dock, shrieked wildly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien, there are snakes all around
-you! Come out, quick!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They are only water snakes,&rdquo; I assured
-her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care what kind they are. They
-are snakes just the same.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Diogenes instantly began to bellow for
-me to hand him a snake to play with.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He recognizes his own,&rdquo; I told Silvia,
-who, however, saw nothing amusing in my
-implication.</p>
-<p>When I came out of the water, the temperature
-had climbed several degrees and
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span>
-we were glad to seek the hotel parlor, which
-was cool and damp.</p>
-<p>After dinner Silvia put Diogenes to bed
-and we sat out on the veranda. I was enjoying
-my evening smoke and the feel of
-the night wind in my face. Silvia had just
-finished telling me that merely to be away
-from the Polydores was Paradise enough
-for her, and that she didn&rsquo;t care very much
-about the woods, anyway&ndash;&ndash;the lake was
-sufficient, when her optimism was rudely
-jolted by the shrill, shudder-sending song
-of the festive mosquito.</p>
-<p>She fled into the parlor. The landlady,
-who seemed to have a panacea for all ills,
-suggested that she might tack mosquito
-netting around the little balcony extending
-from our bedroom, and then she could sit
-there in comfort when the mosquitoes
-bothered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what the last lady that had that
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span>
-room did,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but when she left,
-she took the netting with her. We keep a
-supply in our little store.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia immediately sought the hotel store
-and bought a quantity of the netting and a
-goodly stock of the mosquito lotion.</p>
-<p>That night as I was drifting into slumber,
-Silvia remarked: &ldquo;Only one of the
-things I heard and read about this place is
-true.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which one?&rdquo; I asked between winks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That it was unfrequented. I have seen
-only three guests besides us so far. How do
-they make it pay?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The hotel is evidently only a side issue,&rdquo;
-I replied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To what?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To the store. Think of the quantities
-of lotion and netting they must sell in
-the season, which, you must know, is in the
-fall. The hunting, the landlord tells me, is
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span>
-very good, and his hotel is quite popular in
-October and November.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think we had better stay, Lucien.
-Mosquitoes don&rsquo;t poison you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Even if they did,&rdquo; I declared, &ldquo;as a
-choice between them and the Polydores I
-would say, &lsquo;Oh, Mosquito, where is thy
-sting?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_10' id='linki_10'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-015.jpg' alt='' title='' width='198' height='311' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_11' id='linki_11'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-016.jpg' alt='' title='' width='339' height='169' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_VI__A_FLIRT_AND_A_WOMANHATER' id='CHAPTER_VI__A_FLIRT_AND_A_WOMANHATER'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter VI</span></h2>
-<h3><i>A Flirt and a Woman-Hater</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>The next morning I arose early and
-screened in the little birdhouse balcony.
-There was a large piece of
-netting left and Silvia converted it into a
-robe and headgear for the swaddling of
-Diogenes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He looks like the Bride of Lammermoor,&rdquo;
-I declared, as he went forth in this
-regalia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s preferable to looking like a
-pest-house patient, as he did yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span></div>
-<p>His first-aid costume didn&rsquo;t find favor
-with the landlady, as it would seem indicative
-to the newly arrived of the features
-of the place. However, before another
-stage-coming was due, Di had rent
-his garment sufficiently to make it useless
-is a &ldquo;skeeter skirt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>During the morning I enjoyed my solitary
-swim with the snakes. Diogenes
-played football with the croquet balls and
-bruised one of his toes, besides hitting the
-landlady&rsquo;s child in the eye. Silvia went
-for a walk which had been pictured in the
-advertisements. She speedily returned, her
-ardor dampened.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There are so many sticks and stones
-and rocks,&rdquo; she said in a discouraged tone,
-&ldquo;that there was no pleasure in walking.
-I nearly sprained my ankle.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, the real sport we haven&rsquo;t tried
-yet,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll get a boat and take
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span>
-Diogenes and go for a row on the lake.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This proposition met with instant favor.
-I put Silvia and Diogenes in the stern of the
-boat and pulled for the opposite shore. My
-endeavors to gain this point were balked by
-Silvia&rsquo;s remarkable conceptions of the art
-of steering craft. She was so serenely
-satisfied, however, with the way she performed
-her duties and the aid she thought
-she was giving me, that I forbore to
-criticize.</p>
-<p>In order to achieve a few strokes in the
-right direction, I asked her to get me a
-cigar from an inside pocket of my coat,
-which was on the seat in front of her.
-Then came the blight to our bliss. She
-looked in the wrong pocket and instead
-of producing a cigar, she extracted two
-letters with seals unbroken.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_12' id='linki_12'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
-<img src='images/illus-017.jpg' alt='' title='' width='357' height='391' /><br />
-<p class='caption'>
-&ldquo;Lucien Wade!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Here are our letters to Beth and Rob.&rdquo;<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien Wade!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Here
-are our letters to Beth and Rob. Well, it
-is my fault. I should have known better
-than to give them to you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The plot thickens,&rdquo; I replied thoughtfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is Monday. They must both be
-at the house now. What will they think!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They will think we didn&rsquo;t receive their
-letters.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it unfortunate&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; she began.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;I am not sure but
-what it is a good thing. It will give Rob
-a jolt to see that girls can be as nice as Beth
-is, and as for her, she is quite able to take
-care of the situation where a man is concerned.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But we must have Beth here. Maybe
-you&rsquo;d better telegraph her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah understands conditions. She
-will send Beth on here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The next morning we took Diogenes and
-went down the road to meet the stage. As
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span>
-it came around the curve, we saw there
-were three passengers.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tolly!&rdquo; cried Diogenes with an ecstatic
-whoop.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Beth!&rdquo; recognized Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rob!&rdquo; I ejaculated.</p>
-<p>The stage stopped to allow us to get in.</p>
-<p>Mutual explanations followed. Ours
-were brief and substantiated by the documents
-in evidence.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; I said turning threateningly to
-Ptolemy, &ldquo;what did you come here for?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To show them,&rdquo; indicating Beth and
-Rob, &ldquo;how to get here and to look after
-Di so you and mudder could enjoy your
-vacation,&rdquo; he replied glibly.</p>
-<p>Beth laughed mirthfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Check! Lucien.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t Huldah warn you,&rdquo; I asked her,
-&ldquo;that our whereabouts were to remain unknown?&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;is evidently a
-mind reader, for he told me where you were
-before I saw Huldah.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, Ptolemy, how did you know where
-we were?&rdquo; asked Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was on top of the porch when you
-told stepdaddy about coming. I didn&rsquo;t
-tell the others. I won&rsquo;t bother you any.
-And I know how to look after Di. You
-won&rsquo;t send me back, mudder,&rdquo; he pleaded,
-looking wistfully at the foam-crested water
-of the little lake.</p>
-<p>I wondered mutely if Silvia could resist
-the appeal in the eyes of the neglected boy
-when he turned his imploring gaze to hers,
-and the delight depicted in Diogenes&rsquo; eyes
-at &ldquo;Tolly&rsquo;s&rdquo; arrival. She could not.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You may stay as long as we do,&rdquo; she
-said slowly, &ldquo;if you are a good boy and will
-not play too rough with Diogenes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We had reached the hotel by this time,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span>
-and with a wild &ldquo;ki yi&rdquo; Ptolemy dashed
-for the shore, dragging the delighted Diogenes
-with him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s only fair to Huldah to take one
-more off her hands,&rdquo; Silvia said apologetically.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Them Three is what bothers me,&rdquo; I
-complained. &ldquo;If they, too, follow after,
-Heaven help them! I won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a good arrangement all around,&rdquo;
-declared Rob. &ldquo;I judge it takes a Polydore
-to understand his ilk, so the kids can pair
-off together. Miss Wade will be company
-for you, while Lucien and I go fishing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He looked keenly at Beth as he spoke,
-but Beth was looking demurely down and
-made no sign of having heard him.</p>
-<p>Silvia and I went with Beth to her room,
-and then she told her story.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Knowing Lucien&rsquo;s failing, I was not
-surprised at receiving no response to my
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
-letter. When I got out of the cab in front
-of your house, a wild-looking boy, very bas-relief
-as to eyes, and who I felt sure must
-be Ptolemy of the Polydores, appeared.
-As soon as he saw me he gave utterance
-to a blood-curdling yell of&ndash;&ndash;&lsquo;Here she
-is!&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In response to his call three of his understudies
-came on with headlong greeting.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;You are Beth, aren&rsquo;t you?&rsquo; Ptolemy
-asked me. Then he drew me aside and in
-mysterious whispers told me where you
-were and that you had written me to join
-you here. He added that stepdaddy never
-remembered to mail letters. I went within
-and interviewed Huldah who confirmed
-his information.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Presently I saw a taxi stop before the
-house.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That&rsquo;s him!&rsquo; exclaimed Ptolemy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Him who?&rsquo; I asked.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Rob somebody&ndash;&ndash;stepdaddy&rsquo;s college
-chum. He wrote he was coming, and they
-thought they had postponed him.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;With a sprint of speed the four Polydores
-surrounded your Mr. Rossiter, all
-talking at once. I came to the rescue, of
-course, and explained the situation, and we
-decided to follow you.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy was promoter for the trip and
-suggested the advisability of his accompanying
-us as courier and future nursemaid to
-Diogenes. He was intending to come anyway,
-but thought he&rsquo;d wait for us. He
-had all his belongings packed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He hasn&rsquo;t many except those he had
-on,&rdquo; said Silvia thoughtfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He has some swimming trunks, two
-collars, two shirts, some mismated socks,
-homemade fishing tackle and a battered
-baseball bat. We came away surreptitiously
-to escape detection by the trio left
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span>
-behind. I knew you wouldn&rsquo;t welcome
-his presence&ndash;&ndash;but he said he was coming
-anyway, so we thought we might as well
-bring him and express him back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After visiting with Beth for a few moments,
-Silvia and I withdrew to talk matters
-over confidentially.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All&rsquo;s well that ends well,&rdquo; I quoth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It hasn&rsquo;t ended yet,&rdquo; reminded Silvia.
-&ldquo;I trust Ptolemy didn&rsquo;t reveal what you
-said about Rob&rsquo;s being a woman-hater and
-Beth a flirt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy conveniently appeared just then,
-as he generally did in the midst of private
-interviews. Silvia asked him if he had
-repeated those remarks to Beth or Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I knew you didn&rsquo;t
-want her to know, because stepdaddy said
-so, and I thought he wouldn&rsquo;t like to be
-called that, and I wasn&rsquo;t going to give Beth
-away to him.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re all right, Ptolemy!&rdquo; I exclaimed,
-for the first time awarding him
-approbation.</p>
-<p>Out on the veranda we met Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say, those Polydores certainly have
-the punch and pep,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d
-like to have fetched the whole bunch along
-with me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you had,&rdquo; I replied dryly, &ldquo;our life&rsquo;s
-friendship would have died on the spot.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_13' id='linki_13'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-018.jpg' alt='' title='' width='263' height='266' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_14' id='linki_14'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-019.jpg' alt='' title='' width='367' height='130' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_VII__IN_WHICH_NOTHING_MUCH_HAPPENS' id='CHAPTER_VII__IN_WHICH_NOTHING_MUCH_HAPPENS'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcaplc'>CHAPTER VII</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which Nothing Much Happens</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why Hope Haven?&rdquo; asked Rob
-reflectively, when he had taken
-inventory of the possibilities
-of the resort.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; sighed Silvia, &ldquo;so many
-hopes&ndash;&ndash;vacation hopes&ndash;&ndash;must have been
-buried here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Rob was of an investigating turn of
-mind, however, and he had heard from a
-native of H. H., as he had abbreviated the
-place, that there was a smaller lake, abounding
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
-in fish, farther on through the forest.
-It was so strongly fortified, however, by
-the formidable battalions of sharp-shooting
-insects that but few fishermen had ever
-been able to lay siege to it.</p>
-<p>Rob and I being poison proof decided to
-try our luck and pitch camp for a few days
-on the shores of this hidden treasure. As
-we had to send to town by the stage driver
-for the necessary supplies, we remained in
-H. H. the remainder of the day.</p>
-<p>We at once paired off in Noah&rsquo;s most
-approved style as Rob had outlined. Beth
-and Ptolemy went up shore, sticks and
-stones and rocks being no obstacles to their
-feet. Rob and I sought the society of the
-snakes, while Silvia and Diogenes, mosquito-netted,
-watched a game of croquet.</p>
-<p>We dined without the pleasure of the
-society of Ptolemy and Diogenes, who had
-been invited to sit at the table with the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span>
-landlady&rsquo;s children. I might state, incidentally,
-that the invitation was never
-repeated.</p>
-<p>Beth was quite excited over her walk.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy and I,&rdquo; she boasted, &ldquo;made
-more of a discovery than Mr. Rossiter did.
-We found a haunted house, a perfectly
-haunted house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am not surprised,&rdquo; declared Silvia.
-&ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t expect any other kind of a
-house in such a region.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where is it?&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;and what is
-it haunted by?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Insects,&rdquo; suggested Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You go around shore about two miles,
-only it&rsquo;s farther, as you have to make so
-many ups and downs over the rocks. Then
-you leave the shore and go through a
-low marshy stretch, sort of a Dismal
-Swamp, and then up a hill. After Ptolemy
-and I climbed to the top, we looked
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span>
-down and saw, hidden in a clump of lonely
-looking poplars, a small, rudely built house.
-We went down to explore and had hard
-work making our way through a thick
-growth of&ndash;&ndash;everything. We crawled
-under some tangled vines and came up
-on the steps. The house was vacant, although
-there were a few old pieces of
-furniture&ndash;&ndash;a couple of cots, a cook-stove,
-table, and chairs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;On our way home we met a woman
-who gave us a history of the house. An
-old miser lived there long ago. One night
-he was robbed and murdered, and his
-ghost still haunts the place. No one
-ventures in its vicinity, and she said most
-likely we were the first people who had
-gone there since the tragedy. She told
-us of a nearer way to reach it. You take
-the road to Windy Creek, and about two
-miles below here, turn into a lane and
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span>
-then go through a grove and over a
-hill.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t really believe the story, that
-is, the ghost part of it?&rdquo; asked Rossiter.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;N&ndash;&ndash;o,&rdquo; allowed Beth. &ldquo;Still, I&rsquo;d like
-to. It makes it interesting. Ptolemy and
-I are going down there some night to see
-if we can find the ghost.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t see one,&rdquo; I assured her.
-&ldquo;Ptolemy&rsquo;s presence would be sufficient
-to keep even a ghost in the background.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy&rsquo;s a peach,&rdquo; declared Beth
-emphatically.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If he were older, you wouldn&rsquo;t think
-so,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; asked Beth in surprise,
-or seeming surprise.</p>
-<p>He smiled enigmatically, and irrelevantly
-asked her if she wouldn&rsquo;t really be afraid
-to go to the haunted house at night with
-only Ptolemy for protection.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span></div>
-<p>She assured him she shouldn&rsquo;t be afraid
-of a ghost if she saw one, and that she
-shouldn&rsquo;t be afraid to go alone.</p>
-<p>Throughout the evening, which we
-spent in rowing, walking, and later at a
-little impromptu supper, I was interested
-in observing the puzzling behavior of Beth
-and my chum. I had expected that he
-would avoid her as much as possible and
-speak to her only when common politeness
-made conversation obligatory, and
-that she, a born coquette, would seek to
-add his scalp to her collection. Instead,
-to my surprise, their r&ocirc;les were reversed.
-He appeared interested in her every remark
-and looked at her often and intently.
-He was quite assiduous in his attentions
-which, strange to say, she discouraged,
-not with the deep design of a flirt to increase
-his ardor, but with a calm firmness
-that admitted of no doubt as to her feelings.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Your sister,&rdquo; he remarked to me as
-we were walking down to the lake for a
-swim just before going to bed, &ldquo;is a very
-unusual type.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not at all!&rdquo; I assured him. &ldquo;Beth is
-the true feminine type which you have
-never taken the trouble to know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, come, Lucien! Not feminine,
-you know. Though she is inconsistent.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I resented the imputation hotly, but he
-only laughed and said that he guessed it
-was true that a man didn&rsquo;t understand the
-women in his family as well as an outsider
-did.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You think,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;just because she
-says she isn&rsquo;t afraid of ghosts&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; he denied. &ldquo;That wasn&rsquo;t
-the reason, but&ndash;&ndash;I like her type, though
-I always supposed I wouldn&rsquo;t. It is a
-new one to me&ndash;&ndash;anyway. I didn&rsquo;t
-think so young a girl as she&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span></div>
-<p>Our discussion was cut short by the
-inevitable, ever-present Ptolemy, who
-came running up to us, clad in about four
-inches of swimming trunks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why aren&rsquo;t you in bed?&rdquo; I demanded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was in bed, but it was so warm I
-couldn&rsquo;t sleep, and I went to the window
-and saw you coming down here, so I thought
-I&rsquo;d come, too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I repeated Rob&rsquo;s remarks to Silvia when
-I returned to our room, and she betrayed
-Beth&rsquo;s confidences in regard to Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She says she would like him if it were
-not for one trait that she dislikes more
-than any other in a man and that it was
-sufficient in her estimation to counterbalance
-all his good qualities.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What can she mean?&rdquo; I asked bewildered.
-&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see a flaw in Rob,
-except for his being a woman-hater, and
-he surely hasn&rsquo;t betrayed that fact to her,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span>
-judging from his manner toward her. I
-think he is making an effort to be nice to
-her on my account, and she doesn&rsquo;t appreciate
-it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I asked her what the flaw was, and she
-flushed and said she couldn&rsquo;t tell me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I guess all around it is a good
-thing we are going off on our fishing expedition.
-I don&rsquo;t want my friend turned
-down by my sister, and I don&rsquo;t want my
-friend calling my sister a new type and
-unfeminine.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_15' id='linki_15'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-020.jpg' alt='' title='' width='152' height='196' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_16' id='linki_16'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-021.jpg' alt='' title='' width='360' height='116' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_VIII__PTOLEMY_DISAPPEARS_AND_I_VISIT_A_HAUNTED_HOUSE' id='CHAPTER_VIII__PTOLEMY_DISAPPEARS_AND_I_VISIT_A_HAUNTED_HOUSE'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcaplc'>CHAPTER VIII</span></h2>
-<h3><i>Ptolemy Disappears and I Visit a Haunted House</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>When Rob and I, with our camping
-outfit, drove off through the
-woods, Ptolemy&rsquo;s eyes followed
-us so enviously and he pleaded so eloquently
-to be taken with us that Rob
-was actually on the point of considering
-it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;See here, Rob Rossiter!&rdquo; I exclaimed,
-&ldquo;This is my vacation and all I came to
-this God-forsaken place for was to escape
-the Polydores. If he goes, I stay. You
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span>
-know I&rsquo;ve always tried to meet issues,
-but this antique family has got me going.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; he yielded.</p>
-<p>After a drive of a few miles we came
-to the lake and pitched our tent. Two
-days of ideal camp life followed. The
-weather was fine, Rob was a first-class
-cook, and the sport was beyond our most
-optimistic expectation. We landed enough
-of the Friday food to satisfy the most
-fastidious fishing fiend, and the mosquitoes,
-finding we were impervious to their
-stings, finally let us alone.</p>
-<p>I forgot all business cares and disappointments,
-yes, even the Polydores; but on
-the morning of the third day Rob began
-to show signs of restlessness and spoke
-of the likelihood of my wife&rsquo;s being lonely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not with Beth and Ptolemy in calling
-distance,&rdquo; I told him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But they will be off together,&rdquo; he
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span>
-replied, &ldquo;and your wife will be alone with
-that <i>enfant terrible</i>. I fancy, too, that
-your sister isn&rsquo;t exactly a companion for
-your wife.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, that shows how little you know
-her. She and Silvia are great friends.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, of course they are friendly,
-but I mean their tastes are so different,
-and they are so unlike. Your sister doesn&rsquo;t
-care for domesticity.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure she does. You have turned the
-wrong searchlight on Beth. If you knew
-her, you&rsquo;d like her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I do like her,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s too
-bad she&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He stopped abruptly and quickly
-changed the conversation. In spite of
-my efforts to renew the controversy about
-Beth, he refused to return to the subject.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_17' id='linki_17'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span>
-<img src='images/illus-022.jpg' alt='' title='' width='336' height='477' /><br />
-<p class='caption'>
-He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span></div>
-<p>In the afternoon, when I was doing a
-little scale work preparatory to cooking,
-a messenger from the hotel drove up with
-a note from Silvia which I read aloud:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy has been missing for twenty-four
-hours. We are in hopes he has
-joined you. If not, what shall I do?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll go back with you,&rdquo; said Rob to
-the man. &ldquo;Just lend a hand here and
-help us pull up these tent stakes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s Ptolemy to me or I to him?&rdquo;
-I asked with a groan, &ldquo;can&rsquo;t we give him
-absent treatment?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re positively inhuman, Lucien,&rdquo;
-protested Rob. &ldquo;The boy may be at
-the bottom of the lake.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not he! He was born to be hung.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All this time, however, I had been active
-in making preparations for departure, as
-I knew that Silvia would feel that we were
-responsible for Ptolemy&rsquo;s safety, and her
-anxiety was reason enough for me to hasten
-to her.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span></div>
-<p>Rob was quite jubilant on our return trip
-and declared that the fish came too easily
-and too plentifully to make it real sport,
-but I felt that I had another grudge to be
-charged up to the fateful family.</p>
-<p>We found Silvia pale from anxiety, Beth
-in tears, and Diogenes loudly clamoring for
-&ldquo;Tolly.&rdquo; We learned that the afternoon
-before, Silvia and Beth had gone with the
-landlady for a ride, leaving Diogenes in
-Ptolemy&rsquo;s care, but on their return at
-dinner time, Diogenes was playing alone
-in the sandpile.</p>
-<p>Nothing was thought of Ptolemy&rsquo;s absence
-until bedtime, and they had then
-sent out searching parties to the woods
-and the lake shores. Finally it occurred
-to Beth that he might have gone to join
-Rob and me, so they sent the messenger
-to investigate.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He must be lost in the woods
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span>
-somewhere,&rdquo; said Beth tearfully, &ldquo;and he will
-starve to death.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Rob actually touched her hand in his
-distress at her grief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy is too smart to get lost anywhere,&rdquo;
-I declared. &ldquo;He knows fully as
-much about woodcraft as he does about
-every other kind of craft. He&rsquo;s one of
-his mother&rsquo;s antiquities personified. But
-haven&rsquo;t you been able to find anyone who
-saw him after you went for your ride?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; even the hotel help were all out
-on the lake.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And he left Diogenes here, absolutely
-unguarded?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well!&rdquo; admitted Silvia, &ldquo;he tied Diogenes
-to a tree near the sandpile.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then he must have gone away with
-malice aforethought,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;and Diogenes
-is the only one who knows anything
-about his last movements.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span></div>
-<p>I lifted the child to my knee, and speaking
-more gently to him than I had ever
-done, I asked:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Di, did you and Tolly play in the
-sandpile yesterday?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He was quite emphatic in his affirmative.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, tell Ocean: Did Tolly go away
-and leave you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tolly goed away,&rdquo; he confirmed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien!&rdquo; protested Beth, laughing.
-&ldquo;He&rsquo;s too little to know what you are
-talking about or to remember.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien&rsquo;s ruling passion strong in death,&rdquo;
-murmured Rob. &ldquo;He can&rsquo;t help cross-examining
-the cradle even!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which way,&rdquo; I resumed, ignoring these
-interruptions, &ldquo;did Tolly go&ndash;&ndash;that way?&rdquo;
-pointing towards the woods.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No! Tolly goed&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; and he trailed off
-into his baby jargon which no one could
-understand, but he pointed to the lake.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;What did he say when he went away;
-when he tied the rope around you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bye-bye.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What else?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Diogenes&rsquo; intentions to be communicative
-were certainly all right, but not a
-word was intelligible. As he kept picking
-at his dress and pointing to it, I finally
-prompted:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did Tolly pin a paper to Di&rsquo;s dress?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;m&ndash;&ndash;h&rsquo;&ndash;&ndash;m.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bravo, Lucien!&rdquo; applauded Rob.
-&ldquo;They say you can induce a witness to
-admit anything.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did Di do with the paper?&rdquo; I
-continued.</p>
-<p>The word he wanted evidently being
-beyond his vocabulary and speech, he
-made a rotary motion with his fist. The
-gesture conveyed nothing to our minds,
-but was instantly recognized and interpreted
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
-by the landlady&rsquo;s little girl, who
-said he meant a windmill such as she had
-sometimes made for him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did Di do with the windmill?&rdquo;
-I asked.</p>
-<p>He pointed to the sandpile, which I
-investigated and found a stick planted
-therein. I pulled it up and saw a pin
-sticking in the end of it. Further excavation
-revealed a crumpled piece of paper
-on which was written in Ptolemy&rsquo;s round
-hand:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;Want to see kids. Am going home.
-Tell Beth I bet she dasent go to the haunted
-house alone at night. Ptolemy.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor Huldah!&rdquo; sighed Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought he was having the time of
-his life here,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He was sore,&rdquo; declared Beth, &ldquo;because
-you and Lucien wouldn&rsquo;t take him with
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span>
-you on the fishing trip. He was moping
-by himself all the morning.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Trying to think up some new deviltry,&rdquo;
-I theorized, &ldquo;to make us feel bad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; asserted Silvia, &ldquo;I think he really
-misses the boys. The Polydores, for all
-their scrappings, are very clannish. But
-how do you suppose he got down to Windy
-Creek?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He could catch plenty of rides along
-the way, but what is puzzling me is how
-he got the money to pay his fare.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He seemed very well provided with
-cash,&rdquo; informed Rob. &ldquo;I tried to pay
-for his ticket down here, but he insisted
-on buying it himself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia worried so much about what
-might happen to him en route that after
-dinner I motored to Windy Creek with
-some tourists who had stopped at the
-hotel in passing.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span></div>
-<p>I called up long distance and after some
-delay got in communication with our house.
-Ptolemy himself answered and assured me
-he had arrived all &ldquo;hunky doory&rdquo;, that
-Huldah, who was out on an errand, was
-&ldquo;hunky doory&rdquo;, and that the kids were
-all &ldquo;hunky doory.&rdquo; In fact, his cheerful
-tone indicated that the whole universe
-was in the beatific state described by his
-expressive adjective.</p>
-<p>I was really ripping mad at his taking
-French leave and so giving Silvia cause
-for her anxiety, but I forbore to reprimand
-him by word or tone, lest he get even by
-&ldquo;coming back&rdquo; literally. I did tell him
-how the loss of the note for twenty-four
-hours had caused a general excitement,
-but he felt no remorse for his share in the
-situation, blaming Diogenes entirely and
-bidding me &ldquo;punch the kid&rsquo;s face&rdquo; for
-unpinning the note.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span></div>
-<p>On my return from Windy Creek I was
-fortunate enough to fall in with a farmer
-who lived near the hotel. He was driving
-some sort of a machine he called an <i>autoo</i>.
-He was an old-timer in the vicinity and
-related the past, present, and pluperfect of
-all the residents on the route. I had a
-detailed and vivid account of the midnight
-visitor of the haunted house.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d jest naturally like to see what there
-is to it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Not that I am afeerd
-at all, only it&rsquo;s sort of spooky to go to a
-lonesome place like that all alone. If I
-could git some one to go with me, I&rsquo;d tackle
-the job, but I vum if every time I perpose
-it to anyone they don&rsquo;t make some excuse.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m on,&rdquo; I declared. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t dread
-ghosts near as much as I do some living
-folks I know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right you air,&rdquo; chuckled the old man.
-&ldquo;If you say so we&rsquo;ll go right off now jest
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span>
-as sure as shootin&rsquo;. We may be ghosts
-ourselves tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I assured him I was quite ready to encounter
-the ghost, so he jubilantly turned
-the machine from the road into a grass-grown
-lane. We zigzagged for some distance
-and then got out and went on foot
-through a grove. The moon and the stars
-were half veiled by some light, misty clouds,
-so that the little house didn&rsquo;t show up
-very clearly, but as we came to the top
-of the hill, we saw something that shook
-even my well-behaved nerves.</p>
-<p>From a window in the roof-room extended
-a white arm and hand, with index
-finger pointing threateningly and directly
-toward us.</p>
-<p>My farmer friend turned quickly and
-fled toward the grove. I followed fleetly.
-&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your rush?&rdquo; I asked, when I
-had overtaken him.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I just happened to remember,&rdquo; he explained
-gaspingly, &ldquo;that there&rsquo;s a pesky
-autoo thief in these &rsquo;ere parts. Bukins
-had his stole jest last night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The lights on his machine must have
-reassured him as to its safety when we
-emerged from the woods into the open, but
-he didn&rsquo;t lessen his speed. We got in the
-&ldquo;autoo&rdquo; and soon said good-by to the
-lane. At one time I believed it was
-good-by to everything, but at last we
-gained the highway, right side up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well!&rdquo; I said, when we were running
-normally again on terra firma, &ldquo;that
-was some little old ghost,&ndash;&ndash;beckoned to
-us to come right in, too!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You seen it then!&rdquo; he exclaimed excitedly.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m mighty glad I had an eyewitness.
-Folks wouldn&rsquo;t believe me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They probably won&rsquo;t believe me,
-either,&rdquo; I assured him. &ldquo;I am a lawyer.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t tell me! Well, it did jest
-give me a start for a minute. I&rsquo;d like to
-hev gone in and seen it nigh to, if I hadn&rsquo;t
-happened to think of this &rsquo;ere autoo. You
-see I ain&rsquo;t got it all paid for yet. I&rsquo;m jest
-clean beat. You don&rsquo;t mind my takin&rsquo;
-a leetle pull at a stone fence, do you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess not,&rdquo; I assented somewhat
-dubiously, however. &ldquo;That was a rail
-fence we took a pull at back in the lane,
-wasn&rsquo;t it? Of course, if we shouldn&rsquo;t
-happen to clear the stone fence as well
-as we did the rail fence, it might be more
-disastrous.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, land!&rdquo; he said with a cackling
-laugh, &ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t meanin&rsquo; that kind of a
-fence. I mean the kind you&ndash;&ndash;Say!
-You ain&rsquo;t one of them teetotalers, be you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Only in theory,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;but this
-stone fence drink is a new one on me.
-What&rsquo;s it like?&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span></div>
-<p>He stopped the &ldquo;autoo&rdquo; and pulled a
-bottle from an inner pocket.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You kin taste it better than I kin tell
-it,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;Take a pull&ndash;&ndash;a condumned
-good one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I rarely imbibed, confining my indulgences
-to the demands of necessity, but I
-thought that the flight of Ptolemy, the
-ghostly encounter, and my Mazeppa&ndash;&ndash;wild
-ride all combined to constitute an occasion
-adequate to call for a bracer in the shape
-of a stone fence, or anything he might
-produce.</p>
-<p>I took what I considered a &ldquo;condumned
-good one&rdquo; from the bottle and it nearly
-strangled me, but I followed the aged
-stranger&rsquo;s advice to take another to &ldquo;cure
-the chokes&rdquo; caused by the first one. On
-general principles I took a third and then
-reluctantly returned him the bottle.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s over the moon,&rdquo; he jovially
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span>
-exclaimed as he proceeded to make my
-attempt at a &ldquo;condumned good one&rdquo;
-appear most niggardly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;May I ask,&rdquo; I inquired when my feeling
-of nerve-tense strain had vanished, and
-I felt as if I were treading thin air, &ldquo;just
-what is in a stone fence?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, what do you think?&rdquo; he asked
-slyly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think the very devil is in it,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, mebby,&rdquo; he admitted. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-two-thirds hard cider and one-third whisky.
-It&rsquo;s a healthy, hearting drink and yet
-it has a leetle come back to it&ndash;&ndash;a sort
-o&rsquo; kick, you know. But this is where I
-live,&rdquo; pointing to a farmhouse well back
-from the road, &ldquo;but I am goin&rsquo; to run you
-on to your tavern though.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The hotel was dark, save for a light in
-my room. I invited him in, but he was
-anxious to &ldquo;git hum and tell the folks&rdquo;,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span>
-so I gave him some cigars and went in to
-&ldquo;tell my folks.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I found them in the room waiting for
-me. That is, Beth was in the room, sitting
-by the table and pretending to read. Silvia
-and Rob were out in the little balcony.
-They came inside as soon as they heard my
-voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, was he there?&rdquo; asked Silvia anxiously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;He answered the
-telephone himself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I was feeling quite exhilarated by this
-time. My wife looked a perfect vision to
-me. Beth, I thought, was some sister,
-and Rob the best fellow in the world. Even
-the Polydores at long range, and under
-the ameliorating influence of stone fences,
-seemed like fine little fellows&ndash;&ndash;rather active
-and strenuous, to be sure, but only as
-all wholesome children should be.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span></div>
-<p>Silvia was relieved at the announcement
-of Ptolemy&rsquo;s safety, but very much disappointed
-that I did not succeed in interviewing
-Huldah and finding out something
-about domestic affairs.</p>
-<p>I assured her that everything was &ldquo;hunky
-doory&rdquo; at home, praised the telephone
-service, my expedition to town, and painted
-my return ride with &ldquo;the honest farmer&rdquo;
-in glowing terms. I was suddenly halted in
-my eulogy by becoming aware of an amazed
-expression on my wife&rsquo;s countenance, a
-most suspicious glance in Beth&rsquo;s wide-open
-eyes, and a very knowing wink from
-Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia severely, &ldquo;I believe
-you&rsquo;ve been drinking. I certainly
-smell spirits.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe you do,&rdquo; I replied jocosely.
-&ldquo;I certainly saw spirits. I went to the
-haunted house on my way back.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought Windy Creek was a dry
-town,&rdquo; remarked Rob innocently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is,&rdquo; I assured him, &ldquo;but I rode home
-with an old man&ndash;&ndash;a farmer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Does he run a blind pig?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was more like a pig in a poke,&rdquo; I
-replied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; exclaimed Silvia reproachfully,
-&ldquo;you told me two years ago, after
-that banquet to the Bar, that you were
-never going to touch wine or whisky again.
-What did that horrid old man give you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A stone fence. That&rsquo;s what he said
-it was anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a new one on me,&rdquo; commented
-Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There was a new toast went with it.
-He drank to &lsquo;over the moon.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You must have gone there all right and
-taken all the shine from the moon-man,&rdquo;
-said Rob.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; asked Beth, &ldquo;did you really
-go to that haunted house?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Again I was moved to eloquence, and I
-told of the farmer&rsquo;s yearning, the fulfillment,
-the beckoning hand and the beating
-of the retreat at length.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you sure,&rdquo; asked Rob, &ldquo;that you
-didn&rsquo;t take that stone fence before you
-visited the haunted house?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; I replied, loftily, &ldquo;that a
-lawyer&rsquo;s word is worthless, but seeing is
-believing. We will all visit the haunted
-house tomorrow night and I&rsquo;ll make good
-on ghosts.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This plan was unanimously approved,
-and then Silvia suggested that she thought
-I had better go to bed. I had no particular
-objection to doing so.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; she said solemnly, when we
-were alone, &ldquo;I want you to promise me
-something. I want you to give me your
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span>
-word that you will never take another
-stone wall.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I did this most readily.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_18' id='linki_18'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-023.jpg' alt='' title='' width='307' height='284' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_19' id='linki_19'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-024.jpg' alt='' title='' width='378' height='100' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_IX__IN_WHICH_WE_SEE_GHOSTS' id='CHAPTER_IX__IN_WHICH_WE_SEE_GHOSTS'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter IX</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which We See Ghosts</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>The next morning Rob tried earnestly
-and vainly to drive a wedge in
-Beth&rsquo;s good graces, but she treated
-him with a casual tolerance that finally
-put him in an ill humor which he took out
-on me with many a gibe at my &ldquo;stone fence
-spirit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Men of my profession who have to deal
-with facts rather than fancy are not believers
-in the supernatural. I was sure
-that the extending arm and the beckoning
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span>
-finger were there, but belonged to no
-ghost. It might have been a curtain
-blowing out the window or a fake of some
-kind. But I knew that unless there was
-some kind of a showing in a ghostly way
-that night, I should never hear the last of
-my stone fence indulgence, so I resolved
-to make a preliminary visit alone by daylight
-and rig up something white to substantiate
-my spectral narrative.</p>
-<p>I didn&rsquo;t find an opportunity to escape
-unseen until late in the afternoon, when I
-went, ostensibly, for a solitary row on the
-lake.</p>
-<p>I landed and came by a circuitous route
-to the haunted house. The calm security
-of sunshine, of course, prevented any shivers
-of anticipation such as I had experienced
-the night before. On passing one of the
-windows on my way to the front entrance,
-I glanced in, stopped in sheer fright, stooped
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span>
-and backed to the next window, which was
-screened by a labyrinth of vines through
-which I peered. I am sure I lost my Bloom
-of Youth complexion for a few moments.
-I babbled aimlessly to myself and then
-managed to pull together and beat it to
-the lake with as much speed as my farmer
-friend had shown in his retreat. I made the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span>
-boat and the hotel in double quick time.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_20' id='linki_20'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-025.jpg' alt='' title='' width='324' height='296' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>I felt no misgivings now as to the promise
-of a sensation that night, and that sustaining
-thought was all that propped my flagging
-spirits throughout the day, but I
-resolved to keep my little party at safe
-distance from the house.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say we keep our nocturnal noctambulation
-under our hats,&rdquo; proposed Rob.</p>
-<p>When this proposition was translated to
-Silvia, she entirely approved, so, committing
-Diogenes to the Polydores&rsquo; Providence, we
-left the hotel at half past eleven for a row
-on the lake by moonlight.</p>
-<p>When we descended the slope leading
-to the House of Mystery, I cautioned silence
-and a &ldquo;safety-first&rdquo; distance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ghosts are easily vanished,&rdquo; I informed
-them. &ldquo;They don&rsquo;t seek limelight,
-and I want you to be sure to see
-this one.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span></div>
-<p>As we came to the untrodden undergrowth
-we heard a weird, wailing sound
-that would have curdled my blood had I
-not glanced in the window that afternoon
-and so, in a measure, been prepared for
-this&ndash;&ndash;or anything.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look!&rdquo; whispered Beth. &ldquo;The arm!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia looked at the roof window and with
-a stifled shriek of terror turned and fled up
-the hill, Rob chivalrously pursuing her.</p>
-<p>Beth was pale, but game.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What can it be, Lucien?&rdquo; she whispered.
-&ldquo;Do we dare go in to see?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t, Beth,&rdquo; I vetoed quickly.
-&ldquo;Maybe some lunatic or half-witted person
-has taken up abode here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien!&rdquo; called Rob peremptorily.</p>
-<p>I turned quickly. He was at the top of
-the hill, half supporting Silvia. I ran
-toward them, followed by Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t a ghost, of course, Silvia,&rdquo; I
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span>
-said soothingly, and then repeated my supposition
-about the lunatic.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course I don&rsquo;t believe in ghosts,&rdquo;
-said Silvia shudderingly, &ldquo;but it&rsquo;s an awful
-place and those sounds are like those I
-have heard in nightmares.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll hurry back to the hotel and forget
-all about it,&rdquo; I urged.</p>
-<p>I rowed the boat and Silvia sat opposite
-me. Beth and Rob were in the stern
-and I had to listen to their conversation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course I felt a little creepy,&rdquo; she admitted,
-&ldquo;but then I like to feel that way,
-and I wasn&rsquo;t afraid.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, of course, you wouldn&rsquo;t be,&rdquo; he
-replied somewhat ironically. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re the
-new woman type.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I am not,&rdquo; she denied. &ldquo;I wish
-I were. Silvia&rsquo;s really the strong-minded
-type.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;She didn&rsquo;t act the part when she saw
-the ghost,&rdquo; he retorted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s very unusual for her nerves to give
-way. Silvia&rsquo;s quite a surprise to me this
-summer, but I think those funny Polydores
-have upset her more than Lucien realizes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I wondered if she were right, and once
-again murderous wishes toward the Polydores
-entered my brain, and I made renewed
-vows about disposing of them on
-our return home.</p>
-<p>One thing, however, had been accomplished
-by our expedition. Silvia was more
-lenient in her judgment on my indulgences
-of the preceding night.</p>
-<p>By the time we pulled in at the landing,
-Silvia had recovered her equilibrium.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien, what the devil do you suppose
-was in that house?&rdquo; asked Rob, when we
-were putting up the boat.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Loons and things,&rdquo; I allowed.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;But what was that white arm?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some fake thing the village wag has
-put up to scare the natives.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Next morning&rsquo;s stage brought some new
-arrivals, and among them were two college
-students who at once were claimed by Beth.
-She played tennis with one and later went
-rowing with the other. Rob smoked and
-sulked, apart.</p>
-<p>My farmer friend had been garrulous
-and rumors of the ghost and the haunted
-house had come to the ears of the hotel
-inmates, thereby causing a pleasurable
-stir of excitement. A number of them
-announced their intention of visiting the
-place. They asked me to be their guide,
-but I refused.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was interesting,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;but I think
-it would be a bore to see the same ghost
-twice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am sure I don&rsquo;t care to go again,&rdquo; was
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span>
-Silvia&rsquo;s emphatic reply when asked to be
-one of the party.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ghosts are scientifically admitted and
-explained,&rdquo; growled Rob, &ldquo;so I don&rsquo;t see
-anything to be excited about.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth accepted the offer of escort of one
-of the students, so Silvia, Rob, and I remained
-at home. The night was quite
-cool, and we played cards in our room.
-When the party returned, Beth joined us.
-She looked rather out of sorts.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; she replied in answer to
-Silvia&rsquo;s eager inquiry. &ldquo;We saw the ghost.
-I don&rsquo;t know whether it was the same
-little old last night&rsquo;s ghost or a new one.
-He showed more of himself this time though.
-He had two arms and a veiled head out of
-the window. As soon as our crowd glimpsed
-it, they all fled quicker than we did last
-night. Those two students fell all over
-each other and left me in the lurch.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;What could you expect,&rdquo; asked Rob,
-&ldquo;from such ladylike things? They ought
-to be kept in the confines of the croquet
-ground. If they are a fair specimen of
-the kind you have met, no wonder you&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_21' id='linki_21'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-026.jpg' alt='' title='' width='309' height='287' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>He stopped abruptly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No wonder what?&rdquo; she asked quickly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; he replied glumly.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span></div>
-<p>When I came down to breakfast the
-next morning, the landlady in tears waylaid
-me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Wade,&rdquo; she began in trouble-telling
-tone, &ldquo;this affair about the ghost is
-going to hurt my business. Some of those
-folks say they are going home, and they
-will tell others and&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll fix the ghost story. Just leave it to
-me!&rdquo; I assured her optimistically, as we
-went into the dining-room.</p>
-<p>There were only enough guests to fill one
-long table, and every one was excitedly
-dissecting the ghost.</p>
-<p>I took my seat and also the floor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hate to dispel your illusions,&rdquo; I said
-cheerfully, &ldquo;but the fact is, I made a daylight
-investigation of the haunted house.
-First I looked in the window and I saw&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, what did you see?&rdquo; chorused a
-dozen or more expectant voices.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;A lot of&ndash;&ndash;mice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; came in disappointed and skeptical
-tones.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But, the ghost, Mr. Wade?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes! The arms and the head?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A fake figure put up by some practical
-joker for the purpose of frightening timid
-people and encouraging the credulous. I
-didn&rsquo;t want to spoil your little picnic, so
-I kept still.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Those sounds, Lucien!&rdquo; reminded
-Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Were from a cat chorus. They were
-prowling about the house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re sure some lawyer, Mr. Wade,&rdquo;
-doubtfully complimented my grateful landlady,
-as we went out of the room after
-breakfast.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; asked Rob <i>sotto voce</i>, joining
-me on the veranda, &ldquo;why don&rsquo;t the cats
-you speak of catch that lot of mice?&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span></div>
-<p>Fortunately Beth came up to us, and I
-didn&rsquo;t have to explain.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she said with a shudder. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
-never go near that awful place! I&rsquo;d rather
-see a perfectly good ghost, or a loon, or a
-lunatic any day than a mouse.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re surely not afraid of a mouse!&rdquo;
-exclaimed Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; she asked coolly as she
-walked on.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told you she was feminine,&rdquo; I reminded
-him.</p>
-<p>He shook his head.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t understand,&rdquo; he remarked, &ldquo;why
-a girl who is afraid of mice should be&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t understand anything about
-women,&rdquo; I interrupted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right, Lucien. I don&rsquo;t, but
-your sister is surely the greatest enigma of
-them all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I rented the stone fence farmer&rsquo;s &ldquo;autoo&rdquo;
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span>
-and took Silvia and Diogenes to a neighboring
-town that afternoon. We didn&rsquo;t
-get back to the hotel until dinner time.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What have you been up to all day,
-Rob?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Numerous things. For one, I strolled
-down to the haunted house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you see?&rdquo; cried the women.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I saw four&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ghosts?&rdquo; asked Beth.</p>
-<p>I shot him a warning glance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Young tomcats playing tag with the
-mice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I corralled Rob outside after dinner.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For Heaven&rsquo;s sake!&rdquo; I implored.
-&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t disturb Silvia&rsquo;s peace of mind.
-Did you go inside?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; I was sorely tempted to, but refrained
-out of deference to the evident
-wishes of my host, but really, Lucien, we
-should&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I have only ten more days off, Rob.
-Don&rsquo;t make any unpleasant suggestions.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he said promptly.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_22' id='linki_22'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-027.jpg' alt='' title='' width='223' height='266' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_23' id='linki_23'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-028.jpg' alt='' title='' width='349' height='109' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_X_IN_WHICH_WE_MAKE_SOME_DISCOVERIES' id='CHAPTER_X_IN_WHICH_WE_MAKE_SOME_DISCOVERIES'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter</span> X</h2>
-<h3><i>In Which We Make Some Discoveries</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Diogenes, who, for a Polydore, had
-been quite placid since Ptolemy&rsquo;s
-departure, caused a commotion
-by disappearing the next morning. As he
-was possessed of a deep desire to go in the
-lake and get a little snake, he had been,
-when not under strict surveillance, tied to
-a tree with enough leeway in the length of
-rope to allow him to play comfortably.</p>
-<p>By some means he had managed to work
-himself loose from the rope and had evidently
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
-followed Ptolemy&rsquo;s example. I suggested
-calling up Huldah and asking if he
-had arrived yet, but I met with such chilling
-glances from Silvia and Beth that I got
-busy and organized searching parties, who
-reluctantly and lukewarmly engaged in the
-pursuit. Rob and I took the shore. After
-we had walked some little distance, we
-met a woman and stopped for inquiry.
-She said she had seen a child of about two
-years, clad in a blue and white striped dress
-and a big hat, going over the hill in company
-with a boy of about eight.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you going on to the hotel?&rdquo; I
-asked.</p>
-<p>On her replying that she was, I told her
-to inform them that she had met me and
-that the lost child was located.</p>
-<p>Rob and I then kept on over the hill, and
-when we neared the haunted house, we
-heard hair-raising sounds.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;If I hadn&rsquo;t been here before,&rdquo; remarked
-Rob, &ldquo;I should think that Sitting Bull had
-been reincarnated and was reviving the
-warrior war whoops.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We paused on the threshold. A human
-windmill of whirling legs and arms&ndash;&ndash;Polydore
-legs and arms&ndash;&ndash;flashed before our
-eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; I thundered.</p>
-<p>The flying wheel of arms and legs slacked,
-ran a few times, then slowly stopped, and
-the Polydore quintette assumed normal
-positions.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Halloa, stepdaddy!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A landslide composed of Emerald, Pythagoras,
-and Demetrius started toward
-me. I side-stepped and let Rob receive
-the charge.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Line them up now, for attention,&rdquo; I
-directed Ptolemy. &ldquo;I have something to
-say to you all.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span></div>
-<p>Ptolemy knocked the three terrors up
-against the wall, and I picked up Diogenes,
-who had a bump as big as an egg on his
-head.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told you,&rdquo; said Ptolemy to Pythagoras,
-&ldquo;that if you brought Di down here
-they&rsquo;d get on our trail. He wanted to see
-Di,&rdquo; he explained, &ldquo;so he sneaked over
-there and got him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We were wise before today,&rdquo; I informed
-him. &ldquo;I saw you all day before
-yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And I discovered you yesterday,&rdquo; added
-Rob.</p>
-<p>Ptolemy looked rather crestfallen, and
-then, seeming to consider that my discovery
-had been succeeded by inaction, which must
-mean non-interference, he heartened up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; I demanded, &ldquo;I want you to
-begin at the time you left the hotel and tell
-me everything and why you did it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I wasn&rsquo;t having any fun after you two
-went off camping,&rdquo; he began lugubriously.
-&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t hang around women folks all
-the time. I wanted boys to play with.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I saw a gleam of sympathy and understanding
-come into Rob&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A harem of hens,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I knew we could all have a grand time
-here and not be a bother to mudder, or
-Huldah or anyone, and it seemed too bad
-for this nice house to be empty, and no
-one anywhere else wanting us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I felt my first gleam of pity for a Polydore
-and wiped Diogenes&rsquo; dirty, moist face
-carefully with my handkerchief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So I went home and told Huldah I had
-come after the boys to take them back
-with me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And told her we had sent for them?&rdquo;
-I asked sharply.</p>
-<p>He flushed slightly at my tone.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;No; I didn&rsquo;t tell her so. She got that
-idea herself, and I didn&rsquo;t tell her different.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When did you come?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I came the same night that you telephoned,
-and took the train you and mudder
-came on. We got to Windy Creek in the
-morning. We fetched all our stuff here
-from home. I bought it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right here,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;tell me where you
-got the money to buy your stuff and to pay
-your fare here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I cashed father&rsquo;s check.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know he left you one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t, except the one he gave me
-to give you for our board. You told
-mudder you wouldn&rsquo;t touch it, and it seemed
-a pity not to have it working.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Visions of a future Polydore doing the
-chain and ball step flashed before my vision.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And they cashed it for you at the
-bank?&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure. Father always has me cash his
-checks for him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What amount did you fill in?&rdquo; I asked
-enviously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One hundred dollars. There&rsquo;s a lot
-more in the bank, too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How did you get your truck here
-from Windy Creek?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We divided it up and each took a
-bunch and started on foot, and some people
-in an automobile, going to the town past
-here, took us in and brought us as far
-as the lane. We&rsquo;ve been having a fine
-time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What doing?&rdquo; asked Rob interestedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fishing, sailing on a raft, playing in
-the woods all day and&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Playing ghost at night,&rdquo; said Pythagoras
-with a grin.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who made that ghost in the window?&rdquo;
-I demanded.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I did. I rigged up an arm and put it
-out the window the afternoon I left, hoping
-Beth would come down and see it, but
-we&rsquo;ve got a jim dandy one now.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was quite a shapely arm,&rdquo; said
-Rob. &ldquo;Where did you learn sculpturing?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I rigged it up,&rdquo; he said casually.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you bring in the way of
-supplies?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bacon, crackers, beans, candy, popcorn,
-gum, peanuts, pickles, candles, matches,
-and butter,&rdquo; was the glib inventory.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You may stay here,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;until we
-go home, but you are not to stir away from
-the woods about here and not on any
-account to come near the hotel, or let it
-be known that you are here. And you are
-to end this ghost business right off. Now,
-Di, we&rsquo;ll go home to mudder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; bawled Di. &ldquo;Stay with boys.
-Mudder come here.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span></div>
-<p>At least this was Ptolemy&rsquo;s interpretation
-of his protest.</p>
-<p>I threatened, Rob coaxed, and Ptolemy
-cuffed, but every time I started to leave
-and jerk him after me, he uttered such
-demoniac yells I was forced to stop.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wish it was night,&rdquo; said Emerald
-regretfully. &ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t he scare folks
-though! How does he get his voice up so
-high?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor little Di!&rdquo; said a voice commiseratingly
-from the doorway. &ldquo;Was
-Ocean plaguing him?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth gathered the child in her arms,
-and his howls changed to sobs. Rob
-stood petrified with amazement at her
-appearance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t want to go,&rdquo; said Diogenes
-between gulps.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Needn&rsquo;t go!&rdquo; promised Beth. &ldquo;Stay
-here with me, and we&rsquo;ll have dinner with
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span>
-the boys and then we&rsquo;ll go home and get
-some ice cream.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All yite,&rdquo; agreed the appeased Polydore.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;May Lucien and I stay to dinner,
-too?&rdquo; asked Rob humbly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she replied icily.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But, Beth,&rdquo; I remonstrated. &ldquo;Silvia
-will be worrying about Di. How can we
-explain?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia has gone to Windy Creek for the
-day. You see, I met that woman you
-sent to the hotel, and she told me she saw
-Di going over the hill with a boy, and I
-suddenly seemed to smell one of your
-mice, so I sent the woman on her way,
-and told Silvia you and Rob had found
-Diogenes. Just then some people she
-knew came along in a car and asked her
-to go to Windy Creek. I made her go and
-told her I&rsquo;d look after Di.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a brick, Beth!&rdquo; applauded
-Ptolemy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you boys will be very careful and not
-let anyone besides us know you are here,
-so mudder will not hear of it, for though
-she&rsquo;d like to see you&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;this without a
-flicker or flinch&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;we want her to have a
-nice rest. I&rsquo;ll come over every day except
-tomorrow and bring things from the hotel
-store, and bake up cookies and cake for
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A yell of approval went up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why can&rsquo;t you come tomorrow?&rdquo;
-asked the greedy Demetrius.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because I&rsquo;ve promised to go to the
-other end of the lake on a picnic. All
-the people at the hotel are going.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll come tomorrow and spend the
-whole day with you,&rdquo; promised Rob.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have a ride in the sailboat and do
-all sorts of things.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, aren&rsquo;t you going on that infernal
-picnic?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; I&rsquo;ll have all the picnic I want
-over here. Like Ptolemy I feel that I
-want to play with some of my own kind.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth looked at him approvingly; then
-she said a little sarcastically:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe you&rsquo;ll change your mind&ndash;&ndash;about
-going on the picnic, I mean&ndash;&ndash;when
-you see the new girl who just came to the
-hotel on the morning stage. She&rsquo;s a
-blonde, and not peroxided, either.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That would certainly drive him down
-here, or anywhere,&rdquo; I laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t you like blondes?&rdquo; she asked
-innocently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He doesn&rsquo;t like&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; I began, but
-Ptolemy rudely interrupted with an elaborate
-description of a new kind of fishing
-tackle he had bought.</p>
-<p>Then Beth bade Pythagoras build a fire
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span>
-in the cook-stove while she set the room to
-rights.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll eat out of doors,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I
-think it would be more appetizing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How did you get here?&rdquo; Rob asked
-her as we were leaving.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I rowed over.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;May I come over and row you back?&rdquo;
-he asked pleadingly.</p>
-<p>She hesitated, and then, realizing that
-she could scarcely manage a boat and
-Diogenes at the same time, assented, bidding
-him not come, however, until five
-o&rsquo;clock.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll have enough of the Polydores
-by that time,&rdquo; I said to Rob on our way
-home.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you know,&rdquo; he said reflectively,
-&ldquo;I like Ptolemy. There&rsquo;s the making of
-a man in him, if he has only half a chance.
-I didn&rsquo;t suppose your sister understood
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span>
-children so well or was so fond of them.
-She looked quite the little housewife, too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d discover a lot of things you
-don&rsquo;t know, if you&rsquo;d cultivate the society
-of women,&rdquo; I informed him.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_24' id='linki_24'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-029.jpg' alt='' title='' width='256' height='214' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_25' id='linki_25'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-030.jpg' alt='' title='' width='345' height='114' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XI__A_BAD_MEANS_TO_A_GOOD_END' id='CHAPTER_XI__A_BAD_MEANS_TO_A_GOOD_END'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XI</span></h2>
-<h3><i>A Bad Means to a Good End</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>When we were setting out on the
-proposed picnic the next day,
-Rob made himself extremely unpopular
-by announcing his intention to spend
-the day otherwise. The new blonde girl
-gave him fetching glances of entreaty which
-he never even saw. He made another sensation
-by proposing to keep Diogenes with
-him. To Silvia&rsquo;s surprise, Diogenes voiced
-his delight and chattered away, I suppose,
-about playing with the boys, but fortunately
-no one understood him.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you change your mind and
-come, too?&rdquo; he asked Beth.</p>
-<p>She seemed on the point of accepting
-and then firmly declined.</p>
-<p>When we returned at six o&rsquo;clock, Rob
-and Diogenes were awaiting us. There
-was something in Rob&rsquo;s eyes I had not seen
-there before. He had the look of one in
-love with life.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you have a nice time playing solitaire?&rdquo;
-asked Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had a very nice time,&rdquo; he replied
-with a subtle smile, &ldquo;but I didn&rsquo;t play
-solitaire. You know I had Diogenes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Diogenes apparently had a good time,
-too,&rdquo; said Silvia, looking at the child, who
-was certainly a wreck in the way of garments.
-&ldquo;What did you do all day, Rob?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We went out on the water, played
-games, and had a picnic dinner outdoors.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You had huckleberry pie for one thing,&rdquo;
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span>
-she observed, with a glance at Diogenes&rsquo;
-dress, &ldquo;and jelly for another, and&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Chicken, baked potatoes, milk, cake,
-and ice cream,&rdquo; he finished.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did you get ice cream?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I went down to a dairy farm and got
-a gallon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A gallon!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;For you
-and Diogenes?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t eat it all,&rdquo; he said guardedly.
-&ldquo;I gave what we didn&rsquo;t eat to some stray
-boys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hope Di won&rsquo;t be ill.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; asserted Rob. &ldquo;I am sure
-he is made of cast iron.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Throughout dinner Rob remained in high
-spirits. He kept eyeing Beth in a way
-that disconcerted her, and then suddenly
-he would smile with the expression of one
-who knows something funny, but intends
-to keep it a secret.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span></div>
-<p>Presently Silvia left us and went upstairs
-to give Diogenes a bath before she
-put him to bed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve had two days&rsquo; freedom from
-the last of the Polydores,&rdquo; I called after
-her. &ldquo;Doesn&rsquo;t it seem delightful?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; she answered slowly, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
-really missed the care of him. I was lonesome
-for him all day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He isn&rsquo;t such a bad little kid when he is
-out from Polydore environment,&rdquo; I admitted,
-regretting that he had been restored
-to it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now tell us all about your day with the
-boys,&rdquo; Beth asked Rob, when we were
-left alone. &ldquo;It really does seem too bad
-to keep a secret from Silvia, and yet it
-is a case of where ignorance is bliss&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It would be folly to be otherwise,&rdquo;
-finished Rob. &ldquo;Well, Diogenes and I left
-here with a boat load of supplies in the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span>
-way of provender and things for the boys.
-I had to tie Diogenes in the boat, of course,
-so he would not try some aquatic feat. He
-objected and yelled like a fiend all the
-way. I was glad there was no one at the
-hotel to come out and arrest me for cruelty
-to children. Of course before we landed,
-his cries were heard by his brothers and
-they were all at the water&rsquo;s edge. They
-made mulepacks of themselves and transferred
-the commissary supplies. The ice
-cream and bats and balls which I found at
-the store made quite a hit.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We played baseball, fished, and had a
-spread on the shore. Then Ptolemy and
-I rowed out to where the sailboat was. I
-explained the mysteries of the jib and he
-caught on instantly. We took in the other
-Polydores and sailed for a couple of hours.
-Then we all went in swimming.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not Diogenes!&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Certainly. I tucked him under my
-arm and he seemed perfectly at home, although
-greatly disappointed because we
-didn&rsquo;t succeed in catching a snake.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I finally landed them all safely under
-the roof of the Haunted House, and
-Ptolemy assured me it was the best day of
-his young life. In appreciation of the
-diversions I had afforded him, he made a
-confession which proved such good news
-to me that I was a lenient listener and
-exacted no penalty.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What was it?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He told me that on the day of Miss
-Wade&rsquo;s and my arrival at your house, he
-had made a misstatement to each of us
-and had not repeated to us accurately what
-he had overheard you telling Silvia when
-he was on the porch roof. Miss Wade,
-what did he tell you about me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He said that Lucien said that your only
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span>
-failing was that you were daffy over women
-and made love to every one you saw.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Beth!&rdquo; I cried, light bursting in,
-&ldquo;and you believed that little wretch?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I did.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then that is why you have been so&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes&ndash;&ndash;so&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; repeated Rob grimly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I never did have any use for a
-man-flirt, and I was awfully disappointed,
-for I had thought from what Rob said
-that you were a man&rsquo;s man.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And then, of course, when for the first
-time in my life I began being interested in
-a woman&ndash;&ndash;in you&ndash;&ndash;I played right into
-that little scamp&rsquo;s hands.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He is a man&rsquo;s man, Beth,&rdquo; I said
-warmly. &ldquo;What Ptolemy heard me say
-was that Rob was a woman-hater.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am not!&rdquo; declared Rob indignantly&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;just
-a woman-shyer, but I haven&rsquo;t
-finished with Ptolemy&rsquo;s confession. I
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span>
-wonder, now, if either of you can guess
-what he told me was Miss Wade&rsquo;s characteristic.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t dare guess,&rdquo; laughed Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What I did say about Beth was that
-she was a born flirt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am not!&rdquo; protested my sister, in resentment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I should prefer that appellation to the
-one he gave you. He said you were
-strong-minded and a man-hater.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Even Beth saw the irony of this.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I asked him,&rdquo; continued Rob, &ldquo;what
-his motive was, and he said &lsquo;Stepdaddy
-didn&rsquo;t want Beth to know about the man-hater
-business,&rsquo; so he took that means of
-throwing you off the track.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I took the occasion to talk to him like
-a Dutch uncle, though I don&rsquo;t know
-exactly what that is. I think it was the
-first time anything but brute force had
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span>
-been tried on him. I must have touched
-some little flicker of the right thing in
-him, for he was really contrite and seemed
-to sense a different angle of vision when I
-explained to him what havoc could be
-worked by the misinformation of meddlers.
-He promised me he&rsquo;d try to overcome his
-tendency to start things going wrong.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I made no comment, but it occurred to
-me that Ptolemy was a shrewd little fellow,
-and that there had been wisdom back of
-his strategic speeches to Beth and Rob,
-for he had taken the one sure course to
-make them both &ldquo;take notice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So, Beth,&rdquo; said Rob, and her name
-seemed to come quite handily to him,
-&ldquo;can&rsquo;t we cut out the past ten days and
-begin our acquaintance right?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think we can,&rdquo; she answered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had better go upstairs,&rdquo; I suggested,
-&ldquo;and tell Silvia that Diogenes doesn&rsquo;t
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span>
-need a bath, seeing he has been in swimming.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Neither of them urged me to remain, so
-I went up to our room and found Silvia
-tucking Diogenes under cover.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you come up for?&rdquo; she asked.
-&ldquo;I was just coming down to join you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Beth is treating Rob so&ndash;&ndash;differently,
-that I thought it well to retreat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am so glad! Whatever came over
-the spirit of her dreams?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve just discovered in the course
-of conversation that Ptolemy as usual
-crossed the wires and told Beth Rob was
-a flirt, and then informed Rob that Beth
-was strong-minded and a man-hater.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, the little imp!&rdquo; she exclaimed indignantly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. It worked, anyway, so
-Ptolemy was the bad means to a good
-end.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;How did they ever happen to discover
-what he had done?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They caught on from something Rob
-said,&rdquo; I told her, feeling again guilty at
-keeping my first secret from her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It will be a fine match for Beth,&rdquo; said
-Silvia. &ldquo;Rob is such a splendid man,
-and then he has plenty of money. He
-can give her anything she wants.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I winced. I think Silvia must have
-been conscious of it, even though the room
-was dark, for she came to me quickly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish I could give you&ndash;&ndash;everything&ndash;&ndash;anything&ndash;&ndash;you
-want, Silvia.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You have, Lucien. The things that
-no money could buy&ndash;&ndash;love and protection.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Well, maybe I had. I had surely given
-her protection from the Polydores, though
-she didn&rsquo;t know to what extent.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am going to give you more material
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span>
-things, though, Silvia. When we go home,
-I shall start to work in earnest and see if
-I can&rsquo;t get enough ahead to make a good
-investment I know of.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d rather do without the necessities
-even, Lucien, than to have you work any
-harder than you have been doing. We
-must let well enough alone.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_26' id='linki_26'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-032.jpg' alt='' title='' width='157' height='254' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_27' id='linki_27'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-031.jpg' alt='' title='' width='342' height='124' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XII__TOO_MUCH_POLYDORES' id='CHAPTER_XII__TOO_MUCH_POLYDORES'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XII</span></h2>
-<h3>&ldquo;<i>Too Much Polydores</i>&rdquo;</h3>
-</div>
-<p>The next morning at breakfast, Beth
-announced that she and Rob were
-going to spend the day camping in
-the woods.</p>
-<p>Silvia and I tried not to look significantly
-at each other, but Beth was very keen.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We will take Diogenes with us,&rdquo; she
-instantly added.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; protested Silvia. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll be
-such a bother. And then he can&rsquo;t walk
-very far, you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll be no bother,&rdquo; persisted Beth.
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span>
-&ldquo;And we&rsquo;ll borrow the little cart to draw
-him in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; acquiesced Rob. &ldquo;We sure
-want Diogenes with us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have them put up a lunch for you,&rdquo;
-proposed Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Rob objected. &ldquo;We are going to
-forage and cook over a fire in the woods.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; I proposed to Silvia with alacrity,
-&ldquo;we&rsquo;ll have our first day alone together&ndash;&ndash;the
-first we have had since the
-Polydores came into our lives. I&rsquo;ll rent the
-&lsquo;autoo&rsquo; again, and we will go through the
-country and dine at some little wayside inn.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get the &lsquo;autoo&rsquo;, now, Lucien,&rdquo; advised
-Beth privately, &ldquo;and make an early start,
-so Rob and I can take supplies from the
-store without arousing Silvia&rsquo;s suspicions.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe,&rdquo; said Silvia disappointedly,
-when we were &ldquo;autooing&rdquo; on
-our way, &ldquo;that they are in love after all,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span>
-or that he has proposed, or that he is going
-to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did you draw all those pessimistic
-inferences from?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;From their both being so keen to take
-Diogenes with them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Diogenes would be no barrier to their
-love-making,&rdquo; I told her. &ldquo;He couldn&rsquo;t
-repeat what they said; at least, not so
-anyone could understand him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Many miles away we came upon a picturesque
-little old-time tavern where we
-had an appetizing dinner, and then continued
-on our aimless way. It was nearly
-ten o&rsquo;clock when we returned to the hotel,
-where the owner of the &ldquo;autoo&rdquo; was waiting.</p>
-<p>Rob came down the roadway.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s Beth?&rdquo; asked Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She has gone to bed. The day in the
-open made her sleepy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When Silvia had left us, the old farmer
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span>
-said with a chuckle: &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t offer you another
-swig of stone fence.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s probably just as well you can&rsquo;t,&rdquo;
-I replied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to be introduced to one,&rdquo; said
-Rob, who appeared to be somewhat downcast.
-&ldquo;I sure need a bracer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter, Rob?&rdquo; I asked
-when we were lighting our pipes. &ldquo;A
-strenuous day? Two in rapid &lsquo;concussion&rsquo;
-with the Polydores must be nerve-racking.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; I admit there seemed to be &lsquo;too
-much Polydores.&rsquo; We all had a happy reunion,
-and I devoted the forenoon to the
-entertainment of the famous family so I
-could be entitled to the afternoon off to
-spend with Beth. At noon we built a fire
-and cooked a sumptuous dinner. Beth
-baked up some things to keep them supplied
-a couple of days longer. After dinner
-I asked her to go for a row. She insisted
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span>
-on taking Diogenes along, and the
-others all followed us on a raft. So I
-decided to cut the water sports short, and
-Beth and I started for a walk in the woods.
-Three or more were constantly right on
-our trail. I begged and bribed, but to
-no avail. They were sticktights all right,
-and,&rdquo; he added morosely, &ldquo;she seemed
-covertly to aid and abet them. When we
-started for home, I found that the young
-fiends had broken the cart, so I had to
-carry Diogenes most of the way, and of
-course he bellowed as usual at being parted
-from the whelps.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_28' id='linki_28'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-033.jpg' alt='' title='' width='177' height='289' /><br />
-</div>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;They aren&rsquo;t such &lsquo;fine little chaps&rsquo;
-after all,&rdquo; I couldn&rsquo;t resist commenting.
-&ldquo;Familiarity breeds contempt, you see. I
-am sorry Diogenes had so much of their
-society. He&rsquo;ll be unendurable tomorrow.
-Well, you had some day!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So did the Polydores. Demetrius and
-Diogenes fell in the fire twice. Emerald
-threw a finger out of joint, but Ptolemy
-quickly jerked it into place. Pythagoras
-was kicked off the raft twice, following a
-mutiny. Demetrius threw a lighted match
-into the vines and set fire to the house.
-They said it was a &lsquo;beaut of a day&rsquo;, though,
-and urged us to come tomorrow and repeat
-the program. By the way, they went
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span>
-across the lake on their raft yesterday and
-bought a tent of some campers. They have
-pitched it in the woods beyond the house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When I went upstairs Silvia met me
-disconsolately.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t propose,&rdquo; she said disappointedly.
-&ldquo;She wouldn&rsquo;t let him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you wake her up to find out?&rdquo; I
-asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She hadn&rsquo;t gone to bed and she wasn&rsquo;t
-sleepy. She was trimming a hat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why wouldn&rsquo;t she let him propose, if
-she cares for him?&rdquo; I asked perplexedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you see,&rdquo; explained Silvia, &ldquo;that
-when a girl&ndash;&ndash;a coquette girl like Beth&ndash;&ndash;is
-as sure of a man as she is of Rob, she
-gets a touch of contrariness or offishness
-or something. She said it would have been
-too prosaic and cut and dried if they had
-gone away for a day in the woods and come
-back engaged. She wants the unexpected.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you think she loves him?&rdquo; I asked
-interestedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t say so. You can&rsquo;t tell
-from what she says anyway. Still, I think
-she is hovering around the danger point.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;d better watch out. Rob isn&rsquo;t
-the kind of a man who will stand for too
-much thwarting,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If he&rsquo;d only play up a little bit to some
-one else, it would bring things to a climax,&rdquo;
-said my wife sagely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no one else to play up to. The
-blonde left today because it was so slow
-here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe some new girl will come tomorrow,&rdquo;
-said Silvia, &ldquo;or there&rsquo;s that
-trim little waitress who is waiting her way
-through college. He gave her a good big tip
-yesterday. I think I will give him a hint.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t help any. He wouldn&rsquo;t
-know how to play such a game if you could
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span>
-persuade him to try. He&rsquo;d probably tell
-the girl his motive in being attentive to her
-and then she&rsquo;d back out. Maybe, after
-all, Beth doesn&rsquo;t love him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think she does,&rdquo; replied my wife,
-&ldquo;because she is getting absent-minded.
-She let Diogenes go too near the fire. His
-shoes are burned, his hair singed, and his
-dress scorched. He woke up when I came
-in and he was so cross. He acted just
-the way he does when he is with his
-brothers.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_29' id='linki_29'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-034.jpg' alt='' title='' width='256' height='218' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_30' id='linki_30'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-035.jpg' alt='' title='' width='361' height='118' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XIII__ROBS_FRIEND_THE_REPORTER' id='CHAPTER_XIII__ROBS_FRIEND_THE_REPORTER'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XIII</span></h2>
-<h3><i>Rob&rsquo;s Friend the Reporter</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Silvia&rsquo;s vague prophecy was fulfilled.
-When the event of the day,
-the arrival of the stage, occurred, a
-solitary passenger alighted, a slim, alert,
-city-cut young woman.</p>
-<p>She looked us all over&ndash;&ndash;not boldly, but
-with a business-like directness as if she
-were taking inventory of stock, or acting
-as judge at a competition. When her
-blue eyes lighted on Rob, they darkened
-with pleasure.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Rossiter!&rdquo; she exclaimed,
-&ldquo;this is better than I hoped for.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They shook hands with the air of being
-old acquaintances, and he introduced her to
-us as &ldquo;Miss Frayne, from my home town.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She went into the office, registered, and
-sent her bag to her room. Then she asked
-Rob if she might have a talk with him.</p>
-<p>They walked away together down to
-the shore and she was talking to him quite
-excitedly. Rob suddenly stopped, threw
-back his head and laughed in the way
-that it is good to hear a man laugh.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Frayne must be a wit,&rdquo; observed
-Beth dryly.</p>
-<p>I looked at her keenly. Something in
-her eyes as she gazed after the retreating
-couple told me that Silvia&rsquo;s surmise was
-right, and that Miss Frayne might be just
-the little punch needed to send Beth over
-the danger point.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I rather incline to the belief that
-Ptolemy told the truth in the first place,&rdquo;
-she continued, and then looked disappointed
-because I did not contradict her.</p>
-<p>I decided not to reveal, for the present
-anyway, what I knew of Miss Frayne, of
-whom I had often heard Rob speak.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She can&rsquo;t be going to stay long,&rdquo; said Silvia
-hopefully. &ldquo;She didn&rsquo;t bring a trunk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t need one,&rdquo; replied Beth.
-&ldquo;She is probably one of those mannish
-girls who believe in a skirt and a few
-waists for a wardrobe.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When Rob and the newcomer returned,
-he seemed to be monopolizing the conversation
-in a very emphatic and earnest
-manner. As they came up the steps to the
-veranda, we heard her say:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Very well, Mr. Rossiter, I will do just
-as you say. I have perfect confidence in
-your judgment.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span></div>
-<p>They passed on into the hotel and
-Beth jumped up and went down toward
-the lake.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you ever hear Rob speak of this
-Miss Frayne?&rdquo; asked Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Often. She is engaged to his cousin,
-and is a reporter on a big newspaper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you say so? Oh, Lucien,&rdquo;
-she continued before I could speak, &ldquo;were
-you really shrewd enough to see which way
-the wind was blowing?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure. After you set my sails for me
-last night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Just then Rob came out of the hotel.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say, Lucien, I want to see you a minute.
-Come on down the road.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got some work ahead,&rdquo; he said
-when we were out of Silvia&rsquo;s hearing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s up?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Frayne is up&ndash;&ndash;and doing. What
-do you suppose her paper sent her here for?&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;For a rest, or to write up the mosquitoes
-of H. H.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;H. H. is all right, only it happens they
-stand for Haunted House.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not really?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, really. The rumors of the house
-and the ghost, greatly elaborated, of course,
-reached the Sunday editor of the paper
-Miss Frayne is on, and he sent her up here
-to revive the story of the murder, translate
-the ghost, and get snapshots of the house.
-She was quite keen to have me take her
-there at once, so she could commence her
-article, but I headed her off, so she wouldn&rsquo;t
-discover the summer boarders at the hotel
-annex. I assured her that daytime was
-not the time to gather material and the
-only way she could get a proper focus on
-the ghost and acquire the thrills necessary
-for an inspiration was to see the place
-first by night.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;If she would view Fair Melrose aright,&rdquo;
-I quoted, &ldquo;she must visit it in the pale
-moonlight, but you were very clever to
-delay her visit long enough for us to get
-over there and warn the enemy. If she
-had gone down there and caught the
-Polydores unawares, she would have come
-back here and revealed our secret, and
-there would be the end of Silvia&rsquo;s vacation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To tell the truth, Lucien, I wasn&rsquo;t
-thinking so much of that as I was of Miss
-Frayne&rsquo;s interests. You see she has come
-a long ways for a story and if it collapsed
-from her ghostly expectations to a showdown
-of four healthy boys, the blow might
-mean a good deal to her in a business way.
-I think we had better let Ptolemy plant a
-ghost just once more for her. You know
-you made him take a reef in the flapping of
-ghostly garments. Can&rsquo;t we resurrect the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span>
-specter and restore the wails just for tonight,
-and bring her over here at the
-witching hour?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure we will,&rdquo; I agreed heartily. &ldquo;She
-shall have her ghost and all the trappings.
-It will give the Polydores the time of their
-lives.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go over there now and put Ptolemy
-next so he can get busy on his spirits.&rdquo;
-We went down to the shore and pulled
-off. Midway across the lake, Rob suddenly
-rested on his oars and asked:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did Beth go?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Back to first principles,&rdquo; I replied.
-&ldquo;She thinks, judging from your excited,
-earnest manner in addressing Miss Frayne
-and your rushing frantically away for a
-walk with her before she had removed the
-travel dust, that Ptolemy was quite correct,
-after all, in declaring you to be a
-&lsquo;ladies&rsquo; man.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you explain to her who Miss
-Frayne was?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;I am on my vacation
-and I am not doing any explaining, professionally
-or otherwise.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He swung the boat around.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Starboard!&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you
-know a trump card when you see it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Again he rested on his oars and stared
-at me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you mean, Lucien? If you
-have a grain of hope for me, please let me
-in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I repeated Silvia&rsquo;s theories.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am not going to win her that way,&rdquo;
-he said slowly, &ldquo;not by playing a part.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I declared, &ldquo;if you go back to
-the hotel now, you can&rsquo;t explain Miss
-Frayne to Beth, because she went for a
-walk with old Professor Treadtop.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He turned the boat again.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia won&rsquo;t come to the Haunted
-House, will she?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, indeed. Nothing would induce
-her to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you bring Miss Frayne here tonight
-and I&rsquo;ll bring Beth. And I&rsquo;ll be sure
-that there are no double boats lying around
-loose. I&rsquo;ll have two at the dock, see?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see your system,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;but I
-am not sure how I can explain Miss Frayne
-to Silvia. Silvia is not in the least narrow-minded,
-but still to leave the hotel at
-midnight with a perfectly strange young
-woman&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can tell her I want a clear field for
-Beth. She will see it is in a good cause.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Polydores greeted us rapturously
-and roughly. When I had restored order,
-and they were once more right side up, I
-addressed the chief of the bandits.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; I began, &ldquo;a young lady,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span>
-who is a reporter for a big newspaper, has
-come from many miles away to write up
-the haunted house and the ghost, and they
-will be pictured out in the Sunday edition.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy&rsquo;s eyes glistened, and &ldquo;Them
-Three&rdquo; were instantly &ldquo;at attention.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, say, stepdaddy,&rdquo; begged the young
-chief, &ldquo;let me play ghost right for her, just
-once, will you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You may for tonight,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;but
-you will have to be very careful and not
-overdo the matter, for she isn&rsquo;t the kind
-that is easily fooled. She&rsquo;s had to keep
-her eyes and wits sharpened, else she
-wouldn&rsquo;t be on a newspaper, so I want
-you to be very careful and not bungle.
-Make a neat job of it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do it up brown, you bet!&rdquo; he cried
-gleefully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Naw, do it up white,&rdquo; drawled Pythagoras.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Show me your ghost stuff by daylight,&rdquo;
-I demanded, &ldquo;and let me see how you are
-going to rig him up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He brought forth a head and shoulders
-and arms that were ghastly even in sunlight,
-and proceeded to explain them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I got this skull out of father&rsquo;s study,
-and the arms came off a skeleton mother
-had in her antiquities. I dressed them
-up in a pillow case and the white cotton
-gloves are Huldah&rsquo;s. I can get some
-phosphorus in the woods and put it in the
-eyes. And Demetrius bought two electric
-flashlights yesterday, and Pythagoras
-can snap them once in a while from the
-lower windows.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are some little property man,&rdquo;
-said Rob in admiration. &ldquo;But tell me
-who produces those heart-rending
-shrieks?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was Pythagoras who did the high
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span>
-ones. And Em came in with low groans.
-Show &rsquo;em, boys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Pythagoras uttered high-trebled, thin-toned
-whines and ever and anon Emerald
-added a <i>basso profundo</i> accompaniment,
-making a combination that was most trying
-to the ears at close range.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;as I want
-Beth subjected to such a realistic performance.
-We will loiter in the distance.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your rehearsal,&rdquo; I assured Ptolemy,
-&ldquo;is very good, but you must remember
-that Miss Frayne is used to encountering
-things far more terrible than ghosts. She
-may insist on coming right in here to investigate.
-Of course, if she does, I can&rsquo;t
-refuse or she&rsquo;ll think I am afraid, or else
-that I put up a fake ghost here, myself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll lock the door with a chair,&rdquo; suggested
-Emerald.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll be quite capable of breaking into
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span>
-a little house like this, but I&rsquo;ll keep her
-back until you have time to haul in your
-ghost and make a quick and quiet getaway
-by a back window. Then another thing,
-she&rsquo;ll be over here tomorrow morning to
-take some pictures of the house, so by sunrise
-I want you all to take up your abode
-in the tent you have in the woods and
-stay there until I come and tell you the
-coast is clear.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re dead on,&rdquo; assured Ptolemy.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad there&rsquo;s going to be something
-doing. We&rsquo;re getting tired of being here
-alone. I had to tie Demetrius up this
-morning. He was bound to go over to
-the hotel and see mudder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t one of you dare to make such an
-attempt,&rdquo; I said peremptorily. &ldquo;You keep
-right on here for a few days. Some of us,
-either Rob, or Beth and I will drop over
-every day. If you play your ghost just
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span>
-as I tell you and keep out of sight, I&rsquo;ll
-bring you over some ice cream tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bring me a bigger bat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bring me a mitt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bring me a boat,&rdquo; came in chorus from
-Ptolemy, Emerald, and Demetrius.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;ll you give me to stay here?&rdquo;
-asked Pythagoras, who was a born bargain-driver.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give you a licking if you don&rsquo;t stay,&rdquo;
-was the only offer he gleaned from me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Be good boys,&rdquo; adjured the softhearted
-Rob, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll bring you everything
-I can find at the hotel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was long past the luncheon hour
-when we returned. We found Miss Frayne
-wondering at Rob&rsquo;s sudden disappearance
-and Beth was accordingly mystified.</p>
-<p>I planted myself directly in front of
-Miss Frayne.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;May I take you to the haunted house
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span>
-tonight at the yawning churchyard hour?&rdquo;
-I asked. &ldquo;I am most eminently fitted to
-be your guide, for I was the first one of
-this assembly to see the ghost <i>in toto</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He saw it over a stone fence,&rdquo; remarked
-Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Indeed you may, thank you very
-much,&rdquo; she said enthusiastically.</p>
-<p>Silvia&rsquo;s face was a study.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And will you come with me, Beth?&rdquo;
-asked Rob. &ldquo;Of course, the ghost is an
-old story to us, but we really should hover
-in Lucien&rsquo;s wake out of regard to the
-conventions.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is Miss Frayne interested in ghosts?&rdquo;
-asked Beth.</p>
-<p>Miss Frayne turned and answered the
-question.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not personally,&rdquo; she admitted frankly,
-&ldquo;but the newspaper I am on is, and they
-sent me up here to get a story.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, you are a reporter?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; on the <i>Times</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She won&rsquo;t be one long, though,&rdquo; asserted
-Rob cheerfully, &ldquo;because she is
-going to marry my cousin in the fall.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth&rsquo;s expression remained neutral at
-the announcement, but I noticed throughout
-the afternoon that she was extremely
-affable toward Miss Frayne, and that she
-had the whiphand again with Rob, and
-meanwhile he seemed to be gathering a
-grim determination to do or die.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien, how did you come to ask Miss
-Frayne to go to that awful place tonight?&rdquo;
-asked Silvia when we had gone to our room
-for a siesta, which seemed impossible by
-reason of the bellowing of Diogenes, who
-balked at being required to lie down.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rob asked me to,&rdquo; I informed her,
-when I had cowed Diogenes, &ldquo;so he could
-have a free field for Beth. I believe he
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span>
-planned this expedition so he could storm
-the citadel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She reflected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, maybe he is wise. Girls like
-Beth have to be taken by storm sometimes.
-I shouldn&rsquo;t wonder if Rob could
-be a bit of a bully, too, but&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She ended her speculations in a shriek.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien! Diogenes has jumped out
-the window.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We rushed down stairs, Silvia informing
-the guests in transit of the awful catastrophe.</p>
-<p>Silvia paused at the door opening on to
-the veranda.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t see him,&rdquo; she said faintly,
-closing her eyes. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to tend to
-it alone, Lucien.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth was already at the telephone,
-which connected with the country doctor&rsquo;s.
-Rob joined me. We located our window,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span>
-and began hunting underneath for the
-pieces.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where in the world do you suppose he
-landed?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
-<p>Just then the missing one came around
-the house clasping a bologna sausage in
-his fist.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ye Gods and little Polydores!&rdquo; exclaimed
-Rob.</p>
-<p>I caught Diogenes by the arm and
-rushed him in to Silvia.</p>
-<p>I found her in company with an old
-colored mammy, who was laundress for
-the hotel.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sho&rsquo;,&rdquo; she was saying, &ldquo;I done gwine
-by de windah with ma baby cab full o&rsquo;
-cloes, an&rsquo; dis yer white chile done come
-tumblin&rsquo; down an&rsquo; fall right in ma cab.
-Now, what do you think o&rsquo; dat? I reckon
-I was nevah so done clean skeert afoah
-in ma life. An&rsquo; ef de chile didn&rsquo;t grab one
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span>
-of ma bolognas and done git out de cab
-an&rsquo; run around de house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; cried Silvia, &ldquo;poor little baby!
-Come to mudder. Lucien, where are you
-going with him?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I had picked up the acrobatic Polydore
-and was going up the stairs two at a
-time. I gained our room, locked the
-door and proceeded to give the &ldquo;poor
-little baby&rdquo; all that was coming to him.
-Now and then above his howls, I heard
-Silvia&rsquo;s plaintive protests outside the door,
-but I finished my job completely and
-satisfactorily, and laid the penitent Polydore
-in his little bed. Then I went out into
-the hall, feeling better than I had in months.</p>
-<p>Silvia essayed to pass me, but I took
-her arm and led her to a recess in the hall.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am convinced,&rdquo; I told her, &ldquo;that we
-have Diogenes as a permanent pensioner
-on our hands, so it was up to me to show
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span>
-him where to get off. You can&rsquo;t go to him
-for a quarter of an hour.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We went down stairs and I was sure I
-read suppressed regret in the faces of most
-of the guests at learning of the soft place
-in which Diogenes&rsquo; lot had been cast.
-Silvia tearfully told Rob and Beth of my
-cruelty.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_31' id='linki_31'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-036.jpg' alt='' title='' width='228' height='299' /><br />
-</div>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Do him good!&rdquo; approved Rob heartily.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How mean men are!&rdquo; declared Beth
-indignantly. &ldquo;I am going up and comfort
-the poor little thing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I held up the key to the room with a
-grin, and she had to content herself by
-making unkind remarks about me.</p>
-<p>At the expiration of the allotted time, I
-handed Silvia the key. She took it from
-me without a word or a look. It was
-quite evident I was in wrong.</p>
-<p>In half an hour my wife came down,
-carrying Diogenes, who, dressed in fresh
-white clothes, was a good picture of an
-angel child. She passed me and went to
-a remote corner of the veranda and sat
-down. When he spied me, he leaped from
-her arms and ran to me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ocean,&rdquo; he said propitiatingly, &ldquo;me
-love oo.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span></div>
-<p>I took him up. His arms clasped about
-my neck, and over his curly head, I winked
-at Silvia and Beth.</p>
-<p>Rob roared.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_32' id='linki_32'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-037.jpg' alt='' title='' width='227' height='213' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_33' id='linki_33'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-038.jpg' alt='' title='' width='353' height='129' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XIV__A_MIDNIGHT_EXCURSION' id='CHAPTER_XIV__A_MIDNIGHT_EXCURSION'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XIV</span></h2>
-<h3><i>A Midnight Excursion</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>The night was Satan&rsquo;s own: dark,
-wind-shrieking, and Polydorish.
-No one saw us leave the hotel when,
-at a late hour, we started on our little
-excursion. On account of the darkness
-and the poor landing near the haunted
-house, we decided to go by the overland
-route. I managed to purloin a lantern
-from the kitchen to light our path.</p>
-<p>Rob and Beth kept behind Miss Frayne
-and myself, and in spite of the wildness of
-the weather, he was evidently pleading his
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span>
-suit, for now and then above the roar of
-the wind, I heard his ardent voice. Apparently
-Beth had not yet given him any
-encouragement.</p>
-<p>Going down the lane my lantern underwent
-a total eclipse, so we had a Jordan-like
-road to travel. Miss Frayne was
-quite impervious to unfavorable conditions,
-as it was a matter of bread and butter to
-her, she said, and she was accustomed to
-braving worse storms than this, and anyway
-she hadn&rsquo;t come here for a summer picnic.</p>
-<p>When we came into the grove it was so
-dark, I lost my bearings.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t we bring a flashlight?&rdquo;
-asked Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There were none at the hotel,&rdquo; I told
-her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know some boys,&rdquo; said Rob with a
-little laugh, &ldquo;who would have lent us one&ndash;&ndash;maybe.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span></div>
-<p>Fortunately we were well provided with
-safety matches and after striking a box or
-so, we gained the open. A rise of ground
-hid the house, but when we climbed to the
-top, the ghost loomed up ghastlier than
-ever.</p>
-<p>I felt the business-like Miss Frayne start
-and shiver as a little scream escaped her.
-I didn&rsquo;t wonder. Even I, knowing that it
-was an illusion and a snare, felt my flesh
-creeping as I looked at the ghastly thing in
-the window.</p>
-<p>Every now and then according to schedule
-a light flashed from the windows below.
-And then came the blood-curdling sounds&ndash;&ndash;whimpers
-and groans that were rivaling
-the whistling of the wind.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is awful!&rdquo; said Miss Frayne in a
-hoarse whisper.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you want to go inside the house?&rdquo;
-I asked.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;No&ndash;&ndash;o! I couldn&rsquo;t. Not tonight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We were some little in advance of Rob
-and Beth. When one spectral sound came
-like a tense whisper, Miss Frayne turned
-and fled, and of course I followed her. We
-could not see our two companions, but
-suddenly in an interim of wind and ghost
-whispers, we heard Beth say:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Rob. I think we should really
-be cosier in a story-and-a-half cottage than
-we should in a bungalow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ye Gods!&rdquo; muttered Miss Frayne, &ldquo;did
-he propose in the face of that awful Thing?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ship ahoy!&rdquo; I called.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, didn&rsquo;t you go inside?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go in! I wouldn&rsquo;t go inside that place;
-not if I lose my job on the paper. What
-can it be? You don&rsquo;t seem to mind it,
-Miss Wade.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you know,&rdquo; said Beth apologetically,
-&ldquo;this is my third performance.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span></div>
-<p>We were now down the hill out of sight
-of the gruesome, ghastly window display,
-and Miss Frayne gained courage as we
-retreated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course I don&rsquo;t believe in ghosts,&rdquo;
-she said, &ldquo;but what do you suppose that
-is?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had a theory,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;that it is the
-work of a lunatic, but I&rsquo;ve since concluded
-it is due to practical jokers. I&rsquo;ll tell you
-what I&rsquo;ll do. If you wait here, I&rsquo;ll investigate
-and see what I can find out for you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, would you really dare, Mr. Wade?
-I don&rsquo;t believe men ever have creepy
-nerves,&rdquo; she exclaimed.</p>
-<p>I began to feel ashamed of my deception.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t go, Lucien,&rdquo; warned Rob,
-coming to my rescue. &ldquo;There may be a
-gang of desperadoes in there, or counterfeit
-money-makers, or something of that kind.
-Besides, I have a far more interesting piece
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span>
-of news than anything the ghost could
-give you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rob!&rdquo; protested Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We know it already,&rdquo; I laughed. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-to be a story-and-a-half high.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think I am getting material for quite
-a story,&rdquo; declared Miss Frayne.</p>
-<p>I knew Beth&rsquo;s dislike of scenes and display
-of emotions&ndash;&ndash;mock heroics&ndash;&ndash;she
-called them, so I made no congratulatory
-speeches of the bless-you-my-children order,
-but presently under the cover of darkness,
-I felt a little hand slipped in mine, and my
-clasp was eloquent of what I felt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; said Miss Frayne, &ldquo;that daylight
-will make me so ashamed of my
-cowardice that I can come down here and
-take some pictures and go inside the
-house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll all come with you,&rdquo; promised
-Beth. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s safety in numbers.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span></div>
-<p>When we were back at the hotel I managed
-to have a few words with Rob before
-we went upstairs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bless the ghost!&rdquo; he said cheerily.
-&ldquo;When Beth first glimpsed it, she just
-turned and fell into my arms. She was
-really frightened for the first time. I shall
-feel under obligations to Ptolemy for a
-lifetime.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank goodness!&rdquo; I ejaculated fervently,
-&ldquo;that I am under no obligations to
-a Polydore. Ptolemy certainly did put
-up the most ghastly thing in the way of
-ghosts. The lights in the eyes of the
-skeleton were frightful.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you see the ghost?&rdquo; asked Silvia
-sleepily, when I came in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; same old ghost, only more of
-him,&rdquo; I assured her.</p>
-<p>She was asleep before I had uttered this
-reply.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;I have a more startling
-piece of news for you than that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She sat bolt upright.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are they engaged, Lucien?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They are. They are building their
-castle&ndash;&ndash;I mean their story-and-a-half
-cottage already.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Alas for my own desire to sleep! I had
-so effectually awakened Silvia that she
-planned Beth&rsquo;s trousseau, the wedding,
-honeymoon, and the furnishing of their
-house before she subsided.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_34' id='linki_34'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-039.jpg' alt='' title='' width='324' height='221' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_35' id='linki_35'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-040.jpg' alt='' title='' width='366' height='133' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XV__WHAT_MISS_FRAYNE_FOUND_OUT' id='CHAPTER_XV__WHAT_MISS_FRAYNE_FOUND_OUT'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XV</span></h2>
-<h3><i>What Miss Frayne Found Out</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>We had planned to go to the haunted
-house at nine o&rsquo;clock the next
-morning, but owing to my dissipation
-of the night before, it was long
-after the appointed hour when Silvia awoke
-me.</p>
-<p>I hurried down stairs and ate my breakfast
-in solitude. I inquired for Beth and
-Rob, but the waitress told me they had left
-the dining-room at seven o&rsquo;clock and gone
-for a walk in the woods. She said it with
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span>
-a knowing smile that told me she, too, must
-be a &ldquo;sister of the Golden Circle.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And Miss Frayne?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She went down the road over an hour
-ago.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Evidently her courage had come up with
-the sun. I was greatly disturbed at the
-chance of her stumbling over one or more
-Polydores, and Rob didn&rsquo;t want to let the
-cat out of the bag until her article was
-written, as he believed that if the ghostly
-spell were broken, she would lose her
-&ldquo;punch.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I was unable to think of any plausible
-explanation to offer Silvia as to why I
-should start in pursuit, and I wished all
-sorts of dire calamities on Rob&rsquo;s blond
-head. Lovers were surely blind and selfish.</p>
-<p>About ten o&rsquo;clock they came strolling
-in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t know it was so late,&rdquo; said
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span>
-Beth cheerfully, &ldquo;but the boys will keep
-in the woods all right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;With her nose for news, there is no
-telling how far into the woods Miss Frayne&rsquo;s
-investigation will take her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say we go down by the lane and meet
-her,&rdquo; proposed Beth, &ldquo;so that if she has
-run across the boys we can explain to her
-why we desire secrecy from Silvia.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You and Rob go,&rdquo; I advised. &ldquo;It
-would seem odd to Silvia if we didn&rsquo;t ask
-her to go with us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So the newly engaged couple started
-down the road, but in their self-absorption
-they didn&rsquo;t notice the turn to the lane, and
-they got half way to Windy Creek before
-they came back to earth and the hotel.
-Miss Frayne still had not shown up, and I
-began to have misgivings lest the Polydores
-had locked her up in the house, but
-finally just as we were having a happy
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span>
-family gathering and discussing the new
-event under the shade of the one resort
-tree, she came excitedly up to us.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Such an interesting morning as I have
-had!&rdquo; she exclaimed enthusiastically. &ldquo;I
-made some corking pictures of the place,
-and I&rsquo;ve found out about not only that
-ghost, but all ghosts&ndash;&ndash;the whole race of
-ghosts.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I hurriedly interrupted her and made
-elaborate and jumbled apologies for not
-keeping our engagement, which evidently
-bored her and mystified Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am glad I went alone,&rdquo; she finally
-replied. &ldquo;Otherwise I might not have
-got such an interesting interview.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth, Rob, and I made frantic and appealing
-gestures to her behind Silvia&rsquo;s
-back, but she didn&rsquo;t seem to notice them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Whom did you interview, the ghost?&rdquo;
-asked Silvia.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;No, indeed. Some very interesting and
-unusual people who are staying there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I threw her a wildly beseeching glance
-and Beth and Rob began at the same time
-to ply her with distracting questions. I
-think she seemed to divine that there was
-something in the situation that was not
-to be explained, but Silvia interrupted
-them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do let Miss Frayne tell us about her
-interview,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We all seem to be
-very talkative today.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I saw there was no way to dodge the
-d&eacute;nouement, so I awaited the finale in
-dread desperation. It proved to be more
-of a stunner than I had expected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I went down the lane,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and
-through the grove, up the little hill, and
-laughed at myself for the hallucinations
-of the night before. There were no ghosts
-visible and the door to the haunted house
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span>
-was hospitably open. I stood on the hill
-long enough to make some pictures and
-then went on. I walked up the steps
-fearlessly and looked within. A woman,
-an untidy, disheveled-looking woman, sat
-at a table writing furiously in just the same
-breathless way I write when I have a scoop,
-and the presses are waiting open-mouthed
-for my copy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She looked up and scowled at my intrusion.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Don&rsquo;t bother me,&rsquo; she said, and continued
-writing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I went through the house and came
-outside again where I met an absent-minded,
-spectacled man. I told him who
-I was and of my object in coming to the
-house. Then he showed signs of coming to.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Oh, the ghost!&rsquo; he said. &lsquo;That is
-what brought me here. My wife is interested
-in more tangible, more material
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span>
-things. We have just returned from a long
-journey, and when we were nearly to our
-destination, our place of residence, I happened
-to read in a paper about this haunted
-house and its apparition, so we came right
-up here this morning to remain overnight
-and see if the article were true.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told him how successful I had been
-and he became quite alert and enthusiastic.
-He showed me why I should not have been
-alarmed, because ghosts, he said, were
-scientific facts. He then explained to me
-at length how the gases from the dead
-arise and form a nebulous vapor or a vaporous
-nebula. It sounded very simple and
-plausible when he told me, but I can&rsquo;t seem
-to remember it. Fortunately I have it all
-down in writing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia&rsquo;s eyes and mine had met in speechless
-horror since she had mentioned the
-&ldquo;writing woman.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien!&rdquo; Silvia now said in a tragic,
-hoarse whisper&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;the Polydores!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, do you know them?&rdquo; asked Miss
-Frayne. &ldquo;Dr. Felix Polydore, the eminent
-LL.D. or something like that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The whole family are D&rsquo;s,&rdquo; I said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;His wife is the highest of high-brows,
-and they are averse to interviews. They
-moved to a small city sometime ago to be
-secluded. Just think of my opportunity!
-I have them headlined! &lsquo;The Haunted
-House of Hope Haven. Ghost that appears
-at midnight scientifically explained
-by the distinguished Dr. Felix Polydore.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think we are in luck,&rdquo; I said to Silvia,
-on second thoughts. &ldquo;We will take them
-home by the nape of the neck and deliver
-their children into their keeping to have
-and to hold.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t turn Diogenes over to them,&rdquo;
-she said plaintively.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Diogenes!&rdquo; repeated Miss Frayne in
-astonishment.</p>
-<p>I then narrated to her the history of
-our next-door neighbors, and how they
-planted their five children upon us.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We had better go down at once and see
-them,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;before they escape.
-No telling where they might take it in their
-heads to go.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We will,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll go soon after
-luncheon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thrice blessed haunted house,&rdquo; quoted
-Rob. &ldquo;It gave me Beth, and it has restored
-the parents of the wise Ptolemy and
-&lsquo;Them Three.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And gave me a ripping story,&rdquo; said
-Miss Frayne.</p>
-<p>Just then the gong sounded, and after
-luncheon while I was comfortably tipped
-back in a chair, my feet on the veranda
-rail, seeing in the smoke from my pipe
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span>
-dream visions of Polydoreless days, a faint
-cry from Silvia brought me back to earth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien, look!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I looked.</p>
-<p>My chair came down to all fours and my
-feet slipped from the rail.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_36' id='linki_36'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-041.jpg' alt='' title='' width='220' height='230' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_37' id='linki_37'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-042.jpg' alt='' title='' width='359' height='115' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XVI__PTOLEMYS_TALE' id='CHAPTER_XVI__PTOLEMYS_TALE'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XVI</span></h2>
-<h3><i>Ptolemy&rsquo;s Tale</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Four defiant, determined-looking
-Polydores came up the steps and
-bore down upon us. Then Silvia
-as usual thought she saw land ahead.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, boys,&rdquo; she asked hopefully, &ldquo;did
-your father send for you to meet him here?
-And when is he going to take you home?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t I tell you,&rdquo; I thundered at
-Ptolemy, &ldquo;that you were not to leave that
-house&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It left us,&rdquo; interrupted Emerald with
-a grin.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Went up in smoke,&rdquo; added Pythagoras
-blithely, &ldquo;ghost and all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Four minutes quicker,&rdquo; said Demetrius,
-&ldquo;and it would have took father and mother,
-too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, is it the haunted house they are
-talking about?&rdquo; asked Miss Frayne joyfully.
-&ldquo;What a story I&rsquo;ll have!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Life to Miss Frayne seemed to be one
-story after another. Well, it was certainly
-becoming the same way to us.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did the ghost set fire to the house?&rdquo;
-asked Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What are you all talking about,&rdquo; demanded
-Silvia, &ldquo;and how did you know
-these boys were there? How long have
-you been here?&rdquo; she asked, turning to
-Ptolemy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told you,&rdquo; I repeated angrily to the
-subdued boy, &ldquo;not to leave. Those were
-plain orders. If the house did burn up,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span>
-you could have stayed in your tent in the
-woods.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy&rsquo;s lips twitched faintly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The house burned up and all our
-clothes and our stuff to eat, and our bats
-and things, and father and mother went
-away and I didn&rsquo;t know what to do, so&ndash;&ndash;I
-came here. But we&rsquo;ll go back to our
-own house. We have learned to cook.
-Come on, boys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll stay right here with me, son,&rdquo;
-and Rob&rsquo;s hand came down intimately
-on Ptolemy&rsquo;s shoulder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t likely we&rsquo;ll turn them out into
-the woods, when they haven&rsquo;t a roof over
-their heads,&rdquo; declared Silvia, drawing
-Emerald to her side.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think you are absolutely inhuman,
-Lucien,&rdquo; cried Beth. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see what has
-changed you so,&rdquo; and she proceeded to make
-room for Pythagoras in the porch swing.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Did the fire scare you?&rdquo; asked Miss
-Frayne gently, as she put her arms about
-Demetrius.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Et tu, Brute? Well, I plainly see
-this is no place for an inhuman, childless,
-married man,&rdquo; I said with a laugh, walking
-down the veranda.</p>
-<p>In the doorway I met Diogenes, who
-raised his chubby arms invitingly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Up, up, Ocean!&rdquo; he begged sweetly.</p>
-<p>I lifted him to my shoulder, and then
-turned and walked triumphantly back to
-the family group.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;here is the whole
-d-dashed family. And I propose that each
-keep unto his charge the child he has now
-under his wing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Miss Frayne quickly relinquished the
-dirty Demetrius. Beth shrank away from
-Pythagoras.</p>
-<p>As I seated myself still holding Diogenes,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span>
-his brothers sprang toward him in greeting,
-but he spat at one, kicked at another, and
-pulled the hair of a third, although he patted
-Ptolemy&rsquo;s cheek gently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, we&rsquo;ll have this affair thrashed
-out,&rdquo; I declared in my most authoritative,
-professional manner, and I then proceeded
-to explain to Silvia the housing of the Polydores,
-and our strategies to keep their
-arrival a secret simply on her account.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because you know,&rdquo; interpolated Beth,
-with a consideration for the feelings of the
-young Polydores&ndash;&ndash;a consideration they
-had never before encountered&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;we
-wanted you to have a nice rest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia looked quite penitent and remorseful
-for her seeming lack of appreciation of
-our combined efforts. When I had answered
-all her inquiries satisfactorily, Miss Frayne&rsquo;s
-curiosity regarding the progeny of the eminent
-Polydores had to be fully relieved.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;And do you mean that the scribbling
-lady I saw at the table is really the mother
-of these five boys?&rdquo; she asked, unable to
-grasp the fact.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; and the father hereof is the man
-who explained the ghosts to you so scientifically
-that you cannot remember what
-he said. Now, Ptolemy, we&rsquo;ll hear your
-story of the fire and the whereabouts of
-your parents. Take your time and tell
-it accurately.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you see we did just as you said
-to, and took the ghost out of the window
-and went out to the woods early this
-morning so as not to let the paper lady
-see us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; cried Miss Frayne, &ldquo;am I the
-paper lady? I begin to see daylight.
-Are these boys the ghost perpetrators, and
-were you in on the put-up job?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a good guesser,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;And why wasn&rsquo;t I taken into your
-confidence?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For two reasons. First, because
-your friend Rob said you&rsquo;d get better
-results for copy&ndash;&ndash;more inspirations and
-thrills, if you weren&rsquo;t behind the scenes
-on the ghost business,&ndash;&ndash;and then we
-didn&rsquo;t want to tell you about the presence
-of the Polydores lest inadvertently you
-betray the fact to my wife. Now, proceed,
-Ptolemy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;After we were in the woods, I heard
-an automobile coming down the lane, and
-I went up near the edge of the woods and
-peeked out behind a tree, and pretty soon
-I saw father and mother come over the hill
-and go in our haunted house, so I came up
-there and hid under the window and heard
-mother say: &lsquo;What an ideal place to
-write this is. It looks as if I might really
-get a chance to write unmo&ndash;&ndash;&rsquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;&ndash;&ndash;lested,&rsquo;&rdquo; I finished for him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess so,&rdquo; he allowed. &ldquo;Well, she
-began writing, so I didn&rsquo;t go in, but when
-father came outside I went up to him and
-told him you and mudder were at the hotel
-and that we were all with you. He told
-me they came up here to write an article
-for some big magazine about the ghost.
-He hired an automobile down at Windy
-Creek to bring them up to the house and
-the man was going to come back for them
-tomorrow morning. I didn&rsquo;t let on the
-ghost was a fake, because I thought he&rsquo;d
-be so disappointed to have all his trouble
-for nothing, and he&rsquo;d be mad at me for
-swiping his skull. I told him a paper lady
-was coming and then I went back to the
-woods. He went down with me to see the
-boys, and he said he would come back and
-have lunch with us. Mother doesn&rsquo;t ever
-stop to eat at noon when she is writing.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;He went back and talked to the paper
-lady and pretty soon he came down and
-ate with us. I told him all about how we
-couldn&rsquo;t get any girl to do the work for us
-and so we had been living with you, and
-how Di got sick and mudder was all worn
-out taking care of him and came down
-here to rest, and that you wouldn&rsquo;t cash
-the check, so I did and was spending it and
-he said that was all right.&rdquo; Here Ptolemy
-flashed me a most triumphant glance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He said you must be paid for all your
-expense and trouble, so he made out a
-check and gave it to me and told me to
-make mudder a nice present. He ain&rsquo;t
-so bad when he ain&rsquo;t thinking about dead
-stuff. When he felt in his pocket for his
-check book, he found a letter he had got
-yesterday and forgotten to open, so he
-read it then and found it was from some
-magazine, and the man said he&rsquo;d pay his
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span>
-and mother&rsquo;s expenses to go to Chili and
-write up some stuff about&ndash;&ndash;something.
-So father said they must go at once.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not to Chili!&rdquo; I exclaimed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; we all went up to the house with
-him and I took mother&rsquo;s pencil and paper
-away so she would have to listen. She
-was wild for Chili, and I had to go and hunt
-up a farmer who had a machine to take
-them down to Windy Creek. Father
-signed another blank check for you and said
-you could board us with it or do anything
-you thought best.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then mother took a lot of papers out
-of her bag, some stuff she had written and
-didn&rsquo;t get suited with, and she stuffed them
-in the stove and set fire to them. Then
-we all went down to the lane to see father
-and mother off and when we got back the
-house was on fire. The chimney burned
-out.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Guess mother must have written some
-hot stuff,&rdquo; said Emerald.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was burning so fast,&rdquo; continued
-Ptolemy, &ldquo;that we didn&rsquo;t dast go in to
-save anything and all our food and clothes
-and balls and bats and fishing tackle are
-gone, and we didn&rsquo;t know what to do, or
-what to eat, and so&ndash;&ndash;we came here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You did just right, Ptolemy,&rdquo; I admitted.
-&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t have called you down&ndash;&ndash;not
-until I heard your story, anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I held out my hand, which he shook
-solemnly, but with an injured air.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you mean to tell me,&rdquo; asked Miss
-Frayne, &ldquo;that your father and mother
-went away without seeing the baby?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy flushed a little.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; he explained apologetically,
-&ldquo;mother gets woolly when she writes and
-she&rsquo;s forgotten there&rsquo;s Di. She thinks
-Demetrius is the youngest. She&rsquo;s mad
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span>
-about writing. If she sees a blank
-paper anywhere, she ain&rsquo;t happy until she
-has written something on it, and the sight
-of a pencil makes her fingers itch.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_38' id='linki_38'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-043.jpg' alt='' title='' width='206' height='276' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Take warning, Miss Frayne,&rdquo; I said,
-&ldquo;and don&rsquo;t get too literary.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some day,&rdquo; resumed Ptolemy,
-&ldquo;mother&rsquo;ll get the antiques all out of
-her system and then she&rsquo;ll remember us.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span></div>
-<p>I liked the boy&rsquo;s defense of his mother,
-and I began to see that Rob was right in
-thinking there were possibilities in the
-lad, but it was Silvia&rsquo;s influence that had
-developed them, for in the days when he
-borrowed soup plates of us, there had been
-no redeeming trait that I could discern.</p>
-<p>And while I was recalling this, I heard
-Silvia saying to him kindly: &ldquo;And in the
-meantime, I&rsquo;ll be &lsquo;mudder&rsquo; to you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So will I,&rdquo; chimed in Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be a big brother,&rdquo; offered Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be next friend, Ptolemy,&rdquo; I contributed.</p>
-<p>Strange to say, my offer seemed to make
-the most impression on him. He came to
-me and gazed into my eyes earnestly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do just as you say,&rdquo; he promised.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where do we&rsquo;uns come in?&rdquo; asked
-Pythagoras, with one of his satanic grins.</p>
-<p>Miss Frayne saved the day.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You all come in with me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and
-have lunch. I haven&rsquo;t eaten since breakfast,
-and I understand there is warm ginger cake
-and huckleberry pie. Aren&rsquo;t you hungry?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You bet,&rdquo; spoke up Pythagoras. &ldquo;We
-only had coffee, peanuts, and beans down in
-the woods, and father ate the beans and
-drank all the coffee.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re out of the frying pan into the
-fire,&rdquo; said Silvia woefully, when we were
-alone.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish the Polydore parents had gone
-up in smoke,&rdquo; I declared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then your last hope of getting rid of
-the children would have gone up in smoke,
-too,&rdquo; argued Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; in case of the demise of their
-parents, we could have turned them over
-body and soul to the probate court,&rdquo; I
-informed her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We will fill out this blank check for
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span>
-any amount, Lucien,&rdquo; declared Silvia,
-&ldquo;that will induce a housekeeper to take
-charge of their house. I shall keep
-Diogenes, though, until he is older.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t mind Ptolemy, either,&rdquo; I
-admitted. &ldquo;I shall be interested in seeing
-what I can make of him, and he hasn&rsquo;t a
-bad influence over Diogenes, but I&rsquo;ll be
-hanged if anything would induce me to
-have &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; Chessy cats running wild
-over us. They can live in their house alone,
-or be put in a reformatory. We won&rsquo;t
-have them. We&rsquo;re under no obligations,
-pecuniary or moral, to look after them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think, Lucien, we might as well go
-home now. We&rsquo;ve had a good rest and a
-good time, and I am anxious to be back
-and see how Huldah is getting on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As Huldah had never mastered two of
-the three R&rsquo;s, we had not been able to
-receive any reports from her.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you what we&rsquo;ll do,&rdquo; proposed
-Beth. &ldquo;Rob and I will take all the Polydores
-save Diogenes, and go home tomorrow
-and prepare the house and Huldah
-for the overflow. Then you two can come
-on with Diogenes the next day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good idea, Beth!&rdquo; I approved. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d
-hate to face Huldah, unprepared, with the
-return of the Polydores <i>en masse</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am glad,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;that Huldah
-has been having a rest from them for a
-few days.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_39' id='linki_39'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-044.jpg' alt='' title='' width='166' height='214' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_40' id='linki_40'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-045.jpg' alt='' title='' width='350' height='124' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XVII__ALL_ABOUT_UNCLE_ISSACHARS_VISIT' id='CHAPTER_XVII__ALL_ABOUT_UNCLE_ISSACHARS_VISIT'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XVII</span></h2>
-<h3><i>All About Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s Visit</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>The next morning&rsquo;s stage carried
-seven passengers to Windy Creek,
-as Miss Frayne with a big roll of
-&ldquo;copy&rdquo; also took her departure.</p>
-<p>Diogenes had been quite docile and
-amenable to my rule since the licking I
-gave him, so we had a pleasant and
-comfortable return journey on the following
-day.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hope, Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;you
-won&rsquo;t refuse to cash this check for a good
-amount. The Polydore parents may never
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span>
-show up, and it&rsquo;s only right we should be
-reimbursed for their keep.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will cash it,&rdquo; I assured her, &ldquo;and use
-it for a housekeeper or else send the boys
-off to a school. I should like very much
-to have it out with Felix Polydore, but,
-as you suggest, I may never have the
-opportunity to see him at close range.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy met us at the
-station.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where are &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo;?&rdquo; I asked
-hopefully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah is feeding them little pies hot
-from the kettle&ndash;&ndash;the kind she cooks like
-doughnuts, you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah cooking for &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo;!&rdquo;
-I exclaimed. &ldquo;She must have passed into
-her second childhood. She grudged them
-even an apple to piece on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She has pampered them ever since our
-return,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor Huldah! She must indeed be
-afflicted with softening of the brain,&rdquo; I
-decided.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She has probably been so lonely, shut
-in here by herself,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;that
-even &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; looked good to her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the hallway Huldah met us. She
-was beaming with pleasure, but except in
-her bearing toward the children, she was
-quite normal.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve all had a real good rest,&rdquo; she
-observed, &ldquo;and you do look so well, Mrs.
-Wade. My! but this place has been
-lonesome. I&rsquo;m glad we&rsquo;re all together
-again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, Silvia, shut your eyes,&rdquo; directed
-Beth, &ldquo;and come into the library.
-Ptolemy has bought you a present with the
-check his father gave him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Beth helped me pick it out,&rdquo; said
-Ptolemy.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span></div>
-<p>Beth led the way into the library, and
-we followed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Open your eyes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia gave a little cry of pleasure, and
-looking over her shoulder, I beheld a
-baby grand piano.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Ptolemy!&rdquo; she cried, giving him a
-fervent kiss and fond hug, &ldquo;I can never
-let you do so much.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; he said, flushing a little under
-the endearments which were doubtless the
-first ever bestowed upon him. &ldquo;Father&rsquo;s
-got a whole lot of money grandpa left him
-and it&rsquo;s fixed so he can&rsquo;t draw out only so
-much each year. He said the board and
-bother of us was worth more than this and
-we&rsquo;ll all enjoy the music. But Thag and
-Em and Dem ain&rsquo;t to touch it. I&rsquo;ll
-knock tar out of the first one that comes
-near it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I was disconsolate. I didn&rsquo;t see how we
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span>
-could return it and I didn&rsquo;t want the Polydore
-web woven any tighter. To think of
-Silvia&rsquo;s receiving from them what it had
-been my longing to give her! But as I
-was to learn later, she was to acquire much
-more than a piano from the eminent
-family.</p>
-<p>After dinner Silvia asked Huldah to
-come in and hear the music, and when
-Silvia&rsquo;s repertoire was exhausted, we gave
-our faithful servant all the little details of
-our trip which Beth had not supplied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now tell us, Huldah, how things went
-along here,&rdquo; said Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you think some wonderful things
-happened to you all on your trip mebby&ndash;&ndash;ghosts
-and proposals,&rdquo; looking at Beth
-and Rob, &ldquo;and fires and Polydores, but
-back here in this quiet house something
-happened that has your ghosts and things
-skinned by a mile.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, dear!&rdquo; cried Silvia apprehensively,
-&ldquo;what is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Break it very gently, Huldah,&rdquo; I
-cautioned. &ldquo;You know we&rsquo;ve borne a
-good deal.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your uncle Issachar was here for a
-couple of days.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She certainly had made a sensation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not Uncle Issachar! Not here?&rdquo; exclaimed
-Silvia incredulously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, ma&rsquo;am. He came the next day
-after Beth and Mr. Rossiter and Polly
-left. I told him you&rsquo;d gone away for a
-little vacation and rest. I didn&rsquo;t let on
-that I knew where you had gone, because
-I didn&rsquo;t want him straggling up there, too,
-or sending for you to come back. He
-said your absence would make no difference
-to his plans; that he never let nothing
-do that. He come to pay a visit and he
-should pay one.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Silvia feebly. &ldquo;That
-sounds like Uncle Issachar.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told him to make himself perfectly
-at home; that every one did that to this
-place, and he said he would. I&rsquo;d just
-slicked up the big front room upstairs
-and I seen to it that he had everything
-all right. I cooked the best dinner I
-knew how, and he said it was the first
-white man&rsquo;s meal he had eat since his ma
-died, so I found out what she used to cook
-and fed him on it. Them three kids and
-him eat like they was holler. I guess if
-Polly hadn&rsquo;t took them away your grocery
-bill would &rsquo;a looked like Barb&rsquo;ry
-Allen&rsquo;s grave.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, as I was saying, your uncle he
-eat till he got over his grouches, and like
-enough he&rsquo;d be here eating yet, if he hadn&rsquo;t
-got a telegraph to hit the line for home,
-some big business deal, he said, and I
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span>
-guess it was a great deal, for he licked his
-chops and smacked his lips over it, and he
-give me a ten dollar bill to get a new dress
-and each of Them Three one dollar fer
-candy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The old tightwad!&rdquo; I exclaimed. &ldquo;It
-was your cooking, sure, that made him
-loosen up that way.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tightwad nothing!&rdquo; she declared indignantly.
-&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t think he was tight-wadded
-when you read this here letter he
-left for you. He told me what was in it,
-and I&rsquo;ve just been busting to tell it to
-Beth, but I waited for you to know it
-first.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With great excitement Silvia opened the
-letter, read it, gasped, re-read it, and then
-in consternation handed it to me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Read it aloud, Lucien,&rdquo; she bade.
-&ldquo;Maybe I can believe it then.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This was the letter.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span></div>
-<blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;My dear Niece:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was sorry not to see you, but glad to
-learn that, as every wise and good woman
-should do, you are raising a fine family&ndash;&ndash;a
-family of <i>sons</i>, which is what our country
-most needs. Your son Pythagoras informed
-me that you had taken your oldest
-child, Ptolemy, and your youngest, Diogenes,
-with you, I am glad you left three
-such promising samples for me to see.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;As you have five sons, I have, agreeable
-to my promise, placed in your name in
-the First National Bank of your city the
-sum of twenty-five thousand dollars.</p>
-<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Your affectionate uncle,<br />
-&ldquo;Issachar Innes.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;did you tell him
-the Polydores were our children?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Me?&rdquo; she repeated indignantly. &ldquo;Me
-tell a lie like that! No; I didn&rsquo;t get no
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span>
-chance to tell him anything about them.
-&lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; done the telling. The first
-thing that one&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;pointing to Pythagoras&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;said
-was, &lsquo;Mudder went away and took
-the baby, Diogenes, with her.&rsquo; And then
-that next one&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;indicating Emerald&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;said:
-&lsquo;Yes, and our oldest brother,
-Ptolemy, went on with Beth to see them.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The old gent asked them all their names
-and ages and he was so pleased and said he
-thought it was just fine for you to raise five
-sons, so I didn&rsquo;t have no heart to tell him
-no different. &lsquo;Twan&rsquo;t none of my business
-anyhow. Then &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; kept talking
-about stepdaddy, and your Uncle Issachar
-asks &lsquo;Who the devil is he? Did my
-niece marry again?&rsquo; And I told him as how
-Mr. Wade was all the husband you ever had,
-and that stepdaddy was nothing but a sort
-of pet-name the kids had give Mr. Wade.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told him,&rdquo; said Demetrius, &ldquo;that
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span>
-stepdaddy was cross to us sometimes and
-not as nice as mudder, and he said&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You shut up,&rdquo; commanded Huldah
-quickly, &ldquo;and let me talk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I intercepted, &ldquo;I&rsquo;d really be
-interested in hearing what he told Uncle
-Issachar. What was it, Demetrius, that
-your great-uncle said to you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He said,&rdquo; stated the imp, darting his
-tongue out in triumph at his victory over
-Huldah, &ldquo;that he always thought you was
-a stiff.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t say nothing of the kind!&rdquo;
-declared Huldah. &ldquo;He said you was stiff-necked,
-and that he presumed you would
-act more like a stepfather than the real
-thing. Well, as I was saying, he asked
-their names, and he liked them fine. Said
-they were so classy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t he say classic, Huldah?&rdquo; inquired
-Rob.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Mebby. What&rsquo;s the difference?&rdquo;
-snapped Huldah.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;None,&rdquo; I assured her quickly, dodging
-a definition.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She told him&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; began Emerald.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You shut up,&rdquo; again adjured Huldah,
-&ldquo;or I&rsquo;ll never bake you one of those small
-pies no more.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, please, Huldah,&rdquo; I coaxed. &ldquo;Let
-us hear everything. I&rsquo;ve always told you
-my life&rsquo;s secrets, and I don&rsquo;t mind what
-you or the boys told him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I suppose what he was going to
-tattle was that I thought the old gent
-might feel hurt, &rsquo;cause none of them was
-named after him, so I told him Polly&rsquo;s
-middle name was Issachar.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, Huldah,&rdquo; remonstrated Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;s always wanted a middle
-name, and he&rsquo;s never been baptized, so
-you can stick it in and have him ducked
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span>
-next Sunday and then that will square
-that. &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; stuck to him like
-a hive of bees, and I was scairt for fear
-they&rsquo;d let the cat out of the bag, and so
-long as they had put it in, I thought it
-might just as well stay in, but they were
-just as slick as grease in all they said.
-They&rsquo;ll hang in that rogues&rsquo; gallery yet.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose they were pretty&ndash;&ndash;strenuous,&rdquo;
-said Silvia with a sigh.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They was more than that. The first
-afternoon right after dinner when he was
-sitting on the front porch, sleeping peaceful
-and snoring, that there one&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; pointing
-to Pythagoras&ndash;&ndash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tattle-tale!&rdquo; he began, but I administered
-a cuff and he subsided into surprised
-silence.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_41' id='linki_41'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span>
-<img src='images/illus-046.jpg' alt='' title='' width='360' height='464' /><br />
-<p class='caption'>
-&ldquo;He went to the front window and dropped a young kitten down on the old gent&rsquo;s head.&rdquo;<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;He,&rdquo; said Huldah, looking pleased at
-this little attention to the boy, &ldquo;went to
-the front window and dropped a young
-kitten down on the old gent&rsquo;s head. It
-clawed something fierce. We had just got
-things going smooth again when Emmy
-got one of his earaches. I roasted an
-onion and put in his ear, and what did he
-do but take it out of his ear and slip it down
-your poor uncle&rsquo;s back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you beat them?&rdquo; I asked
-indignantly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because the old gent did that. He put
-&rsquo;em across his knee, and believe me, it was
-some licking they caught. They didn&rsquo;t
-let out a whimper and that pleased him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huh!&rdquo; said Emerald. &ldquo;Thag don&rsquo;t
-know how to cry. He hasn&rsquo;t got any tears,
-and old Uncle Iz didn&rsquo;t hurt me, because,
-you see, when I heard Thag getting his,
-I went and stuffed the Declaration of Independence,
-that book of stepdaddy&rsquo;s that
-Demetrius tore the pictures out of, in my
-pants.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Go on!&rdquo; urged Rob delightedly.
-&ldquo;What else did you all do? Uncle must
-have had some time. It would make a
-fine scenario. &lsquo;The first visit of the rich
-uncle.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; resumed Huldah. &ldquo;One of &rsquo;em
-put red pepper in the old man&rsquo;s bed, and
-he like to sneeze his head off, but he said
-as how sneezing was healthy, and showed
-you&rsquo;d got rid of a cold.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He never got on to the pepper,&rdquo; said
-Demetrius gleefully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the morning, that second one put a
-toad in his new uncle&rsquo;s pocket, and Emmy
-broke his specs. Then Meetie he dropped
-his watch. They used his razor to cut the
-lawn with. And then they took him down
-to the creek to go fishing, and they put the
-fish in Uncle&rsquo;s silk hat, and and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; implored Silvia, who was now
-in tears. &ldquo;Uncle Issachar believes them
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span>
-mine! Ours! And that I brought them
-up! Oh, why did we ever go away?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, pshaw,&rdquo; exclaimed Huldah comfortingly,
-&ldquo;he said you had brung them up
-fine; that they were no mollycoddles or
-Lizzie boys, and he didn&rsquo;t suppose you had
-so much sense as to leave them natural.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A left-handed one for mudder,&rdquo; laughed
-Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He must be a very peculiar man&ndash;&ndash;ready
-for the asylum, I should say,&rdquo; commented
-Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He would have been if he&rsquo;d stayed any
-longer, or else I would have been,&rdquo; declared
-Huldah.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t you make them behave, someway?&rdquo;
-asked Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, at first I tried to, and every time
-I pinched one of &rsquo;em when the old gent
-wasn&rsquo;t looking, or knocked &rsquo;em down when
-I got &rsquo;em alone, they would threaten to tell
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span>
-who they was, and then when I seen how
-your uncle liked the way they acted, I just
-let &rsquo;em go it, head on. And seeing as how
-they each brung you five thousand, I&rsquo;ve
-treated &rsquo;em best I know how. They&rsquo;re
-worth it, now. They done one thing more
-that was awful. Could you stand it to
-hear?&rdquo; turning to Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Please, Silvia,&rdquo; implored Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; argued Silvia faintly. &ldquo;I suppose
-we might as well know the worst.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You see the old gent didn&rsquo;t always get
-up to breakfast with the kids and one morning
-when I brought in the cakes Emmy
-looked up and grinned. I nearly dropped
-the plate. He had both sets of the old
-man&rsquo;s false teeth in his mouth. I got &rsquo;em
-back in his room without his waking, but
-I&rsquo;d have liked a picture of Emmy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pythagoras,&rdquo; I demanded, when we
-had recovered from this recital, &ldquo;why
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span>
-didn&rsquo;t you tell him who you were, and how
-you all came to be here with us?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because she is our mudder, and we are
-going to stay with her, always. We&rsquo;ve
-got a snap. So has father and mother.
-And Ptolemy told us that if you ever got
-any kids, you&rsquo;d get five thousand each for
-them, and I thought we&rsquo;d just make that
-much for you. So we played Uncle Iz
-for it. Easy money, all right, all right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Talk about fine financiering,&rdquo; quoth
-Rob. &ldquo;&lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; will surely land on
-Wall Street.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But poor Silvia had no heart for humor
-and was weeping silently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, look here, my dear,&rdquo; I said in
-consolation, &ldquo;this is a very simple matter
-to adjust. In the morning when you feel
-better, just write a full explanation of the
-affair and inclose your check for twenty-five
-thousand.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span></div>
-<p>Silvia quickly wiped away her tears.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do it tonight, Lucien. I feel better
-now. I never thought of writing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Huldah and &ldquo;Them Three&rdquo; looked most
-lugubrious.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The old skinflint won&rsquo;t miss it as much
-as I would a penny,&rdquo; declared our faithful
-handmaiden. &ldquo;And I&rsquo;m sure you&rsquo;ve earnt
-that twenty-five thousand if anyone ever
-did. You&rsquo;ve had as much care and worry
-about them brats as you would if they&rsquo;d
-been your own.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah,&rdquo; I said severely, &ldquo;there is a
-pretty stiff penalty for obtaining money
-under false pretences.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;After all the pains we took to make
-things lively for him, so he wouldn&rsquo;t get
-bored and think he was having a poor time!&rdquo;
-regretted Pythagoras.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And us watching every word we spoke
-so as not to give it away,&rdquo; wailed Emerald.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Cake&rsquo;s all dough,&rdquo; muttered Demetrius.</p>
-<p>Ptolemy regarded the three disapprovingly.
-He had the old inscrutable look,
-the look that foreboded mischief, in his eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You bungled, you fool kids!&rdquo; he said
-in disgust, &ldquo;and Huldah, what did you
-want to let on to mudder for that he thought
-we was hers? You ought to have torn up
-the note he left and just said he&rsquo;d put
-twenty-five thousand in the bank for her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huh! you&rsquo;re just jealous because you
-weren&rsquo;t in the Uncle Izzy deal yourself,&rdquo;
-jeered Pythagoras. &ldquo;You always think
-you&rsquo;re the only one that can do anything
-right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish you had been here, Polly,&rdquo; said
-Huldah, &ldquo;I am sure you could have worked
-it through somehow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish I had stayed and put it across,&rdquo;
-he answered. &ldquo;If you and the kids would
-only learn not to blab everything you know.
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span>
-It&rsquo;s the only way to work anything. Minute
-you tell a thing, it&rsquo;s all off.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was still a great deal of development
-work to be put on Ptolemy&rsquo;s moral standard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll find, my lad,&rdquo; remonstrated
-Rob, &ldquo;that honesty is the best policy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d have been perfectly honest about
-it,&rdquo; he defended. &ldquo;I would have told him
-the truth, and how our parents had deserted
-us, and how mudder took us in when we
-were homeless and was bringing us up like
-her own because she hadn&rsquo;t got any, and
-how stepdaddy wanted to turn us out, and
-she wouldn&rsquo;t let him, and then he would
-have decided against stepdaddy and given
-mudder the money so she could keep us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; I said warningly, &ldquo;there is a
-way of telling the truth, or rather of coloring
-white lies with enough truth to make
-them deceive, that is more dishonorable
-than an out and out lie.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me, Ptolemy,&rdquo; asked Silvia, &ldquo;how
-did you know about that offer of five thousand
-dollars for each child?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I overheard it,&rdquo; he said guardedly;
-&ldquo;but I can&rsquo;t remember where.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He heard me say so,&rdquo; confessed Huldah.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was when he first come here and he
-was making us so much trouble, and I told
-him it was too bad we had to have other
-folks&rsquo; brats around when, if we only had
-our own, they&rsquo;d be bringing in something.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The recital now broke up and Silvia sat
-down to write a long explanatory letter to
-Uncle Issachar. The next morning I procured
-her a check from the First National
-Bank and she filled it out.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she said with indrawn breath,
-when she had asked me how to write
-twenty-five thousand dollars, &ldquo;I never expected
-to be able to sign my name to a
-check for such an amount.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You never will again, I fear,&rdquo; was my
-sad prophecy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It must feel rich,&rdquo; said Beth, &ldquo;just to
-have a large check pass through your
-fingers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Them Three&rdquo; came the nearest to tears
-that they were able to do.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We worked so hard for it,&rdquo; they sighed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So did I!&rdquo; muttered Huldah.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t live a double life,&rdquo; declared
-Silvia.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_42' id='linki_42'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-048.jpg' alt='' title='' width='217' height='215' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_43' id='linki_43'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-047.jpg' alt='' title='' width='336' height='89' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XVIII__IN_WHICH_I_DECIDE_ON_EXTREME_MEASURES' id='CHAPTER_XVIII__IN_WHICH_I_DECIDE_ON_EXTREME_MEASURES'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XVIII</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which I Decide on Extreme Measures</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Everyone in our house, which was
-now filled to overflowing&ndash;&ndash;in fact,
-there were Polydores on sofas and
-in beds on the floor&ndash;&ndash;save Silvia and
-myself, was on the alert for a response to
-the letter during the succeeding few days.
-Knowing Uncle Issachar, we felt sure he
-would make no response, or notice the
-matter in any way save to cash the check
-promptly.
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span></p>
-<p>The monotony was somewhat relieved
-by the difficulties under which Beth and
-Rob were pursuing their courtship. On
-the third evening succeeding our return,
-Silvia and I started upstairs early to give
-them a chance to have the exclusive use of
-the library, the Polydores having all been
-sent to bed. As we were making some
-plausible excuse for going to our room,
-Beth remarked with a smile:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your motive in retiring so early is commendable,
-but of no particular benefit to
-Rob and me. The Polydores, like the poor,
-we always have with us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I saw that every one of them except
-Ptolemy was in bed at eight o&rsquo;clock last
-night and the night before,&rdquo; said Silvia.
-&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean to tell me&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I do mean,&rdquo; laughed Beth. &ldquo;Not
-Ptolemy, though. He has become too
-dignified to spy on us, but last night as we
-sat here on the settee, we heard a suppressed
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span>
-sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald
-from underneath.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How in the world did he ever squeeze
-under there?&rdquo; I asked, gazing at the
-slight space between the floor and settee.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_44' id='linki_44'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-049.jpg' alt='' title='' width='357' height='266' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;He did look a little flattened, as if he
-had been put in a letter press,&rdquo; said Rob.
-&ldquo;I gave him a dime to go to bed and stay
-there. Beth and I had just resumed our
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span>
-conversation when a still, small voice said:
-&lsquo;I&rsquo;ll go to bed for a dime, too.&rsquo; I then
-hauled Demetrius from behind the davenport.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And the night before,&rdquo; said Beth, &ldquo;when
-we were sitting on the porch, Pythagoras
-rolled off the roof, where he had been listening
-to us, and came down into the vines.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now I&rsquo;ll stop that,&rdquo; I declared. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
-tie them in their beds and lock the doors
-and windows.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; refused Rob. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to try
-to circumvent them by their own weapons
-of wits. I have a little plan which I don&rsquo;t
-dare whisper to you lest their long-range
-ears get in their work. We are just about
-to start for a walk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In this pouring rain!&rdquo; protested Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We like the rain,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;and we&ndash;&ndash;are
-not going far.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Pythagoras entered the room just then
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
-and looked astounded and disappointed
-when he saw Beth and Rob departing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We are going out to a small party,&rdquo;
-Rob remarked to me, casually.</p>
-<p>It was after eleven when we heard them
-returning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you suppose they have been walking
-all this time?&rdquo; said Silvia in concern.
-&ldquo;Beth wore no rubbers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The next day was Sunday and Huldah
-put into execution a plan for procuring
-one happy hour each week. This plan was
-the admission of the Polydores, <i>en masse</i>,
-to one of the Sunday schools. She chose
-the church most remote from home so they
-would be a long time going and coming,
-which she said would &ldquo;help some.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Beth, as she watched them
-march away, &ldquo;I can dare to tell you where
-we spent last evening. We were at the
-Polydore house next door. There is a little
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span>
-vine-screened porch on the other side of
-the house. Rob managed to open one
-of the windows and brought out a couple
-of chairs. It was as snug as could be.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll corral them every night,&rdquo; I said,
-&ldquo;until you make your getaway, and I&rsquo;ll
-give you the key so you can go inside when
-it is cool or stormy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll go around the block by way of
-precaution,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
-<p>Presently Huldah returned from the
-Sunday school with triumphant mien.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They made them all into one class and
-put a redheaded woman with spectacles
-in for their teacher. I gave them street
-car tickets to come home on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When the Polydores returned, however,
-they were dragging Diogenes along and he
-looked quite weary.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you come home on the street
-car?&rdquo; I asked Ptolemy.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;No; we sold our tickets and got ice
-cream sodas,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;We took
-turns carrying Diogenes on our backs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You only had one ticket for yourself,
-and two half fares for Thag and Emmy,&rdquo;
-said Huldah suspiciously. &ldquo;I thought
-Meetie and Di could ride free. You
-couldn&rsquo;t have sold them tickets for enough
-for sodies.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rob gave us three nickels to put in the
-plate,&rdquo; said Pythagoras. &ldquo;We only put in
-one of them, seeing we were all in one family
-and one class. That gave us four nickels
-for ice cream sodas and the clerk gave
-Di half a glass some one had left.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I gave you a penny for Di to put in,&rdquo;
-said Huldah. &ldquo;What did you do with
-that?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We wanted him to put it in, and when
-they took up the collection, he wouldn&rsquo;t
-give it,&rdquo; said Emerald. &ldquo;I tried to take
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span>
-it away from him and he swallowed it.
-The redhead teacher was awful scared,
-but I told her he was used to swallowing
-things and that you said he carried a whole
-department store in his insides.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor little Di,&rdquo; said Silvia; &ldquo;it&rsquo;s the
-only way he has of keeping things away
-from you all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>That night I saw to it personally that
-each and every Polydore was in his little
-bed. It should have aroused my suspicions
-that none of them rebelled, or had
-evinced the slightest degree of interest or
-curiosity when Beth and Rob announced
-their intention of going out for the evening.</p>
-<p>At ten-thirty the lovers returned, bringing
-in Pythagoras, who was clad in his
-pajamas.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did you pick him up?&rdquo; I asked
-in astonishment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He picked us up,&rdquo; said Beth.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;He was wise, maybe, in discovering
-where we were,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;but he fell
-down when he tried to work off the ghost
-screeches on us. We recognized them at
-once, and ran him down inside, so our
-party broke up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come here, Pythagoras,&rdquo; I commanded.</p>
-<p>He obeyed promptly and fearlessly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How did you know they were there,
-and when did you go over there?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was playing over in our house today,&rdquo;
-he replied, &ldquo;and I found one of Beth&rsquo;s
-hairpins with the little stones in, in the big
-chair, so I knew that was where they hid
-last night. As soon as you went down stairs
-tonight, I got out the window and slid down
-the roof and came over to scare them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve missed a lot of sleep the last
-few nights,&rdquo; I said quietly, &ldquo;so you will
-have to make it up. You can stay in bed
-all day tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Hold on, Lucien!&rdquo; exclaimed Rob.
-&ldquo;Tomorrow&rsquo;s the big baseball game of
-the season, and I promised to take them all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So much the better,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;He
-will learn to mind.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Pythagoras looked as if he had been
-struck, and quickly put his arms across
-his eyes. In a moment his shoulders were
-heaving. At last I had found a vulnerable
-spot in the stoic, and I began to relent.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;See here, Pythagoras,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;if I let
-you up in time to go to the game, will you
-promise me something?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anything,&rdquo; came in a muffled voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Will you promise not to spy on Beth
-and Rob and keep Emerald and Demetrius
-from doing it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he promised quickly, his arm
-coming down and his face brightening.
-&ldquo;Sure I will, but I did want to hear what
-they said.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; asked Rob interestedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re getting up a show, and Em is
-going to take the part of a girl and he spoons
-with Tolly, and we didn&rsquo;t know what to
-have them say to each other.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll rehearse you on the play, and
-prompt you,&rdquo; said Beth with a little
-giggle.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come on upstairs with me now,&rdquo; I
-said to Pythagoras.</p>
-<p>When I landed him at his door, he leaned
-up against me, and rubbed his cheek against
-my arm.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you for letting me go to the
-game,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>I found myself responding to his affectionate
-advance. This would clearly never
-do. I couldn&rsquo;t let another Polydore squeeze
-himself into my regard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I said abruptly, as I came into
-our room, &ldquo;we must really make some immediate
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span>
-plan for disposing of the Polydores,
-or, at least, of &lsquo;Them Three.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah is managing them tolerably
-well,&rdquo; demurred Silvia. &ldquo;Since they depreciated
-in market value from five thousand
-per to nothing, she has resumed her
-former harsh treatment of them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, we are not going to keep them,&rdquo;
-I replied with finality. &ldquo;We are under no
-obligations to do so. I am going to put them
-in a school for boys and use the blank check
-Felix Polydore left to pay for their tuition.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose that is what we will have to
-do,&rdquo; she admitted with a little sigh. &ldquo;Yet,
-Lucien, it doesn&rsquo;t seem quite right. If
-they are in a boys&rsquo; school, they will keep
-on right along the same lines. They need
-home influence and contact with women.
-Demetrius is fond of music and will sit
-still and listen when I play. Emerald
-obeyed me today the first time I spoke,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span>
-and I even thought I saw a glimmer of good
-in Pythagoras.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I didn&rsquo;t tell her that this glimmer was
-what had decided me to dispose of him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It would, doubtless, be better for them
-to stay,&rdquo; I admitted, &ldquo;but I am not going to
-be a martyr to the cause. They are going.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The next morning I wrote for catalogues
-and prospectus to the different schools,
-and I felt as if three old men of the sea
-had been lifted from my shoulders.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_45' id='linki_45'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-050.jpg' alt='' title='' width='197' height='246' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_46' id='linki_46'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-051.jpg' alt='' title='' width='365' height='153' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XIX_WHICH_HAS_TO_DO_WITH_SOME_LETTERS' id='CHAPTER_XIX_WHICH_HAS_TO_DO_WITH_SOME_LETTERS'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter</span> XIX</h2>
-<h3><i>Which Has to Do with Some Letters</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>One morning when I came down to
-my office, I found a letter postmarked
-from the city in which
-Uncle Issachar lived addressed to me. I
-opened it and found inclosed, with seal
-unbroken, the letter Silvia had mailed to
-her uncle and which she had marked &ldquo;personal.&rdquo;
-There was a note addressed to
-me accompanying it:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Dear Sir:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am returning herewith your personal
-letter to Mr. Innes, as he has gone to
-South America and left no forwarding
-address. Should such be received from
-him at any future date, you will be duly
-notified thereof.</p>
-<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Very truly yours,<span class='rindent8'>&nbsp;</span><br />
-&ldquo;Chester K. Winslow,<span class='rindent6'>&nbsp;</span><br />
-&ldquo;Secretary.&rdquo;<span class='rindent4'>&nbsp;</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>I read the above to Silvia at luncheon.
-She was grievously disappointed because
-her uncle had not received her letter of
-explanation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is most fortunate,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that
-I sent it in one of your office envelopes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As usual, she had found the bright spot
-she always looked for and generally discovered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t care,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;to have
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span>
-Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s private secretary or the
-dead-letter office know all our private
-affairs, but I shall feel like an impostor
-until Uncle Issachar is undeceived.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I feel a hunch,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;that Uncle
-Issachar will run across Doctor Felix and his
-wife down there in Chili and find you out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He may run across the Polydores,&rdquo; I
-replied, &ldquo;but he&rsquo;ll never find out from
-them that they are the parents of Silvia&rsquo;s
-children. They would not mention a subject
-in which they have so little interest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; argued Beth, &ldquo;naturally they&rsquo;d
-tell him where they lived, and then, of
-course, he&rsquo;d say he had a niece living in
-the same town. They would inquire her
-name and inform him that they were her
-near neighbors, and then he&rsquo;d tell them
-what fine sons you have, and then, of course,
-the Polydores would claim their own.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which theory goes to show,&rdquo; said
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span>
-Silvia, &ldquo;how little you know Uncle Issachar
-and the Polydore seniors. He would
-not think of speaking to strangers, and if
-he did, he wouldn&rsquo;t say any of those usual
-conversational things you mentioned. The
-Polydores wouldn&rsquo;t be interested, in the
-least, in knowing he had a niece unless she
-happened to know something about
-antiques, and if he should describe her
-children, she wouldn&rsquo;t recognize them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After luncheon I went out on the porch.
-While I sat there, the mail carrier came
-along and handed me a letter&ndash;&ndash;a returned
-letter. It was directed in Ptolemy&rsquo;s round
-hand to Mr. Issachar Innes. He had
-evidently used the envelope to Silvia&rsquo;s
-letter to her uncle as his model, for the
-address was written in the same way.
-&ldquo;Personal&rdquo; was added in the left-hand
-corner, and his name and our house number
-was in the upper left-hand corner.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span></div>
-<p>I went into the library where my wife,
-Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy were sitting.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; I said, handing him the
-letter, &ldquo;here is your communication to
-Uncle Issachar, returned.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He lost some of his usual <i>sang froid</i>
-and appeared quite disconcerted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, Ptolemy,&rdquo; exclaimed Silvia in
-consternation, &ldquo;what in the world did
-you write to Uncle Issachar about?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy had recovered and was quite
-himself again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;About us,&rdquo; he said innocently. &ldquo;As
-the oldest of our family, I thought I ought
-to do a little explaining.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And I think,&rdquo; I said, looking at him
-keenly, &ldquo;that we have the right to know
-what your explanation was.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy handed me over the letter.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Read it aloud,&rdquo; he said, with the air
-of one who is proud of his productions.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span></div>
-<p>Rob&rsquo;s eyes shone in anticipation.</p>
-<p>I broke the seal. A note from the
-secretary fell out. It was an apology for
-not returning the letter sooner, but it had
-been inadvertently mislaid. I then read
-aloud the letter Ptolemy had written:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;Dear Uncle Issachar</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am sorry Diogenes and I were away
-when you were here. You thought the
-others were fine, but you should have
-seen&ndash;&ndash;Diogenes. I hope you will send
-mudder back her check, because there is lots
-of things she needs, and it takes a lot of
-money to take care of all us. You see
-our own father and mother don&rsquo;t want to
-be bothered with us and they went away
-and left us, and so we are living with
-mudder the same as if we were really her
-adopted children, and if her own would
-have been worth five thousand per to you,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span>
-I think her adopted children ought to be
-worth half as much anyway, so it would
-only be fair to send her a check for $12,500
-anyway, and if you are a good sport like
-the kids said you were, you&rsquo;ll send back
-her check.</p>
-<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Yours truly,<span class='rindent11'>&nbsp;</span><br />
-&ldquo;P. Issachar Polydore Wade.&rdquo;<span class='rindent4'>&nbsp;</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Rob&rsquo;s laughter was so free and spontaneous
-that I had to join in against my
-will. Ptolemy, who had seemed a little
-apprehensive of the verdict, looked accordingly
-relieved.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a fine letter, young man,&rdquo; approved
-Rob. &ldquo;Stepdaddy ought to take
-you into his law firm.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; declared Beth. &ldquo;I think Ptolemy
-has inherited his mother&rsquo;s gift. He
-should be a writer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not on your life!&rdquo; cried Ptolemy with
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span>
-feeling. &ldquo;I want to live things instead
-of writing about them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A tear or two came into Silvia&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was very sweet in you, Ptolemy, to
-try to get the money for mudder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I felt that all this commendation was
-bad for Ptolemy, and that it was up to
-me to take a reef in his sails.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was a well-meant letter, Ptolemy,&rdquo;
-I said, &ldquo;and I know that your motive was
-unselfish, but it is very poor policy to
-meddle in other people&rsquo;s affairs. Meddlers
-are mischief makers in spite of their
-good intentions. I am very glad it did
-not fall into Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s hands.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy looked sufficiently squelched.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;By the way, Silvia,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;I wrote
-Mr. Winslow and told him not to forget
-to forward Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s address as soon
-as he possibly could do so, as I had matters
-of importance to communicate to him.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;He may travel about like father and
-mother,&rdquo; said Ptolemy, again regaining
-confidence, &ldquo;so why don&rsquo;t you put that
-check for twenty-five thousand in the
-Savings Department and get the interest
-on it anyway?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think, Ptolemy,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;that you
-are too good a financier, after all, to become
-a lawyer. I will go back to my first
-conviction that you should be a promoter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll give him to Uncle Issachar,&rdquo; I
-proposed, &ldquo;for a partner.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_47' id='linki_47'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-053.jpg' alt='' title='' width='271' height='218' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_48' id='linki_48'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-052.jpg' alt='' title='' width='326' height='114' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XX_THE_MONEY_WE_EARNT_FOR_YOU' id='CHAPTER_XX_THE_MONEY_WE_EARNT_FOR_YOU'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter</span> XX</h2>
-<h3><i>&ldquo;The Money We Earnt for You&rdquo;</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Life went on uneventfully save for
-the dire doings of &ldquo;Them Three.&rdquo;
-Knowing that they were to be sent
-to school, they were having their last fling
-at life untrammeled. September came,
-and Rob set the day for his departure, as
-he was going home to arrange his affairs,
-so he and Beth could leave for an extended
-honeymoon trip. I planned to go with
-Rob and install the Polydore three in their
-distant school. They were so despondent
-at leaving, as the time drew near, that a
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span>
-feeling of gloom hung over the household,
-all the members of which, even to Huldah,
-urged me to relent. But I remained adamant
-until the evening before the day set
-for the dissolution of the Polydore family,
-when something happened that changed
-all our plans.</p>
-<p>We were assembled in the library in a
-state of forced cheerfulness when the doorbell
-rang. I answered it, and receipted
-for a telegram which I opened and read in
-the hall. It was from Chester K. Winslow.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I said gravely, as I returned
-to the library, &ldquo;your Uncle Issachar is
-dead. Died in South America. Heart disease.
-Very sudden.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Conflicting emotions were depicted in
-Silvia&rsquo;s expression.</p>
-<p>The thought uppermost in all our minds
-was expressed simultaneously by &ldquo;Them
-Three.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Gee! Then you can keep the money
-we earnt for you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You know,&rdquo; interpolated Rob in soft-pedaled
-tone, &ldquo;they are going to train
-school children toward the military&ndash;&ndash;teach
-the young ideas how to shoot, as it were.
-It won&rsquo;t be long before they are ordered
-to Mexico to protect us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If Them Three ever meets that there
-Viller man,&rdquo; commented Huldah confidently,
-&ldquo;the fur will fly some.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia thoughtfully, &ldquo;we
-are under obligations to these children,
-you see, after all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I acknowledged with a sigh,
-&ldquo;seeing they are now ours, bought and
-paid for, I suppose we&rsquo;ll have to treat them
-as such.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You wouldn&rsquo;t send your own kids
-away to school,&rdquo; said Pythagoras significantly.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I reluctantly allowed, answering
-the protest of Pythagoras, &ldquo;and we won&rsquo;t
-send you. You will all go to the public
-school tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The deafening Polydore powwow that
-followed made me hope that Uncle Issachar
-had met with his just deserts.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_49' id='linki_49'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-054.jpg' alt='' title='' width='184' height='275' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_50' id='linki_50'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-055.jpg' alt='' title='' width='104' height='139' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:20px;'><i>&ldquo;By the author of &ldquo;Mildew Manse.&rdquo;</i></p>
-
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.4em;margin-bottom:20px;'>AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY</p>
-
-<p class='tp' ><i>By</i> BELLE K. MANIATES</p>
-<p class='tp' >Illustrated. 12mo. $1.00 <i>net</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A book for the many who are weary of problem novels.
-How prosperity came to the Jenkins family, how Amarilly
-got an education, how the Boarder married Lily Rose
-and built the Annex, and the adventures of the rector&rsquo;s
-surplice, are told in a wholesome little story, between
-whose covers await many laughs, and a tear or two as well.</p>
-
-<p>Amarilly is blessed with a large family and amiable neighbors,
-and their doings are amusing, but her fancies and devices
-are captivating.... The little heroine is all right.&ndash;&ndash;<i>New
-York Sun.</i></p>
-
-<p>The sort of story which pulls at the heartstrings of all
-readers who like a real and genuine character.... No one can
-afford to miss the sweet humor and helpful cheeriness which
-the author serves in generous measure.&ndash;&ndash;<i>Boston Globe</i>.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley&rdquo; is a dear companion for
-vacation days and comes deservedly under the books of real
-amusement.... Dear Amarilly! she brightens every hour
-spent with her.&ndash;&ndash;<i>Buffalo News</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:larger;'>LITTLE, BROWN &amp; CO., <span class='smcap'>Publishers</span></p>
-<p class='tp' ><span class='smcap'>34 Beacon Street, Boston</span></p>
-
-<!-- generated by ppg.rb version: 3.14 -->
-<!-- timestamp: Thu Sep 24 06:15:03 -0400 2009 -->
-
-<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30075 ***</div>
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Our Next-Door Neighbors, by By Belle K. Maniates.</title>
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+</style>
+
+</head>
+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30075 ***</div>
+
+<h1>OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS</h1>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:10px;'>By Belle K. Maniates</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<p class='cg'>AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY<br />
+MILDEW MANCE<br />
+OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-000.jpg' alt='' title='' width='338' height='453' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your rush?&rdquo; I asked, when I had overtaken him.<br />
+<span class='smcap'>Frontispiece.</span> <i>See page 114.</i><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:2.2em;margin-top:40px;margin-bottom:20px;'>Our Next-Door<br />Neighbors</p>
+<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:10px;'>By</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:20px;'>Belle Kanaris Maniates</p>
+<p class='tp' >With illustrations by</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:larger;'>Tony Sarg</p>
+<div style='margin:25px auto; text-align:center;'>
+<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-001.jpg' />
+</div>
+<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:40px;font-size:1.3em;'>Boston<br />
+Little, Brown, and Company<br />
+1917</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' ><i>Copyright, 1917</i>,</p>
+<p class='tp' ><span class='smcap'>By Little, Brown, and Company.</span></p>
+<hr class='p10' />
+<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:20px;'><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
+<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:60px;'>Published February, 1917</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.8em;margin-bottom:40px;'>Norwood Press<br />
+Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.<br />
+Presswork by The Colonial Press, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
+<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-002.jpg' />
+</div>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>I</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>About Silvia and Myself</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_I__ABOUT_SILVIA_AND_MYSELF'>1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>II</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Introducing Our Next-door Neighbors</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_II__INTRODUCING_OUR_NEXTDOOR_NEIGHBORS'>9</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>III</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Are Pestered by Polydores</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_III__IN_WHICH_WE_ARE_PESTERED_BY_POLYDORES'>28</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Take Boarders</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IV__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_BOARDERS'>45</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>V</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Take a Vacation</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_V__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_A_VACATION'>62</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Flirt and a Woman-Hater</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VI__A_FLIRT_AND_A_WOMANHATER'>78</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which Nothing Much Happens</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VII__IN_WHICH_NOTHING_MUCH_HAPPENS'>91</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Ptolemy Disappears and I Visit a Haunted House</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VIII__PTOLEMY_DISAPPEARS_AND_I_VISIT_A_HAUNTED_HOUSE'>100</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We See Ghosts</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IX__IN_WHICH_WE_SEE_GHOSTS'>124</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>X</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Make Some Discoveries</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_X_IN_WHICH_WE_MAKE_SOME_DISCOVERIES'>139</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Bad Means to a Good End</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XI__A_BAD_MEANS_TO_A_GOOD_END'>153</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>Too Much Polydores</span>&rdquo;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XII__TOO_MUCH_POLYDORES'>165</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Rob&rsquo;s Friend the Reporter</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIII__ROBS_FRIEND_THE_REPORTER'>174</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Midnight Excursion</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIV__A_MIDNIGHT_EXCURSION'>196</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>What Miss Frayne Found Out</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XV__WHAT_MISS_FRAYNE_FOUND_OUT'>204</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Ptolemy&rsquo;s Tale</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVI__PTOLEMYS_TALE'>214</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>All About Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s Visit</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVII__ALL_ABOUT_UNCLE_ISSACHARS_VISIT'>230</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which I Decide on Extreme Measures</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVIII__IN_WHICH_I_DECIDE_ON_EXTREME_MEASURES'>255</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Which Has to Do with Some Letters</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIX_WHICH_HAS_TO_DO_WITH_SOME_LETTERS'>268</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>&ldquo;The Money We Earnt for You&rdquo;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XX_THE_MONEY_WE_EARNT_FOR_YOU'>277</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
+<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-003.jpg' />
+</div>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Illustrations' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<col style='width:75%;' />
+<col style='width:25%;' />
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your rush?&rdquo; I asked, when I had overtaken him.</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_1'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>Uncle Issachar</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_2'>10</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>Dr. Felix Polydore</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_3'>23</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;Lucien Wade!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Here are our letters to Beth and Rob.&rdquo;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_12'>81</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us.</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_17'>103</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull together and beat it to the lake</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_20'>127</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>The landlady intears waylaid me</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_21'>133</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>I had to carry Diogenes most of the way</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_28'>169</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia&rsquo;s plaintive protests outside the door</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_31'>193</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an injured air</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_38'>225</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;He went to the front window and dropped a young kitten down on the old gent&rsquo;s head.&rdquo;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_41'>243</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from underneath.&rdquo;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_44'>257</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_1' name='page_1'></a>1</span></div>
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1.5em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:1.4em;'>OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOURS</p>
+<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
+<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-004.jpg' />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_I__ABOUT_SILVIA_AND_MYSELF' id='CHAPTER_I__ABOUT_SILVIA_AND_MYSELF'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter I</span></h2>
+<h3><i>About Silvia and Myself</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>Some people have children born unto
+them, some acquire children and
+others have children thrust upon
+them. Silvia and I are of the last named
+class. We have no offspring of our own,
+but yesterday, today, and forever we have
+those of our neighbor.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_2' name='page_2'></a>2</span></div>
+<p>We were born and bred in the same little
+home-grown city and as a small boy, even,
+I was Silvia&rsquo;s worshiper, but perforce a
+worshiper from afar.</p>
+<p>Her upcoming had been supervised by a
+grimalkin governess who drew around the
+form of her young charge the awful circle
+of exclusiveness, intercourse with child-kind
+being strictly prohibited.</p>
+<p>Children are naturally gregarious little
+creatures, however, and Silvia on rare
+occasions managed to break parole and
+make adroit escape from surveillance.
+Then she would speed to the top of the
+boundary wall that separated the stable
+precincts from an alluring alley which
+was the playground of the plebeian progeny
+of the humble born.</p>
+<p>To the circle of dirty but fascinating
+ragamuffins she became an interested tangent,
+a silent observer. Here I had my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3' name='page_3'></a>3</span>
+first meeting with her. I was not of her
+class, neither was I to the alley born, but
+sailed in the sane mid-channel that ameliorates
+the distinction between high and
+low life.</p>
+<p>On this eventful day I was taking a
+short cut on my way to school. One of
+the group of alleyites, with the inherent
+friendliness of the unchartered but big-hearted
+members of the silt of the stream
+of humans, had proffered to little Silvia
+a chip on which was a patch of mud designed
+to become a fruitcake stuffed with
+pebbles in lieu of raisins and frosted with
+moistened ashes. Before the enticing
+pastime of transformation was begun,
+however, Silvia was swiftly snatched from
+the contaminating midst and borne away
+over the ramparts.</p>
+<p>Thereafter I haunted the alley, hoping
+for another glimpse of the little picture
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4' name='page_4'></a>4</span>
+girl on the wall. At last I attained my
+desire. One Saturday afternoon I saw her
+coming, alone, down a long rosebush bordered
+path. A thrill ran through me.
+Our eyes met. Yet all I found to say
+was: &ldquo;C&rsquo;mon over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She responded to this invitation and I
+helped her over the wall. She looked
+longingly at the Irish playing in the mud,
+but a clean sandpile in my own backyard
+not far away seemed to me a more fitting
+environment for one so daintily clad.</p>
+<p>We played undisturbed for a never-to-be-forgotten
+half hour and then they found
+her out. Reprimanding voices jangled and
+the whole world was out of tune.</p>
+<p>Thereafter a strict watch was kept on
+little Silvia&rsquo;s movements and I saw her
+only at rare intervals, when she was
+going into church or as she rode past our
+house. She always remembered me and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5' name='page_5'></a>5</span>
+on such meetings a faint, reminiscent smile
+lighted the somber little face and her
+eyes met mine as if in a mysterious promise.</p>
+<p>She grew up an outlawed, isolated child
+deprived of her birthright, but in spite of
+the handicaps of so barren a childhood,
+she achieved young womanhood unspoiled
+and in possession of her early democratic
+tendencies.</p>
+<p>When I was making a modest start
+in a legal way, her parents died and left
+her with that most unprofitable of legacies,
+an encumbered estate. Then I dared
+to renew our acquaintance begun on the
+sandpile. She went to live with a poor
+but practical relation and was initiated
+into the science of stretching an inadequate
+income to meet everyday needs.
+In time I wooed and won her.</p>
+<p>We set up housekeeping in a small,
+thriving mid-Western city where I secured
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6' name='page_6'></a>6</span>
+a partnership in a legal firm. Silvia
+had all the requisites of mind and manner
+and Domestic Science necessary to a
+&ldquo;hearth-and home-&rdquo; maker.</p>
+<p>We lived in a house which was one of
+many made to the same measure with
+the inevitable street porch, big window,
+trimmed lawn in front and garden in
+the rear. We had attained the standard of
+prosperity maintained in our home town
+by keeping &ldquo;hired help&rdquo; and installing
+a telephone, so our social status was
+fixed.</p>
+<p>There was but one adjunct missing to
+our little Arcadia. While at a word or
+look children flocked to me like friendly
+puppies in response to a call, to Silvia
+they were still an unknown quantity.</p>
+<p>I had hoped that her understanding
+and love for children might be developed
+in the usual and natural way, but we had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7' name='page_7'></a>7</span>
+now been married ten years and this hope
+had not been realized.</p>
+<p>She had tried most assiduously to cultivate
+an acquaintance with members of
+child-world, but into that kingdom there
+is no open sesame. The sure keen intuition
+of a child recognizes on sight a kindred
+spirit and Silvia&rsquo;s forced advances
+met with but indifferent response. She
+wistfully proposed to me one day that we
+adopt a child. My doubts as to the
+advisability of such a course were confirmed
+by Huldah, our strong staff in
+household help. In our section of the
+country servants were generally quite conversant
+with the intimate and personal
+affairs of the home.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you never do it, Mr. Wade,&rdquo; she
+counseled. &ldquo;Ready-mades ain&rsquo;t for the
+likes of her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When, in acting on this advice, I vetoed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8' name='page_8'></a>8</span>
+Silvia&rsquo;s lukewarm proposition, I was convinced
+of Huldah&rsquo;s wisdom by seeing the
+look of relief that flashed into my wife&rsquo;s
+troubled countenance, and I knew that
+her suggestion had been but a perfunctory
+prompting of duty.</p>
+<p>Time alone could overcome the effects of
+her early environment!</p>
+<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
+<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-005.jpg' />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9' name='page_9'></a>9</span></div>
+<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
+<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-006.jpg' />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_II__INTRODUCING_OUR_NEXTDOOR_NEIGHBORS' id='CHAPTER_II__INTRODUCING_OUR_NEXTDOOR_NEIGHBORS'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter II</span></h2>
+<h3><i>Introducing Our Next-door Neighbors</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>One morning Silvia and I lingered
+over our coffee cups discussing our
+plans for the coming summer, which
+included visits from my sister Beth and my
+college chum, Rob Rossiter. We wished
+to avoid having their arrivals occur
+simultaneously, however, because Rob was
+a woman-hater, or thought he was. We
+decided to have Beth pay her visit first
+and later take Rob with us on our vacation
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10' name='page_10'></a>10</span>
+trip to some place where the fishing facilities
+would be to our liking. However,
+summer vacation time like our plans was
+yet far, vague and dim.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-007.jpg' alt='' title='' width='210' height='278' /><br />
+</div>
+<p>While I was putting on my overcoat,
+Silvia had gone to the window and was
+looking pensively at the vacant house next
+to ours.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fear,&rdquo; she said abruptly and irrelevantly,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span>
+&ldquo;that we are destined to receive
+no part of Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s fortune.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Uncle Issachar was a wealthy but eccentric
+relative of my wife. He had made us
+no wedding gift beyond his best wishes,
+but he had then informed us that at the
+birth of each of our prospective sons he
+should place in the bank to Silvia&rsquo;s account
+the sum of five thousand dollars. We had
+never invited him to visit us or made any
+overtures in the way of communication with
+him, lest he should think we were cultivating
+his acquaintance from mercenary motives.</p>
+<p>While I was debating whether the
+lament in Silvia&rsquo;s tone was for the loss of
+the money or the lack of children, she
+again spoke; this time in a tone which
+had lost its languor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is a big moving van in front of
+the house next door. At last we will
+have some near neighbors.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Are they unloading furniture?&rdquo; I
+asked inanely, crossing to the window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; course not,&rdquo; came cheerfully from
+Huldah, who had come in to remove the
+dishes. &ldquo;Most likely they are unloading
+lions and tigers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As I have already intimated, Huldah
+was a privileged servant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are unloading children!&rdquo; explained
+Silvia, in a tone implying that
+Huldah&rsquo;s sarcastic implication would be
+infinitely more preferable. &ldquo;The van
+seems to be overflowing with them&ndash;&ndash;a
+perfect crowd. Do you suppose the house
+is to be used as an orphan asylum?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; I assured her as I counted
+the flock. Five children would seem like
+a crowd to Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Boys!&rdquo; exclaimed Huldah tragically,
+as she joined us for a survey. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see that
+they don&rsquo;t keep the grass off our lawn.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span></div>
+<p>Late that afternoon I opened the outer
+door of the dining-room in response to the
+rap of strenuously applied knuckles.</p>
+<p>A lad of about eleven years with the
+sardonic face of a satyr and diabolically
+bright eyes peered into the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re going to have soup for dinner,&rdquo;
+he announced, &ldquo;and mother wants to borrow
+a soup plate for father to eat his out of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia stared at him aghast. She seemed
+to feel something compelling in the boy&rsquo;s
+personnel, however, and she went to the
+china closet and brought forth a soup plate
+which she handed to him without comment.</p>
+<p>In silence we watched him run across
+the lawn, twirling the plate deftly above
+his head in juggler fashion.</p>
+<p>The next day when we sat down to
+dinner our new young neighbor again
+appeared on our threshold.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Halloa!&rdquo; he called chummily. &ldquo;We
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span>
+are going to have soup again and we want
+a soup plate for father.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is the one I loaned you yesterday?&rdquo;
+demanded Silvia in a tone far
+below thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit, while
+her features assumed a frigidity that would
+have congealed father&rsquo;s favorite sustenance
+had it been in her vicinity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, we broke that!&rdquo; he casually and
+cheerfully explained.</p>
+<p>With much reluctance Silvia bestowed
+another plate upon the young applicant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; I said as he started to leave,
+&ldquo;don&rsquo;t you want the soup tureen, too, or
+the ladle and some soup spoons?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, thank you,&rdquo; he answered politely.
+&ldquo;None of the rest of us like soup, so we
+dish father&rsquo;s up in the kitchen. He
+doesn&rsquo;t like soup particularly, but he eats
+it because it goes down quick and lets him
+have more time for work.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span></div>
+<p>This time as he sped homeward, he
+didn&rsquo;t spin the plate in air, but tried
+out a new plan of balancing it on a
+stick.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; I suggested gently, when our
+young neighbor was lost to our sorrowful
+sight, &ldquo;that it might be well to invest in
+another dozen or so of soup plates. I will
+see about getting them at wholesale rates.
+Our supply will soon give out if our new
+neighbors continue to cultivate the soup
+and borrowing habit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will buy some at the five cent store,&rdquo;
+replied Silvia. &ldquo;I think I had better call
+upon them tomorrow and see what manner
+of people they can be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When I came home the next day it was
+quite evident that she had called.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I inquired, &ldquo;what do they keep&ndash;&ndash;a
+soup house?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are literary people, the highest of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span>
+high-brows. Their name is Polydore, and
+the head of the house&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. or Mrs.?&rdquo; I interrupted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The head of the house,&rdquo; pursued Silvia,
+ignoring my question, &ldquo;is a collector.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So I inferred. Has he a large collection
+of soup plates?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She collects antiquities and writes their
+history. He pursues science.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They were seemingly communicative.
+What did they look like?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t see them. After I rang I heard
+a woman&rsquo;s voice bidding some one not to
+answer the bell. She said she couldn&rsquo;t be
+bothered with interruptions, so I went on
+up the street to call on Mrs. Fleming, who
+told me all about them. She was also refused
+admittance when she called. On my way
+home I met that boy&ndash;&ndash;that awful boy&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She paused, evidently overcome by the
+consideration of his awfulness.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He had been digging bait&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again she paused as if words were inadequate
+for her climax.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I encouraged.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was carrying his bait&ndash;&ndash;horrid,
+wriggling angleworms&ndash;&ndash;in our soup
+plate!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then it is not broken yet!&rdquo; I exclaimed
+joyfully. &ldquo;Let us hope it is given
+an antiseptic bath before father&rsquo;s next
+indulgence in consomm&eacute;. After dinner I
+will go over and try my luck at paying my
+respects to the soup savant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They won&rsquo;t let you in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In that case I shall follow their lead of
+setting aside all ceremony and formality
+and admit myself, as their heir apparent
+does here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After dinner and my twilight smoke, I
+went next door, first asking Silvia if there
+was anything we needed that I could
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
+borrow, just to show them there were no
+hard feelings.</p>
+<p>My third vigorous ring brought results.
+A slipshod servant appeared and
+reluctantly seated me in the hall. She
+read with seeming interest the card I
+handed to her and then, pushing aside
+some mangy looking porti&egrave;res, vanished
+from view.</p>
+<p>She evidently delivered my card, for I
+heard a woman&rsquo;s voice read my name,
+&ldquo;Mr. Lucien Wade.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After another short interval the slovenly
+servant returned and offered me my
+card.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She seen it,&rdquo; she assured me in answer
+to my look of surprise.</p>
+<p>She again put the porti&egrave;res between us
+and I was obliged to own myself baffled
+in my efforts to break in. I was showing
+myself out when my onward course was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span>
+deflected by a troop of noisy children
+leaded by the soup plate skirmisher, who
+was the oldest and apparently the leader
+of the brood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, halloa!&rdquo; he greeted me with the
+air of an old acquaintance, &ldquo;didn&rsquo;t you
+see the folks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On my informing him that I had seen
+no one but the servant, he exclaimed:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that chicken wouldn&rsquo;t know
+enough to ask you in! Just follow us.
+Mother wouldn&rsquo;t remember to come out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was loth to force my presence on
+mother, but by this time my hospitable
+young friend had pulled the porti&egrave;res so
+strenuously that they parted from the pole,
+and I was presented willy nilly to the
+collector of antiquities, who had the
+angular sharp-cut face and form of a
+rocking horse. She was seated at a table
+strewn with books and papers, writing at
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span>
+a rate of speed that convinced me she was
+in the throes of an inspiration. I forebore
+to interrupt. My scruples, however, were
+not shared by her eldest son. He gave
+her elbow a jog of reminder which sent her
+pencil to the floor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mother!&rdquo; he shouted in megaphone
+voice, &ldquo;here&rsquo;s the man next door&ndash;&ndash;the
+one we get our soup plates from.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She looked up abstractedly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she said in dismayed tone, &ldquo;I
+thought you had gone. I am very much
+engaged in writing a paper on modern
+antiquities.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I murmured some sort of an apology for
+my untimely interruption.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am so absorbed in my great work,&rdquo;
+she explained, &ldquo;that I am oblivious to all
+else. I have the rare and great gift of
+concentration in a marked degree.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was quite sure of this fact. She took
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
+another pencil from a supply box and
+resumed her literary occupation. As my
+presence seemed of so little moment, I
+lingered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; shouted one of the boys,
+snatching the pencil from her grasp, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
+hungry. I didn&rsquo;t have any supper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you did!&rdquo; she asserted. &ldquo;I saw
+Gladys give you a bowl of bread and
+milk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Emerald took it away from me and
+drank it up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t neither!&rdquo; denied a shaggy looking
+boy. &ldquo;I spilled it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He accompanied this denial by a fierce
+punch in his accuser&rsquo;s ribs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here!&rdquo; said the author of Modern
+Antiquities, taking a nickel from her
+pocket, &ldquo;go get yourself some popcorn,
+Demetrius.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t Demetrius! I&rsquo;m Pythagoras.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;It makes no difference. Go and get it
+and don&rsquo;t speak to me again tonight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boy had already snatched the coin,
+and he now started for the exit, but his
+outgoing way was instantly blocked by a
+promiscuous pack of pugilistic Polydores,
+and an ardent and general onslaught
+followed.</p>
+<p>I endeavored to untangle the arms and
+legs of the attackers and the attacked in
+a desire to rescue the youngest, a child
+of two, but I soon beat a retreat, having
+no mind to become a punching bag for
+Polydores.</p>
+<p>The concentrator at the writing table,
+looking up vaguely, perceived the general
+joust.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How provoking!&rdquo; she exclaimed indignantly.
+&ldquo;I was in search of an antonym
+and now they&rsquo;ve driven it out of my
+memory.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span></div>
+<p>I politely offered my sympathy for her loss.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever see such misbehaved
+children?&rdquo; she asked casually and impersonally
+as she calmly surveyed the
+free-for-all fight.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-008.jpg' alt='' title='' width='157' height='293' /><br />
+</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Children always misbehave before company,&rdquo;
+I remarked propitiatingly. &ldquo;Of
+course they know better.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why no, they don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; she declared,
+looking at me in surprise, &ldquo;they&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this instant the errant antonym
+evidently flashed upon her mental vision
+and her pencil hastened to record it and
+then flew on at lightning speed.</p>
+<p>I was about to try to make an escape
+when a momentary cessation of hostilities
+was caused by the entrance of a moth-eaten,
+abstracted-looking man. As the
+<i>two-year-old</i> hailed him as &ldquo;fadder&rdquo;, I
+gathered that he was the person responsible
+for the family now fighting at his feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the trouble?&rdquo; he asked helplessly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She gave Thag a nickel,&rdquo; explained the
+eldest boy, &ldquo;and we want it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man drew a sigh of relief. The
+solution of this family problem was instantly
+and satisfactorily met by an impartial
+distribution of nickels.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span></div>
+<p>With demoniac whoops of delight, the
+contestants fled from the room.</p>
+<p>I introduced myself to the man of the
+house, who seemed to realize that some
+sort of compulsory conventionalities must
+be observed. He looked hopelessly at his
+wife, and seeing that she was beyond response
+to an S O S call to things mundane,
+he frankly but impressively informed me
+that I must expect nothing of them socially
+as their lives were devoted to research
+and study. The children, however,
+he assured me, could run over frequently
+to see us.</p>
+<p>I instinctively felt that my call was considered
+ended, so I took my departure. I
+related the details of my neighborly visit
+to Silvia, but her sense of humor was not
+stirred. It was entirely dominated by her
+dread of the young Polydores.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How many children are there?&rdquo; she
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span>
+asked faintly. &ldquo;More than the five you
+said you counted that first day?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They seemed not so many as much.
+That is, though I suppose in round
+numbers there are but five, yet each of
+those five is equal to at least three ordinary
+children.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are they all boys? Huldah says the
+youngest wears dresses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nevertheless he is a boy. They are all
+unmistakably boys. I think they must
+have been born with boots on and,&rdquo; conscious
+of the imprints of my shins, &ldquo;hobnail
+boots at that. Even the youngest, a
+two-year old, seems to have been graduated
+from Home Rule.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t bear to think of their going to
+bed hungry,&rdquo; she said wistfully. &ldquo;Think
+of that unnatural mother expecting them
+to satisfy their hunger by popcorn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They didn&rsquo;t though,&rdquo; I assured her.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span>
+&ldquo;I saw them stop a street vender below
+here and invest their nickels in hot
+dogs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hot dogs!&rdquo; repeated Silvia in horror.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wienerwursts,&rdquo; I hastened to interpret.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_4' id='linki_4'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-009.jpg' alt='' title='' width='323' height='257' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_5' id='linki_5'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-010.jpg' alt='' title='' width='344' height='116' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_III__IN_WHICH_WE_ARE_PESTERED_BY_POLYDORES' id='CHAPTER_III__IN_WHICH_WE_ARE_PESTERED_BY_POLYDORES'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter III</span></h2>
+<h3><i>In Which We Are Pestered by Polydores</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>Our life now became one long round
+of Polydores. They were with us
+burr-tight, and attached themselves
+to me with dog-like devotion, remaining
+utterly impervious to Silvia&rsquo;s aloofness
+and repulses. At last, however, she succumbed
+to their presence as one of the
+things inevitable.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Polydores are here to stay,&rdquo; she
+acknowledged in a calmness-of-despair voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They don&rsquo;t seem to be homebodies,&rdquo;
+I allowed.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span></div>
+<p>The children were not literary like the
+other productions of their profound
+parents, but were a band of robust, active
+youngsters unburdened with brains, excepting
+Ptolemy of soup plate fame. Not
+that he betrayed any tendencies toward a
+learned line, but he was possessed of an
+occult, uncanny, wizard-like wisdom that
+was disconcerting. His contemplative eyes
+seemed to search my soul and read my inmost
+thoughts.</p>
+<p>Pythagoras, Emerald, and Demetrius,
+aged respectively nine, eight, and seven,
+were very much alike in looks and size,
+being so many pinched caricatures of their
+mother. To Silvia they were bewildering
+whirlwinds, but Huldah, who seemed to
+have difficulty in telling them apart, always
+classified them as &ldquo;Them three&rdquo;, and
+Silvia and I fell into the habit of referring
+to them in the same way. Huldah could
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
+not master the Polydore given names either
+by memory or pronunciation. Ptolemy,
+whose name was shortened to &ldquo;Tolly&rdquo; by
+Diogenes, she called &ldquo;Polly.&rdquo; When she
+was on speaking terms with &ldquo;Them three&rdquo;
+she nicknamed them &ldquo;Thaggy, Emmy, and
+Meetie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Diogenes, the two-year old, was a Tartar
+when emulating his brothers. Alone, he
+was sometimes normal and a shade more
+like ordinary children.</p>
+<p>When they first began swarming in
+upon us, Silvia drew many lines which,
+however, the Polydores promptly effaced.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They shall not eat here, anyway,&rdquo;
+she emphatically declared.</p>
+<p>This was her last stand and she went
+down ingloriously.</p>
+<p>One day while we were seated at the
+table enjoying some of Huldah&rsquo;s most
+palatable dishes, Ptolemy came in. There
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span>
+ensued on our part a silence which the lad
+made no effort to break. Silvia and I
+each slipped him a side glance. He stood
+statuesque, watching us with the mute
+wistfulness of a hungry animal. There
+were unwonted small red specks high upon
+his cheekbones, symptoms, Silvia thought,
+of starvation.</p>
+<p>She was moved to ask, though reluctantly
+and perfunctorily:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t you been to dinner, Ptolemy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he admitted quickly, &ldquo;but I
+could eat another.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Assuming that the forced inquiry was
+an invitation, before protest could be
+entered he supplied himself with a plate
+and helped himself to food. His need and
+relish of the meal weakened Silvia&rsquo;s fortifications.</p>
+<p>This opening, of course, was the wedge
+that let in other Polydores, and thereafter
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span>
+we seldom sat down to a meal without the
+presence of one or more members of the
+illustrious and famished family, who made
+themselves as entirely at home as would
+a troop of foraging soldiers. Silvia gazed
+upon their devouring of food with the
+same surprised, shocked, and yet interested
+manner in which one watches the
+feeding of animals.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose he ought not to eat so many
+pickles,&rdquo; she remarked one day, as Emerald
+consumed his ninth Dill.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t kill a Polydore,&rdquo; I assured her.</p>
+<p>I never opened a door but more or less
+Polydores fell in. They were at the left
+of us and at the right of us, with Diogenes
+always under foot. We had no privacy.
+I found myself waking suddenly in the
+night with the uncomfortable feeling that
+Ptolemy lurked in a dark corner or two
+of my bedroom.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span></div>
+<p>Even Silvia&rsquo;s boudoir was not free from
+their invasion. But one door in our house
+remained closed to them. They found no
+open sesame to Huldah&rsquo;s apartment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish she would let me in on her system,&rdquo;
+I said. &ldquo;I wonder how she manages
+to keep them on the outside?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can tell you,&rdquo; confided Silvia. &ldquo;Emerald
+and Demetrius went in one day and
+she dropped Demetrius out the window
+and kicked Emerald out the door. You
+know, Lucien, you are too softhearted to
+resort to such measures.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was once,&rdquo; I confessed, &ldquo;but I think
+under Polydore r&eacute;gime I am getting stoical
+enough to follow in Huldah&rsquo;s footsteps
+and go her one better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Our conversation was interrupted by
+the entrance of Diogenes.</p>
+<p>Silvia screamed.</p>
+<p>Turning to see what the latest Polydore
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
+perpetration might be, I saw that Diogenes
+was frothing at the mouth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s having a fit!&rdquo; exclaimed
+Silvia frantically. &ldquo;Call Huldah! Put
+him in a hot bath. Quick, Lucien, turn
+on the hot water.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not I,&rdquo; I refused grimly. &ldquo;Let him
+have a fit and fall in it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He ain&rsquo;t got no fit,&rdquo; was the cheerful
+assurance of Pythagoras, as he sauntered in.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your mother would have one,&rdquo; I told
+him, &ldquo;if she could hear your English.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is the matter with him?&rdquo; asked
+Silvia. &ldquo;Does he often foam in this way?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s been eating your tooth powder,&rdquo;
+explained Pythagoras. &ldquo;He likes it &rsquo;cause
+it tastes like peppermint, and then he
+drank some water before he swallowed
+the powder and it all fizzed up and run out
+his mouth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wondered,&rdquo; said Silvia ruefully,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
+&ldquo;what made my tooth powder disappear
+so rapidly. What shall I do!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Resort to strategy!&rdquo; I advised. &ldquo;Lock
+up your powder hereafter and fill an empty
+bottle with powdered alum or something
+worse and leave it around handy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien!&rdquo; exclaimed my wife, who could
+not seem to recover from this latest annoyance,
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see how you can be so
+fond of children. I did hope&ndash;&ndash;for your
+sake and&ndash;&ndash;on account of Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s
+offer that I&rsquo;d like to have one&ndash;&ndash;but I&rsquo;d
+rather go to the poorhouse! I&rsquo;d almost lose
+your affection rather than have a child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, Silvia!&rdquo; I remonstrated in dismay,
+&ldquo;you shouldn&rsquo;t judge all by these.
+They&rsquo;re not fair samples. They&rsquo;re not
+children&ndash;&ndash;not home-grown children.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should say not!&rdquo; agreed Huldah,
+who had come into the room. &ldquo;They are
+imps&ndash;&ndash;imps of the devil.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span></div>
+<p>I believe she was right. They had a
+generally demoralizing effect on our household.
+I was growing irritable, Silvia careworn.
+Even Huldah showed their influence
+by acquiring the very latest in slang
+from them. Once in a while to my amusement
+I heard Silvia unconsciously adopting
+the Polydore argot.</p>
+<p>As the result of their better nourishment
+at our table, the imps of the devil
+daily grew more obstreperous and life
+became so burdensome to Silvia that I
+proposed moving away to a childless neighborhood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;d find us out,&rdquo; said Silvia wearily,
+&ldquo;wherever we went. Distance would be
+no obstacle to them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we might move out of town, as a
+last resort,&rdquo; I suggested. &ldquo;Rob says he
+thinks there is a good legal field in&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Lucien,&rdquo; vetoed Silvia. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span>
+a fine practice here, and then there&rsquo;s that
+attorneyship for the Bartwell Manufacturing
+Company.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>My hope of securing this appointment
+meant a good deal to us. We were now
+living up to every cent of my income
+and though we had the necessities, it was
+the luxuries of life I craved&ndash;&ndash;for Silvia&rsquo;s
+sake. She was a lover of music and we
+had no piano. She yearned to ride and
+she had no horse. We both had longings
+for a touring-car and we wanted to travel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve thought of a scheme for a little
+respite from the sight and sound of the
+Polydores,&rdquo; I remarked one day. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll
+enter them in the public school. There
+are four more weeks yet before the long
+summer vacation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That would be too good to be true,&rdquo;
+declared Silvia. &ldquo;Five or six hours each
+day, and then, too, their deportment will
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span>
+be so dreadful that they will have to stay
+after school hours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I thought more likely their deportment
+would lead to suspension, but forbore to
+wet-blanket Silvia&rsquo;s hopes.</p>
+<p>I made my second call upon the male
+head of the House of Polydore to recommend
+and urge that its young scions be
+sent to the public school. I had misgivings
+as to the outcome of my proposition,
+as the Polydore parents believed
+themselves to be the only fount of learning
+in the town. To my surprise and
+intense gratification, my suggestion met
+with no objections whatever. Felix Polydore
+referred me to his wife and said he
+would abide by her decision. I found her,
+of course, buried in books, but remembering
+Ptolemy&rsquo;s mode of gaining attention,
+I peremptorily closed the volume she was
+studying.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span></div>
+<p>My audacity attained its object and I
+proferred my request, laying great stress
+on the quietude she would gain thereby.
+She replied that attendance at school would
+doubtless do them no harm, although she
+expressed her belief that the most thorough
+educations were those obtained outside of
+schools.</p>
+<p>Silvia was wafted into the eighth heaven
+of bliss and then some, as the result of my
+diplomatic mission. Of course the task of
+preparing pupils out of the pestiferous
+Polydores devolved upon her, but she was
+actively aided by the eager and willing
+Huldah and between them they pushed the
+project that promised such an elysium with
+all speed. The prospective pupils themselves
+were not wildly enthusiastic over this
+curtailment of their liberty, but Huldah
+won the day by proposing that they carry
+their luncheon with them, promising an
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span>
+abundant supply of sugared doughnuts
+and small pies.</p>
+<p>Pythagoras foresaw recreation ahead in
+the opportunity to &ldquo;lick all the kids,&rdquo;
+and I assumed that Ptolemy had deep
+laid schemes for the outmaneuvering of
+teachers, but as his left hand never made
+confidant of his right, I could not expect to
+fathom the workings of his mind.</p>
+<p>Early on a Monday morning, therefore,
+our household arose to lick our Polydore
+prot&eacute;g&eacute;s into a shape presentable for admission
+to school. It took two hours to
+pull up stockings and make them stay
+pulled, tie shoestrings, comb out tangles,
+adjust collars and neckties, to say nothing
+of vigorous scrubbings to five grimy faces
+and ten dirt-stained hands.</p>
+<p>At last with an air of achievement Silvia
+corralled her round-up and unloaded the
+four eldest upon the public school and then
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span>
+proceeded to install the protesting Diogenes
+in a nursery kindergarten. Huldah
+stood in the doorway as they marched off
+and sped the parting guests with a muttered
+&ldquo;Good riddance to bad rubbish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia returned radiant, but her rejoicing
+was shortlived. She had scarcely taken
+off her hat and gloves when the four oldest
+came trooping and whooping into the house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; gasped Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Got to be vaccinated,&rdquo; explained
+Ptolemy with an appreciative grin. Of all
+the Polydores he was the one who had least
+objected to scholastic pursuits, but he
+seemed quite jubilant at our discomfiture.</p>
+<p>We were somewhat reluctant to undertake
+the responsibility of their inoculation,
+especially after Ptolemy told us that his
+mother didn&rsquo;t believe in vaccination.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll take &rsquo;em down and get &rsquo;em vaccinated
+right,&rdquo; declared Huldah. &ldquo;Their
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span>
+ma won&rsquo;t never notice the scars, and if
+one of you young uns blabs about it,&rdquo;
+she added, turning upon them ferociously,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll cut your tongue out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Suppose there should be some ill result
+from it,&rdquo; said Silvia apprehensively.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you worry!&rdquo; exclaimed Huldah.
+&ldquo;Most likely it won&rsquo;t amount to anything.
+It&rsquo;ll take some new kind of scabs to work
+in these brats. They&rsquo;re too tough to take
+anything. Come on now with me,&rdquo; she
+commanded, &ldquo;and after it&rsquo;s done, I&rsquo;ll
+get you each an ice cream sody.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Through Huldah&rsquo;s efficiency the vaccination
+was quickly accomplished and
+the children of our neighbor were reluctantly
+accepted by the school authorities.</p>
+<p>The Polydores were not parted by reason
+of dissimilarity of age or learning, as
+they were put into the ungraded room.
+To keep them there enrolled taxed to the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span>
+utmost our ingenuity in the way of framing
+excuses for their repeated cases of
+tardiness and suspension.</p>
+<p>Silvia felt a little remorseful when she
+listened to the tale of woe recited to her
+by their teacher at a card party one Saturday
+afternoon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She said,&rdquo; my wife repeated, &ldquo;that
+yesterday Pythagoras brought two mice to
+school in his marble-bag and let them loose.
+She doesn&rsquo;t believe in corporal punishment,
+but she determined to experiment with its
+effect on Pythagoras, so she kept him and
+Emerald, who was slightly implicated, after
+school and sent the latter out to get a
+whip. When he came back he said: &lsquo;I
+couldn&rsquo;t find any stick, but here&rsquo;s some
+rocks you can throw at him,&rsquo; and handed
+her a hat full of stones. This made her
+too hysterical to try her experiment, so
+she took away his recess for a week.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;We ought to make her a present,&rdquo; I
+observed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She said,&rdquo; continued Silvia, &ldquo;that they
+had given her nervous prostration, but
+she had no time to prostrate, and if she
+didn&rsquo;t succeed in getting them graded by
+the coming fall term, she should accept an
+offer of marriage she had received from a
+cross-eyed man, and you know how unlucky
+that would be, Lucien!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We may be driven to worse things than
+that by fall,&rdquo; I replied ruefully.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_6' id='linki_6'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-011.jpg' alt='' title='' width='337' height='143' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_7' id='linki_7'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-012.jpg' alt='' title='' width='299' height='194' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IV__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_BOARDERS' id='CHAPTER_IV__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_BOARDERS'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter IV</span></h2>
+<h3><i>In Which We Take Boarders</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>Four weeks of unalloyed bliss and
+then the summer vacation times
+arrived, bringing joy to the heart
+of the Polydores and the teacher of the
+ungraded room, but deep gloom to the
+hearthside of the Wades.</p>
+<p>One misfortune always brings another.
+A rival applicant received the coveted attorneyship
+and we bade a sad farewell to piano,
+saddle-horse, automobile and journey, the
+furnishings to our Little House of Dreams.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I did want you to have a car, Lucien,&rdquo;
+sighed Silvia, regretfully, &ldquo;and you worked
+so hard this last year, you need a trip.
+Won&rsquo;t you go somewhere with Rob&ndash;&ndash;without
+me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I assured her it would be no vacation
+without her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know, Lucien,&rdquo; she proposed
+diffidently, &ldquo;I think it would be an excellent
+plan to invite Uncle Issachar to visit
+us. He knows no more about children than
+I do&ndash;&ndash;than I did, I mean, and if he should
+see the Polydores he&rsquo;d give us five thousand
+each for the children we didn&rsquo;t have.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I wouldn&rsquo;t consent to this plan. I had
+met Uncle Issachar once. He was a crusty
+old bachelor with a morbid suspicion that
+everyone was working him for his money.
+I don&rsquo;t wonder he thought so. He had no
+other attractions.</p>
+<p>Perceiving the strength of my opposition
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span>
+Silvia sweetly and sagaciously refrained
+from further pressure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We should not repine,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We
+have health and happiness and love.
+What are pianos and cars and trips compared
+to such assets?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What, indeed! I admitted that things
+might be worse.</p>
+<p>Alas! All too soon was my statement
+substantiated. That night after we had
+gone to bed, I heard a taxicab sputtering
+away at the house next door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Polydores must have unexpected
+guests,&rdquo; I remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I trust they brought no children with
+them,&rdquo; murmured Silvia drowsily.</p>
+<p>The next morning while we were at
+breakfast, the odor of June roses wafting
+in through the open window, the delicious
+flavor of red-ripe strawberries tickling our
+palate, and the anticipation of rice griddle-cakes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span>
+exhilarating us, the millennium
+came.</p>
+<p>For the five young Polydores bore down
+upon us <i>en masse</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Father and mother have gone away,&rdquo;
+proclaimed Ptolemy, who was always
+spokesman for the quintette.</p>
+<p>This intelligence was of no particular
+interest to us&ndash;&ndash;not then, at least. We
+rarely saw father and mother Polydore,
+and they were apparently of no need to
+their offspring.</p>
+<p>Ptolemy&rsquo;s next announcement, however,
+was startling and effective in its dramatic
+intensity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve come over to stay with you
+while they are away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I laughed; jocosely, I thought.</p>
+<p>Silvia paid no heed to my forced hilarity,
+but ejaculated gaspingly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, what do you mean!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;They have gone away somewhere,&rdquo;
+enlightened our oracle. &ldquo;They went to the
+train last night in a taxi. They have gone
+somewhere to find out something about
+some kind of aborigines.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which reminds me,&rdquo; I remarked reminiscently,
+&ldquo;of the man who traveled far
+and vainly in search of a certain plant
+which, on his return, he found growing
+beside his own doorstep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia paid no heed to my misplaced
+pleasantry. She was right&ndash;&ndash;as usual. It
+was no time for levity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see,&rdquo; spoke my unappreciative
+wife, addressing Ptolemy, &ldquo;why their absence
+should make any difference in your
+remaining at home. Gladys can cook your
+meals and put Diogenes to bed as usual.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gladys has gone,&rdquo; piped Demetrius.
+&ldquo;She left yesterday afternoon. She was
+only staying till she could get her pay.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Father forgot to get another girl in her
+place,&rdquo; informed Ptolemy, &ldquo;and he forgot
+to tell mother he had forgotten until just
+before they went to the train. She said it
+didn&rsquo;t matter&ndash;&ndash;that we could just as well
+come over here and stay with you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She said,&rdquo; added Pythagoras, &ldquo;that
+you were so crazy over children, that
+probably you&rsquo;d be glad to have us stay
+with you all the time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>My last strawberry remained poised in
+mid-air. It was quite apparent to me now
+that there was nothing funny about this
+situation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Milk, milk!&rdquo; whimpered Diogenes, pulling
+at Silvia&rsquo;s dress and making frantic
+efforts to reach the cream pitcher.</p>
+<p>Huldah had come in with the griddle-cakes
+during this avalanche of news.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here, all you kids!&rdquo; commanded our
+field marshal, as she picked up Diogenes,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span>
+&ldquo;beat it to the kitchen, and I&rsquo;ll give you
+some breakfast. Hustle up!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Polydores, whose eyes were bulging
+with expectancy and semi-starvation, tumbled
+over each other in their eagerness to
+&ldquo;hustle up and beat it to the kitchen.&rdquo;
+Our oiler of troubled waters followed, and
+there was assurance of a brief lull.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What shall we do!&rdquo; I exclaimed helplessly
+when the door had closed on the
+last Polydore. I felt too limp and impotent
+to cope with the situation. Not so
+Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do!&rdquo; she echoed with an intensity of
+tone and feeling I had never known her to
+display. &ldquo;Do! We&rsquo;ll do something, I am
+sure! I will not for a moment submit to
+such an imposition. Who ever heard of
+such colossal nerve! That father and
+mother should be brought back and prosecuted.
+I shall report them to the Society
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span>
+for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.
+But we won&rsquo;t wait for such procedure.
+We&rsquo;ll express each and every Polydore to
+them at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should certainly do that P.D.Q. and
+C.O.D.,&rdquo; I acquiesced, &ldquo;if the Polydore
+parents could be located, but you know
+the abodes of aborigines are many and
+scattered.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>My remarks seemed to fall as flat as
+the flapjacks I was siruping.</p>
+<p>Silvia arose, determination in every lineament
+and muscle, and crossed the room.
+She opened the door leading into the kitchen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; she demanded, &ldquo;where have
+your father and mother gone?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He came forward and replied in a voice
+somewhat smothered by cakes and sirup.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. They didn&rsquo;t say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We can find out from the ticket-agent,&rdquo;
+I optimistically assured her.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;They never bother to buy tickets. Pay
+on the train,&rdquo; Ptolemy explained.</p>
+<p>My legal habit of counter-argument asserted
+itself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We can easily ascertain to what point
+their baggage was checked,&rdquo; I remarked,
+again essaying to maintain a r&ocirc;le of good
+cheer.</p>
+<p>But the pessimistic Ptolemy was right
+there with another of his gloom-casting
+retaliations.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They only took suit-cases and they
+always keep them in the car. Here&rsquo;s a
+check father said to give you to pay for
+our board. He said you could write in
+any amount you wanted to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He got a lot of dough yesterday,&rdquo; informed
+Pythagoras, &ldquo;and he put half of it
+in the bank here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ptolemy handed over a check which was
+blank except for Felix Polydore&rsquo;s signature.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see,&rdquo; I weakly exclaimed when
+my wife had closed the kitchen door, &ldquo;why
+she put them off on <i>us</i>. Why didn&rsquo;t she
+trade her brats off for antiques?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia eyed the check wistfully. I could
+read the unspoken thought that here, perhaps,
+was the opportunity for our much-desired
+trip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Silvia,&rdquo; I answered quickly, &ldquo;not
+for any number of blank checks or vacation
+trips shall you have the care and annoyance
+of those wild Comanches.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know what I&rsquo;ll do!&rdquo; she exclaimed
+suddenly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go right down to the intelligence
+office and get anything in the
+shape of a maid and put her in charge of
+the Polydore caravansary with double
+wages and every night out and any other
+privileges she requests.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This seemed a sane and sensible arrangement,
+and I wended my way to my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span>
+office feeling that we were out of the
+woods.</p>
+<p>When I returned home at noon, I found
+that we had only exchanged the woods for
+water&ndash;&ndash;and deep water at that.</p>
+<p>I beheld a strange sight. Silvia sat by
+our bedroom window twittering soft, cooing
+nonsensical nothings to Diogenes, who
+was clasped in her arms, his flushed little
+face pressed close to her shoulder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s been quite ill, Lucien. I was
+frightened and called the doctor. He said
+it was only the slight fever that children are
+subject to. He thought with good care
+that he&rsquo;d be all right in a few days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you succeed in getting a cook to
+go to the Polydores?&rdquo; I asked anxiously.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll need a nurse to go there, too, to
+take care of Diogenes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She looked at me reproachfully and rebukingly.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Lucien! You don&rsquo;t suppose I
+could send this sick baby back to that uninviting
+house with only hired help in
+charge! Besides, I don&rsquo;t believe he&rsquo;d stay
+with a stranger. He seems to have taken
+a fancy to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Diogenes confirmed this belief by a
+languid lifting of his eyelids, as he feelingly
+patted her cheek with his baby fingers.</p>
+<p>I forebore to suggest that the fancy
+seemed to be mutual. Diogenes, sick, was
+no longer an &ldquo;imp of the devil&rdquo;, but a
+normal, appealing little child. It occurred
+to me that possibly the care of a sick
+Polydore might develop Silvia&rsquo;s tiny germ
+of child-ken.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep him here of course,&rdquo; I agreed,
+&ldquo;but&ndash;&ndash;the other children must return
+home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Diogenes would miss them,&rdquo; she said
+quickly, &ldquo;and the doctor says his whims
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span>
+must be humored while he is sick. He is
+almost asleep now. I think he will let me
+put him down in his own little bed. Ptolemy
+brought it over here. Pull back the
+covers for me, Lucien. There!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Diogenes half opened his eyes, as she
+laid him in the bed and smiled wanly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mudder!&rdquo; he cooed.</p>
+<p>Silvia flushed and looked as if she dreaded
+some expression of mirth from me. Relieved
+by my silence and a suggestion of
+moisture in the region of my eyes&ndash;&ndash;the
+day was quite warm&ndash;&ndash;she confessed:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has called me that all the morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would be a wise Polydore that knows
+its own parents,&rdquo; I observed.</p>
+<p>The slight illness of Diogenes lasted three
+or four days. I still shudder to recall the
+memory of that hideous period. Silvia&rsquo;s
+time and attention were devoted to the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span>
+sick child. Huldah was putting in all her
+leisure moments at the dentist&rsquo;s, where
+she was acquiring her third set of teeth,
+and joy rode unconfined and unrestrained
+with our &ldquo;boarders.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Polydore proclivities made the Reign of
+Terror formerly known as the French
+Revolution seem like an ice cream festival.
+I don&rsquo;t regard myself as a particularly
+nervous man, but there&rsquo;s a limit! Their
+war whoops and screeches got on my
+nerves and temper to the extent of sending
+me into their midst one evening brandishing
+a whip and commanding immediate
+silence. I got it. Not through fear of
+chastisement, for fear was an emotion
+unknown to a Polydore, but from astonishment
+at so unexpected a procedure
+from so unexpected a source. Heretofore
+I had either ignored them or frolicked
+with them. Before they had recovered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span>
+from their shock, Silvia appeared on the
+scene.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Diogenes,&rdquo; she informed them, &ldquo;was
+not used to such unwonted quiet, and was
+fretting at the unaccustomed stillness.
+Would the boys please play Indian or some
+of their games again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boys would. I backed from the
+room, the whip behind me, carefully kept
+without Silvia&rsquo;s angle of vision. Before
+Ptolemy resumed his r&ocirc;le of chief, he bestowed
+a knowing and maddening wink
+upon me.</p>
+<p>I wished that we had remained neighbor-less.
+I wished that the aborigines would
+scalp Felix Polydore and the writer of
+Modern Antiquities. Then we could land
+their brats on the Probate Court. I wished
+that this were the reign of Herod. I vowed
+I would backslide from the Presbyterian
+faith since it no longer included in its
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span>
+articles of belief the eternal damnation of
+infants. How long, O Catiline, would&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>A paralyzing suspicion flashed into the
+maelstrom of my vituperative maledictions.
+I rushed wildly upstairs to our combination
+bedroom, sickroom, and nursery, where
+Silvia sat like a guardian angel beside the
+Polydore patient.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I shouted excitedly, &ldquo;do you
+suppose those diabolical Polydore parents
+purposely played this trick on us? Was
+it a premeditated Polydore plan to abandon
+their young? And can you blame
+them for playing us for easy marks? Could
+any parents, Polydore, or otherwise, ever
+come back to such fiends as these?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; she cautioned, without so much
+as a glance in my direction. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll wake
+Diogenes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Wake Diogenes! Ye Gods! And she
+had also implored the brothers of Diogenes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span>
+to continue their anvil chorus! This took
+the last stitch of starch from my manly
+bosom. Spiritless and spineless I bore all
+things, believed all things&ndash;&ndash;but hoped
+for nothing.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_8' id='linki_8'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-013.jpg' alt='' title='' width='228' height='246' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_9' id='linki_9'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span>
+<img src='images/illus-014.jpg' alt='' title='' width='341' height='181' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_V__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_A_VACATION' id='CHAPTER_V__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_A_VACATION'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter V</span></h2>
+<h3><i>In Which We Take a Vacation</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>Diogenes finally convalesced to
+his former state of ruggedness and
+obstreperousness. He continued,
+however, to cling to Silvia and to call her
+&ldquo;mudder.&rdquo; To my amusement the other
+children followed suit and she was now
+&ldquo;muddered&rdquo; by all the Polydores.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad,&rdquo; I remarked, &ldquo;that they
+scorn to include me in their adoption. I
+wouldn&rsquo;t fancy being &lsquo;faddered&rsquo; by the
+Polydores.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t be,&rdquo; Ptolemy, appearing
+seemingly from nowhere, assured me.
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve named you stepdaddy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it be possible, Silvia,&rdquo; I implored,
+&ldquo;let this cup pass from me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am going down to the intelligence
+office today,&rdquo; replied Silvia soothingly.
+&ldquo;Diogenes is well enough to go home now,
+and I can run over there every evening
+and see that he is properly put to bed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I went down town feeling like a mule
+relieved of his pack.</p>
+<p>When I came home that afternoon, I found
+Silvia sitting on the shaded porch serenely
+sewing. A Sabbath-like stillness pervaded.
+Not a Polydore in sight or sound.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; I cried buoyantly. &ldquo;The Polydores
+have been returned to their home
+station!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she replied calmly. &ldquo;They told
+me at the intelligence office that it would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span>
+be absolutely impossible to persuade, bribe,
+or hire a servant to assume the charge of
+the Polydore place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; I said glumly, &ldquo;that Gladys
+gave the job a double cross. But will you
+please account for the phenomenon of the
+utter absence of Polydores at the present
+period? Has Huldah at last carried out
+her oft-repeated threat of exterminating
+the Polydore race?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pythagoras,&rdquo; explained Silvia dejectedly,
+&ldquo;has gone to the doctor&rsquo;s. He broke
+his wrist this morning. Diogenes is lost
+and Emerald has gone to look for him&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, why hunt him up?&rdquo; I remonstrated.
+&ldquo;Maybe Emerald, too, will get lost or
+strayed or stolen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huldah,&rdquo; continued Silvia, &ldquo;has locked
+Demetrius in the cellar. I am unable to
+report on Ptolemy. Huldah is half sick,
+but she won&rsquo;t go to bed. She said no beds
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span>
+in Bedlamite for her. But I have a wonderful
+plan to suggest. There is relief in sight
+if you will consent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will consent to any committable
+crime on the calendar,&rdquo; I assured her,
+&ldquo;that will lead to the parting of the Polydore
+path from ours. Divulge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We both need a change and rest. Today
+I heard of a most alluring, inexpensive,
+unfrequented resort called Hope Haven.
+Unfashionable, fine fishing, beautiful scenery,
+twelve miles from a railroad, and a
+stage stops there but once a day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If there is such a place, we&rsquo;ll go there
+at once, though why such an enticing spot
+should be unfrequented is beyond me. Do
+we leave the Polydores to their fate, or as
+a town charge?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll leave them to Huldah. She
+offered to keep them here if we&rsquo;d take
+the outing. She said she&rsquo;d either give
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span>
+them free rein or beat their brains out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I see where the Polydores land
+in a juvenile jail, or else I return to defend
+Huldah for a charge of murder. We&rsquo;ll
+take our departure by night&ndash;&ndash;tomorrow
+night&ndash;&ndash;and like the Arabs, or the Polydore
+parents, silently steal away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia constrainedly, when
+we had arranged the details of our plan, &ldquo;if
+you wouldn&rsquo;t object too much, I should
+like to take Diogenes with us. He hasn&rsquo;t
+missed his mother, but I really believe he&rsquo;d
+be homesick without me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take him, of course,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
+manageable away from the others. I
+plainly see you&rsquo;ve formed the Polydore
+habit, and maybe a partial parting from
+the Polydores would be wiser, but we&rsquo;ll
+take Diogenes as an antidote against
+too perfect a time. But I forgot to tell
+you that I had a letter from Rob today.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
+He plans to come and make his visit now
+and will arrive next Monday. I&rsquo;ll write
+him to join us at Hope Haven. You must
+write down again for me the route we take
+to get there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia laughed hopelessly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It never rains but it pours. I had a
+letter from Beth this afternoon, and she
+says she would like to come to us now.
+She arrives Monday. Here is her letter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Great minds! It is quite a coincidence,&rdquo;
+I declared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought it would be so nice to have
+Beth go with us to this resort.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It can&rsquo;t be done,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;That is,
+they can&rsquo;t both go. I am not going to let
+even Rob Rossiter slight my sister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Still it would be a triumph to have her
+change his mind&ndash;&ndash;or his heart. You
+know a woman-hater always succumbs to
+the right girl.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;In books, yes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had been scanning Beth&rsquo;s letter and I
+laughed derisively as I read aloud: &ldquo;&lsquo;I am
+so curious to see those next-door children.
+When you first wrote of the &ldquo;Polydores&rdquo;
+I never once thought of them as children.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She thought exactly right,&rdquo; I told
+Silvia, and then continued reading: &ldquo;&lsquo;I
+supposed them to be something like tadpoles
+or polliwogs. I really think I shall
+enjoy them.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would serve her right,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;to
+let her come and stay with them here in
+our absence. She&rsquo;d get the cure for enjoyment
+all right. Rob wrote of them in
+the same strain and says he, too, is curious
+to meet the missing links.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does she know,&rdquo; asked Silvia, &ldquo;how
+Rob regards women?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; I&rsquo;ve always made some excuse to
+her for not having them meet. I didn&rsquo;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span>
+want to hear her make disparaging remarks
+about him, and she is such a flirt, she&rsquo;d try
+to draw him out and he would shut up like
+a clam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I think,&rdquo; decided Silvia, &ldquo;that the
+best way out of it is to write Rob to postpone
+his visit and I will write Beth to come
+direct to Hope Haven.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I agreed, &ldquo;that will be fine. She
+shall have charge of dear little Di and
+study the evolutions of the Polydores later.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I approved this plan. So we wrote our
+letters and stealthily, but joyously, prepared
+for our getaway, leaving the house
+like thieves in the night and bearing the
+sleeping cherub, Diogenes.</p>
+<p>Silvia sighed in relief when we were
+aboard the train.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I feel quite chesty,&rdquo; she declared, &ldquo;at
+being smart enough to outwit Ptolemy, the
+wizard.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I have the feeling,&rdquo; I observed forebodingly,
+&ldquo;that they may be on the train
+or underneath it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The next morning we reached Windy
+Creek, the station nearest our destination,
+and continued our journey by stage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;People will think you have consoled
+yourself very speedily for the death of
+your first husband,&rdquo; I observed, as we were
+en route.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, what do you mean, Lucien?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You know Diogenes addresses me as
+stepdaddy. It is the only word he speaks
+plainly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she exclaimed in perturbation,
+&ldquo;I never thought of that! Well, we can
+explain to everyone, or I&rsquo;ll teach them to
+leave off the &lsquo;step.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not on your life!&rdquo; I demurred.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He had better call you Lucien, then.
+Emerald calls his father &lsquo;Felix.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span></div>
+<p>She at once began her tutelage of the bewildered
+Diogenes. After several stabs at
+pronouncing Lucien he managed to evolve
+&ldquo;Ocean&rdquo; to which he sometimes affixed
+&ldquo;step&rdquo; so that people to whom he was not
+explained doubtless thought me the latest
+thing in dances.</p>
+<p>Hope Haven was like most resorts&ndash;&ndash;a
+place safe to shun. There was a low, flat
+stretch of woods in which a clearing had
+been made for a barn-like structure called
+a hotel, with rooms rough and not always
+ready. The beautiful recreation grounds
+mentioned in the advertising matter consisted
+of a plowed field worked over into a
+space designated as a tennis court and a
+grass-grown croquet ground.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anyway,&rdquo; claimed Silvia hopefully,
+&ldquo;it&rsquo;s a treat to see woods, water, and sky
+unconfined.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She devoted the remainder of the morning
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span>
+to unpacking and after luncheon set
+off to explore the woods, borrowing from
+the landlady a little cart for Diogenes to
+ride in. My plan to go in swimming was
+delayed by my garrulous landlord.</p>
+<p>I was just starting for the lake when I
+heard sounds from the woods that alarmed
+the landlord but which I instantly recognized
+as the Polydore yell. A moment
+later I saw Silvia emerging at full speed
+into the open, drawing the cart in which
+Diogenes was doubled up like a jackknife.
+I hastened to meet them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien,&rdquo; exclaimed my wife tearfully,
+&ldquo;we are bitten to bits! Just look
+at poor little Di!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I lifted the howling child from the cart.
+His face, neck, and hands were stringy and
+purplish&ndash;&ndash;a cross between an eggplant
+and a round steak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mosquitoes!&rdquo; explained Silvia. &ldquo;They
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span>
+came in flocks and they advertised particularly
+&lsquo;no mosquitoes.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A dour-faced guest paused in passing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There aren&rsquo;t&ndash;&ndash;many,&rdquo; she declared.
+&ldquo;Very few, in fact, compared to the number
+of black flies, sand fleas, and jiggers. However,
+you&rsquo;ll find more discomfort from the
+poison ivy, I imagine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; began Silvia in lament.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind!&rdquo; I hastened to console,
+&ldquo;you are out of the woods now, and you
+won&rsquo;t have to go in again. I presume they
+have an antidote up at the house. I&rsquo;ll
+give you and Diogenes first aid and then
+we will all go down to the lake shore. You
+can both sit on the dock and watch me
+swim.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They both brightened up, and when we
+reached the hotel the landlady provided
+a soothing lotion for the bites and stings.</p>
+<p>By the time we had started for the lake,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span>
+the afflicted two were in holiday spirit
+again.</p>
+<p>I sought cover in a small shed called a
+bath-house and got into my swimming outfit
+and shot out from the dipping end of the
+diving-board into the water. When I came
+to the surface, Silvia, sitting beside Diogenes
+on the dock, shrieked wildly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien, there are snakes all around
+you! Come out, quick!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are only water snakes,&rdquo; I assured
+her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care what kind they are. They
+are snakes just the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Diogenes instantly began to bellow for
+me to hand him a snake to play with.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He recognizes his own,&rdquo; I told Silvia,
+who, however, saw nothing amusing in my
+implication.</p>
+<p>When I came out of the water, the temperature
+had climbed several degrees and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span>
+we were glad to seek the hotel parlor, which
+was cool and damp.</p>
+<p>After dinner Silvia put Diogenes to bed
+and we sat out on the veranda. I was enjoying
+my evening smoke and the feel of
+the night wind in my face. Silvia had just
+finished telling me that merely to be away
+from the Polydores was Paradise enough
+for her, and that she didn&rsquo;t care very much
+about the woods, anyway&ndash;&ndash;the lake was
+sufficient, when her optimism was rudely
+jolted by the shrill, shudder-sending song
+of the festive mosquito.</p>
+<p>She fled into the parlor. The landlady,
+who seemed to have a panacea for all ills,
+suggested that she might tack mosquito
+netting around the little balcony extending
+from our bedroom, and then she could sit
+there in comfort when the mosquitoes
+bothered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what the last lady that had that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span>
+room did,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but when she left,
+she took the netting with her. We keep a
+supply in our little store.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia immediately sought the hotel store
+and bought a quantity of the netting and a
+goodly stock of the mosquito lotion.</p>
+<p>That night as I was drifting into slumber,
+Silvia remarked: &ldquo;Only one of the
+things I heard and read about this place is
+true.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which one?&rdquo; I asked between winks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That it was unfrequented. I have seen
+only three guests besides us so far. How do
+they make it pay?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The hotel is evidently only a side issue,&rdquo;
+I replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To what?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the store. Think of the quantities
+of lotion and netting they must sell in
+the season, which, you must know, is in the
+fall. The hunting, the landlord tells me, is
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span>
+very good, and his hotel is quite popular in
+October and November.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think we had better stay, Lucien.
+Mosquitoes don&rsquo;t poison you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even if they did,&rdquo; I declared, &ldquo;as a
+choice between them and the Polydores I
+would say, &lsquo;Oh, Mosquito, where is thy
+sting?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_10' id='linki_10'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-015.jpg' alt='' title='' width='198' height='311' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_11' id='linki_11'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-016.jpg' alt='' title='' width='339' height='169' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VI__A_FLIRT_AND_A_WOMANHATER' id='CHAPTER_VI__A_FLIRT_AND_A_WOMANHATER'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter VI</span></h2>
+<h3><i>A Flirt and a Woman-Hater</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>The next morning I arose early and
+screened in the little birdhouse balcony.
+There was a large piece of
+netting left and Silvia converted it into a
+robe and headgear for the swaddling of
+Diogenes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He looks like the Bride of Lammermoor,&rdquo;
+I declared, as he went forth in this
+regalia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s preferable to looking like a
+pest-house patient, as he did yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span></div>
+<p>His first-aid costume didn&rsquo;t find favor
+with the landlady, as it would seem indicative
+to the newly arrived of the features
+of the place. However, before another
+stage-coming was due, Di had rent
+his garment sufficiently to make it useless
+is a &ldquo;skeeter skirt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>During the morning I enjoyed my solitary
+swim with the snakes. Diogenes
+played football with the croquet balls and
+bruised one of his toes, besides hitting the
+landlady&rsquo;s child in the eye. Silvia went
+for a walk which had been pictured in the
+advertisements. She speedily returned, her
+ardor dampened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are so many sticks and stones
+and rocks,&rdquo; she said in a discouraged tone,
+&ldquo;that there was no pleasure in walking.
+I nearly sprained my ankle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, the real sport we haven&rsquo;t tried
+yet,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll get a boat and take
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span>
+Diogenes and go for a row on the lake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This proposition met with instant favor.
+I put Silvia and Diogenes in the stern of the
+boat and pulled for the opposite shore. My
+endeavors to gain this point were balked by
+Silvia&rsquo;s remarkable conceptions of the art
+of steering craft. She was so serenely
+satisfied, however, with the way she performed
+her duties and the aid she thought
+she was giving me, that I forbore to
+criticize.</p>
+<p>In order to achieve a few strokes in the
+right direction, I asked her to get me a
+cigar from an inside pocket of my coat,
+which was on the seat in front of her.
+Then came the blight to our bliss. She
+looked in the wrong pocket and instead
+of producing a cigar, she extracted two
+letters with seals unbroken.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_12' id='linki_12'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
+<img src='images/illus-017.jpg' alt='' title='' width='357' height='391' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;Lucien Wade!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Here are our letters to Beth and Rob.&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien Wade!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Here
+are our letters to Beth and Rob. Well, it
+is my fault. I should have known better
+than to give them to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The plot thickens,&rdquo; I replied thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is Monday. They must both be
+at the house now. What will they think!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They will think we didn&rsquo;t receive their
+letters.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it unfortunate&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; she began.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;I am not sure but
+what it is a good thing. It will give Rob
+a jolt to see that girls can be as nice as Beth
+is, and as for her, she is quite able to take
+care of the situation where a man is concerned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But we must have Beth here. Maybe
+you&rsquo;d better telegraph her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huldah understands conditions. She
+will send Beth on here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The next morning we took Diogenes and
+went down the road to meet the stage. As
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span>
+it came around the curve, we saw there
+were three passengers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tolly!&rdquo; cried Diogenes with an ecstatic
+whoop.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beth!&rdquo; recognized Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rob!&rdquo; I ejaculated.</p>
+<p>The stage stopped to allow us to get in.</p>
+<p>Mutual explanations followed. Ours
+were brief and substantiated by the documents
+in evidence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; I said turning threateningly to
+Ptolemy, &ldquo;what did you come here for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To show them,&rdquo; indicating Beth and
+Rob, &ldquo;how to get here and to look after
+Di so you and mudder could enjoy your
+vacation,&rdquo; he replied glibly.</p>
+<p>Beth laughed mirthfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Check! Lucien.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t Huldah warn you,&rdquo; I asked her,
+&ldquo;that our whereabouts were to remain unknown?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;is evidently a
+mind reader, for he told me where you were
+before I saw Huldah.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Ptolemy, how did you know where
+we were?&rdquo; asked Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was on top of the porch when you
+told stepdaddy about coming. I didn&rsquo;t
+tell the others. I won&rsquo;t bother you any.
+And I know how to look after Di. You
+won&rsquo;t send me back, mudder,&rdquo; he pleaded,
+looking wistfully at the foam-crested water
+of the little lake.</p>
+<p>I wondered mutely if Silvia could resist
+the appeal in the eyes of the neglected boy
+when he turned his imploring gaze to hers,
+and the delight depicted in Diogenes&rsquo; eyes
+at &ldquo;Tolly&rsquo;s&rdquo; arrival. She could not.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may stay as long as we do,&rdquo; she
+said slowly, &ldquo;if you are a good boy and will
+not play too rough with Diogenes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We had reached the hotel by this time,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span>
+and with a wild &ldquo;ki yi&rdquo; Ptolemy dashed
+for the shore, dragging the delighted Diogenes
+with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s only fair to Huldah to take one
+more off her hands,&rdquo; Silvia said apologetically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Them Three is what bothers me,&rdquo; I
+complained. &ldquo;If they, too, follow after,
+Heaven help them! I won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a good arrangement all around,&rdquo;
+declared Rob. &ldquo;I judge it takes a Polydore
+to understand his ilk, so the kids can pair
+off together. Miss Wade will be company
+for you, while Lucien and I go fishing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He looked keenly at Beth as he spoke,
+but Beth was looking demurely down and
+made no sign of having heard him.</p>
+<p>Silvia and I went with Beth to her room,
+and then she told her story.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Knowing Lucien&rsquo;s failing, I was not
+surprised at receiving no response to my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
+letter. When I got out of the cab in front
+of your house, a wild-looking boy, very bas-relief
+as to eyes, and who I felt sure must
+be Ptolemy of the Polydores, appeared.
+As soon as he saw me he gave utterance
+to a blood-curdling yell of&ndash;&ndash;&lsquo;Here she
+is!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In response to his call three of his understudies
+came on with headlong greeting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;You are Beth, aren&rsquo;t you?&rsquo; Ptolemy
+asked me. Then he drew me aside and in
+mysterious whispers told me where you
+were and that you had written me to join
+you here. He added that stepdaddy never
+remembered to mail letters. I went within
+and interviewed Huldah who confirmed
+his information.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Presently I saw a taxi stop before the
+house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That&rsquo;s him!&rsquo; exclaimed Ptolemy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Him who?&rsquo; I asked.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Rob somebody&ndash;&ndash;stepdaddy&rsquo;s college
+chum. He wrote he was coming, and they
+thought they had postponed him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With a sprint of speed the four Polydores
+surrounded your Mr. Rossiter, all
+talking at once. I came to the rescue, of
+course, and explained the situation, and we
+decided to follow you.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy was promoter for the trip and
+suggested the advisability of his accompanying
+us as courier and future nursemaid to
+Diogenes. He was intending to come anyway,
+but thought he&rsquo;d wait for us. He
+had all his belongings packed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He hasn&rsquo;t many except those he had
+on,&rdquo; said Silvia thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has some swimming trunks, two
+collars, two shirts, some mismated socks,
+homemade fishing tackle and a battered
+baseball bat. We came away surreptitiously
+to escape detection by the trio left
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span>
+behind. I knew you wouldn&rsquo;t welcome
+his presence&ndash;&ndash;but he said he was coming
+anyway, so we thought we might as well
+bring him and express him back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After visiting with Beth for a few moments,
+Silvia and I withdrew to talk matters
+over confidentially.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All&rsquo;s well that ends well,&rdquo; I quoth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It hasn&rsquo;t ended yet,&rdquo; reminded Silvia.
+&ldquo;I trust Ptolemy didn&rsquo;t reveal what you
+said about Rob&rsquo;s being a woman-hater and
+Beth a flirt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ptolemy conveniently appeared just then,
+as he generally did in the midst of private
+interviews. Silvia asked him if he had
+repeated those remarks to Beth or Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I knew you didn&rsquo;t
+want her to know, because stepdaddy said
+so, and I thought he wouldn&rsquo;t like to be
+called that, and I wasn&rsquo;t going to give Beth
+away to him.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re all right, Ptolemy!&rdquo; I exclaimed,
+for the first time awarding him
+approbation.</p>
+<p>Out on the veranda we met Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say, those Polydores certainly have
+the punch and pep,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d
+like to have fetched the whole bunch along
+with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you had,&rdquo; I replied dryly, &ldquo;our life&rsquo;s
+friendship would have died on the spot.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_13' id='linki_13'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-018.jpg' alt='' title='' width='263' height='266' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_14' id='linki_14'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-019.jpg' alt='' title='' width='367' height='130' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VII__IN_WHICH_NOTHING_MUCH_HAPPENS' id='CHAPTER_VII__IN_WHICH_NOTHING_MUCH_HAPPENS'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcaplc'>CHAPTER VII</span></h2>
+<h3><i>In Which Nothing Much Happens</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why Hope Haven?&rdquo; asked Rob
+reflectively, when he had taken
+inventory of the possibilities
+of the resort.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; sighed Silvia, &ldquo;so many
+hopes&ndash;&ndash;vacation hopes&ndash;&ndash;must have been
+buried here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Rob was of an investigating turn of
+mind, however, and he had heard from a
+native of H. H., as he had abbreviated the
+place, that there was a smaller lake, abounding
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
+in fish, farther on through the forest.
+It was so strongly fortified, however, by
+the formidable battalions of sharp-shooting
+insects that but few fishermen had ever
+been able to lay siege to it.</p>
+<p>Rob and I being poison proof decided to
+try our luck and pitch camp for a few days
+on the shores of this hidden treasure. As
+we had to send to town by the stage driver
+for the necessary supplies, we remained in
+H. H. the remainder of the day.</p>
+<p>We at once paired off in Noah&rsquo;s most
+approved style as Rob had outlined. Beth
+and Ptolemy went up shore, sticks and
+stones and rocks being no obstacles to their
+feet. Rob and I sought the society of the
+snakes, while Silvia and Diogenes, mosquito-netted,
+watched a game of croquet.</p>
+<p>We dined without the pleasure of the
+society of Ptolemy and Diogenes, who had
+been invited to sit at the table with the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span>
+landlady&rsquo;s children. I might state, incidentally,
+that the invitation was never
+repeated.</p>
+<p>Beth was quite excited over her walk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy and I,&rdquo; she boasted, &ldquo;made
+more of a discovery than Mr. Rossiter did.
+We found a haunted house, a perfectly
+haunted house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not surprised,&rdquo; declared Silvia.
+&ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t expect any other kind of a
+house in such a region.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is it?&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;and what is
+it haunted by?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Insects,&rdquo; suggested Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You go around shore about two miles,
+only it&rsquo;s farther, as you have to make so
+many ups and downs over the rocks. Then
+you leave the shore and go through a
+low marshy stretch, sort of a Dismal
+Swamp, and then up a hill. After Ptolemy
+and I climbed to the top, we looked
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span>
+down and saw, hidden in a clump of lonely
+looking poplars, a small, rudely built house.
+We went down to explore and had hard
+work making our way through a thick
+growth of&ndash;&ndash;everything. We crawled
+under some tangled vines and came up
+on the steps. The house was vacant, although
+there were a few old pieces of
+furniture&ndash;&ndash;a couple of cots, a cook-stove,
+table, and chairs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On our way home we met a woman
+who gave us a history of the house. An
+old miser lived there long ago. One night
+he was robbed and murdered, and his
+ghost still haunts the place. No one
+ventures in its vicinity, and she said most
+likely we were the first people who had
+gone there since the tragedy. She told
+us of a nearer way to reach it. You take
+the road to Windy Creek, and about two
+miles below here, turn into a lane and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span>
+then go through a grove and over a
+hill.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t really believe the story, that
+is, the ghost part of it?&rdquo; asked Rossiter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;N&ndash;&ndash;o,&rdquo; allowed Beth. &ldquo;Still, I&rsquo;d like
+to. It makes it interesting. Ptolemy and
+I are going down there some night to see
+if we can find the ghost.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t see one,&rdquo; I assured her.
+&ldquo;Ptolemy&rsquo;s presence would be sufficient
+to keep even a ghost in the background.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy&rsquo;s a peach,&rdquo; declared Beth
+emphatically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he were older, you wouldn&rsquo;t think
+so,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; asked Beth in surprise,
+or seeming surprise.</p>
+<p>He smiled enigmatically, and irrelevantly
+asked her if she wouldn&rsquo;t really be afraid
+to go to the haunted house at night with
+only Ptolemy for protection.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span></div>
+<p>She assured him she shouldn&rsquo;t be afraid
+of a ghost if she saw one, and that she
+shouldn&rsquo;t be afraid to go alone.</p>
+<p>Throughout the evening, which we
+spent in rowing, walking, and later at a
+little impromptu supper, I was interested
+in observing the puzzling behavior of Beth
+and my chum. I had expected that he
+would avoid her as much as possible and
+speak to her only when common politeness
+made conversation obligatory, and
+that she, a born coquette, would seek to
+add his scalp to her collection. Instead,
+to my surprise, their r&ocirc;les were reversed.
+He appeared interested in her every remark
+and looked at her often and intently.
+He was quite assiduous in his attentions
+which, strange to say, she discouraged,
+not with the deep design of a flirt to increase
+his ardor, but with a calm firmness
+that admitted of no doubt as to her feelings.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Your sister,&rdquo; he remarked to me as
+we were walking down to the lake for a
+swim just before going to bed, &ldquo;is a very
+unusual type.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not at all!&rdquo; I assured him. &ldquo;Beth is
+the true feminine type which you have
+never taken the trouble to know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, come, Lucien! Not feminine,
+you know. Though she is inconsistent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I resented the imputation hotly, but he
+only laughed and said that he guessed it
+was true that a man didn&rsquo;t understand the
+women in his family as well as an outsider
+did.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You think,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;just because she
+says she isn&rsquo;t afraid of ghosts&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; he denied. &ldquo;That wasn&rsquo;t
+the reason, but&ndash;&ndash;I like her type, though
+I always supposed I wouldn&rsquo;t. It is a
+new one to me&ndash;&ndash;anyway. I didn&rsquo;t
+think so young a girl as she&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span></div>
+<p>Our discussion was cut short by the
+inevitable, ever-present Ptolemy, who
+came running up to us, clad in about four
+inches of swimming trunks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why aren&rsquo;t you in bed?&rdquo; I demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was in bed, but it was so warm I
+couldn&rsquo;t sleep, and I went to the window
+and saw you coming down here, so I thought
+I&rsquo;d come, too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I repeated Rob&rsquo;s remarks to Silvia when
+I returned to our room, and she betrayed
+Beth&rsquo;s confidences in regard to Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She says she would like him if it were
+not for one trait that she dislikes more
+than any other in a man and that it was
+sufficient in her estimation to counterbalance
+all his good qualities.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can she mean?&rdquo; I asked bewildered.
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see a flaw in Rob,
+except for his being a woman-hater, and
+he surely hasn&rsquo;t betrayed that fact to her,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span>
+judging from his manner toward her. I
+think he is making an effort to be nice to
+her on my account, and she doesn&rsquo;t appreciate
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I asked her what the flaw was, and she
+flushed and said she couldn&rsquo;t tell me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I guess all around it is a good
+thing we are going off on our fishing expedition.
+I don&rsquo;t want my friend turned
+down by my sister, and I don&rsquo;t want my
+friend calling my sister a new type and
+unfeminine.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_15' id='linki_15'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-020.jpg' alt='' title='' width='152' height='196' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_16' id='linki_16'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-021.jpg' alt='' title='' width='360' height='116' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VIII__PTOLEMY_DISAPPEARS_AND_I_VISIT_A_HAUNTED_HOUSE' id='CHAPTER_VIII__PTOLEMY_DISAPPEARS_AND_I_VISIT_A_HAUNTED_HOUSE'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcaplc'>CHAPTER VIII</span></h2>
+<h3><i>Ptolemy Disappears and I Visit a Haunted House</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>When Rob and I, with our camping
+outfit, drove off through the
+woods, Ptolemy&rsquo;s eyes followed
+us so enviously and he pleaded so eloquently
+to be taken with us that Rob
+was actually on the point of considering
+it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See here, Rob Rossiter!&rdquo; I exclaimed,
+&ldquo;This is my vacation and all I came to
+this God-forsaken place for was to escape
+the Polydores. If he goes, I stay. You
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span>
+know I&rsquo;ve always tried to meet issues,
+but this antique family has got me going.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; he yielded.</p>
+<p>After a drive of a few miles we came
+to the lake and pitched our tent. Two
+days of ideal camp life followed. The
+weather was fine, Rob was a first-class
+cook, and the sport was beyond our most
+optimistic expectation. We landed enough
+of the Friday food to satisfy the most
+fastidious fishing fiend, and the mosquitoes,
+finding we were impervious to their
+stings, finally let us alone.</p>
+<p>I forgot all business cares and disappointments,
+yes, even the Polydores; but on
+the morning of the third day Rob began
+to show signs of restlessness and spoke
+of the likelihood of my wife&rsquo;s being lonely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not with Beth and Ptolemy in calling
+distance,&rdquo; I told him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But they will be off together,&rdquo; he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span>
+replied, &ldquo;and your wife will be alone with
+that <i>enfant terrible</i>. I fancy, too, that
+your sister isn&rsquo;t exactly a companion for
+your wife.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, that shows how little you know
+her. She and Silvia are great friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, of course they are friendly,
+but I mean their tastes are so different,
+and they are so unlike. Your sister doesn&rsquo;t
+care for domesticity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure she does. You have turned the
+wrong searchlight on Beth. If you knew
+her, you&rsquo;d like her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do like her,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s too
+bad she&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stopped abruptly and quickly
+changed the conversation. In spite of
+my efforts to renew the controversy about
+Beth, he refused to return to the subject.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_17' id='linki_17'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span>
+<img src='images/illus-022.jpg' alt='' title='' width='336' height='477' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us.<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span></div>
+<p>In the afternoon, when I was doing a
+little scale work preparatory to cooking,
+a messenger from the hotel drove up with
+a note from Silvia which I read aloud:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy has been missing for twenty-four
+hours. We are in hopes he has
+joined you. If not, what shall I do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll go back with you,&rdquo; said Rob to
+the man. &ldquo;Just lend a hand here and
+help us pull up these tent stakes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s Ptolemy to me or I to him?&rdquo;
+I asked with a groan, &ldquo;can&rsquo;t we give him
+absent treatment?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re positively inhuman, Lucien,&rdquo;
+protested Rob. &ldquo;The boy may be at
+the bottom of the lake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not he! He was born to be hung.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All this time, however, I had been active
+in making preparations for departure, as
+I knew that Silvia would feel that we were
+responsible for Ptolemy&rsquo;s safety, and her
+anxiety was reason enough for me to hasten
+to her.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span></div>
+<p>Rob was quite jubilant on our return trip
+and declared that the fish came too easily
+and too plentifully to make it real sport,
+but I felt that I had another grudge to be
+charged up to the fateful family.</p>
+<p>We found Silvia pale from anxiety, Beth
+in tears, and Diogenes loudly clamoring for
+&ldquo;Tolly.&rdquo; We learned that the afternoon
+before, Silvia and Beth had gone with the
+landlady for a ride, leaving Diogenes in
+Ptolemy&rsquo;s care, but on their return at
+dinner time, Diogenes was playing alone
+in the sandpile.</p>
+<p>Nothing was thought of Ptolemy&rsquo;s absence
+until bedtime, and they had then
+sent out searching parties to the woods
+and the lake shores. Finally it occurred
+to Beth that he might have gone to join
+Rob and me, so they sent the messenger
+to investigate.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must be lost in the woods
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span>
+somewhere,&rdquo; said Beth tearfully, &ldquo;and he will
+starve to death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Rob actually touched her hand in his
+distress at her grief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy is too smart to get lost anywhere,&rdquo;
+I declared. &ldquo;He knows fully as
+much about woodcraft as he does about
+every other kind of craft. He&rsquo;s one of
+his mother&rsquo;s antiquities personified. But
+haven&rsquo;t you been able to find anyone who
+saw him after you went for your ride?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; even the hotel help were all out
+on the lake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he left Diogenes here, absolutely
+unguarded?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well!&rdquo; admitted Silvia, &ldquo;he tied Diogenes
+to a tree near the sandpile.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he must have gone away with
+malice aforethought,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;and Diogenes
+is the only one who knows anything
+about his last movements.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span></div>
+<p>I lifted the child to my knee, and speaking
+more gently to him than I had ever
+done, I asked:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Di, did you and Tolly play in the
+sandpile yesterday?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was quite emphatic in his affirmative.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, tell Ocean: Did Tolly go away
+and leave you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tolly goed away,&rdquo; he confirmed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien!&rdquo; protested Beth, laughing.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s too little to know what you are
+talking about or to remember.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien&rsquo;s ruling passion strong in death,&rdquo;
+murmured Rob. &ldquo;He can&rsquo;t help cross-examining
+the cradle even!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which way,&rdquo; I resumed, ignoring these
+interruptions, &ldquo;did Tolly go&ndash;&ndash;that way?&rdquo;
+pointing towards the woods.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No! Tolly goed&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; and he trailed off
+into his baby jargon which no one could
+understand, but he pointed to the lake.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;What did he say when he went away;
+when he tied the rope around you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bye-bye.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What else?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Diogenes&rsquo; intentions to be communicative
+were certainly all right, but not a
+word was intelligible. As he kept picking
+at his dress and pointing to it, I finally
+prompted:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did Tolly pin a paper to Di&rsquo;s dress?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;m&ndash;&ndash;h&rsquo;&ndash;&ndash;m.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bravo, Lucien!&rdquo; applauded Rob.
+&ldquo;They say you can induce a witness to
+admit anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did Di do with the paper?&rdquo; I
+continued.</p>
+<p>The word he wanted evidently being
+beyond his vocabulary and speech, he
+made a rotary motion with his fist. The
+gesture conveyed nothing to our minds,
+but was instantly recognized and interpreted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
+by the landlady&rsquo;s little girl, who
+said he meant a windmill such as she had
+sometimes made for him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did Di do with the windmill?&rdquo;
+I asked.</p>
+<p>He pointed to the sandpile, which I
+investigated and found a stick planted
+therein. I pulled it up and saw a pin
+sticking in the end of it. Further excavation
+revealed a crumpled piece of paper
+on which was written in Ptolemy&rsquo;s round
+hand:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Want to see kids. Am going home.
+Tell Beth I bet she dasent go to the haunted
+house alone at night. Ptolemy.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor Huldah!&rdquo; sighed Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought he was having the time of
+his life here,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was sore,&rdquo; declared Beth, &ldquo;because
+you and Lucien wouldn&rsquo;t take him with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span>
+you on the fishing trip. He was moping
+by himself all the morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Trying to think up some new deviltry,&rdquo;
+I theorized, &ldquo;to make us feel bad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; asserted Silvia, &ldquo;I think he really
+misses the boys. The Polydores, for all
+their scrappings, are very clannish. But
+how do you suppose he got down to Windy
+Creek?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He could catch plenty of rides along
+the way, but what is puzzling me is how
+he got the money to pay his fare.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He seemed very well provided with
+cash,&rdquo; informed Rob. &ldquo;I tried to pay
+for his ticket down here, but he insisted
+on buying it himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia worried so much about what
+might happen to him en route that after
+dinner I motored to Windy Creek with
+some tourists who had stopped at the
+hotel in passing.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span></div>
+<p>I called up long distance and after some
+delay got in communication with our house.
+Ptolemy himself answered and assured me
+he had arrived all &ldquo;hunky doory&rdquo;, that
+Huldah, who was out on an errand, was
+&ldquo;hunky doory&rdquo;, and that the kids were
+all &ldquo;hunky doory.&rdquo; In fact, his cheerful
+tone indicated that the whole universe
+was in the beatific state described by his
+expressive adjective.</p>
+<p>I was really ripping mad at his taking
+French leave and so giving Silvia cause
+for her anxiety, but I forbore to reprimand
+him by word or tone, lest he get even by
+&ldquo;coming back&rdquo; literally. I did tell him
+how the loss of the note for twenty-four
+hours had caused a general excitement,
+but he felt no remorse for his share in the
+situation, blaming Diogenes entirely and
+bidding me &ldquo;punch the kid&rsquo;s face&rdquo; for
+unpinning the note.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span></div>
+<p>On my return from Windy Creek I was
+fortunate enough to fall in with a farmer
+who lived near the hotel. He was driving
+some sort of a machine he called an <i>autoo</i>.
+He was an old-timer in the vicinity and
+related the past, present, and pluperfect of
+all the residents on the route. I had a
+detailed and vivid account of the midnight
+visitor of the haunted house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d jest naturally like to see what there
+is to it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Not that I am afeerd
+at all, only it&rsquo;s sort of spooky to go to a
+lonesome place like that all alone. If I
+could git some one to go with me, I&rsquo;d tackle
+the job, but I vum if every time I perpose
+it to anyone they don&rsquo;t make some excuse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m on,&rdquo; I declared. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t dread
+ghosts near as much as I do some living
+folks I know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right you air,&rdquo; chuckled the old man.
+&ldquo;If you say so we&rsquo;ll go right off now jest
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span>
+as sure as shootin&rsquo;. We may be ghosts
+ourselves tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I assured him I was quite ready to encounter
+the ghost, so he jubilantly turned
+the machine from the road into a grass-grown
+lane. We zigzagged for some distance
+and then got out and went on foot
+through a grove. The moon and the stars
+were half veiled by some light, misty clouds,
+so that the little house didn&rsquo;t show up
+very clearly, but as we came to the top
+of the hill, we saw something that shook
+even my well-behaved nerves.</p>
+<p>From a window in the roof-room extended
+a white arm and hand, with index
+finger pointing threateningly and directly
+toward us.</p>
+<p>My farmer friend turned quickly and
+fled toward the grove. I followed fleetly.
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your rush?&rdquo; I asked, when I
+had overtaken him.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I just happened to remember,&rdquo; he explained
+gaspingly, &ldquo;that there&rsquo;s a pesky
+autoo thief in these &rsquo;ere parts. Bukins
+had his stole jest last night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lights on his machine must have
+reassured him as to its safety when we
+emerged from the woods into the open, but
+he didn&rsquo;t lessen his speed. We got in the
+&ldquo;autoo&rdquo; and soon said good-by to the
+lane. At one time I believed it was
+good-by to everything, but at last we
+gained the highway, right side up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well!&rdquo; I said, when we were running
+normally again on terra firma, &ldquo;that
+was some little old ghost,&ndash;&ndash;beckoned to
+us to come right in, too!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You seen it then!&rdquo; he exclaimed excitedly.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m mighty glad I had an eyewitness.
+Folks wouldn&rsquo;t believe me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They probably won&rsquo;t believe me,
+either,&rdquo; I assured him. &ldquo;I am a lawyer.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t tell me! Well, it did jest
+give me a start for a minute. I&rsquo;d like to
+hev gone in and seen it nigh to, if I hadn&rsquo;t
+happened to think of this &rsquo;ere autoo. You
+see I ain&rsquo;t got it all paid for yet. I&rsquo;m jest
+clean beat. You don&rsquo;t mind my takin&rsquo;
+a leetle pull at a stone fence, do you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I guess not,&rdquo; I assented somewhat
+dubiously, however. &ldquo;That was a rail
+fence we took a pull at back in the lane,
+wasn&rsquo;t it? Of course, if we shouldn&rsquo;t
+happen to clear the stone fence as well
+as we did the rail fence, it might be more
+disastrous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, land!&rdquo; he said with a cackling
+laugh, &ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t meanin&rsquo; that kind of a
+fence. I mean the kind you&ndash;&ndash;Say!
+You ain&rsquo;t one of them teetotalers, be you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only in theory,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;but this
+stone fence drink is a new one on me.
+What&rsquo;s it like?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span></div>
+<p>He stopped the &ldquo;autoo&rdquo; and pulled a
+bottle from an inner pocket.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You kin taste it better than I kin tell
+it,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;Take a pull&ndash;&ndash;a condumned
+good one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I rarely imbibed, confining my indulgences
+to the demands of necessity, but I
+thought that the flight of Ptolemy, the
+ghostly encounter, and my Mazeppa&ndash;&ndash;wild
+ride all combined to constitute an occasion
+adequate to call for a bracer in the shape
+of a stone fence, or anything he might
+produce.</p>
+<p>I took what I considered a &ldquo;condumned
+good one&rdquo; from the bottle and it nearly
+strangled me, but I followed the aged
+stranger&rsquo;s advice to take another to &ldquo;cure
+the chokes&rdquo; caused by the first one. On
+general principles I took a third and then
+reluctantly returned him the bottle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s over the moon,&rdquo; he jovially
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span>
+exclaimed as he proceeded to make my
+attempt at a &ldquo;condumned good one&rdquo;
+appear most niggardly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May I ask,&rdquo; I inquired when my feeling
+of nerve-tense strain had vanished, and
+I felt as if I were treading thin air, &ldquo;just
+what is in a stone fence?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, what do you think?&rdquo; he asked
+slyly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think the very devil is in it,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, mebby,&rdquo; he admitted. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+two-thirds hard cider and one-third whisky.
+It&rsquo;s a healthy, hearting drink and yet
+it has a leetle come back to it&ndash;&ndash;a sort
+o&rsquo; kick, you know. But this is where I
+live,&rdquo; pointing to a farmhouse well back
+from the road, &ldquo;but I am goin&rsquo; to run you
+on to your tavern though.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The hotel was dark, save for a light in
+my room. I invited him in, but he was
+anxious to &ldquo;git hum and tell the folks&rdquo;,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span>
+so I gave him some cigars and went in to
+&ldquo;tell my folks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I found them in the room waiting for
+me. That is, Beth was in the room, sitting
+by the table and pretending to read. Silvia
+and Rob were out in the little balcony.
+They came inside as soon as they heard my
+voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, was he there?&rdquo; asked Silvia anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;He answered the
+telephone himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was feeling quite exhilarated by this
+time. My wife looked a perfect vision to
+me. Beth, I thought, was some sister,
+and Rob the best fellow in the world. Even
+the Polydores at long range, and under
+the ameliorating influence of stone fences,
+seemed like fine little fellows&ndash;&ndash;rather active
+and strenuous, to be sure, but only as
+all wholesome children should be.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span></div>
+<p>Silvia was relieved at the announcement
+of Ptolemy&rsquo;s safety, but very much disappointed
+that I did not succeed in interviewing
+Huldah and finding out something
+about domestic affairs.</p>
+<p>I assured her that everything was &ldquo;hunky
+doory&rdquo; at home, praised the telephone
+service, my expedition to town, and painted
+my return ride with &ldquo;the honest farmer&rdquo;
+in glowing terms. I was suddenly halted in
+my eulogy by becoming aware of an amazed
+expression on my wife&rsquo;s countenance, a
+most suspicious glance in Beth&rsquo;s wide-open
+eyes, and a very knowing wink from
+Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia severely, &ldquo;I believe
+you&rsquo;ve been drinking. I certainly
+smell spirits.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe you do,&rdquo; I replied jocosely.
+&ldquo;I certainly saw spirits. I went to the
+haunted house on my way back.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought Windy Creek was a dry
+town,&rdquo; remarked Rob innocently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is,&rdquo; I assured him, &ldquo;but I rode home
+with an old man&ndash;&ndash;a farmer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does he run a blind pig?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was more like a pig in a poke,&rdquo; I
+replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; exclaimed Silvia reproachfully,
+&ldquo;you told me two years ago, after
+that banquet to the Bar, that you were
+never going to touch wine or whisky again.
+What did that horrid old man give you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A stone fence. That&rsquo;s what he said
+it was anyway.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a new one on me,&rdquo; commented
+Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was a new toast went with it.
+He drank to &lsquo;over the moon.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must have gone there all right and
+taken all the shine from the moon-man,&rdquo;
+said Rob.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; asked Beth, &ldquo;did you really
+go to that haunted house?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again I was moved to eloquence, and I
+told of the farmer&rsquo;s yearning, the fulfillment,
+the beckoning hand and the beating
+of the retreat at length.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sure,&rdquo; asked Rob, &ldquo;that you
+didn&rsquo;t take that stone fence before you
+visited the haunted house?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; I replied, loftily, &ldquo;that a
+lawyer&rsquo;s word is worthless, but seeing is
+believing. We will all visit the haunted
+house tomorrow night and I&rsquo;ll make good
+on ghosts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This plan was unanimously approved,
+and then Silvia suggested that she thought
+I had better go to bed. I had no particular
+objection to doing so.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; she said solemnly, when we
+were alone, &ldquo;I want you to promise me
+something. I want you to give me your
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span>
+word that you will never take another
+stone wall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I did this most readily.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_18' id='linki_18'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-023.jpg' alt='' title='' width='307' height='284' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_19' id='linki_19'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-024.jpg' alt='' title='' width='378' height='100' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IX__IN_WHICH_WE_SEE_GHOSTS' id='CHAPTER_IX__IN_WHICH_WE_SEE_GHOSTS'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter IX</span></h2>
+<h3><i>In Which We See Ghosts</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>The next morning Rob tried earnestly
+and vainly to drive a wedge in
+Beth&rsquo;s good graces, but she treated
+him with a casual tolerance that finally
+put him in an ill humor which he took out
+on me with many a gibe at my &ldquo;stone fence
+spirit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Men of my profession who have to deal
+with facts rather than fancy are not believers
+in the supernatural. I was sure
+that the extending arm and the beckoning
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span>
+finger were there, but belonged to no
+ghost. It might have been a curtain
+blowing out the window or a fake of some
+kind. But I knew that unless there was
+some kind of a showing in a ghostly way
+that night, I should never hear the last of
+my stone fence indulgence, so I resolved
+to make a preliminary visit alone by daylight
+and rig up something white to substantiate
+my spectral narrative.</p>
+<p>I didn&rsquo;t find an opportunity to escape
+unseen until late in the afternoon, when I
+went, ostensibly, for a solitary row on the
+lake.</p>
+<p>I landed and came by a circuitous route
+to the haunted house. The calm security
+of sunshine, of course, prevented any shivers
+of anticipation such as I had experienced
+the night before. On passing one of the
+windows on my way to the front entrance,
+I glanced in, stopped in sheer fright, stooped
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span>
+and backed to the next window, which was
+screened by a labyrinth of vines through
+which I peered. I am sure I lost my Bloom
+of Youth complexion for a few moments.
+I babbled aimlessly to myself and then
+managed to pull together and beat it to
+the lake with as much speed as my farmer
+friend had shown in his retreat. I made the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span>
+boat and the hotel in double quick time.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_20' id='linki_20'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-025.jpg' alt='' title='' width='324' height='296' /><br />
+</div>
+<p>I felt no misgivings now as to the promise
+of a sensation that night, and that sustaining
+thought was all that propped my flagging
+spirits throughout the day, but I
+resolved to keep my little party at safe
+distance from the house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say we keep our nocturnal noctambulation
+under our hats,&rdquo; proposed Rob.</p>
+<p>When this proposition was translated to
+Silvia, she entirely approved, so, committing
+Diogenes to the Polydores&rsquo; Providence, we
+left the hotel at half past eleven for a row
+on the lake by moonlight.</p>
+<p>When we descended the slope leading
+to the House of Mystery, I cautioned silence
+and a &ldquo;safety-first&rdquo; distance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ghosts are easily vanished,&rdquo; I informed
+them. &ldquo;They don&rsquo;t seek limelight,
+and I want you to be sure to see
+this one.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span></div>
+<p>As we came to the untrodden undergrowth
+we heard a weird, wailing sound
+that would have curdled my blood had I
+not glanced in the window that afternoon
+and so, in a measure, been prepared for
+this&ndash;&ndash;or anything.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look!&rdquo; whispered Beth. &ldquo;The arm!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia looked at the roof window and with
+a stifled shriek of terror turned and fled up
+the hill, Rob chivalrously pursuing her.</p>
+<p>Beth was pale, but game.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can it be, Lucien?&rdquo; she whispered.
+&ldquo;Do we dare go in to see?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t, Beth,&rdquo; I vetoed quickly.
+&ldquo;Maybe some lunatic or half-witted person
+has taken up abode here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien!&rdquo; called Rob peremptorily.</p>
+<p>I turned quickly. He was at the top of
+the hill, half supporting Silvia. I ran
+toward them, followed by Beth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t a ghost, of course, Silvia,&rdquo; I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span>
+said soothingly, and then repeated my supposition
+about the lunatic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course I don&rsquo;t believe in ghosts,&rdquo;
+said Silvia shudderingly, &ldquo;but it&rsquo;s an awful
+place and those sounds are like those I
+have heard in nightmares.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll hurry back to the hotel and forget
+all about it,&rdquo; I urged.</p>
+<p>I rowed the boat and Silvia sat opposite
+me. Beth and Rob were in the stern
+and I had to listen to their conversation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course I felt a little creepy,&rdquo; she admitted,
+&ldquo;but then I like to feel that way,
+and I wasn&rsquo;t afraid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, of course, you wouldn&rsquo;t be,&rdquo; he
+replied somewhat ironically. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re the
+new woman type.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I am not,&rdquo; she denied. &ldquo;I wish
+I were. Silvia&rsquo;s really the strong-minded
+type.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;She didn&rsquo;t act the part when she saw
+the ghost,&rdquo; he retorted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s very unusual for her nerves to give
+way. Silvia&rsquo;s quite a surprise to me this
+summer, but I think those funny Polydores
+have upset her more than Lucien realizes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I wondered if she were right, and once
+again murderous wishes toward the Polydores
+entered my brain, and I made renewed
+vows about disposing of them on
+our return home.</p>
+<p>One thing, however, had been accomplished
+by our expedition. Silvia was more
+lenient in her judgment on my indulgences
+of the preceding night.</p>
+<p>By the time we pulled in at the landing,
+Silvia had recovered her equilibrium.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien, what the devil do you suppose
+was in that house?&rdquo; asked Rob, when we
+were putting up the boat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Loons and things,&rdquo; I allowed.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But what was that white arm?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some fake thing the village wag has
+put up to scare the natives.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Next morning&rsquo;s stage brought some new
+arrivals, and among them were two college
+students who at once were claimed by Beth.
+She played tennis with one and later went
+rowing with the other. Rob smoked and
+sulked, apart.</p>
+<p>My farmer friend had been garrulous
+and rumors of the ghost and the haunted
+house had come to the ears of the hotel
+inmates, thereby causing a pleasurable
+stir of excitement. A number of them
+announced their intention of visiting the
+place. They asked me to be their guide,
+but I refused.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was interesting,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;but I think
+it would be a bore to see the same ghost
+twice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure I don&rsquo;t care to go again,&rdquo; was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span>
+Silvia&rsquo;s emphatic reply when asked to be
+one of the party.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ghosts are scientifically admitted and
+explained,&rdquo; growled Rob, &ldquo;so I don&rsquo;t see
+anything to be excited about.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Beth accepted the offer of escort of one
+of the students, so Silvia, Rob, and I remained
+at home. The night was quite
+cool, and we played cards in our room.
+When the party returned, Beth joined us.
+She looked rather out of sorts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; she replied in answer to
+Silvia&rsquo;s eager inquiry. &ldquo;We saw the ghost.
+I don&rsquo;t know whether it was the same
+little old last night&rsquo;s ghost or a new one.
+He showed more of himself this time though.
+He had two arms and a veiled head out of
+the window. As soon as our crowd glimpsed
+it, they all fled quicker than we did last
+night. Those two students fell all over
+each other and left me in the lurch.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;What could you expect,&rdquo; asked Rob,
+&ldquo;from such ladylike things? They ought
+to be kept in the confines of the croquet
+ground. If they are a fair specimen of
+the kind you have met, no wonder you&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_21' id='linki_21'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-026.jpg' alt='' title='' width='309' height='287' /><br />
+</div>
+<p>He stopped abruptly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No wonder what?&rdquo; she asked quickly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; he replied glumly.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span></div>
+<p>When I came down to breakfast the
+next morning, the landlady in tears waylaid
+me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Wade,&rdquo; she began in trouble-telling
+tone, &ldquo;this affair about the ghost is
+going to hurt my business. Some of those
+folks say they are going home, and they
+will tell others and&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll fix the ghost story. Just leave it to
+me!&rdquo; I assured her optimistically, as we
+went into the dining-room.</p>
+<p>There were only enough guests to fill one
+long table, and every one was excitedly
+dissecting the ghost.</p>
+<p>I took my seat and also the floor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hate to dispel your illusions,&rdquo; I said
+cheerfully, &ldquo;but the fact is, I made a daylight
+investigation of the haunted house.
+First I looked in the window and I saw&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, what did you see?&rdquo; chorused a
+dozen or more expectant voices.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;A lot of&ndash;&ndash;mice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; came in disappointed and skeptical
+tones.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, the ghost, Mr. Wade?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes! The arms and the head?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A fake figure put up by some practical
+joker for the purpose of frightening timid
+people and encouraging the credulous. I
+didn&rsquo;t want to spoil your little picnic, so
+I kept still.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Those sounds, Lucien!&rdquo; reminded
+Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were from a cat chorus. They were
+prowling about the house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re sure some lawyer, Mr. Wade,&rdquo;
+doubtfully complimented my grateful landlady,
+as we went out of the room after
+breakfast.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; asked Rob <i>sotto voce</i>, joining
+me on the veranda, &ldquo;why don&rsquo;t the cats
+you speak of catch that lot of mice?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span></div>
+<p>Fortunately Beth came up to us, and I
+didn&rsquo;t have to explain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she said with a shudder. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+never go near that awful place! I&rsquo;d rather
+see a perfectly good ghost, or a loon, or a
+lunatic any day than a mouse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re surely not afraid of a mouse!&rdquo;
+exclaimed Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; she asked coolly as she
+walked on.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told you she was feminine,&rdquo; I reminded
+him.</p>
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t understand,&rdquo; he remarked, &ldquo;why
+a girl who is afraid of mice should be&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t understand anything about
+women,&rdquo; I interrupted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right, Lucien. I don&rsquo;t, but
+your sister is surely the greatest enigma of
+them all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I rented the stone fence farmer&rsquo;s &ldquo;autoo&rdquo;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span>
+and took Silvia and Diogenes to a neighboring
+town that afternoon. We didn&rsquo;t
+get back to the hotel until dinner time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What have you been up to all day,
+Rob?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Numerous things. For one, I strolled
+down to the haunted house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did you see?&rdquo; cried the women.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I saw four&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ghosts?&rdquo; asked Beth.</p>
+<p>I shot him a warning glance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Young tomcats playing tag with the
+mice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I corralled Rob outside after dinner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For Heaven&rsquo;s sake!&rdquo; I implored.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t disturb Silvia&rsquo;s peace of mind.
+Did you go inside?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; I was sorely tempted to, but refrained
+out of deference to the evident
+wishes of my host, but really, Lucien, we
+should&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I have only ten more days off, Rob.
+Don&rsquo;t make any unpleasant suggestions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he said promptly.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_22' id='linki_22'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-027.jpg' alt='' title='' width='223' height='266' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_23' id='linki_23'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-028.jpg' alt='' title='' width='349' height='109' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_X_IN_WHICH_WE_MAKE_SOME_DISCOVERIES' id='CHAPTER_X_IN_WHICH_WE_MAKE_SOME_DISCOVERIES'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter</span> X</h2>
+<h3><i>In Which We Make Some Discoveries</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>Diogenes, who, for a Polydore, had
+been quite placid since Ptolemy&rsquo;s
+departure, caused a commotion
+by disappearing the next morning. As he
+was possessed of a deep desire to go in the
+lake and get a little snake, he had been,
+when not under strict surveillance, tied to
+a tree with enough leeway in the length of
+rope to allow him to play comfortably.</p>
+<p>By some means he had managed to work
+himself loose from the rope and had evidently
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
+followed Ptolemy&rsquo;s example. I suggested
+calling up Huldah and asking if he
+had arrived yet, but I met with such chilling
+glances from Silvia and Beth that I got
+busy and organized searching parties, who
+reluctantly and lukewarmly engaged in the
+pursuit. Rob and I took the shore. After
+we had walked some little distance, we
+met a woman and stopped for inquiry.
+She said she had seen a child of about two
+years, clad in a blue and white striped dress
+and a big hat, going over the hill in company
+with a boy of about eight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you going on to the hotel?&rdquo; I
+asked.</p>
+<p>On her replying that she was, I told her
+to inform them that she had met me and
+that the lost child was located.</p>
+<p>Rob and I then kept on over the hill, and
+when we neared the haunted house, we
+heard hair-raising sounds.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;If I hadn&rsquo;t been here before,&rdquo; remarked
+Rob, &ldquo;I should think that Sitting Bull had
+been reincarnated and was reviving the
+warrior war whoops.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We paused on the threshold. A human
+windmill of whirling legs and arms&ndash;&ndash;Polydore
+legs and arms&ndash;&ndash;flashed before our
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; I thundered.</p>
+<p>The flying wheel of arms and legs slacked,
+ran a few times, then slowly stopped, and
+the Polydore quintette assumed normal
+positions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Halloa, stepdaddy!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A landslide composed of Emerald, Pythagoras,
+and Demetrius started toward
+me. I side-stepped and let Rob receive
+the charge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Line them up now, for attention,&rdquo; I
+directed Ptolemy. &ldquo;I have something to
+say to you all.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span></div>
+<p>Ptolemy knocked the three terrors up
+against the wall, and I picked up Diogenes,
+who had a bump as big as an egg on his
+head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told you,&rdquo; said Ptolemy to Pythagoras,
+&ldquo;that if you brought Di down here
+they&rsquo;d get on our trail. He wanted to see
+Di,&rdquo; he explained, &ldquo;so he sneaked over
+there and got him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We were wise before today,&rdquo; I informed
+him. &ldquo;I saw you all day before
+yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I discovered you yesterday,&rdquo; added
+Rob.</p>
+<p>Ptolemy looked rather crestfallen, and
+then, seeming to consider that my discovery
+had been succeeded by inaction, which must
+mean non-interference, he heartened up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; I demanded, &ldquo;I want you to
+begin at the time you left the hotel and tell
+me everything and why you did it.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I wasn&rsquo;t having any fun after you two
+went off camping,&rdquo; he began lugubriously.
+&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t hang around women folks all
+the time. I wanted boys to play with.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I saw a gleam of sympathy and understanding
+come into Rob&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A harem of hens,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I knew we could all have a grand time
+here and not be a bother to mudder, or
+Huldah or anyone, and it seemed too bad
+for this nice house to be empty, and no
+one anywhere else wanting us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I felt my first gleam of pity for a Polydore
+and wiped Diogenes&rsquo; dirty, moist face
+carefully with my handkerchief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So I went home and told Huldah I had
+come after the boys to take them back
+with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And told her we had sent for them?&rdquo;
+I asked sharply.</p>
+<p>He flushed slightly at my tone.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No; I didn&rsquo;t tell her so. She got that
+idea herself, and I didn&rsquo;t tell her different.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When did you come?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I came the same night that you telephoned,
+and took the train you and mudder
+came on. We got to Windy Creek in the
+morning. We fetched all our stuff here
+from home. I bought it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right here,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;tell me where you
+got the money to buy your stuff and to pay
+your fare here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cashed father&rsquo;s check.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know he left you one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t, except the one he gave me
+to give you for our board. You told
+mudder you wouldn&rsquo;t touch it, and it seemed
+a pity not to have it working.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Visions of a future Polydore doing the
+chain and ball step flashed before my vision.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And they cashed it for you at the
+bank?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure. Father always has me cash his
+checks for him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What amount did you fill in?&rdquo; I asked
+enviously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One hundred dollars. There&rsquo;s a lot
+more in the bank, too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did you get your truck here
+from Windy Creek?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We divided it up and each took a
+bunch and started on foot, and some people
+in an automobile, going to the town past
+here, took us in and brought us as far
+as the lane. We&rsquo;ve been having a fine
+time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What doing?&rdquo; asked Rob interestedly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fishing, sailing on a raft, playing in
+the woods all day and&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Playing ghost at night,&rdquo; said Pythagoras
+with a grin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who made that ghost in the window?&rdquo;
+I demanded.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I did. I rigged up an arm and put it
+out the window the afternoon I left, hoping
+Beth would come down and see it, but
+we&rsquo;ve got a jim dandy one now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was quite a shapely arm,&rdquo; said
+Rob. &ldquo;Where did you learn sculpturing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I rigged it up,&rdquo; he said casually.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did you bring in the way of
+supplies?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bacon, crackers, beans, candy, popcorn,
+gum, peanuts, pickles, candles, matches,
+and butter,&rdquo; was the glib inventory.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may stay here,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;until we
+go home, but you are not to stir away from
+the woods about here and not on any
+account to come near the hotel, or let it
+be known that you are here. And you are
+to end this ghost business right off. Now,
+Di, we&rsquo;ll go home to mudder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; bawled Di. &ldquo;Stay with boys.
+Mudder come here.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span></div>
+<p>At least this was Ptolemy&rsquo;s interpretation
+of his protest.</p>
+<p>I threatened, Rob coaxed, and Ptolemy
+cuffed, but every time I started to leave
+and jerk him after me, he uttered such
+demoniac yells I was forced to stop.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wish it was night,&rdquo; said Emerald
+regretfully. &ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t he scare folks
+though! How does he get his voice up so
+high?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor little Di!&rdquo; said a voice commiseratingly
+from the doorway. &ldquo;Was
+Ocean plaguing him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Beth gathered the child in her arms,
+and his howls changed to sobs. Rob
+stood petrified with amazement at her
+appearance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t want to go,&rdquo; said Diogenes
+between gulps.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Needn&rsquo;t go!&rdquo; promised Beth. &ldquo;Stay
+here with me, and we&rsquo;ll have dinner with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span>
+the boys and then we&rsquo;ll go home and get
+some ice cream.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All yite,&rdquo; agreed the appeased Polydore.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May Lucien and I stay to dinner,
+too?&rdquo; asked Rob humbly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she replied icily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, Beth,&rdquo; I remonstrated. &ldquo;Silvia
+will be worrying about Di. How can we
+explain?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silvia has gone to Windy Creek for the
+day. You see, I met that woman you
+sent to the hotel, and she told me she saw
+Di going over the hill with a boy, and I
+suddenly seemed to smell one of your
+mice, so I sent the woman on her way,
+and told Silvia you and Rob had found
+Diogenes. Just then some people she
+knew came along in a car and asked her
+to go to Windy Creek. I made her go and
+told her I&rsquo;d look after Di.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a brick, Beth!&rdquo; applauded
+Ptolemy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you boys will be very careful and not
+let anyone besides us know you are here,
+so mudder will not hear of it, for though
+she&rsquo;d like to see you&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;this without a
+flicker or flinch&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;we want her to have a
+nice rest. I&rsquo;ll come over every day except
+tomorrow and bring things from the hotel
+store, and bake up cookies and cake for
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A yell of approval went up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why can&rsquo;t you come tomorrow?&rdquo;
+asked the greedy Demetrius.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because I&rsquo;ve promised to go to the
+other end of the lake on a picnic. All
+the people at the hotel are going.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll come tomorrow and spend the
+whole day with you,&rdquo; promised Rob.
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have a ride in the sailboat and do
+all sorts of things.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, aren&rsquo;t you going on that infernal
+picnic?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; I&rsquo;ll have all the picnic I want
+over here. Like Ptolemy I feel that I
+want to play with some of my own kind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Beth looked at him approvingly; then
+she said a little sarcastically:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe you&rsquo;ll change your mind&ndash;&ndash;about
+going on the picnic, I mean&ndash;&ndash;when
+you see the new girl who just came to the
+hotel on the morning stage. She&rsquo;s a
+blonde, and not peroxided, either.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That would certainly drive him down
+here, or anywhere,&rdquo; I laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t you like blondes?&rdquo; she asked
+innocently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He doesn&rsquo;t like&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; I began, but
+Ptolemy rudely interrupted with an elaborate
+description of a new kind of fishing
+tackle he had bought.</p>
+<p>Then Beth bade Pythagoras build a fire
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span>
+in the cook-stove while she set the room to
+rights.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll eat out of doors,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I
+think it would be more appetizing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did you get here?&rdquo; Rob asked
+her as we were leaving.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I rowed over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May I come over and row you back?&rdquo;
+he asked pleadingly.</p>
+<p>She hesitated, and then, realizing that
+she could scarcely manage a boat and
+Diogenes at the same time, assented, bidding
+him not come, however, until five
+o&rsquo;clock.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll have enough of the Polydores
+by that time,&rdquo; I said to Rob on our way
+home.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know,&rdquo; he said reflectively,
+&ldquo;I like Ptolemy. There&rsquo;s the making of
+a man in him, if he has only half a chance.
+I didn&rsquo;t suppose your sister understood
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span>
+children so well or was so fond of them.
+She looked quite the little housewife, too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d discover a lot of things you
+don&rsquo;t know, if you&rsquo;d cultivate the society
+of women,&rdquo; I informed him.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_24' id='linki_24'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-029.jpg' alt='' title='' width='256' height='214' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_25' id='linki_25'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-030.jpg' alt='' title='' width='345' height='114' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XI__A_BAD_MEANS_TO_A_GOOD_END' id='CHAPTER_XI__A_BAD_MEANS_TO_A_GOOD_END'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XI</span></h2>
+<h3><i>A Bad Means to a Good End</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>When we were setting out on the
+proposed picnic the next day,
+Rob made himself extremely unpopular
+by announcing his intention to spend
+the day otherwise. The new blonde girl
+gave him fetching glances of entreaty which
+he never even saw. He made another sensation
+by proposing to keep Diogenes with
+him. To Silvia&rsquo;s surprise, Diogenes voiced
+his delight and chattered away, I suppose,
+about playing with the boys, but fortunately
+no one understood him.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you change your mind and
+come, too?&rdquo; he asked Beth.</p>
+<p>She seemed on the point of accepting
+and then firmly declined.</p>
+<p>When we returned at six o&rsquo;clock, Rob
+and Diogenes were awaiting us. There
+was something in Rob&rsquo;s eyes I had not seen
+there before. He had the look of one in
+love with life.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you have a nice time playing solitaire?&rdquo;
+asked Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had a very nice time,&rdquo; he replied
+with a subtle smile, &ldquo;but I didn&rsquo;t play
+solitaire. You know I had Diogenes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Diogenes apparently had a good time,
+too,&rdquo; said Silvia, looking at the child, who
+was certainly a wreck in the way of garments.
+&ldquo;What did you do all day, Rob?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We went out on the water, played
+games, and had a picnic dinner outdoors.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You had huckleberry pie for one thing,&rdquo;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span>
+she observed, with a glance at Diogenes&rsquo;
+dress, &ldquo;and jelly for another, and&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Chicken, baked potatoes, milk, cake,
+and ice cream,&rdquo; he finished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did you get ice cream?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I went down to a dairy farm and got
+a gallon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A gallon!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;For you
+and Diogenes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t eat it all,&rdquo; he said guardedly.
+&ldquo;I gave what we didn&rsquo;t eat to some stray
+boys.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope Di won&rsquo;t be ill.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; asserted Rob. &ldquo;I am sure
+he is made of cast iron.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Throughout dinner Rob remained in high
+spirits. He kept eyeing Beth in a way
+that disconcerted her, and then suddenly
+he would smile with the expression of one
+who knows something funny, but intends
+to keep it a secret.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span></div>
+<p>Presently Silvia left us and went upstairs
+to give Diogenes a bath before she
+put him to bed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve had two days&rsquo; freedom from
+the last of the Polydores,&rdquo; I called after
+her. &ldquo;Doesn&rsquo;t it seem delightful?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; she answered slowly, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+really missed the care of him. I was lonesome
+for him all day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He isn&rsquo;t such a bad little kid when he is
+out from Polydore environment,&rdquo; I admitted,
+regretting that he had been restored
+to it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now tell us all about your day with the
+boys,&rdquo; Beth asked Rob, when we were
+left alone. &ldquo;It really does seem too bad
+to keep a secret from Silvia, and yet it
+is a case of where ignorance is bliss&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would be folly to be otherwise,&rdquo;
+finished Rob. &ldquo;Well, Diogenes and I left
+here with a boat load of supplies in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span>
+way of provender and things for the boys.
+I had to tie Diogenes in the boat, of course,
+so he would not try some aquatic feat. He
+objected and yelled like a fiend all the
+way. I was glad there was no one at the
+hotel to come out and arrest me for cruelty
+to children. Of course before we landed,
+his cries were heard by his brothers and
+they were all at the water&rsquo;s edge. They
+made mulepacks of themselves and transferred
+the commissary supplies. The ice
+cream and bats and balls which I found at
+the store made quite a hit.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We played baseball, fished, and had a
+spread on the shore. Then Ptolemy and
+I rowed out to where the sailboat was. I
+explained the mysteries of the jib and he
+caught on instantly. We took in the other
+Polydores and sailed for a couple of hours.
+Then we all went in swimming.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not Diogenes!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly. I tucked him under my
+arm and he seemed perfectly at home, although
+greatly disappointed because we
+didn&rsquo;t succeed in catching a snake.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I finally landed them all safely under
+the roof of the Haunted House, and
+Ptolemy assured me it was the best day of
+his young life. In appreciation of the
+diversions I had afforded him, he made a
+confession which proved such good news
+to me that I was a lenient listener and
+exacted no penalty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was it?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He told me that on the day of Miss
+Wade&rsquo;s and my arrival at your house, he
+had made a misstatement to each of us
+and had not repeated to us accurately what
+he had overheard you telling Silvia when
+he was on the porch roof. Miss Wade,
+what did he tell you about me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He said that Lucien said that your only
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span>
+failing was that you were daffy over women
+and made love to every one you saw.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Beth!&rdquo; I cried, light bursting in,
+&ldquo;and you believed that little wretch?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then that is why you have been so&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes&ndash;&ndash;so&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; repeated Rob grimly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I never did have any use for a
+man-flirt, and I was awfully disappointed,
+for I had thought from what Rob said
+that you were a man&rsquo;s man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And then, of course, when for the first
+time in my life I began being interested in
+a woman&ndash;&ndash;in you&ndash;&ndash;I played right into
+that little scamp&rsquo;s hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is a man&rsquo;s man, Beth,&rdquo; I said
+warmly. &ldquo;What Ptolemy heard me say
+was that Rob was a woman-hater.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not!&rdquo; declared Rob indignantly&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;just
+a woman-shyer, but I haven&rsquo;t
+finished with Ptolemy&rsquo;s confession. I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span>
+wonder, now, if either of you can guess
+what he told me was Miss Wade&rsquo;s characteristic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t dare guess,&rdquo; laughed Beth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What I did say about Beth was that
+she was a born flirt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not!&rdquo; protested my sister, in resentment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should prefer that appellation to the
+one he gave you. He said you were
+strong-minded and a man-hater.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Even Beth saw the irony of this.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I asked him,&rdquo; continued Rob, &ldquo;what
+his motive was, and he said &lsquo;Stepdaddy
+didn&rsquo;t want Beth to know about the man-hater
+business,&rsquo; so he took that means of
+throwing you off the track.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I took the occasion to talk to him like
+a Dutch uncle, though I don&rsquo;t know
+exactly what that is. I think it was the
+first time anything but brute force had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span>
+been tried on him. I must have touched
+some little flicker of the right thing in
+him, for he was really contrite and seemed
+to sense a different angle of vision when I
+explained to him what havoc could be
+worked by the misinformation of meddlers.
+He promised me he&rsquo;d try to overcome his
+tendency to start things going wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I made no comment, but it occurred to
+me that Ptolemy was a shrewd little fellow,
+and that there had been wisdom back of
+his strategic speeches to Beth and Rob,
+for he had taken the one sure course to
+make them both &ldquo;take notice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So, Beth,&rdquo; said Rob, and her name
+seemed to come quite handily to him,
+&ldquo;can&rsquo;t we cut out the past ten days and
+begin our acquaintance right?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think we can,&rdquo; she answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had better go upstairs,&rdquo; I suggested,
+&ldquo;and tell Silvia that Diogenes doesn&rsquo;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span>
+need a bath, seeing he has been in swimming.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Neither of them urged me to remain, so
+I went up to our room and found Silvia
+tucking Diogenes under cover.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did you come up for?&rdquo; she asked.
+&ldquo;I was just coming down to join you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beth is treating Rob so&ndash;&ndash;differently,
+that I thought it well to retreat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am so glad! Whatever came over
+the spirit of her dreams?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve just discovered in the course
+of conversation that Ptolemy as usual
+crossed the wires and told Beth Rob was
+a flirt, and then informed Rob that Beth
+was strong-minded and a man-hater.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, the little imp!&rdquo; she exclaimed indignantly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. It worked, anyway, so
+Ptolemy was the bad means to a good
+end.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;How did they ever happen to discover
+what he had done?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They caught on from something Rob
+said,&rdquo; I told her, feeling again guilty at
+keeping my first secret from her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will be a fine match for Beth,&rdquo; said
+Silvia. &ldquo;Rob is such a splendid man,
+and then he has plenty of money. He
+can give her anything she wants.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I winced. I think Silvia must have
+been conscious of it, even though the room
+was dark, for she came to me quickly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I could give you&ndash;&ndash;everything&ndash;&ndash;anything&ndash;&ndash;you
+want, Silvia.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have, Lucien. The things that
+no money could buy&ndash;&ndash;love and protection.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Well, maybe I had. I had surely given
+her protection from the Polydores, though
+she didn&rsquo;t know to what extent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am going to give you more material
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span>
+things, though, Silvia. When we go home,
+I shall start to work in earnest and see if
+I can&rsquo;t get enough ahead to make a good
+investment I know of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d rather do without the necessities
+even, Lucien, than to have you work any
+harder than you have been doing. We
+must let well enough alone.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_26' id='linki_26'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-032.jpg' alt='' title='' width='157' height='254' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_27' id='linki_27'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-031.jpg' alt='' title='' width='342' height='124' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XII__TOO_MUCH_POLYDORES' id='CHAPTER_XII__TOO_MUCH_POLYDORES'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XII</span></h2>
+<h3>&ldquo;<i>Too Much Polydores</i>&rdquo;</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The next morning at breakfast, Beth
+announced that she and Rob were
+going to spend the day camping in
+the woods.</p>
+<p>Silvia and I tried not to look significantly
+at each other, but Beth was very keen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will take Diogenes with us,&rdquo; she
+instantly added.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; protested Silvia. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll be
+such a bother. And then he can&rsquo;t walk
+very far, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll be no bother,&rdquo; persisted Beth.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span>
+&ldquo;And we&rsquo;ll borrow the little cart to draw
+him in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; acquiesced Rob. &ldquo;We sure
+want Diogenes with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have them put up a lunch for you,&rdquo;
+proposed Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Rob objected. &ldquo;We are going to
+forage and cook over a fire in the woods.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; I proposed to Silvia with alacrity,
+&ldquo;we&rsquo;ll have our first day alone together&ndash;&ndash;the
+first we have had since the
+Polydores came into our lives. I&rsquo;ll rent the
+&lsquo;autoo&rsquo; again, and we will go through the
+country and dine at some little wayside inn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get the &lsquo;autoo&rsquo;, now, Lucien,&rdquo; advised
+Beth privately, &ldquo;and make an early start,
+so Rob and I can take supplies from the
+store without arousing Silvia&rsquo;s suspicions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe,&rdquo; said Silvia disappointedly,
+when we were &ldquo;autooing&rdquo; on
+our way, &ldquo;that they are in love after all,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span>
+or that he has proposed, or that he is going
+to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did you draw all those pessimistic
+inferences from?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From their both being so keen to take
+Diogenes with them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Diogenes would be no barrier to their
+love-making,&rdquo; I told her. &ldquo;He couldn&rsquo;t
+repeat what they said; at least, not so
+anyone could understand him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Many miles away we came upon a picturesque
+little old-time tavern where we
+had an appetizing dinner, and then continued
+on our aimless way. It was nearly
+ten o&rsquo;clock when we returned to the hotel,
+where the owner of the &ldquo;autoo&rdquo; was waiting.</p>
+<p>Rob came down the roadway.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s Beth?&rdquo; asked Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She has gone to bed. The day in the
+open made her sleepy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When Silvia had left us, the old farmer
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span>
+said with a chuckle: &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t offer you another
+swig of stone fence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s probably just as well you can&rsquo;t,&rdquo;
+I replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to be introduced to one,&rdquo; said
+Rob, who appeared to be somewhat downcast.
+&ldquo;I sure need a bracer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter, Rob?&rdquo; I asked
+when we were lighting our pipes. &ldquo;A
+strenuous day? Two in rapid &lsquo;concussion&rsquo;
+with the Polydores must be nerve-racking.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; I admit there seemed to be &lsquo;too
+much Polydores.&rsquo; We all had a happy reunion,
+and I devoted the forenoon to the
+entertainment of the famous family so I
+could be entitled to the afternoon off to
+spend with Beth. At noon we built a fire
+and cooked a sumptuous dinner. Beth
+baked up some things to keep them supplied
+a couple of days longer. After dinner
+I asked her to go for a row. She insisted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span>
+on taking Diogenes along, and the
+others all followed us on a raft. So I
+decided to cut the water sports short, and
+Beth and I started for a walk in the woods.
+Three or more were constantly right on
+our trail. I begged and bribed, but to
+no avail. They were sticktights all right,
+and,&rdquo; he added morosely, &ldquo;she seemed
+covertly to aid and abet them. When we
+started for home, I found that the young
+fiends had broken the cart, so I had to
+carry Diogenes most of the way, and of
+course he bellowed as usual at being parted
+from the whelps.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_28' id='linki_28'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-033.jpg' alt='' title='' width='177' height='289' /><br />
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;They aren&rsquo;t such &lsquo;fine little chaps&rsquo;
+after all,&rdquo; I couldn&rsquo;t resist commenting.
+&ldquo;Familiarity breeds contempt, you see. I
+am sorry Diogenes had so much of their
+society. He&rsquo;ll be unendurable tomorrow.
+Well, you had some day!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So did the Polydores. Demetrius and
+Diogenes fell in the fire twice. Emerald
+threw a finger out of joint, but Ptolemy
+quickly jerked it into place. Pythagoras
+was kicked off the raft twice, following a
+mutiny. Demetrius threw a lighted match
+into the vines and set fire to the house.
+They said it was a &lsquo;beaut of a day&rsquo;, though,
+and urged us to come tomorrow and repeat
+the program. By the way, they went
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span>
+across the lake on their raft yesterday and
+bought a tent of some campers. They have
+pitched it in the woods beyond the house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When I went upstairs Silvia met me
+disconsolately.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t propose,&rdquo; she said disappointedly.
+&ldquo;She wouldn&rsquo;t let him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you wake her up to find out?&rdquo; I
+asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She hadn&rsquo;t gone to bed and she wasn&rsquo;t
+sleepy. She was trimming a hat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why wouldn&rsquo;t she let him propose, if
+she cares for him?&rdquo; I asked perplexedly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you see,&rdquo; explained Silvia, &ldquo;that
+when a girl&ndash;&ndash;a coquette girl like Beth&ndash;&ndash;is
+as sure of a man as she is of Rob, she
+gets a touch of contrariness or offishness
+or something. She said it would have been
+too prosaic and cut and dried if they had
+gone away for a day in the woods and come
+back engaged. She wants the unexpected.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think she loves him?&rdquo; I asked
+interestedly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t say so. You can&rsquo;t tell
+from what she says anyway. Still, I think
+she is hovering around the danger point.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;d better watch out. Rob isn&rsquo;t
+the kind of a man who will stand for too
+much thwarting,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he&rsquo;d only play up a little bit to some
+one else, it would bring things to a climax,&rdquo;
+said my wife sagely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no one else to play up to. The
+blonde left today because it was so slow
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe some new girl will come tomorrow,&rdquo;
+said Silvia, &ldquo;or there&rsquo;s that
+trim little waitress who is waiting her way
+through college. He gave her a good big tip
+yesterday. I think I will give him a hint.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t help any. He wouldn&rsquo;t
+know how to play such a game if you could
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span>
+persuade him to try. He&rsquo;d probably tell
+the girl his motive in being attentive to her
+and then she&rsquo;d back out. Maybe, after
+all, Beth doesn&rsquo;t love him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think she does,&rdquo; replied my wife,
+&ldquo;because she is getting absent-minded.
+She let Diogenes go too near the fire. His
+shoes are burned, his hair singed, and his
+dress scorched. He woke up when I came
+in and he was so cross. He acted just
+the way he does when he is with his
+brothers.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_29' id='linki_29'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-034.jpg' alt='' title='' width='256' height='218' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_30' id='linki_30'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-035.jpg' alt='' title='' width='361' height='118' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIII__ROBS_FRIEND_THE_REPORTER' id='CHAPTER_XIII__ROBS_FRIEND_THE_REPORTER'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XIII</span></h2>
+<h3><i>Rob&rsquo;s Friend the Reporter</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>Silvia&rsquo;s vague prophecy was fulfilled.
+When the event of the day,
+the arrival of the stage, occurred, a
+solitary passenger alighted, a slim, alert,
+city-cut young woman.</p>
+<p>She looked us all over&ndash;&ndash;not boldly, but
+with a business-like directness as if she
+were taking inventory of stock, or acting
+as judge at a competition. When her
+blue eyes lighted on Rob, they darkened
+with pleasure.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Rossiter!&rdquo; she exclaimed,
+&ldquo;this is better than I hoped for.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They shook hands with the air of being
+old acquaintances, and he introduced her to
+us as &ldquo;Miss Frayne, from my home town.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She went into the office, registered, and
+sent her bag to her room. Then she asked
+Rob if she might have a talk with him.</p>
+<p>They walked away together down to
+the shore and she was talking to him quite
+excitedly. Rob suddenly stopped, threw
+back his head and laughed in the way
+that it is good to hear a man laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Frayne must be a wit,&rdquo; observed
+Beth dryly.</p>
+<p>I looked at her keenly. Something in
+her eyes as she gazed after the retreating
+couple told me that Silvia&rsquo;s surmise was
+right, and that Miss Frayne might be just
+the little punch needed to send Beth over
+the danger point.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I rather incline to the belief that
+Ptolemy told the truth in the first place,&rdquo;
+she continued, and then looked disappointed
+because I did not contradict her.</p>
+<p>I decided not to reveal, for the present
+anyway, what I knew of Miss Frayne, of
+whom I had often heard Rob speak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She can&rsquo;t be going to stay long,&rdquo; said Silvia
+hopefully. &ldquo;She didn&rsquo;t bring a trunk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t need one,&rdquo; replied Beth.
+&ldquo;She is probably one of those mannish
+girls who believe in a skirt and a few
+waists for a wardrobe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When Rob and the newcomer returned,
+he seemed to be monopolizing the conversation
+in a very emphatic and earnest
+manner. As they came up the steps to the
+veranda, we heard her say:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, Mr. Rossiter, I will do just
+as you say. I have perfect confidence in
+your judgment.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span></div>
+<p>They passed on into the hotel and
+Beth jumped up and went down toward
+the lake.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever hear Rob speak of this
+Miss Frayne?&rdquo; asked Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Often. She is engaged to his cousin,
+and is a reporter on a big newspaper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you say so? Oh, Lucien,&rdquo;
+she continued before I could speak, &ldquo;were
+you really shrewd enough to see which way
+the wind was blowing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure. After you set my sails for me
+last night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Just then Rob came out of the hotel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say, Lucien, I want to see you a minute.
+Come on down the road.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got some work ahead,&rdquo; he said
+when we were out of Silvia&rsquo;s hearing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s up?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Frayne is up&ndash;&ndash;and doing. What
+do you suppose her paper sent her here for?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;For a rest, or to write up the mosquitoes
+of H. H.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;H. H. is all right, only it happens they
+stand for Haunted House.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not really?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, really. The rumors of the house
+and the ghost, greatly elaborated, of course,
+reached the Sunday editor of the paper
+Miss Frayne is on, and he sent her up here
+to revive the story of the murder, translate
+the ghost, and get snapshots of the house.
+She was quite keen to have me take her
+there at once, so she could commence her
+article, but I headed her off, so she wouldn&rsquo;t
+discover the summer boarders at the hotel
+annex. I assured her that daytime was
+not the time to gather material and the
+only way she could get a proper focus on
+the ghost and acquire the thrills necessary
+for an inspiration was to see the place
+first by night.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;If she would view Fair Melrose aright,&rdquo;
+I quoted, &ldquo;she must visit it in the pale
+moonlight, but you were very clever to
+delay her visit long enough for us to get
+over there and warn the enemy. If she
+had gone down there and caught the
+Polydores unawares, she would have come
+back here and revealed our secret, and
+there would be the end of Silvia&rsquo;s vacation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To tell the truth, Lucien, I wasn&rsquo;t
+thinking so much of that as I was of Miss
+Frayne&rsquo;s interests. You see she has come
+a long ways for a story and if it collapsed
+from her ghostly expectations to a showdown
+of four healthy boys, the blow might
+mean a good deal to her in a business way.
+I think we had better let Ptolemy plant a
+ghost just once more for her. You know
+you made him take a reef in the flapping of
+ghostly garments. Can&rsquo;t we resurrect the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span>
+specter and restore the wails just for tonight,
+and bring her over here at the
+witching hour?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure we will,&rdquo; I agreed heartily. &ldquo;She
+shall have her ghost and all the trappings.
+It will give the Polydores the time of their
+lives.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go over there now and put Ptolemy
+next so he can get busy on his spirits.&rdquo;
+We went down to the shore and pulled
+off. Midway across the lake, Rob suddenly
+rested on his oars and asked:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did Beth go?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Back to first principles,&rdquo; I replied.
+&ldquo;She thinks, judging from your excited,
+earnest manner in addressing Miss Frayne
+and your rushing frantically away for a
+walk with her before she had removed the
+travel dust, that Ptolemy was quite correct,
+after all, in declaring you to be a
+&lsquo;ladies&rsquo; man.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you explain to her who Miss
+Frayne was?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;I am on my vacation
+and I am not doing any explaining, professionally
+or otherwise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He swung the boat around.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Starboard!&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you
+know a trump card when you see it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again he rested on his oars and stared
+at me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you mean, Lucien? If you
+have a grain of hope for me, please let me
+in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I repeated Silvia&rsquo;s theories.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not going to win her that way,&rdquo;
+he said slowly, &ldquo;not by playing a part.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I declared, &ldquo;if you go back to
+the hotel now, you can&rsquo;t explain Miss
+Frayne to Beth, because she went for a
+walk with old Professor Treadtop.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He turned the boat again.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Silvia won&rsquo;t come to the Haunted
+House, will she?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, indeed. Nothing would induce
+her to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you bring Miss Frayne here tonight
+and I&rsquo;ll bring Beth. And I&rsquo;ll be sure
+that there are no double boats lying around
+loose. I&rsquo;ll have two at the dock, see?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see your system,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;but I
+am not sure how I can explain Miss Frayne
+to Silvia. Silvia is not in the least narrow-minded,
+but still to leave the hotel at
+midnight with a perfectly strange young
+woman&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can tell her I want a clear field for
+Beth. She will see it is in a good cause.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Polydores greeted us rapturously
+and roughly. When I had restored order,
+and they were once more right side up, I
+addressed the chief of the bandits.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; I began, &ldquo;a young lady,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span>
+who is a reporter for a big newspaper, has
+come from many miles away to write up
+the haunted house and the ghost, and they
+will be pictured out in the Sunday edition.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ptolemy&rsquo;s eyes glistened, and &ldquo;Them
+Three&rdquo; were instantly &ldquo;at attention.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, say, stepdaddy,&rdquo; begged the young
+chief, &ldquo;let me play ghost right for her, just
+once, will you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may for tonight,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;but
+you will have to be very careful and not
+overdo the matter, for she isn&rsquo;t the kind
+that is easily fooled. She&rsquo;s had to keep
+her eyes and wits sharpened, else she
+wouldn&rsquo;t be on a newspaper, so I want
+you to be very careful and not bungle.
+Make a neat job of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do it up brown, you bet!&rdquo; he cried
+gleefully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naw, do it up white,&rdquo; drawled Pythagoras.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Show me your ghost stuff by daylight,&rdquo;
+I demanded, &ldquo;and let me see how you are
+going to rig him up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He brought forth a head and shoulders
+and arms that were ghastly even in sunlight,
+and proceeded to explain them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I got this skull out of father&rsquo;s study,
+and the arms came off a skeleton mother
+had in her antiquities. I dressed them
+up in a pillow case and the white cotton
+gloves are Huldah&rsquo;s. I can get some
+phosphorus in the woods and put it in the
+eyes. And Demetrius bought two electric
+flashlights yesterday, and Pythagoras
+can snap them once in a while from the
+lower windows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are some little property man,&rdquo;
+said Rob in admiration. &ldquo;But tell me
+who produces those heart-rending
+shrieks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was Pythagoras who did the high
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span>
+ones. And Em came in with low groans.
+Show &rsquo;em, boys.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pythagoras uttered high-trebled, thin-toned
+whines and ever and anon Emerald
+added a <i>basso profundo</i> accompaniment,
+making a combination that was most trying
+to the ears at close range.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;as I want
+Beth subjected to such a realistic performance.
+We will loiter in the distance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your rehearsal,&rdquo; I assured Ptolemy,
+&ldquo;is very good, but you must remember
+that Miss Frayne is used to encountering
+things far more terrible than ghosts. She
+may insist on coming right in here to investigate.
+Of course, if she does, I can&rsquo;t
+refuse or she&rsquo;ll think I am afraid, or else
+that I put up a fake ghost here, myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll lock the door with a chair,&rdquo; suggested
+Emerald.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll be quite capable of breaking into
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span>
+a little house like this, but I&rsquo;ll keep her
+back until you have time to haul in your
+ghost and make a quick and quiet getaway
+by a back window. Then another thing,
+she&rsquo;ll be over here tomorrow morning to
+take some pictures of the house, so by sunrise
+I want you all to take up your abode
+in the tent you have in the woods and
+stay there until I come and tell you the
+coast is clear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re dead on,&rdquo; assured Ptolemy.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad there&rsquo;s going to be something
+doing. We&rsquo;re getting tired of being here
+alone. I had to tie Demetrius up this
+morning. He was bound to go over to
+the hotel and see mudder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t one of you dare to make such an
+attempt,&rdquo; I said peremptorily. &ldquo;You keep
+right on here for a few days. Some of us,
+either Rob, or Beth and I will drop over
+every day. If you play your ghost just
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span>
+as I tell you and keep out of sight, I&rsquo;ll
+bring you over some ice cream tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring me a bigger bat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring me a mitt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring me a boat,&rdquo; came in chorus from
+Ptolemy, Emerald, and Demetrius.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;ll you give me to stay here?&rdquo;
+asked Pythagoras, who was a born bargain-driver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give you a licking if you don&rsquo;t stay,&rdquo;
+was the only offer he gleaned from me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be good boys,&rdquo; adjured the softhearted
+Rob, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll bring you everything
+I can find at the hotel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was long past the luncheon hour
+when we returned. We found Miss Frayne
+wondering at Rob&rsquo;s sudden disappearance
+and Beth was accordingly mystified.</p>
+<p>I planted myself directly in front of
+Miss Frayne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May I take you to the haunted house
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span>
+tonight at the yawning churchyard hour?&rdquo;
+I asked. &ldquo;I am most eminently fitted to
+be your guide, for I was the first one of
+this assembly to see the ghost <i>in toto</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He saw it over a stone fence,&rdquo; remarked
+Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed you may, thank you very
+much,&rdquo; she said enthusiastically.</p>
+<p>Silvia&rsquo;s face was a study.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And will you come with me, Beth?&rdquo;
+asked Rob. &ldquo;Of course, the ghost is an
+old story to us, but we really should hover
+in Lucien&rsquo;s wake out of regard to the
+conventions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is Miss Frayne interested in ghosts?&rdquo;
+asked Beth.</p>
+<p>Miss Frayne turned and answered the
+question.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not personally,&rdquo; she admitted frankly,
+&ldquo;but the newspaper I am on is, and they
+sent me up here to get a story.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you are a reporter?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; on the <i>Times</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She won&rsquo;t be one long, though,&rdquo; asserted
+Rob cheerfully, &ldquo;because she is
+going to marry my cousin in the fall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Beth&rsquo;s expression remained neutral at
+the announcement, but I noticed throughout
+the afternoon that she was extremely
+affable toward Miss Frayne, and that she
+had the whiphand again with Rob, and
+meanwhile he seemed to be gathering a
+grim determination to do or die.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien, how did you come to ask Miss
+Frayne to go to that awful place tonight?&rdquo;
+asked Silvia when we had gone to our room
+for a siesta, which seemed impossible by
+reason of the bellowing of Diogenes, who
+balked at being required to lie down.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rob asked me to,&rdquo; I informed her,
+when I had cowed Diogenes, &ldquo;so he could
+have a free field for Beth. I believe he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span>
+planned this expedition so he could storm
+the citadel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She reflected.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, maybe he is wise. Girls like
+Beth have to be taken by storm sometimes.
+I shouldn&rsquo;t wonder if Rob could
+be a bit of a bully, too, but&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She ended her speculations in a shriek.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien! Diogenes has jumped out
+the window.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We rushed down stairs, Silvia informing
+the guests in transit of the awful catastrophe.</p>
+<p>Silvia paused at the door opening on to
+the veranda.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t see him,&rdquo; she said faintly,
+closing her eyes. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to tend to
+it alone, Lucien.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Beth was already at the telephone,
+which connected with the country doctor&rsquo;s.
+Rob joined me. We located our window,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span>
+and began hunting underneath for the
+pieces.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where in the world do you suppose he
+landed?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
+<p>Just then the missing one came around
+the house clasping a bologna sausage in
+his fist.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye Gods and little Polydores!&rdquo; exclaimed
+Rob.</p>
+<p>I caught Diogenes by the arm and
+rushed him in to Silvia.</p>
+<p>I found her in company with an old
+colored mammy, who was laundress for
+the hotel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sho&rsquo;,&rdquo; she was saying, &ldquo;I done gwine
+by de windah with ma baby cab full o&rsquo;
+cloes, an&rsquo; dis yer white chile done come
+tumblin&rsquo; down an&rsquo; fall right in ma cab.
+Now, what do you think o&rsquo; dat? I reckon
+I was nevah so done clean skeert afoah
+in ma life. An&rsquo; ef de chile didn&rsquo;t grab one
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span>
+of ma bolognas and done git out de cab
+an&rsquo; run around de house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; cried Silvia, &ldquo;poor little baby!
+Come to mudder. Lucien, where are you
+going with him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had picked up the acrobatic Polydore
+and was going up the stairs two at a
+time. I gained our room, locked the
+door and proceeded to give the &ldquo;poor
+little baby&rdquo; all that was coming to him.
+Now and then above his howls, I heard
+Silvia&rsquo;s plaintive protests outside the door,
+but I finished my job completely and
+satisfactorily, and laid the penitent Polydore
+in his little bed. Then I went out into
+the hall, feeling better than I had in months.</p>
+<p>Silvia essayed to pass me, but I took
+her arm and led her to a recess in the hall.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am convinced,&rdquo; I told her, &ldquo;that we
+have Diogenes as a permanent pensioner
+on our hands, so it was up to me to show
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span>
+him where to get off. You can&rsquo;t go to him
+for a quarter of an hour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We went down stairs and I was sure I
+read suppressed regret in the faces of most
+of the guests at learning of the soft place
+in which Diogenes&rsquo; lot had been cast.
+Silvia tearfully told Rob and Beth of my
+cruelty.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_31' id='linki_31'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-036.jpg' alt='' title='' width='228' height='299' /><br />
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Do him good!&rdquo; approved Rob heartily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How mean men are!&rdquo; declared Beth
+indignantly. &ldquo;I am going up and comfort
+the poor little thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I held up the key to the room with a
+grin, and she had to content herself by
+making unkind remarks about me.</p>
+<p>At the expiration of the allotted time, I
+handed Silvia the key. She took it from
+me without a word or a look. It was
+quite evident I was in wrong.</p>
+<p>In half an hour my wife came down,
+carrying Diogenes, who, dressed in fresh
+white clothes, was a good picture of an
+angel child. She passed me and went to
+a remote corner of the veranda and sat
+down. When he spied me, he leaped from
+her arms and ran to me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ocean,&rdquo; he said propitiatingly, &ldquo;me
+love oo.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span></div>
+<p>I took him up. His arms clasped about
+my neck, and over his curly head, I winked
+at Silvia and Beth.</p>
+<p>Rob roared.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_32' id='linki_32'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-037.jpg' alt='' title='' width='227' height='213' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_33' id='linki_33'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-038.jpg' alt='' title='' width='353' height='129' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIV__A_MIDNIGHT_EXCURSION' id='CHAPTER_XIV__A_MIDNIGHT_EXCURSION'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XIV</span></h2>
+<h3><i>A Midnight Excursion</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>The night was Satan&rsquo;s own: dark,
+wind-shrieking, and Polydorish.
+No one saw us leave the hotel when,
+at a late hour, we started on our little
+excursion. On account of the darkness
+and the poor landing near the haunted
+house, we decided to go by the overland
+route. I managed to purloin a lantern
+from the kitchen to light our path.</p>
+<p>Rob and Beth kept behind Miss Frayne
+and myself, and in spite of the wildness of
+the weather, he was evidently pleading his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span>
+suit, for now and then above the roar of
+the wind, I heard his ardent voice. Apparently
+Beth had not yet given him any
+encouragement.</p>
+<p>Going down the lane my lantern underwent
+a total eclipse, so we had a Jordan-like
+road to travel. Miss Frayne was
+quite impervious to unfavorable conditions,
+as it was a matter of bread and butter to
+her, she said, and she was accustomed to
+braving worse storms than this, and anyway
+she hadn&rsquo;t come here for a summer picnic.</p>
+<p>When we came into the grove it was so
+dark, I lost my bearings.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t we bring a flashlight?&rdquo;
+asked Beth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There were none at the hotel,&rdquo; I told
+her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know some boys,&rdquo; said Rob with a
+little laugh, &ldquo;who would have lent us one&ndash;&ndash;maybe.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span></div>
+<p>Fortunately we were well provided with
+safety matches and after striking a box or
+so, we gained the open. A rise of ground
+hid the house, but when we climbed to the
+top, the ghost loomed up ghastlier than
+ever.</p>
+<p>I felt the business-like Miss Frayne start
+and shiver as a little scream escaped her.
+I didn&rsquo;t wonder. Even I, knowing that it
+was an illusion and a snare, felt my flesh
+creeping as I looked at the ghastly thing in
+the window.</p>
+<p>Every now and then according to schedule
+a light flashed from the windows below.
+And then came the blood-curdling sounds&ndash;&ndash;whimpers
+and groans that were rivaling
+the whistling of the wind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is awful!&rdquo; said Miss Frayne in a
+hoarse whisper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you want to go inside the house?&rdquo;
+I asked.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No&ndash;&ndash;o! I couldn&rsquo;t. Not tonight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We were some little in advance of Rob
+and Beth. When one spectral sound came
+like a tense whisper, Miss Frayne turned
+and fled, and of course I followed her. We
+could not see our two companions, but
+suddenly in an interim of wind and ghost
+whispers, we heard Beth say:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Rob. I think we should really
+be cosier in a story-and-a-half cottage than
+we should in a bungalow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye Gods!&rdquo; muttered Miss Frayne, &ldquo;did
+he propose in the face of that awful Thing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ship ahoy!&rdquo; I called.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, didn&rsquo;t you go inside?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go in! I wouldn&rsquo;t go inside that place;
+not if I lose my job on the paper. What
+can it be? You don&rsquo;t seem to mind it,
+Miss Wade.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you know,&rdquo; said Beth apologetically,
+&ldquo;this is my third performance.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span></div>
+<p>We were now down the hill out of sight
+of the gruesome, ghastly window display,
+and Miss Frayne gained courage as we
+retreated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course I don&rsquo;t believe in ghosts,&rdquo;
+she said, &ldquo;but what do you suppose that
+is?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had a theory,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;that it is the
+work of a lunatic, but I&rsquo;ve since concluded
+it is due to practical jokers. I&rsquo;ll tell you
+what I&rsquo;ll do. If you wait here, I&rsquo;ll investigate
+and see what I can find out for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, would you really dare, Mr. Wade?
+I don&rsquo;t believe men ever have creepy
+nerves,&rdquo; she exclaimed.</p>
+<p>I began to feel ashamed of my deception.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t go, Lucien,&rdquo; warned Rob,
+coming to my rescue. &ldquo;There may be a
+gang of desperadoes in there, or counterfeit
+money-makers, or something of that kind.
+Besides, I have a far more interesting piece
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span>
+of news than anything the ghost could
+give you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rob!&rdquo; protested Beth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We know it already,&rdquo; I laughed. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+to be a story-and-a-half high.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I am getting material for quite
+a story,&rdquo; declared Miss Frayne.</p>
+<p>I knew Beth&rsquo;s dislike of scenes and display
+of emotions&ndash;&ndash;mock heroics&ndash;&ndash;she
+called them, so I made no congratulatory
+speeches of the bless-you-my-children order,
+but presently under the cover of darkness,
+I felt a little hand slipped in mine, and my
+clasp was eloquent of what I felt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; said Miss Frayne, &ldquo;that daylight
+will make me so ashamed of my
+cowardice that I can come down here and
+take some pictures and go inside the
+house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll all come with you,&rdquo; promised
+Beth. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s safety in numbers.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span></div>
+<p>When we were back at the hotel I managed
+to have a few words with Rob before
+we went upstairs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bless the ghost!&rdquo; he said cheerily.
+&ldquo;When Beth first glimpsed it, she just
+turned and fell into my arms. She was
+really frightened for the first time. I shall
+feel under obligations to Ptolemy for a
+lifetime.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank goodness!&rdquo; I ejaculated fervently,
+&ldquo;that I am under no obligations to
+a Polydore. Ptolemy certainly did put
+up the most ghastly thing in the way of
+ghosts. The lights in the eyes of the
+skeleton were frightful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you see the ghost?&rdquo; asked Silvia
+sleepily, when I came in.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; same old ghost, only more of
+him,&rdquo; I assured her.</p>
+<p>She was asleep before I had uttered this
+reply.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;I have a more startling
+piece of news for you than that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She sat bolt upright.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are they engaged, Lucien?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are. They are building their
+castle&ndash;&ndash;I mean their story-and-a-half
+cottage already.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Alas for my own desire to sleep! I had
+so effectually awakened Silvia that she
+planned Beth&rsquo;s trousseau, the wedding,
+honeymoon, and the furnishing of their
+house before she subsided.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_34' id='linki_34'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-039.jpg' alt='' title='' width='324' height='221' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_35' id='linki_35'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-040.jpg' alt='' title='' width='366' height='133' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XV__WHAT_MISS_FRAYNE_FOUND_OUT' id='CHAPTER_XV__WHAT_MISS_FRAYNE_FOUND_OUT'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XV</span></h2>
+<h3><i>What Miss Frayne Found Out</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>We had planned to go to the haunted
+house at nine o&rsquo;clock the next
+morning, but owing to my dissipation
+of the night before, it was long
+after the appointed hour when Silvia awoke
+me.</p>
+<p>I hurried down stairs and ate my breakfast
+in solitude. I inquired for Beth and
+Rob, but the waitress told me they had left
+the dining-room at seven o&rsquo;clock and gone
+for a walk in the woods. She said it with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span>
+a knowing smile that told me she, too, must
+be a &ldquo;sister of the Golden Circle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Miss Frayne?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She went down the road over an hour
+ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Evidently her courage had come up with
+the sun. I was greatly disturbed at the
+chance of her stumbling over one or more
+Polydores, and Rob didn&rsquo;t want to let the
+cat out of the bag until her article was
+written, as he believed that if the ghostly
+spell were broken, she would lose her
+&ldquo;punch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was unable to think of any plausible
+explanation to offer Silvia as to why I
+should start in pursuit, and I wished all
+sorts of dire calamities on Rob&rsquo;s blond
+head. Lovers were surely blind and selfish.</p>
+<p>About ten o&rsquo;clock they came strolling
+in.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t know it was so late,&rdquo; said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span>
+Beth cheerfully, &ldquo;but the boys will keep
+in the woods all right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With her nose for news, there is no
+telling how far into the woods Miss Frayne&rsquo;s
+investigation will take her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say we go down by the lane and meet
+her,&rdquo; proposed Beth, &ldquo;so that if she has
+run across the boys we can explain to her
+why we desire secrecy from Silvia.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You and Rob go,&rdquo; I advised. &ldquo;It
+would seem odd to Silvia if we didn&rsquo;t ask
+her to go with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So the newly engaged couple started
+down the road, but in their self-absorption
+they didn&rsquo;t notice the turn to the lane, and
+they got half way to Windy Creek before
+they came back to earth and the hotel.
+Miss Frayne still had not shown up, and I
+began to have misgivings lest the Polydores
+had locked her up in the house, but
+finally just as we were having a happy
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span>
+family gathering and discussing the new
+event under the shade of the one resort
+tree, she came excitedly up to us.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Such an interesting morning as I have
+had!&rdquo; she exclaimed enthusiastically. &ldquo;I
+made some corking pictures of the place,
+and I&rsquo;ve found out about not only that
+ghost, but all ghosts&ndash;&ndash;the whole race of
+ghosts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I hurriedly interrupted her and made
+elaborate and jumbled apologies for not
+keeping our engagement, which evidently
+bored her and mystified Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad I went alone,&rdquo; she finally
+replied. &ldquo;Otherwise I might not have
+got such an interesting interview.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Beth, Rob, and I made frantic and appealing
+gestures to her behind Silvia&rsquo;s
+back, but she didn&rsquo;t seem to notice them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whom did you interview, the ghost?&rdquo;
+asked Silvia.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No, indeed. Some very interesting and
+unusual people who are staying there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I threw her a wildly beseeching glance
+and Beth and Rob began at the same time
+to ply her with distracting questions. I
+think she seemed to divine that there was
+something in the situation that was not
+to be explained, but Silvia interrupted
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do let Miss Frayne tell us about her
+interview,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We all seem to be
+very talkative today.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I saw there was no way to dodge the
+d&eacute;nouement, so I awaited the finale in
+dread desperation. It proved to be more
+of a stunner than I had expected.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I went down the lane,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and
+through the grove, up the little hill, and
+laughed at myself for the hallucinations
+of the night before. There were no ghosts
+visible and the door to the haunted house
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span>
+was hospitably open. I stood on the hill
+long enough to make some pictures and
+then went on. I walked up the steps
+fearlessly and looked within. A woman,
+an untidy, disheveled-looking woman, sat
+at a table writing furiously in just the same
+breathless way I write when I have a scoop,
+and the presses are waiting open-mouthed
+for my copy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She looked up and scowled at my intrusion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Don&rsquo;t bother me,&rsquo; she said, and continued
+writing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I went through the house and came
+outside again where I met an absent-minded,
+spectacled man. I told him who
+I was and of my object in coming to the
+house. Then he showed signs of coming to.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Oh, the ghost!&rsquo; he said. &lsquo;That is
+what brought me here. My wife is interested
+in more tangible, more material
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span>
+things. We have just returned from a long
+journey, and when we were nearly to our
+destination, our place of residence, I happened
+to read in a paper about this haunted
+house and its apparition, so we came right
+up here this morning to remain overnight
+and see if the article were true.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told him how successful I had been
+and he became quite alert and enthusiastic.
+He showed me why I should not have been
+alarmed, because ghosts, he said, were
+scientific facts. He then explained to me
+at length how the gases from the dead
+arise and form a nebulous vapor or a vaporous
+nebula. It sounded very simple and
+plausible when he told me, but I can&rsquo;t seem
+to remember it. Fortunately I have it all
+down in writing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia&rsquo;s eyes and mine had met in speechless
+horror since she had mentioned the
+&ldquo;writing woman.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien!&rdquo; Silvia now said in a tragic,
+hoarse whisper&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;the Polydores!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, do you know them?&rdquo; asked Miss
+Frayne. &ldquo;Dr. Felix Polydore, the eminent
+LL.D. or something like that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The whole family are D&rsquo;s,&rdquo; I said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His wife is the highest of high-brows,
+and they are averse to interviews. They
+moved to a small city sometime ago to be
+secluded. Just think of my opportunity!
+I have them headlined! &lsquo;The Haunted
+House of Hope Haven. Ghost that appears
+at midnight scientifically explained
+by the distinguished Dr. Felix Polydore.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think we are in luck,&rdquo; I said to Silvia,
+on second thoughts. &ldquo;We will take them
+home by the nape of the neck and deliver
+their children into their keeping to have
+and to hold.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t turn Diogenes over to them,&rdquo;
+she said plaintively.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Diogenes!&rdquo; repeated Miss Frayne in
+astonishment.</p>
+<p>I then narrated to her the history of
+our next-door neighbors, and how they
+planted their five children upon us.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We had better go down at once and see
+them,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;before they escape.
+No telling where they might take it in their
+heads to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll go soon after
+luncheon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thrice blessed haunted house,&rdquo; quoted
+Rob. &ldquo;It gave me Beth, and it has restored
+the parents of the wise Ptolemy and
+&lsquo;Them Three.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And gave me a ripping story,&rdquo; said
+Miss Frayne.</p>
+<p>Just then the gong sounded, and after
+luncheon while I was comfortably tipped
+back in a chair, my feet on the veranda
+rail, seeing in the smoke from my pipe
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span>
+dream visions of Polydoreless days, a faint
+cry from Silvia brought me back to earth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien, look!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I looked.</p>
+<p>My chair came down to all fours and my
+feet slipped from the rail.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_36' id='linki_36'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-041.jpg' alt='' title='' width='220' height='230' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_37' id='linki_37'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-042.jpg' alt='' title='' width='359' height='115' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVI__PTOLEMYS_TALE' id='CHAPTER_XVI__PTOLEMYS_TALE'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XVI</span></h2>
+<h3><i>Ptolemy&rsquo;s Tale</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>Four defiant, determined-looking
+Polydores came up the steps and
+bore down upon us. Then Silvia
+as usual thought she saw land ahead.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, boys,&rdquo; she asked hopefully, &ldquo;did
+your father send for you to meet him here?
+And when is he going to take you home?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t I tell you,&rdquo; I thundered at
+Ptolemy, &ldquo;that you were not to leave that
+house&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It left us,&rdquo; interrupted Emerald with
+a grin.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Went up in smoke,&rdquo; added Pythagoras
+blithely, &ldquo;ghost and all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Four minutes quicker,&rdquo; said Demetrius,
+&ldquo;and it would have took father and mother,
+too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, is it the haunted house they are
+talking about?&rdquo; asked Miss Frayne joyfully.
+&ldquo;What a story I&rsquo;ll have!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Life to Miss Frayne seemed to be one
+story after another. Well, it was certainly
+becoming the same way to us.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did the ghost set fire to the house?&rdquo;
+asked Beth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you all talking about,&rdquo; demanded
+Silvia, &ldquo;and how did you know
+these boys were there? How long have
+you been here?&rdquo; she asked, turning to
+Ptolemy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told you,&rdquo; I repeated angrily to the
+subdued boy, &ldquo;not to leave. Those were
+plain orders. If the house did burn up,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span>
+you could have stayed in your tent in the
+woods.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ptolemy&rsquo;s lips twitched faintly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The house burned up and all our
+clothes and our stuff to eat, and our bats
+and things, and father and mother went
+away and I didn&rsquo;t know what to do, so&ndash;&ndash;I
+came here. But we&rsquo;ll go back to our
+own house. We have learned to cook.
+Come on, boys.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll stay right here with me, son,&rdquo;
+and Rob&rsquo;s hand came down intimately
+on Ptolemy&rsquo;s shoulder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t likely we&rsquo;ll turn them out into
+the woods, when they haven&rsquo;t a roof over
+their heads,&rdquo; declared Silvia, drawing
+Emerald to her side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think you are absolutely inhuman,
+Lucien,&rdquo; cried Beth. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see what has
+changed you so,&rdquo; and she proceeded to make
+room for Pythagoras in the porch swing.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Did the fire scare you?&rdquo; asked Miss
+Frayne gently, as she put her arms about
+Demetrius.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Et tu, Brute? Well, I plainly see
+this is no place for an inhuman, childless,
+married man,&rdquo; I said with a laugh, walking
+down the veranda.</p>
+<p>In the doorway I met Diogenes, who
+raised his chubby arms invitingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up, up, Ocean!&rdquo; he begged sweetly.</p>
+<p>I lifted him to my shoulder, and then
+turned and walked triumphantly back to
+the family group.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;here is the whole
+d-dashed family. And I propose that each
+keep unto his charge the child he has now
+under his wing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Miss Frayne quickly relinquished the
+dirty Demetrius. Beth shrank away from
+Pythagoras.</p>
+<p>As I seated myself still holding Diogenes,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span>
+his brothers sprang toward him in greeting,
+but he spat at one, kicked at another, and
+pulled the hair of a third, although he patted
+Ptolemy&rsquo;s cheek gently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, we&rsquo;ll have this affair thrashed
+out,&rdquo; I declared in my most authoritative,
+professional manner, and I then proceeded
+to explain to Silvia the housing of the Polydores,
+and our strategies to keep their
+arrival a secret simply on her account.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because you know,&rdquo; interpolated Beth,
+with a consideration for the feelings of the
+young Polydores&ndash;&ndash;a consideration they
+had never before encountered&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;we
+wanted you to have a nice rest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia looked quite penitent and remorseful
+for her seeming lack of appreciation of
+our combined efforts. When I had answered
+all her inquiries satisfactorily, Miss Frayne&rsquo;s
+curiosity regarding the progeny of the eminent
+Polydores had to be fully relieved.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;And do you mean that the scribbling
+lady I saw at the table is really the mother
+of these five boys?&rdquo; she asked, unable to
+grasp the fact.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; and the father hereof is the man
+who explained the ghosts to you so scientifically
+that you cannot remember what
+he said. Now, Ptolemy, we&rsquo;ll hear your
+story of the fire and the whereabouts of
+your parents. Take your time and tell
+it accurately.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you see we did just as you said
+to, and took the ghost out of the window
+and went out to the woods early this
+morning so as not to let the paper lady
+see us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; cried Miss Frayne, &ldquo;am I the
+paper lady? I begin to see daylight.
+Are these boys the ghost perpetrators, and
+were you in on the put-up job?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a good guesser,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;And why wasn&rsquo;t I taken into your
+confidence?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For two reasons. First, because
+your friend Rob said you&rsquo;d get better
+results for copy&ndash;&ndash;more inspirations and
+thrills, if you weren&rsquo;t behind the scenes
+on the ghost business,&ndash;&ndash;and then we
+didn&rsquo;t want to tell you about the presence
+of the Polydores lest inadvertently you
+betray the fact to my wife. Now, proceed,
+Ptolemy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After we were in the woods, I heard
+an automobile coming down the lane, and
+I went up near the edge of the woods and
+peeked out behind a tree, and pretty soon
+I saw father and mother come over the hill
+and go in our haunted house, so I came up
+there and hid under the window and heard
+mother say: &lsquo;What an ideal place to
+write this is. It looks as if I might really
+get a chance to write unmo&ndash;&ndash;&rsquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;&ndash;&ndash;lested,&rsquo;&rdquo; I finished for him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I guess so,&rdquo; he allowed. &ldquo;Well, she
+began writing, so I didn&rsquo;t go in, but when
+father came outside I went up to him and
+told him you and mudder were at the hotel
+and that we were all with you. He told
+me they came up here to write an article
+for some big magazine about the ghost.
+He hired an automobile down at Windy
+Creek to bring them up to the house and
+the man was going to come back for them
+tomorrow morning. I didn&rsquo;t let on the
+ghost was a fake, because I thought he&rsquo;d
+be so disappointed to have all his trouble
+for nothing, and he&rsquo;d be mad at me for
+swiping his skull. I told him a paper lady
+was coming and then I went back to the
+woods. He went down with me to see the
+boys, and he said he would come back and
+have lunch with us. Mother doesn&rsquo;t ever
+stop to eat at noon when she is writing.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He went back and talked to the paper
+lady and pretty soon he came down and
+ate with us. I told him all about how we
+couldn&rsquo;t get any girl to do the work for us
+and so we had been living with you, and
+how Di got sick and mudder was all worn
+out taking care of him and came down
+here to rest, and that you wouldn&rsquo;t cash
+the check, so I did and was spending it and
+he said that was all right.&rdquo; Here Ptolemy
+flashed me a most triumphant glance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He said you must be paid for all your
+expense and trouble, so he made out a
+check and gave it to me and told me to
+make mudder a nice present. He ain&rsquo;t
+so bad when he ain&rsquo;t thinking about dead
+stuff. When he felt in his pocket for his
+check book, he found a letter he had got
+yesterday and forgotten to open, so he
+read it then and found it was from some
+magazine, and the man said he&rsquo;d pay his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span>
+and mother&rsquo;s expenses to go to Chili and
+write up some stuff about&ndash;&ndash;something.
+So father said they must go at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not to Chili!&rdquo; I exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; we all went up to the house with
+him and I took mother&rsquo;s pencil and paper
+away so she would have to listen. She
+was wild for Chili, and I had to go and hunt
+up a farmer who had a machine to take
+them down to Windy Creek. Father
+signed another blank check for you and said
+you could board us with it or do anything
+you thought best.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then mother took a lot of papers out
+of her bag, some stuff she had written and
+didn&rsquo;t get suited with, and she stuffed them
+in the stove and set fire to them. Then
+we all went down to the lane to see father
+and mother off and when we got back the
+house was on fire. The chimney burned
+out.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Guess mother must have written some
+hot stuff,&rdquo; said Emerald.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was burning so fast,&rdquo; continued
+Ptolemy, &ldquo;that we didn&rsquo;t dast go in to
+save anything and all our food and clothes
+and balls and bats and fishing tackle are
+gone, and we didn&rsquo;t know what to do, or
+what to eat, and so&ndash;&ndash;we came here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You did just right, Ptolemy,&rdquo; I admitted.
+&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t have called you down&ndash;&ndash;not
+until I heard your story, anyway.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I held out my hand, which he shook
+solemnly, but with an injured air.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mean to tell me,&rdquo; asked Miss
+Frayne, &ldquo;that your father and mother
+went away without seeing the baby?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ptolemy flushed a little.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; he explained apologetically,
+&ldquo;mother gets woolly when she writes and
+she&rsquo;s forgotten there&rsquo;s Di. She thinks
+Demetrius is the youngest. She&rsquo;s mad
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span>
+about writing. If she sees a blank
+paper anywhere, she ain&rsquo;t happy until she
+has written something on it, and the sight
+of a pencil makes her fingers itch.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_38' id='linki_38'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-043.jpg' alt='' title='' width='206' height='276' /><br />
+</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Take warning, Miss Frayne,&rdquo; I said,
+&ldquo;and don&rsquo;t get too literary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some day,&rdquo; resumed Ptolemy,
+&ldquo;mother&rsquo;ll get the antiques all out of
+her system and then she&rsquo;ll remember us.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span></div>
+<p>I liked the boy&rsquo;s defense of his mother,
+and I began to see that Rob was right in
+thinking there were possibilities in the
+lad, but it was Silvia&rsquo;s influence that had
+developed them, for in the days when he
+borrowed soup plates of us, there had been
+no redeeming trait that I could discern.</p>
+<p>And while I was recalling this, I heard
+Silvia saying to him kindly: &ldquo;And in the
+meantime, I&rsquo;ll be &lsquo;mudder&rsquo; to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So will I,&rdquo; chimed in Beth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be a big brother,&rdquo; offered Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be next friend, Ptolemy,&rdquo; I contributed.</p>
+<p>Strange to say, my offer seemed to make
+the most impression on him. He came to
+me and gazed into my eyes earnestly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do just as you say,&rdquo; he promised.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where do we&rsquo;uns come in?&rdquo; asked
+Pythagoras, with one of his satanic grins.</p>
+<p>Miss Frayne saved the day.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You all come in with me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and
+have lunch. I haven&rsquo;t eaten since breakfast,
+and I understand there is warm ginger cake
+and huckleberry pie. Aren&rsquo;t you hungry?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You bet,&rdquo; spoke up Pythagoras. &ldquo;We
+only had coffee, peanuts, and beans down in
+the woods, and father ate the beans and
+drank all the coffee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re out of the frying pan into the
+fire,&rdquo; said Silvia woefully, when we were
+alone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish the Polydore parents had gone
+up in smoke,&rdquo; I declared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then your last hope of getting rid of
+the children would have gone up in smoke,
+too,&rdquo; argued Beth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; in case of the demise of their
+parents, we could have turned them over
+body and soul to the probate court,&rdquo; I
+informed her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will fill out this blank check for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span>
+any amount, Lucien,&rdquo; declared Silvia,
+&ldquo;that will induce a housekeeper to take
+charge of their house. I shall keep
+Diogenes, though, until he is older.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t mind Ptolemy, either,&rdquo; I
+admitted. &ldquo;I shall be interested in seeing
+what I can make of him, and he hasn&rsquo;t a
+bad influence over Diogenes, but I&rsquo;ll be
+hanged if anything would induce me to
+have &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; Chessy cats running wild
+over us. They can live in their house alone,
+or be put in a reformatory. We won&rsquo;t
+have them. We&rsquo;re under no obligations,
+pecuniary or moral, to look after them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think, Lucien, we might as well go
+home now. We&rsquo;ve had a good rest and a
+good time, and I am anxious to be back
+and see how Huldah is getting on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As Huldah had never mastered two of
+the three R&rsquo;s, we had not been able to
+receive any reports from her.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you what we&rsquo;ll do,&rdquo; proposed
+Beth. &ldquo;Rob and I will take all the Polydores
+save Diogenes, and go home tomorrow
+and prepare the house and Huldah
+for the overflow. Then you two can come
+on with Diogenes the next day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good idea, Beth!&rdquo; I approved. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d
+hate to face Huldah, unprepared, with the
+return of the Polydores <i>en masse</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;that Huldah
+has been having a rest from them for a
+few days.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_39' id='linki_39'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-044.jpg' alt='' title='' width='166' height='214' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_40' id='linki_40'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-045.jpg' alt='' title='' width='350' height='124' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVII__ALL_ABOUT_UNCLE_ISSACHARS_VISIT' id='CHAPTER_XVII__ALL_ABOUT_UNCLE_ISSACHARS_VISIT'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XVII</span></h2>
+<h3><i>All About Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s Visit</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>The next morning&rsquo;s stage carried
+seven passengers to Windy Creek,
+as Miss Frayne with a big roll of
+&ldquo;copy&rdquo; also took her departure.</p>
+<p>Diogenes had been quite docile and
+amenable to my rule since the licking I
+gave him, so we had a pleasant and
+comfortable return journey on the following
+day.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope, Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;you
+won&rsquo;t refuse to cash this check for a good
+amount. The Polydore parents may never
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span>
+show up, and it&rsquo;s only right we should be
+reimbursed for their keep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will cash it,&rdquo; I assured her, &ldquo;and use
+it for a housekeeper or else send the boys
+off to a school. I should like very much
+to have it out with Felix Polydore, but,
+as you suggest, I may never have the
+opportunity to see him at close range.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy met us at the
+station.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where are &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo;?&rdquo; I asked
+hopefully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huldah is feeding them little pies hot
+from the kettle&ndash;&ndash;the kind she cooks like
+doughnuts, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huldah cooking for &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo;!&rdquo;
+I exclaimed. &ldquo;She must have passed into
+her second childhood. She grudged them
+even an apple to piece on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She has pampered them ever since our
+return,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor Huldah! She must indeed be
+afflicted with softening of the brain,&rdquo; I
+decided.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She has probably been so lonely, shut
+in here by herself,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;that
+even &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; looked good to her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the hallway Huldah met us. She
+was beaming with pleasure, but except in
+her bearing toward the children, she was
+quite normal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve all had a real good rest,&rdquo; she
+observed, &ldquo;and you do look so well, Mrs.
+Wade. My! but this place has been
+lonesome. I&rsquo;m glad we&rsquo;re all together
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Silvia, shut your eyes,&rdquo; directed
+Beth, &ldquo;and come into the library.
+Ptolemy has bought you a present with the
+check his father gave him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beth helped me pick it out,&rdquo; said
+Ptolemy.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span></div>
+<p>Beth led the way into the library, and
+we followed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Open your eyes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silvia gave a little cry of pleasure, and
+looking over her shoulder, I beheld a
+baby grand piano.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Ptolemy!&rdquo; she cried, giving him a
+fervent kiss and fond hug, &ldquo;I can never
+let you do so much.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; he said, flushing a little under
+the endearments which were doubtless the
+first ever bestowed upon him. &ldquo;Father&rsquo;s
+got a whole lot of money grandpa left him
+and it&rsquo;s fixed so he can&rsquo;t draw out only so
+much each year. He said the board and
+bother of us was worth more than this and
+we&rsquo;ll all enjoy the music. But Thag and
+Em and Dem ain&rsquo;t to touch it. I&rsquo;ll
+knock tar out of the first one that comes
+near it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was disconsolate. I didn&rsquo;t see how we
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span>
+could return it and I didn&rsquo;t want the Polydore
+web woven any tighter. To think of
+Silvia&rsquo;s receiving from them what it had
+been my longing to give her! But as I
+was to learn later, she was to acquire much
+more than a piano from the eminent
+family.</p>
+<p>After dinner Silvia asked Huldah to
+come in and hear the music, and when
+Silvia&rsquo;s repertoire was exhausted, we gave
+our faithful servant all the little details of
+our trip which Beth had not supplied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now tell us, Huldah, how things went
+along here,&rdquo; said Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you think some wonderful things
+happened to you all on your trip mebby&ndash;&ndash;ghosts
+and proposals,&rdquo; looking at Beth
+and Rob, &ldquo;and fires and Polydores, but
+back here in this quiet house something
+happened that has your ghosts and things
+skinned by a mile.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, dear!&rdquo; cried Silvia apprehensively,
+&ldquo;what is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Break it very gently, Huldah,&rdquo; I
+cautioned. &ldquo;You know we&rsquo;ve borne a
+good deal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your uncle Issachar was here for a
+couple of days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She certainly had made a sensation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not Uncle Issachar! Not here?&rdquo; exclaimed
+Silvia incredulously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, ma&rsquo;am. He came the next day
+after Beth and Mr. Rossiter and Polly
+left. I told him you&rsquo;d gone away for a
+little vacation and rest. I didn&rsquo;t let on
+that I knew where you had gone, because
+I didn&rsquo;t want him straggling up there, too,
+or sending for you to come back. He
+said your absence would make no difference
+to his plans; that he never let nothing
+do that. He come to pay a visit and he
+should pay one.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Silvia feebly. &ldquo;That
+sounds like Uncle Issachar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told him to make himself perfectly
+at home; that every one did that to this
+place, and he said he would. I&rsquo;d just
+slicked up the big front room upstairs
+and I seen to it that he had everything
+all right. I cooked the best dinner I
+knew how, and he said it was the first
+white man&rsquo;s meal he had eat since his ma
+died, so I found out what she used to cook
+and fed him on it. Them three kids and
+him eat like they was holler. I guess if
+Polly hadn&rsquo;t took them away your grocery
+bill would &rsquo;a looked like Barb&rsquo;ry
+Allen&rsquo;s grave.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, as I was saying, your uncle he
+eat till he got over his grouches, and like
+enough he&rsquo;d be here eating yet, if he hadn&rsquo;t
+got a telegraph to hit the line for home,
+some big business deal, he said, and I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span>
+guess it was a great deal, for he licked his
+chops and smacked his lips over it, and he
+give me a ten dollar bill to get a new dress
+and each of Them Three one dollar fer
+candy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The old tightwad!&rdquo; I exclaimed. &ldquo;It
+was your cooking, sure, that made him
+loosen up that way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tightwad nothing!&rdquo; she declared indignantly.
+&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t think he was tight-wadded
+when you read this here letter he
+left for you. He told me what was in it,
+and I&rsquo;ve just been busting to tell it to
+Beth, but I waited for you to know it
+first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With great excitement Silvia opened the
+letter, read it, gasped, re-read it, and then
+in consternation handed it to me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Read it aloud, Lucien,&rdquo; she bade.
+&ldquo;Maybe I can believe it then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was the letter.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span></div>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Niece:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was sorry not to see you, but glad to
+learn that, as every wise and good woman
+should do, you are raising a fine family&ndash;&ndash;a
+family of <i>sons</i>, which is what our country
+most needs. Your son Pythagoras informed
+me that you had taken your oldest
+child, Ptolemy, and your youngest, Diogenes,
+with you, I am glad you left three
+such promising samples for me to see.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As you have five sons, I have, agreeable
+to my promise, placed in your name in
+the First National Bank of your city the
+sum of twenty-five thousand dollars.</p>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Your affectionate uncle,<br />
+&ldquo;Issachar Innes.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Huldah,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;did you tell him
+the Polydores were our children?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Me?&rdquo; she repeated indignantly. &ldquo;Me
+tell a lie like that! No; I didn&rsquo;t get no
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span>
+chance to tell him anything about them.
+&lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; done the telling. The first
+thing that one&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;pointing to Pythagoras&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;said
+was, &lsquo;Mudder went away and took
+the baby, Diogenes, with her.&rsquo; And then
+that next one&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;indicating Emerald&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;said:
+&lsquo;Yes, and our oldest brother,
+Ptolemy, went on with Beth to see them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The old gent asked them all their names
+and ages and he was so pleased and said he
+thought it was just fine for you to raise five
+sons, so I didn&rsquo;t have no heart to tell him
+no different. &lsquo;Twan&rsquo;t none of my business
+anyhow. Then &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; kept talking
+about stepdaddy, and your Uncle Issachar
+asks &lsquo;Who the devil is he? Did my
+niece marry again?&rsquo; And I told him as how
+Mr. Wade was all the husband you ever had,
+and that stepdaddy was nothing but a sort
+of pet-name the kids had give Mr. Wade.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told him,&rdquo; said Demetrius, &ldquo;that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span>
+stepdaddy was cross to us sometimes and
+not as nice as mudder, and he said&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shut up,&rdquo; commanded Huldah
+quickly, &ldquo;and let me talk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I intercepted, &ldquo;I&rsquo;d really be
+interested in hearing what he told Uncle
+Issachar. What was it, Demetrius, that
+your great-uncle said to you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He said,&rdquo; stated the imp, darting his
+tongue out in triumph at his victory over
+Huldah, &ldquo;that he always thought you was
+a stiff.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t say nothing of the kind!&rdquo;
+declared Huldah. &ldquo;He said you was stiff-necked,
+and that he presumed you would
+act more like a stepfather than the real
+thing. Well, as I was saying, he asked
+their names, and he liked them fine. Said
+they were so classy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t he say classic, Huldah?&rdquo; inquired
+Rob.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Mebby. What&rsquo;s the difference?&rdquo;
+snapped Huldah.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None,&rdquo; I assured her quickly, dodging
+a definition.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She told him&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; began Emerald.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shut up,&rdquo; again adjured Huldah,
+&ldquo;or I&rsquo;ll never bake you one of those small
+pies no more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, please, Huldah,&rdquo; I coaxed. &ldquo;Let
+us hear everything. I&rsquo;ve always told you
+my life&rsquo;s secrets, and I don&rsquo;t mind what
+you or the boys told him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I suppose what he was going to
+tattle was that I thought the old gent
+might feel hurt, &rsquo;cause none of them was
+named after him, so I told him Polly&rsquo;s
+middle name was Issachar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Huldah,&rdquo; remonstrated Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;s always wanted a middle
+name, and he&rsquo;s never been baptized, so
+you can stick it in and have him ducked
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span>
+next Sunday and then that will square
+that. &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; stuck to him like
+a hive of bees, and I was scairt for fear
+they&rsquo;d let the cat out of the bag, and so
+long as they had put it in, I thought it
+might just as well stay in, but they were
+just as slick as grease in all they said.
+They&rsquo;ll hang in that rogues&rsquo; gallery yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose they were pretty&ndash;&ndash;strenuous,&rdquo;
+said Silvia with a sigh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They was more than that. The first
+afternoon right after dinner when he was
+sitting on the front porch, sleeping peaceful
+and snoring, that there one&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; pointing
+to Pythagoras&ndash;&ndash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tattle-tale!&rdquo; he began, but I administered
+a cuff and he subsided into surprised
+silence.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_41' id='linki_41'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span>
+<img src='images/illus-046.jpg' alt='' title='' width='360' height='464' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;He went to the front window and dropped a young kitten down on the old gent&rsquo;s head.&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He,&rdquo; said Huldah, looking pleased at
+this little attention to the boy, &ldquo;went to
+the front window and dropped a young
+kitten down on the old gent&rsquo;s head. It
+clawed something fierce. We had just got
+things going smooth again when Emmy
+got one of his earaches. I roasted an
+onion and put in his ear, and what did he
+do but take it out of his ear and slip it down
+your poor uncle&rsquo;s back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you beat them?&rdquo; I asked
+indignantly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because the old gent did that. He put
+&rsquo;em across his knee, and believe me, it was
+some licking they caught. They didn&rsquo;t
+let out a whimper and that pleased him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huh!&rdquo; said Emerald. &ldquo;Thag don&rsquo;t
+know how to cry. He hasn&rsquo;t got any tears,
+and old Uncle Iz didn&rsquo;t hurt me, because,
+you see, when I heard Thag getting his,
+I went and stuffed the Declaration of Independence,
+that book of stepdaddy&rsquo;s that
+Demetrius tore the pictures out of, in my
+pants.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Go on!&rdquo; urged Rob delightedly.
+&ldquo;What else did you all do? Uncle must
+have had some time. It would make a
+fine scenario. &lsquo;The first visit of the rich
+uncle.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; resumed Huldah. &ldquo;One of &rsquo;em
+put red pepper in the old man&rsquo;s bed, and
+he like to sneeze his head off, but he said
+as how sneezing was healthy, and showed
+you&rsquo;d got rid of a cold.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He never got on to the pepper,&rdquo; said
+Demetrius gleefully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the morning, that second one put a
+toad in his new uncle&rsquo;s pocket, and Emmy
+broke his specs. Then Meetie he dropped
+his watch. They used his razor to cut the
+lawn with. And then they took him down
+to the creek to go fishing, and they put the
+fish in Uncle&rsquo;s silk hat, and and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; implored Silvia, who was now
+in tears. &ldquo;Uncle Issachar believes them
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span>
+mine! Ours! And that I brought them
+up! Oh, why did we ever go away?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, pshaw,&rdquo; exclaimed Huldah comfortingly,
+&ldquo;he said you had brung them up
+fine; that they were no mollycoddles or
+Lizzie boys, and he didn&rsquo;t suppose you had
+so much sense as to leave them natural.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A left-handed one for mudder,&rdquo; laughed
+Beth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must be a very peculiar man&ndash;&ndash;ready
+for the asylum, I should say,&rdquo; commented
+Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would have been if he&rsquo;d stayed any
+longer, or else I would have been,&rdquo; declared
+Huldah.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t you make them behave, someway?&rdquo;
+asked Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, at first I tried to, and every time
+I pinched one of &rsquo;em when the old gent
+wasn&rsquo;t looking, or knocked &rsquo;em down when
+I got &rsquo;em alone, they would threaten to tell
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span>
+who they was, and then when I seen how
+your uncle liked the way they acted, I just
+let &rsquo;em go it, head on. And seeing as how
+they each brung you five thousand, I&rsquo;ve
+treated &rsquo;em best I know how. They&rsquo;re
+worth it, now. They done one thing more
+that was awful. Could you stand it to
+hear?&rdquo; turning to Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please, Silvia,&rdquo; implored Rob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; argued Silvia faintly. &ldquo;I suppose
+we might as well know the worst.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see the old gent didn&rsquo;t always get
+up to breakfast with the kids and one morning
+when I brought in the cakes Emmy
+looked up and grinned. I nearly dropped
+the plate. He had both sets of the old
+man&rsquo;s false teeth in his mouth. I got &rsquo;em
+back in his room without his waking, but
+I&rsquo;d have liked a picture of Emmy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pythagoras,&rdquo; I demanded, when we
+had recovered from this recital, &ldquo;why
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span>
+didn&rsquo;t you tell him who you were, and how
+you all came to be here with us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because she is our mudder, and we are
+going to stay with her, always. We&rsquo;ve
+got a snap. So has father and mother.
+And Ptolemy told us that if you ever got
+any kids, you&rsquo;d get five thousand each for
+them, and I thought we&rsquo;d just make that
+much for you. So we played Uncle Iz
+for it. Easy money, all right, all right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Talk about fine financiering,&rdquo; quoth
+Rob. &ldquo;&lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; will surely land on
+Wall Street.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But poor Silvia had no heart for humor
+and was weeping silently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, look here, my dear,&rdquo; I said in
+consolation, &ldquo;this is a very simple matter
+to adjust. In the morning when you feel
+better, just write a full explanation of the
+affair and inclose your check for twenty-five
+thousand.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span></div>
+<p>Silvia quickly wiped away her tears.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do it tonight, Lucien. I feel better
+now. I never thought of writing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Huldah and &ldquo;Them Three&rdquo; looked most
+lugubrious.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The old skinflint won&rsquo;t miss it as much
+as I would a penny,&rdquo; declared our faithful
+handmaiden. &ldquo;And I&rsquo;m sure you&rsquo;ve earnt
+that twenty-five thousand if anyone ever
+did. You&rsquo;ve had as much care and worry
+about them brats as you would if they&rsquo;d
+been your own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huldah,&rdquo; I said severely, &ldquo;there is a
+pretty stiff penalty for obtaining money
+under false pretences.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After all the pains we took to make
+things lively for him, so he wouldn&rsquo;t get
+bored and think he was having a poor time!&rdquo;
+regretted Pythagoras.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And us watching every word we spoke
+so as not to give it away,&rdquo; wailed Emerald.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Cake&rsquo;s all dough,&rdquo; muttered Demetrius.</p>
+<p>Ptolemy regarded the three disapprovingly.
+He had the old inscrutable look,
+the look that foreboded mischief, in his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You bungled, you fool kids!&rdquo; he said
+in disgust, &ldquo;and Huldah, what did you
+want to let on to mudder for that he thought
+we was hers? You ought to have torn up
+the note he left and just said he&rsquo;d put
+twenty-five thousand in the bank for her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huh! you&rsquo;re just jealous because you
+weren&rsquo;t in the Uncle Izzy deal yourself,&rdquo;
+jeered Pythagoras. &ldquo;You always think
+you&rsquo;re the only one that can do anything
+right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish you had been here, Polly,&rdquo; said
+Huldah, &ldquo;I am sure you could have worked
+it through somehow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I had stayed and put it across,&rdquo;
+he answered. &ldquo;If you and the kids would
+only learn not to blab everything you know.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span>
+It&rsquo;s the only way to work anything. Minute
+you tell a thing, it&rsquo;s all off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was still a great deal of development
+work to be put on Ptolemy&rsquo;s moral standard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll find, my lad,&rdquo; remonstrated
+Rob, &ldquo;that honesty is the best policy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d have been perfectly honest about
+it,&rdquo; he defended. &ldquo;I would have told him
+the truth, and how our parents had deserted
+us, and how mudder took us in when we
+were homeless and was bringing us up like
+her own because she hadn&rsquo;t got any, and
+how stepdaddy wanted to turn us out, and
+she wouldn&rsquo;t let him, and then he would
+have decided against stepdaddy and given
+mudder the money so she could keep us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; I said warningly, &ldquo;there is a
+way of telling the truth, or rather of coloring
+white lies with enough truth to make
+them deceive, that is more dishonorable
+than an out and out lie.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell me, Ptolemy,&rdquo; asked Silvia, &ldquo;how
+did you know about that offer of five thousand
+dollars for each child?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I overheard it,&rdquo; he said guardedly;
+&ldquo;but I can&rsquo;t remember where.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He heard me say so,&rdquo; confessed Huldah.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was when he first come here and he
+was making us so much trouble, and I told
+him it was too bad we had to have other
+folks&rsquo; brats around when, if we only had
+our own, they&rsquo;d be bringing in something.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The recital now broke up and Silvia sat
+down to write a long explanatory letter to
+Uncle Issachar. The next morning I procured
+her a check from the First National
+Bank and she filled it out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she said with indrawn breath,
+when she had asked me how to write
+twenty-five thousand dollars, &ldquo;I never expected
+to be able to sign my name to a
+check for such an amount.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You never will again, I fear,&rdquo; was my
+sad prophecy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It must feel rich,&rdquo; said Beth, &ldquo;just to
+have a large check pass through your
+fingers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Them Three&rdquo; came the nearest to tears
+that they were able to do.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We worked so hard for it,&rdquo; they sighed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So did I!&rdquo; muttered Huldah.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t live a double life,&rdquo; declared
+Silvia.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_42' id='linki_42'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-048.jpg' alt='' title='' width='217' height='215' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_43' id='linki_43'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-047.jpg' alt='' title='' width='336' height='89' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVIII__IN_WHICH_I_DECIDE_ON_EXTREME_MEASURES' id='CHAPTER_XVIII__IN_WHICH_I_DECIDE_ON_EXTREME_MEASURES'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XVIII</span></h2>
+<h3><i>In Which I Decide on Extreme Measures</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>Everyone in our house, which was
+now filled to overflowing&ndash;&ndash;in fact,
+there were Polydores on sofas and
+in beds on the floor&ndash;&ndash;save Silvia and
+myself, was on the alert for a response to
+the letter during the succeeding few days.
+Knowing Uncle Issachar, we felt sure he
+would make no response, or notice the
+matter in any way save to cash the check
+promptly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span></p>
+<p>The monotony was somewhat relieved
+by the difficulties under which Beth and
+Rob were pursuing their courtship. On
+the third evening succeeding our return,
+Silvia and I started upstairs early to give
+them a chance to have the exclusive use of
+the library, the Polydores having all been
+sent to bed. As we were making some
+plausible excuse for going to our room,
+Beth remarked with a smile:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your motive in retiring so early is commendable,
+but of no particular benefit to
+Rob and me. The Polydores, like the poor,
+we always have with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I saw that every one of them except
+Ptolemy was in bed at eight o&rsquo;clock last
+night and the night before,&rdquo; said Silvia.
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean to tell me&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I do mean,&rdquo; laughed Beth. &ldquo;Not
+Ptolemy, though. He has become too
+dignified to spy on us, but last night as we
+sat here on the settee, we heard a suppressed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span>
+sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald
+from underneath.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How in the world did he ever squeeze
+under there?&rdquo; I asked, gazing at the
+slight space between the floor and settee.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_44' id='linki_44'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-049.jpg' alt='' title='' width='357' height='266' /><br />
+</div>
+<p>&ldquo;He did look a little flattened, as if he
+had been put in a letter press,&rdquo; said Rob.
+&ldquo;I gave him a dime to go to bed and stay
+there. Beth and I had just resumed our
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span>
+conversation when a still, small voice said:
+&lsquo;I&rsquo;ll go to bed for a dime, too.&rsquo; I then
+hauled Demetrius from behind the davenport.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the night before,&rdquo; said Beth, &ldquo;when
+we were sitting on the porch, Pythagoras
+rolled off the roof, where he had been listening
+to us, and came down into the vines.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now I&rsquo;ll stop that,&rdquo; I declared. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+tie them in their beds and lock the doors
+and windows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; refused Rob. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to try
+to circumvent them by their own weapons
+of wits. I have a little plan which I don&rsquo;t
+dare whisper to you lest their long-range
+ears get in their work. We are just about
+to start for a walk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In this pouring rain!&rdquo; protested Silvia.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We like the rain,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;and we&ndash;&ndash;are
+not going far.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pythagoras entered the room just then
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
+and looked astounded and disappointed
+when he saw Beth and Rob departing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are going out to a small party,&rdquo;
+Rob remarked to me, casually.</p>
+<p>It was after eleven when we heard them
+returning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you suppose they have been walking
+all this time?&rdquo; said Silvia in concern.
+&ldquo;Beth wore no rubbers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The next day was Sunday and Huldah
+put into execution a plan for procuring
+one happy hour each week. This plan was
+the admission of the Polydores, <i>en masse</i>,
+to one of the Sunday schools. She chose
+the church most remote from home so they
+would be a long time going and coming,
+which she said would &ldquo;help some.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Beth, as she watched them
+march away, &ldquo;I can dare to tell you where
+we spent last evening. We were at the
+Polydore house next door. There is a little
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span>
+vine-screened porch on the other side of
+the house. Rob managed to open one
+of the windows and brought out a couple
+of chairs. It was as snug as could be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll corral them every night,&rdquo; I said,
+&ldquo;until you make your getaway, and I&rsquo;ll
+give you the key so you can go inside when
+it is cool or stormy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll go around the block by way of
+precaution,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
+<p>Presently Huldah returned from the
+Sunday school with triumphant mien.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They made them all into one class and
+put a redheaded woman with spectacles
+in for their teacher. I gave them street
+car tickets to come home on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When the Polydores returned, however,
+they were dragging Diogenes along and he
+looked quite weary.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you come home on the street
+car?&rdquo; I asked Ptolemy.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No; we sold our tickets and got ice
+cream sodas,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;We took
+turns carrying Diogenes on our backs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You only had one ticket for yourself,
+and two half fares for Thag and Emmy,&rdquo;
+said Huldah suspiciously. &ldquo;I thought
+Meetie and Di could ride free. You
+couldn&rsquo;t have sold them tickets for enough
+for sodies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rob gave us three nickels to put in the
+plate,&rdquo; said Pythagoras. &ldquo;We only put in
+one of them, seeing we were all in one family
+and one class. That gave us four nickels
+for ice cream sodas and the clerk gave
+Di half a glass some one had left.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I gave you a penny for Di to put in,&rdquo;
+said Huldah. &ldquo;What did you do with
+that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We wanted him to put it in, and when
+they took up the collection, he wouldn&rsquo;t
+give it,&rdquo; said Emerald. &ldquo;I tried to take
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span>
+it away from him and he swallowed it.
+The redhead teacher was awful scared,
+but I told her he was used to swallowing
+things and that you said he carried a whole
+department store in his insides.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor little Di,&rdquo; said Silvia; &ldquo;it&rsquo;s the
+only way he has of keeping things away
+from you all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That night I saw to it personally that
+each and every Polydore was in his little
+bed. It should have aroused my suspicions
+that none of them rebelled, or had
+evinced the slightest degree of interest or
+curiosity when Beth and Rob announced
+their intention of going out for the evening.</p>
+<p>At ten-thirty the lovers returned, bringing
+in Pythagoras, who was clad in his
+pajamas.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did you pick him up?&rdquo; I asked
+in astonishment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He picked us up,&rdquo; said Beth.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He was wise, maybe, in discovering
+where we were,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;but he fell
+down when he tried to work off the ghost
+screeches on us. We recognized them at
+once, and ran him down inside, so our
+party broke up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come here, Pythagoras,&rdquo; I commanded.</p>
+<p>He obeyed promptly and fearlessly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did you know they were there,
+and when did you go over there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was playing over in our house today,&rdquo;
+he replied, &ldquo;and I found one of Beth&rsquo;s
+hairpins with the little stones in, in the big
+chair, so I knew that was where they hid
+last night. As soon as you went down stairs
+tonight, I got out the window and slid down
+the roof and came over to scare them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve missed a lot of sleep the last
+few nights,&rdquo; I said quietly, &ldquo;so you will
+have to make it up. You can stay in bed
+all day tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Hold on, Lucien!&rdquo; exclaimed Rob.
+&ldquo;Tomorrow&rsquo;s the big baseball game of
+the season, and I promised to take them all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So much the better,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;He
+will learn to mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pythagoras looked as if he had been
+struck, and quickly put his arms across
+his eyes. In a moment his shoulders were
+heaving. At last I had found a vulnerable
+spot in the stoic, and I began to relent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See here, Pythagoras,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;if I let
+you up in time to go to the game, will you
+promise me something?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anything,&rdquo; came in a muffled voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you promise not to spy on Beth
+and Rob and keep Emerald and Demetrius
+from doing it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he promised quickly, his arm
+coming down and his face brightening.
+&ldquo;Sure I will, but I did want to hear what
+they said.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; asked Rob interestedly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re getting up a show, and Em is
+going to take the part of a girl and he spoons
+with Tolly, and we didn&rsquo;t know what to
+have them say to each other.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll rehearse you on the play, and
+prompt you,&rdquo; said Beth with a little
+giggle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come on upstairs with me now,&rdquo; I
+said to Pythagoras.</p>
+<p>When I landed him at his door, he leaned
+up against me, and rubbed his cheek against
+my arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you for letting me go to the
+game,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>I found myself responding to his affectionate
+advance. This would clearly never
+do. I couldn&rsquo;t let another Polydore squeeze
+himself into my regard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I said abruptly, as I came into
+our room, &ldquo;we must really make some immediate
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span>
+plan for disposing of the Polydores,
+or, at least, of &lsquo;Them Three.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huldah is managing them tolerably
+well,&rdquo; demurred Silvia. &ldquo;Since they depreciated
+in market value from five thousand
+per to nothing, she has resumed her
+former harsh treatment of them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, we are not going to keep them,&rdquo;
+I replied with finality. &ldquo;We are under no
+obligations to do so. I am going to put them
+in a school for boys and use the blank check
+Felix Polydore left to pay for their tuition.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose that is what we will have to
+do,&rdquo; she admitted with a little sigh. &ldquo;Yet,
+Lucien, it doesn&rsquo;t seem quite right. If
+they are in a boys&rsquo; school, they will keep
+on right along the same lines. They need
+home influence and contact with women.
+Demetrius is fond of music and will sit
+still and listen when I play. Emerald
+obeyed me today the first time I spoke,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span>
+and I even thought I saw a glimmer of good
+in Pythagoras.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I didn&rsquo;t tell her that this glimmer was
+what had decided me to dispose of him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would, doubtless, be better for them
+to stay,&rdquo; I admitted, &ldquo;but I am not going to
+be a martyr to the cause. They are going.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The next morning I wrote for catalogues
+and prospectus to the different schools,
+and I felt as if three old men of the sea
+had been lifted from my shoulders.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_45' id='linki_45'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-050.jpg' alt='' title='' width='197' height='246' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_46' id='linki_46'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-051.jpg' alt='' title='' width='365' height='153' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIX_WHICH_HAS_TO_DO_WITH_SOME_LETTERS' id='CHAPTER_XIX_WHICH_HAS_TO_DO_WITH_SOME_LETTERS'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter</span> XIX</h2>
+<h3><i>Which Has to Do with Some Letters</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>One morning when I came down to
+my office, I found a letter postmarked
+from the city in which
+Uncle Issachar lived addressed to me. I
+opened it and found inclosed, with seal
+unbroken, the letter Silvia had mailed to
+her uncle and which she had marked &ldquo;personal.&rdquo;
+There was a note addressed to
+me accompanying it:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear Sir:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am returning herewith your personal
+letter to Mr. Innes, as he has gone to
+South America and left no forwarding
+address. Should such be received from
+him at any future date, you will be duly
+notified thereof.</p>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Very truly yours,<span class='rindent8'>&nbsp;</span><br />
+&ldquo;Chester K. Winslow,<span class='rindent6'>&nbsp;</span><br />
+&ldquo;Secretary.&rdquo;<span class='rindent4'>&nbsp;</span></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I read the above to Silvia at luncheon.
+She was grievously disappointed because
+her uncle had not received her letter of
+explanation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is most fortunate,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that
+I sent it in one of your office envelopes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As usual, she had found the bright spot
+she always looked for and generally discovered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t care,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;to have
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span>
+Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s private secretary or the
+dead-letter office know all our private
+affairs, but I shall feel like an impostor
+until Uncle Issachar is undeceived.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I feel a hunch,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;that Uncle
+Issachar will run across Doctor Felix and his
+wife down there in Chili and find you out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He may run across the Polydores,&rdquo; I
+replied, &ldquo;but he&rsquo;ll never find out from
+them that they are the parents of Silvia&rsquo;s
+children. They would not mention a subject
+in which they have so little interest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; argued Beth, &ldquo;naturally they&rsquo;d
+tell him where they lived, and then, of
+course, he&rsquo;d say he had a niece living in
+the same town. They would inquire her
+name and inform him that they were her
+near neighbors, and then he&rsquo;d tell them
+what fine sons you have, and then, of course,
+the Polydores would claim their own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which theory goes to show,&rdquo; said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span>
+Silvia, &ldquo;how little you know Uncle Issachar
+and the Polydore seniors. He would
+not think of speaking to strangers, and if
+he did, he wouldn&rsquo;t say any of those usual
+conversational things you mentioned. The
+Polydores wouldn&rsquo;t be interested, in the
+least, in knowing he had a niece unless she
+happened to know something about
+antiques, and if he should describe her
+children, she wouldn&rsquo;t recognize them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After luncheon I went out on the porch.
+While I sat there, the mail carrier came
+along and handed me a letter&ndash;&ndash;a returned
+letter. It was directed in Ptolemy&rsquo;s round
+hand to Mr. Issachar Innes. He had
+evidently used the envelope to Silvia&rsquo;s
+letter to her uncle as his model, for the
+address was written in the same way.
+&ldquo;Personal&rdquo; was added in the left-hand
+corner, and his name and our house number
+was in the upper left-hand corner.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span></div>
+<p>I went into the library where my wife,
+Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy were sitting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; I said, handing him the
+letter, &ldquo;here is your communication to
+Uncle Issachar, returned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He lost some of his usual <i>sang froid</i>
+and appeared quite disconcerted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Ptolemy,&rdquo; exclaimed Silvia in
+consternation, &ldquo;what in the world did
+you write to Uncle Issachar about?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ptolemy had recovered and was quite
+himself again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;About us,&rdquo; he said innocently. &ldquo;As
+the oldest of our family, I thought I ought
+to do a little explaining.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I think,&rdquo; I said, looking at him
+keenly, &ldquo;that we have the right to know
+what your explanation was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ptolemy handed me over the letter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Read it aloud,&rdquo; he said, with the air
+of one who is proud of his productions.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span></div>
+<p>Rob&rsquo;s eyes shone in anticipation.</p>
+<p>I broke the seal. A note from the
+secretary fell out. It was an apology for
+not returning the letter sooner, but it had
+been inadvertently mislaid. I then read
+aloud the letter Ptolemy had written:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear Uncle Issachar</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sorry Diogenes and I were away
+when you were here. You thought the
+others were fine, but you should have
+seen&ndash;&ndash;Diogenes. I hope you will send
+mudder back her check, because there is lots
+of things she needs, and it takes a lot of
+money to take care of all us. You see
+our own father and mother don&rsquo;t want to
+be bothered with us and they went away
+and left us, and so we are living with
+mudder the same as if we were really her
+adopted children, and if her own would
+have been worth five thousand per to you,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span>
+I think her adopted children ought to be
+worth half as much anyway, so it would
+only be fair to send her a check for $12,500
+anyway, and if you are a good sport like
+the kids said you were, you&rsquo;ll send back
+her check.</p>
+<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Yours truly,<span class='rindent11'>&nbsp;</span><br />
+&ldquo;P. Issachar Polydore Wade.&rdquo;<span class='rindent4'>&nbsp;</span></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Rob&rsquo;s laughter was so free and spontaneous
+that I had to join in against my
+will. Ptolemy, who had seemed a little
+apprehensive of the verdict, looked accordingly
+relieved.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a fine letter, young man,&rdquo; approved
+Rob. &ldquo;Stepdaddy ought to take
+you into his law firm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; declared Beth. &ldquo;I think Ptolemy
+has inherited his mother&rsquo;s gift. He
+should be a writer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not on your life!&rdquo; cried Ptolemy with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span>
+feeling. &ldquo;I want to live things instead
+of writing about them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A tear or two came into Silvia&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was very sweet in you, Ptolemy, to
+try to get the money for mudder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I felt that all this commendation was
+bad for Ptolemy, and that it was up to
+me to take a reef in his sails.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was a well-meant letter, Ptolemy,&rdquo;
+I said, &ldquo;and I know that your motive was
+unselfish, but it is very poor policy to
+meddle in other people&rsquo;s affairs. Meddlers
+are mischief makers in spite of their
+good intentions. I am very glad it did
+not fall into Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ptolemy looked sufficiently squelched.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By the way, Silvia,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;I wrote
+Mr. Winslow and told him not to forget
+to forward Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s address as soon
+as he possibly could do so, as I had matters
+of importance to communicate to him.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He may travel about like father and
+mother,&rdquo; said Ptolemy, again regaining
+confidence, &ldquo;so why don&rsquo;t you put that
+check for twenty-five thousand in the
+Savings Department and get the interest
+on it anyway?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think, Ptolemy,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;that you
+are too good a financier, after all, to become
+a lawyer. I will go back to my first
+conviction that you should be a promoter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll give him to Uncle Issachar,&rdquo; I
+proposed, &ldquo;for a partner.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_47' id='linki_47'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-053.jpg' alt='' title='' width='271' height='218' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_48' id='linki_48'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-052.jpg' alt='' title='' width='326' height='114' /><br />
+</div>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XX_THE_MONEY_WE_EARNT_FOR_YOU' id='CHAPTER_XX_THE_MONEY_WE_EARNT_FOR_YOU'></a>
+<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter</span> XX</h2>
+<h3><i>&ldquo;The Money We Earnt for You&rdquo;</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p>Life went on uneventfully save for
+the dire doings of &ldquo;Them Three.&rdquo;
+Knowing that they were to be sent
+to school, they were having their last fling
+at life untrammeled. September came,
+and Rob set the day for his departure, as
+he was going home to arrange his affairs,
+so he and Beth could leave for an extended
+honeymoon trip. I planned to go with
+Rob and install the Polydore three in their
+distant school. They were so despondent
+at leaving, as the time drew near, that a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span>
+feeling of gloom hung over the household,
+all the members of which, even to Huldah,
+urged me to relent. But I remained adamant
+until the evening before the day set
+for the dissolution of the Polydore family,
+when something happened that changed
+all our plans.</p>
+<p>We were assembled in the library in a
+state of forced cheerfulness when the doorbell
+rang. I answered it, and receipted
+for a telegram which I opened and read in
+the hall. It was from Chester K. Winslow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I said gravely, as I returned
+to the library, &ldquo;your Uncle Issachar is
+dead. Died in South America. Heart disease.
+Very sudden.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Conflicting emotions were depicted in
+Silvia&rsquo;s expression.</p>
+<p>The thought uppermost in all our minds
+was expressed simultaneously by &ldquo;Them
+Three.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Gee! Then you can keep the money
+we earnt for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You know,&rdquo; interpolated Rob in soft-pedaled
+tone, &ldquo;they are going to train
+school children toward the military&ndash;&ndash;teach
+the young ideas how to shoot, as it were.
+It won&rsquo;t be long before they are ordered
+to Mexico to protect us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If Them Three ever meets that there
+Viller man,&rdquo; commented Huldah confidently,
+&ldquo;the fur will fly some.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia thoughtfully, &ldquo;we
+are under obligations to these children,
+you see, after all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I acknowledged with a sigh,
+&ldquo;seeing they are now ours, bought and
+paid for, I suppose we&rsquo;ll have to treat them
+as such.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You wouldn&rsquo;t send your own kids
+away to school,&rdquo; said Pythagoras significantly.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I reluctantly allowed, answering
+the protest of Pythagoras, &ldquo;and we won&rsquo;t
+send you. You will all go to the public
+school tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The deafening Polydore powwow that
+followed made me hope that Uncle Issachar
+had met with his just deserts.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_49' id='linki_49'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-054.jpg' alt='' title='' width='184' height='275' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span></div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_50' id='linki_50'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-055.jpg' alt='' title='' width='104' height='139' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:20px;'><i>&ldquo;By the author of &ldquo;Mildew Manse.&rdquo;</i></p>
+
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.4em;margin-bottom:20px;'>AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY</p>
+
+<p class='tp' ><i>By</i> BELLE K. MANIATES</p>
+<p class='tp' >Illustrated. 12mo. $1.00 <i>net</i>.</p>
+
+<p>A book for the many who are weary of problem novels.
+How prosperity came to the Jenkins family, how Amarilly
+got an education, how the Boarder married Lily Rose
+and built the Annex, and the adventures of the rector&rsquo;s
+surplice, are told in a wholesome little story, between
+whose covers await many laughs, and a tear or two as well.</p>
+
+<p>Amarilly is blessed with a large family and amiable neighbors,
+and their doings are amusing, but her fancies and devices
+are captivating.... The little heroine is all right.&ndash;&ndash;<i>New
+York Sun.</i></p>
+
+<p>The sort of story which pulls at the heartstrings of all
+readers who like a real and genuine character.... No one can
+afford to miss the sweet humor and helpful cheeriness which
+the author serves in generous measure.&ndash;&ndash;<i>Boston Globe</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley&rdquo; is a dear companion for
+vacation days and comes deservedly under the books of real
+amusement.... Dear Amarilly! she brightens every hour
+spent with her.&ndash;&ndash;<i>Buffalo News</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:larger;'>LITTLE, BROWN &amp; CO., <span class='smcap'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='tp' ><span class='smcap'>34 Beacon Street, Boston</span></p>
+
+<!-- generated by ppg.rb version: 3.14 -->
+<!-- timestamp: Thu Sep 24 06:15:03 -0400 2009 -->
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30075 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
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+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #30075 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/30075)
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-Project Gutenberg's Our Next-Door Neighbors, by Belle Kanaris Maniates
-
-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: Our Next-Door Neighbors
-
-Author: Belle Kanaris Maniates
-
-Illustrator: Tony Sarg
-
-Release Date: September 24, 2009 [EBook #30075]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
-
-
-
-
-By Belle K. Maniates
-
-AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY
-
-MILDEW MANCE
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken him.
-FRONTISPIECE. _See page 114._]
-
-
-
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
-
-By
-
-Belle Kanaris Maniates
-
-With illustrations by
-
-Tony Sarg
-
-Boston
-
-Little, Brown, and Company
-
-1917
-
-
-
-
-Copyright, 1917,
-
-By Little, Brown, and Company.
-
-All rights reserved
-
-Published February, 1917
-
-Norwood Press
-
-Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
-
-Presswork by The Colonial Press, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- I ABOUT SILVIA AND MYSELF 1
- II INTRODUCING OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS 9
- III IN WHICH WE ARE PESTERED BY POLYDORES 28
- IV IN WHICH WE TAKE BOARDERS 45
- V IN WHICH WE TAKE A VACATION 61
- VI A FLIRT AND A WOMAN-HATER 77
- VII IN WHICH NOTHING MUCH HAPPENS 90
- VIII PTOLEMY DISAPPEARS AND I VISIT A HAUNTED HOUSE 99
- IX IN WHICH WE SEE GHOSTS 123
- X IN WHICH WE MAKE SOME DISCOVERIES 138
- XI A BAD MEANS TO A GOOD END 152
- XII "TOO MUCH POLYDORES" 164
- XIII ROB'S FRIEND THE REPORTER 173
- XIV A MIDNIGHT EXCURSION 195
- XV WHAT MISS FRAYNE FOUND OUT 203
- XVI PTOLEMY'S TALE 213
- XVII ALL ABOUT UNCLE ISSACHAR'S VISIT 229
- XVIII IN WHICH I DECIDE ON EXTREME MEASURES 254
- XIX WHICH HAS TO DO WITH SOME LETTERS 267
- XX "THE MONEY WE EARNT FOR YOU" 276
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken
- him. _Frontispiece_
- Uncle Issachar 10
- Dr. Felix Polydore 23
- "Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to
- Beth and Rob." 80
- He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us. 102
- I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to
- pull together and beat it to the lake 126
- The landlady intears waylaid me 132
- I had to carry Diogenes most of the way 168
- Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia's
- plaintive protests outside the door 192
- I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but
- with an injured air 224
- "He went to the front window and dropped a young
- kitten down on the old gent's head." 242
- "We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled
- Emerald from underneath." 256
-
-
-
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOURS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-_About Silvia and Myself_
-
-
-Some people have children born unto them, some acquire children and
-others have children thrust upon them. Silvia and I are of the last
-named class. We have no offspring of our own, but yesterday, today,
-and forever we have those of our neighbor.
-
-We were born and bred in the same little home-grown city and as a
-small boy, even, I was Silvia's worshiper, but perforce a worshiper
-from afar.
-
-Her upcoming had been supervised by a grimalkin governess who drew
-around the form of her young charge the awful circle of exclusiveness,
-intercourse with child-kind being strictly prohibited.
-
-Children are naturally gregarious little creatures, however, and
-Silvia on rare occasions managed to break parole and make adroit
-escape from surveillance. Then she would speed to the top of the
-boundary wall that separated the stable precincts from an alluring
-alley which was the playground of the plebeian progeny of the humble
-born.
-
-To the circle of dirty but fascinating ragamuffins she became an
-interested tangent, a silent observer. Here I had my first meeting
-with her. I was not of her class, neither was I to the alley born, but
-sailed in the sane mid-channel that ameliorates the distinction
-between high and low life.
-
-On this eventful day I was taking a short cut on my way to school. One
-of the group of alleyites, with the inherent friendliness of the
-unchartered but big-hearted members of the silt of the stream of
-humans, had proffered to little Silvia a chip on which was a patch of
-mud designed to become a fruitcake stuffed with pebbles in lieu of
-raisins and frosted with moistened ashes. Before the enticing pastime
-of transformation was begun, however, Silvia was swiftly snatched from
-the contaminating midst and borne away over the ramparts.
-
-Thereafter I haunted the alley, hoping for another glimpse of the
-little picture girl on the wall. At last I attained my desire. One
-Saturday afternoon I saw her coming, alone, down a long rosebush
-bordered path. A thrill ran through me. Our eyes met. Yet all I found
-to say was: "C'mon over."
-
-She responded to this invitation and I helped her over the wall. She
-looked longingly at the Irish playing in the mud, but a clean sandpile
-in my own backyard not far away seemed to me a more fitting
-environment for one so daintily clad.
-
-We played undisturbed for a never-to-be-forgotten half hour and then
-they found her out. Reprimanding voices jangled and the whole world
-was out of tune.
-
-Thereafter a strict watch was kept on little Silvia's movements and I
-saw her only at rare intervals, when she was going into church or as
-she rode past our house. She always remembered me and on such
-meetings a faint, reminiscent smile lighted the somber little face and
-her eyes met mine as if in a mysterious promise.
-
-She grew up an outlawed, isolated child deprived of her birthright,
-but in spite of the handicaps of so barren a childhood, she achieved
-young womanhood unspoiled and in possession of her early democratic
-tendencies.
-
-When I was making a modest start in a legal way, her parents died and
-left her with that most unprofitable of legacies, an encumbered
-estate. Then I dared to renew our acquaintance begun on the sandpile.
-She went to live with a poor but practical relation and was initiated
-into the science of stretching an inadequate income to meet everyday
-needs. In time I wooed and won her.
-
-We set up housekeeping in a small, thriving mid-Western city where I
-secured a partnership in a legal firm. Silvia had all the requisites
-of mind and manner and Domestic Science necessary to a "hearth-and
-home-" maker.
-
-We lived in a house which was one of many made to the same measure
-with the inevitable street porch, big window, trimmed lawn in front
-and garden in the rear. We had attained the standard of prosperity
-maintained in our home town by keeping "hired help" and installing a
-telephone, so our social status was fixed.
-
-There was but one adjunct missing to our little Arcadia. While at a
-word or look children flocked to me like friendly puppies in response
-to a call, to Silvia they were still an unknown quantity.
-
-I had hoped that her understanding and love for children might be
-developed in the usual and natural way, but we had now been married
-ten years and this hope had not been realized.
-
-She had tried most assiduously to cultivate an acquaintance with
-members of child-world, but into that kingdom there is no open sesame.
-The sure keen intuition of a child recognizes on sight a kindred
-spirit and Silvia's forced advances met with but indifferent response.
-She wistfully proposed to me one day that we adopt a child. My doubts
-as to the advisability of such a course were confirmed by Huldah, our
-strong staff in household help. In our section of the country servants
-were generally quite conversant with the intimate and personal affairs
-of the home.
-
-"Don't you never do it, Mr. Wade," she counseled. "Ready-mades ain't
-for the likes of her."
-
-When, in acting on this advice, I vetoed Silvia's lukewarm
-proposition, I was convinced of Huldah's wisdom by seeing the look of
-relief that flashed into my wife's troubled countenance, and I knew
-that her suggestion had been but a perfunctory prompting of duty.
-
-Time alone could overcome the effects of her early environment!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-_Introducing Our Next-door Neighbors_
-
-
-One morning Silvia and I lingered over our coffee cups discussing our
-plans for the coming summer, which included visits from my sister Beth
-and my college chum, Rob Rossiter. We wished to avoid having their
-arrivals occur simultaneously, however, because Rob was a woman-hater,
-or thought he was. We decided to have Beth pay her visit first and
-later take Rob with us on our vacation trip to some place where the
-fishing facilities would be to our liking. However, summer vacation
-time like our plans was yet far, vague and dim.
-
-[Illustration: Uncle Issachar]
-
-While I was putting on my overcoat, Silvia had gone to the window and
-was looking pensively at the vacant house next to ours.
-
-"I fear," she said abruptly and irrelevantly, "that we are destined
-to receive no part of Uncle Issachar's fortune."
-
-Uncle Issachar was a wealthy but eccentric relative of my wife. He had
-made us no wedding gift beyond his best wishes, but he had then
-informed us that at the birth of each of our prospective sons he
-should place in the bank to Silvia's account the sum of five thousand
-dollars. We had never invited him to visit us or made any overtures in
-the way of communication with him, lest he should think we were
-cultivating his acquaintance from mercenary motives.
-
-While I was debating whether the lament in Silvia's tone was for the
-loss of the money or the lack of children, she again spoke; this time
-in a tone which had lost its languor.
-
-"There is a big moving van in front of the house next door. At last we
-will have some near neighbors."
-
-"Are they unloading furniture?" I asked inanely, crossing to the
-window.
-
-"No; course not," came cheerfully from Huldah, who had come in to
-remove the dishes. "Most likely they are unloading lions and tigers."
-
-As I have already intimated, Huldah was a privileged servant.
-
-"They are unloading children!" explained Silvia, in a tone implying
-that Huldah's sarcastic implication would be infinitely more
-preferable. "The van seems to be overflowing with them--a perfect
-crowd. Do you suppose the house is to be used as an orphan asylum?"
-
-"I think not," I assured her as I counted the flock. Five children
-would seem like a crowd to Silvia.
-
-"Boys!" exclaimed Huldah tragically, as she joined us for a survey.
-"I'll see that they don't keep the grass off our lawn."
-
-Late that afternoon I opened the outer door of the dining-room in
-response to the rap of strenuously applied knuckles.
-
-A lad of about eleven years with the sardonic face of a satyr and
-diabolically bright eyes peered into the room.
-
-"We're going to have soup for dinner," he announced, "and mother wants
-to borrow a soup plate for father to eat his out of."
-
-Silvia stared at him aghast. She seemed to feel something compelling
-in the boy's personnel, however, and she went to the china closet and
-brought forth a soup plate which she handed to him without comment.
-
-In silence we watched him run across the lawn, twirling the plate
-deftly above his head in juggler fashion.
-
-The next day when we sat down to dinner our new young neighbor again
-appeared on our threshold.
-
-"Halloa!" he called chummily. "We are going to have soup again and we
-want a soup plate for father."
-
-"Where is the one I loaned you yesterday?" demanded Silvia in a tone
-far below thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit, while her features assumed a
-frigidity that would have congealed father's favorite sustenance had
-it been in her vicinity.
-
-"Oh, we broke that!" he casually and cheerfully explained.
-
-With much reluctance Silvia bestowed another plate upon the young
-applicant.
-
-"Wait!" I said as he started to leave, "don't you want the soup
-tureen, too, or the ladle and some soup spoons?"
-
-"No, thank you," he answered politely. "None of the rest of us like
-soup, so we dish father's up in the kitchen. He doesn't like soup
-particularly, but he eats it because it goes down quick and lets him
-have more time for work."
-
-This time as he sped homeward, he didn't spin the plate in air, but
-tried out a new plan of balancing it on a stick.
-
-"I think," I suggested gently, when our young neighbor was lost to our
-sorrowful sight, "that it might be well to invest in another dozen or
-so of soup plates. I will see about getting them at wholesale rates.
-Our supply will soon give out if our new neighbors continue to
-cultivate the soup and borrowing habit."
-
-"I will buy some at the five cent store," replied Silvia. "I think I
-had better call upon them tomorrow and see what manner of people they
-can be."
-
-When I came home the next day it was quite evident that she had
-called.
-
-"Well," I inquired, "what do they keep--a soup house?"
-
-"They are literary people, the highest of high-brows. Their name is
-Polydore, and the head of the house----"
-
-"Mr. or Mrs.?" I interrupted.
-
-"The head of the house," pursued Silvia, ignoring my question, "is a
-collector."
-
-"So I inferred. Has he a large collection of soup plates?"
-
-"She collects antiquities and writes their history. He pursues
-science."
-
-"They were seemingly communicative. What did they look like?"
-
-"I didn't see them. After I rang I heard a woman's voice bidding some
-one not to answer the bell. She said she couldn't be bothered with
-interruptions, so I went on up the street to call on Mrs. Fleming, who
-told me all about them. She was also refused admittance when she
-called. On my way home I met that boy--that awful boy----"
-
-She paused, evidently overcome by the consideration of his awfulness.
-
-"He had been digging bait--"
-
-Again she paused as if words were inadequate for her climax.
-
-"Well," I encouraged.
-
-"He was carrying his bait--horrid, wriggling angleworms--in our soup
-plate!"
-
-"Then it is not broken yet!" I exclaimed joyfully. "Let us hope it is
-given an antiseptic bath before father's next indulgence in consommé.
-After dinner I will go over and try my luck at paying my respects to
-the soup savant."
-
-"They won't let you in."
-
-"In that case I shall follow their lead of setting aside all ceremony
-and formality and admit myself, as their heir apparent does here."
-
-After dinner and my twilight smoke, I went next door, first asking
-Silvia if there was anything we needed that I could borrow, just to
-show them there were no hard feelings.
-
-My third vigorous ring brought results. A slipshod servant appeared
-and reluctantly seated me in the hall. She read with seeming interest
-the card I handed to her and then, pushing aside some mangy looking
-portières, vanished from view.
-
-She evidently delivered my card, for I heard a woman's voice read my
-name, "Mr. Lucien Wade."
-
-After another short interval the slovenly servant returned and offered
-me my card.
-
-"She seen it," she assured me in answer to my look of surprise.
-
-She again put the portières between us and I was obliged to own myself
-baffled in my efforts to break in. I was showing myself out when my
-onward course was deflected by a troop of noisy children leaded by
-the soup plate skirmisher, who was the oldest and apparently the
-leader of the brood.
-
-"Oh, halloa!" he greeted me with the air of an old acquaintance,
-"didn't you see the folks?"
-
-On my informing him that I had seen no one but the servant, he
-exclaimed:
-
-"Oh, that chicken wouldn't know enough to ask you in! Just follow us.
-Mother wouldn't remember to come out."
-
-I was loth to force my presence on mother, but by this time my
-hospitable young friend had pulled the portières so strenuously that
-they parted from the pole, and I was presented willy nilly to the
-collector of antiquities, who had the angular sharp-cut face and form
-of a rocking horse. She was seated at a table strewn with books and
-papers, writing at a rate of speed that convinced me she was in the
-throes of an inspiration. I forebore to interrupt. My scruples,
-however, were not shared by her eldest son. He gave her elbow a jog of
-reminder which sent her pencil to the floor.
-
-"Mother!" he shouted in megaphone voice, "here's the man next
-door--the one we get our soup plates from."
-
-She looked up abstractedly.
-
-"Oh," she said in dismayed tone, "I thought you had gone. I am very
-much engaged in writing a paper on modern antiquities."
-
-I murmured some sort of an apology for my untimely interruption.
-
-"I am so absorbed in my great work," she explained, "that I am
-oblivious to all else. I have the rare and great gift of concentration
-in a marked degree."
-
-I was quite sure of this fact. She took another pencil from a supply
-box and resumed her literary occupation. As my presence seemed of so
-little moment, I lingered.
-
-"Mother," shouted one of the boys, snatching the pencil from her
-grasp, "I'm hungry. I didn't have any supper."
-
-"Yes, you did!" she asserted. "I saw Gladys give you a bowl of bread
-and milk."
-
-"Emerald took it away from me and drank it up."
-
-"Didn't neither!" denied a shaggy looking boy. "I spilled it."
-
-He accompanied this denial by a fierce punch in his accuser's ribs.
-
-"Here!" said the author of Modern Antiquities, taking a nickel from
-her pocket, "go get yourself some popcorn, Demetrius."
-
-"I ain't Demetrius! I'm Pythagoras."
-
-"It makes no difference. Go and get it and don't speak to me again
-tonight."
-
-The boy had already snatched the coin, and he now started for the
-exit, but his outgoing way was instantly blocked by a promiscuous pack
-of pugilistic Polydores, and an ardent and general onslaught
-followed.
-
-I endeavored to untangle the arms and legs of the attackers and the
-attacked in a desire to rescue the youngest, a child of two, but I
-soon beat a retreat, having no mind to become a punching bag for
-Polydores.
-
-The concentrator at the writing table, looking up vaguely, perceived
-the general joust.
-
-"How provoking!" she exclaimed indignantly. "I was in search of an
-antonym and now they've driven it out of my memory."
-
-I politely offered my sympathy for her loss.
-
-"Did you ever see such misbehaved children?" she asked casually and
-impersonally as she calmly surveyed the free-for-all fight.
-
-[Illustration: Dr. Felix Polydore]
-
-"Children always misbehave before company," I remarked propitiatingly.
-"Of course they know better."
-
-"Why no, they don't!" she declared, looking at me in surprise,
-"they----"
-
-At this instant the errant antonym evidently flashed upon her mental
-vision and her pencil hastened to record it and then flew on at
-lightning speed.
-
-I was about to try to make an escape when a momentary cessation of
-hostilities was caused by the entrance of a moth-eaten, abstracted-looking
-man. As the _two-year-old_ hailed him as "fadder", I gathered that he
-was the person responsible for the family now fighting at his feet.
-
-"What's the trouble?" he asked helplessly.
-
-"She gave Thag a nickel," explained the eldest boy, "and we want it."
-
-The man drew a sigh of relief. The solution of this family problem was
-instantly and satisfactorily met by an impartial distribution of
-nickels.
-
-With demoniac whoops of delight, the contestants fled from the room.
-
-I introduced myself to the man of the house, who seemed to realize
-that some sort of compulsory conventionalities must be observed. He
-looked hopelessly at his wife, and seeing that she was beyond response
-to an S O S call to things mundane, he frankly but impressively
-informed me that I must expect nothing of them socially as their lives
-were devoted to research and study. The children, however, he assured
-me, could run over frequently to see us.
-
-I instinctively felt that my call was considered ended, so I took my
-departure. I related the details of my neighborly visit to Silvia, but
-her sense of humor was not stirred. It was entirely dominated by her
-dread of the young Polydores.
-
-"How many children are there?" she asked faintly. "More than the five
-you said you counted that first day?"
-
-"They seemed not so many as much. That is, though I suppose in round
-numbers there are but five, yet each of those five is equal to at
-least three ordinary children."
-
-"Are they all boys? Huldah says the youngest wears dresses."
-
-"Nevertheless he is a boy. They are all unmistakably boys. I think
-they must have been born with boots on and," conscious of the imprints
-of my shins, "hobnail boots at that. Even the youngest, a two-year
-old, seems to have been graduated from Home Rule."
-
-"I can't bear to think of their going to bed hungry," she said
-wistfully. "Think of that unnatural mother expecting them to satisfy
-their hunger by popcorn."
-
-"They didn't though," I assured her. "I saw them stop a street vender
-below here and invest their nickels in hot dogs."
-
-"Hot dogs!" repeated Silvia in horror.
-
-"Wienerwursts," I hastened to interpret.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-_In Which We Are Pestered by Polydores_
-
-
-Our life now became one long round of Polydores. They were with us
-burr-tight, and attached themselves to me with dog-like devotion,
-remaining utterly impervious to Silvia's aloofness and repulses. At
-last, however, she succumbed to their presence as one of the things
-inevitable.
-
-"The Polydores are here to stay," she acknowledged in a
-calmness-of-despair voice.
-
-"They don't seem to be homebodies," I allowed.
-
-The children were not literary like the other productions of their
-profound parents, but were a band of robust, active youngsters
-unburdened with brains, excepting Ptolemy of soup plate fame. Not that
-he betrayed any tendencies toward a learned line, but he was possessed
-of an occult, uncanny, wizard-like wisdom that was disconcerting. His
-contemplative eyes seemed to search my soul and read my inmost
-thoughts.
-
-Pythagoras, Emerald, and Demetrius, aged respectively nine, eight, and
-seven, were very much alike in looks and size, being so many pinched
-caricatures of their mother. To Silvia they were bewildering
-whirlwinds, but Huldah, who seemed to have difficulty in telling them
-apart, always classified them as "Them three", and Silvia and I fell
-into the habit of referring to them in the same way. Huldah could not
-master the Polydore given names either by memory or pronunciation.
-Ptolemy, whose name was shortened to "Tolly" by Diogenes, she called
-"Polly." When she was on speaking terms with "Them three" she
-nicknamed them "Thaggy, Emmy, and Meetie."
-
-Diogenes, the two-year old, was a Tartar when emulating his brothers.
-Alone, he was sometimes normal and a shade more like ordinary
-children.
-
-When they first began swarming in upon us, Silvia drew many lines
-which, however, the Polydores promptly effaced.
-
-"They shall not eat here, anyway," she emphatically declared.
-
-This was her last stand and she went down ingloriously.
-
-One day while we were seated at the table enjoying some of Huldah's
-most palatable dishes, Ptolemy came in. There ensued on our part a
-silence which the lad made no effort to break. Silvia and I each
-slipped him a side glance. He stood statuesque, watching us with the
-mute wistfulness of a hungry animal. There were unwonted small red
-specks high upon his cheekbones, symptoms, Silvia thought, of
-starvation.
-
-She was moved to ask, though reluctantly and perfunctorily:
-
-"Haven't you been to dinner, Ptolemy?"
-
-"Yes," he admitted quickly, "but I could eat another."
-
-Assuming that the forced inquiry was an invitation, before protest
-could be entered he supplied himself with a plate and helped
-himself to food. His need and relish of the meal weakened Silvia's
-fortifications.
-
-This opening, of course, was the wedge that let in other Polydores,
-and thereafter we seldom sat down to a meal without the presence of
-one or more members of the illustrious and famished family, who made
-themselves as entirely at home as would a troop of foraging soldiers.
-Silvia gazed upon their devouring of food with the same surprised,
-shocked, and yet interested manner in which one watches the feeding of
-animals.
-
-"I suppose he ought not to eat so many pickles," she remarked one day,
-as Emerald consumed his ninth Dill.
-
-"You can't kill a Polydore," I assured her.
-
-I never opened a door but more or less Polydores fell in. They were at
-the left of us and at the right of us, with Diogenes always under
-foot. We had no privacy. I found myself waking suddenly in the night
-with the uncomfortable feeling that Ptolemy lurked in a dark corner or
-two of my bedroom.
-
-Even Silvia's boudoir was not free from their invasion. But one door
-in our house remained closed to them. They found no open sesame to
-Huldah's apartment.
-
-"I wish she would let me in on her system," I said. "I wonder how she
-manages to keep them on the outside?"
-
-"I can tell you," confided Silvia. "Emerald and Demetrius went in one
-day and she dropped Demetrius out the window and kicked Emerald out
-the door. You know, Lucien, you are too softhearted to resort to such
-measures."
-
-"I was once," I confessed, "but I think under Polydore régime I am
-getting stoical enough to follow in Huldah's footsteps and go her one
-better."
-
-Our conversation was interrupted by the entrance of Diogenes.
-
-Silvia screamed.
-
-Turning to see what the latest Polydore perpetration might be, I saw
-that Diogenes was frothing at the mouth.
-
-"Oh, he's having a fit!" exclaimed Silvia frantically. "Call Huldah!
-Put him in a hot bath. Quick, Lucien, turn on the hot water."
-
-"Not I," I refused grimly. "Let him have a fit and fall in it."
-
-"He ain't got no fit," was the cheerful assurance of Pythagoras, as he
-sauntered in.
-
-"Your mother would have one," I told him, "if she could hear your
-English."
-
-"What is the matter with him?" asked Silvia. "Does he often foam in
-this way?"
-
-"He's been eating your tooth powder," explained Pythagoras. "He likes
-it 'cause it tastes like peppermint, and then he drank some water
-before he swallowed the powder and it all fizzed up and run out his
-mouth."
-
-"I wondered," said Silvia ruefully, "what made my tooth powder
-disappear so rapidly. What shall I do!"
-
-"Resort to strategy!" I advised. "Lock up your powder hereafter and
-fill an empty bottle with powdered alum or something worse and leave
-it around handy."
-
-"Lucien!" exclaimed my wife, who could not seem to recover from this
-latest annoyance, "I don't see how you can be so fond of children. I
-did hope--for your sake and--on account of Uncle Issachar's offer that
-I'd like to have one--but I'd rather go to the poorhouse! I'd almost
-lose your affection rather than have a child."
-
-"But, Silvia!" I remonstrated in dismay, "you shouldn't judge all by
-these. They're not fair samples. They're not children--not home-grown
-children."
-
-"I should say not!" agreed Huldah, who had come into the room. "They
-are imps--imps of the devil."
-
-I believe she was right. They had a generally demoralizing effect on
-our household. I was growing irritable, Silvia careworn. Even Huldah
-showed their influence by acquiring the very latest in slang from
-them. Once in a while to my amusement I heard Silvia unconsciously
-adopting the Polydore argot.
-
-As the result of their better nourishment at our table, the imps of
-the devil daily grew more obstreperous and life became so burdensome
-to Silvia that I proposed moving away to a childless neighborhood.
-
-"They'd find us out," said Silvia wearily, "wherever we went. Distance
-would be no obstacle to them."
-
-"Then we might move out of town, as a last resort," I suggested. "Rob
-says he thinks there is a good legal field in----"
-
-"No, Lucien," vetoed Silvia. "You've a fine practice here, and then
-there's that attorneyship for the Bartwell Manufacturing Company."
-
-My hope of securing this appointment meant a good deal to us. We were
-now living up to every cent of my income and though we had the
-necessities, it was the luxuries of life I craved--for Silvia's sake.
-She was a lover of music and we had no piano. She yearned to ride and
-she had no horse. We both had longings for a touring-car and we wanted
-to travel.
-
-"I've thought of a scheme for a little respite from the sight and
-sound of the Polydores," I remarked one day. "We'll enter them in the
-public school. There are four more weeks yet before the long summer
-vacation."
-
-"That would be too good to be true," declared Silvia. "Five or six
-hours each day, and then, too, their deportment will be so dreadful
-that they will have to stay after school hours."
-
-I thought more likely their deportment would lead to suspension, but
-forbore to wet-blanket Silvia's hopes.
-
-I made my second call upon the male head of the House of Polydore to
-recommend and urge that its young scions be sent to the public school.
-I had misgivings as to the outcome of my proposition, as the Polydore
-parents believed themselves to be the only fount of learning in the
-town. To my surprise and intense gratification, my suggestion met with
-no objections whatever. Felix Polydore referred me to his wife and
-said he would abide by her decision. I found her, of course, buried in
-books, but remembering Ptolemy's mode of gaining attention, I
-peremptorily closed the volume she was studying.
-
-My audacity attained its object and I proferred my request, laying
-great stress on the quietude she would gain thereby. She replied that
-attendance at school would doubtless do them no harm, although she
-expressed her belief that the most thorough educations were those
-obtained outside of schools.
-
-Silvia was wafted into the eighth heaven of bliss and then some, as
-the result of my diplomatic mission. Of course the task of preparing
-pupils out of the pestiferous Polydores devolved upon her, but she was
-actively aided by the eager and willing Huldah and between them they
-pushed the project that promised such an elysium with all speed. The
-prospective pupils themselves were not wildly enthusiastic over this
-curtailment of their liberty, but Huldah won the day by proposing that
-they carry their luncheon with them, promising an abundant supply of
-sugared doughnuts and small pies.
-
-Pythagoras foresaw recreation ahead in the opportunity to "lick all
-the kids," and I assumed that Ptolemy had deep laid schemes for the
-outmaneuvering of teachers, but as his left hand never made confidant
-of his right, I could not expect to fathom the workings of his mind.
-
-Early on a Monday morning, therefore, our household arose to lick our
-Polydore protégés into a shape presentable for admission to school.
-It took two hours to pull up stockings and make them stay pulled,
-tie shoestrings, comb out tangles, adjust collars and neckties, to
-say nothing of vigorous scrubbings to five grimy faces and ten
-dirt-stained hands.
-
-At last with an air of achievement Silvia corralled her round-up and
-unloaded the four eldest upon the public school and then proceeded to
-install the protesting Diogenes in a nursery kindergarten. Huldah
-stood in the doorway as they marched off and sped the parting guests
-with a muttered "Good riddance to bad rubbish."
-
-Silvia returned radiant, but her rejoicing was shortlived. She had
-scarcely taken off her hat and gloves when the four oldest came
-trooping and whooping into the house.
-
-"What's the matter?" gasped Silvia.
-
-"Got to be vaccinated," explained Ptolemy with an appreciative
-grin. Of all the Polydores he was the one who had least objected
-to scholastic pursuits, but he seemed quite jubilant at our
-discomfiture.
-
-We were somewhat reluctant to undertake the responsibility of their
-inoculation, especially after Ptolemy told us that his mother didn't
-believe in vaccination.
-
-"I'll take 'em down and get 'em vaccinated right," declared Huldah.
-"Their ma won't never notice the scars, and if one of you young uns
-blabs about it," she added, turning upon them ferociously, "I'll cut
-your tongue out."
-
-"Suppose there should be some ill result from it," said Silvia
-apprehensively.
-
-"Don't you worry!" exclaimed Huldah. "Most likely it won't amount to
-anything. It'll take some new kind of scabs to work in these brats.
-They're too tough to take anything. Come on now with me," she
-commanded, "and after it's done, I'll get you each an ice cream
-sody."
-
-Through Huldah's efficiency the vaccination was quickly accomplished
-and the children of our neighbor were reluctantly accepted by the
-school authorities.
-
-The Polydores were not parted by reason of dissimilarity of age or
-learning, as they were put into the ungraded room. To keep them there
-enrolled taxed to the utmost our ingenuity in the way of framing
-excuses for their repeated cases of tardiness and suspension.
-
-Silvia felt a little remorseful when she listened to the tale of woe
-recited to her by their teacher at a card party one Saturday
-afternoon.
-
-"She said," my wife repeated, "that yesterday Pythagoras brought two
-mice to school in his marble-bag and let them loose. She doesn't
-believe in corporal punishment, but she determined to experiment with
-its effect on Pythagoras, so she kept him and Emerald, who was
-slightly implicated, after school and sent the latter out to get a
-whip. When he came back he said: 'I couldn't find any stick, but
-here's some rocks you can throw at him,' and handed her a hat full of
-stones. This made her too hysterical to try her experiment, so she
-took away his recess for a week."
-
-"We ought to make her a present," I observed.
-
-"She said," continued Silvia, "that they had given her nervous
-prostration, but she had no time to prostrate, and if she didn't
-succeed in getting them graded by the coming fall term, she should
-accept an offer of marriage she had received from a cross-eyed man,
-and you know how unlucky that would be, Lucien!"
-
-"We may be driven to worse things than that by fall," I replied
-ruefully.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-_In Which We Take Boarders_
-
-
-Four weeks of unalloyed bliss and then the summer vacation times
-arrived, bringing joy to the heart of the Polydores and the teacher of
-the ungraded room, but deep gloom to the hearthside of the Wades.
-
-One misfortune always brings another. A rival applicant received
-the coveted attorneyship and we bade a sad farewell to piano,
-saddle-horse, automobile and journey, the furnishings to our Little
-House of Dreams.
-
-"I did want you to have a car, Lucien," sighed Silvia, regretfully,
-"and you worked so hard this last year, you need a trip. Won't you go
-somewhere with Rob--without me?"
-
-I assured her it would be no vacation without her.
-
-"Do you know, Lucien," she proposed diffidently, "I think it would be
-an excellent plan to invite Uncle Issachar to visit us. He knows no
-more about children than I do--than I did, I mean, and if he should
-see the Polydores he'd give us five thousand each for the children we
-didn't have."
-
-I wouldn't consent to this plan. I had met Uncle Issachar once. He was
-a crusty old bachelor with a morbid suspicion that everyone was
-working him for his money. I don't wonder he thought so. He had no
-other attractions.
-
-Perceiving the strength of my opposition Silvia sweetly and
-sagaciously refrained from further pressure.
-
-"We should not repine," she said. "We have health and happiness and
-love. What are pianos and cars and trips compared to such assets?"
-
-What, indeed! I admitted that things might be worse.
-
-Alas! All too soon was my statement substantiated. That night after we
-had gone to bed, I heard a taxicab sputtering away at the house next
-door.
-
-"The Polydores must have unexpected guests," I remarked.
-
-"I trust they brought no children with them," murmured Silvia
-drowsily.
-
-The next morning while we were at breakfast, the odor of June roses
-wafting in through the open window, the delicious flavor of red-ripe
-strawberries tickling our palate, and the anticipation of rice
-griddle-cakes exhilarating us, the millennium came.
-
-For the five young Polydores bore down upon us _en masse_.
-
-"Father and mother have gone away," proclaimed Ptolemy, who was always
-spokesman for the quintette.
-
-This intelligence was of no particular interest to us--not then, at
-least. We rarely saw father and mother Polydore, and they were
-apparently of no need to their offspring.
-
-Ptolemy's next announcement, however, was startling and effective in
-its dramatic intensity.
-
-"We've come over to stay with you while they are away."
-
-I laughed; jocosely, I thought.
-
-Silvia paid no heed to my forced hilarity, but ejaculated gaspingly:
-
-"Why, what do you mean!"
-
-"They have gone away somewhere," enlightened our oracle. "They went to
-the train last night in a taxi. They have gone somewhere to find out
-something about some kind of aborigines."
-
-"Which reminds me," I remarked reminiscently, "of the man who traveled
-far and vainly in search of a certain plant which, on his return, he
-found growing beside his own doorstep."
-
-Silvia paid no heed to my misplaced pleasantry. She was right--as
-usual. It was no time for levity.
-
-"I don't see," spoke my unappreciative wife, addressing Ptolemy, "why
-their absence should make any difference in your remaining at home.
-Gladys can cook your meals and put Diogenes to bed as usual."
-
-"Gladys has gone," piped Demetrius. "She left yesterday afternoon. She
-was only staying till she could get her pay."
-
-"Father forgot to get another girl in her place," informed Ptolemy,
-"and he forgot to tell mother he had forgotten until just before they
-went to the train. She said it didn't matter--that we could just as
-well come over here and stay with you."
-
-"She said," added Pythagoras, "that you were so crazy over children,
-that probably you'd be glad to have us stay with you all the time."
-
-My last strawberry remained poised in mid-air. It was quite apparent
-to me now that there was nothing funny about this situation.
-
-"Milk, milk!" whimpered Diogenes, pulling at Silvia's dress and making
-frantic efforts to reach the cream pitcher.
-
-Huldah had come in with the griddle-cakes during this avalanche of
-news.
-
-"Here, all you kids!" commanded our field marshal, as she picked up
-Diogenes, "beat it to the kitchen, and I'll give you some breakfast.
-Hustle up!"
-
-The Polydores, whose eyes were bulging with expectancy and
-semi-starvation, tumbled over each other in their eagerness to "hustle
-up and beat it to the kitchen." Our oiler of troubled waters followed,
-and there was assurance of a brief lull.
-
-"What shall we do!" I exclaimed helplessly when the door had closed on
-the last Polydore. I felt too limp and impotent to cope with the
-situation. Not so Silvia.
-
-"Do!" she echoed with an intensity of tone and feeling I had never
-known her to display. "Do! We'll do something, I am sure! I will not
-for a moment submit to such an imposition. Who ever heard of such
-colossal nerve! That father and mother should be brought back and
-prosecuted. I shall report them to the Society for the Prevention of
-Cruelty to Children. But we won't wait for such procedure. We'll
-express each and every Polydore to them at once."
-
-"I should certainly do that P.D.Q. and C.O.D.," I acquiesced, "if the
-Polydore parents could be located, but you know the abodes of
-aborigines are many and scattered."
-
-My remarks seemed to fall as flat as the flapjacks I was siruping.
-
-Silvia arose, determination in every lineament and muscle, and crossed
-the room. She opened the door leading into the kitchen.
-
-"Ptolemy," she demanded, "where have your father and mother gone?"
-
-He came forward and replied in a voice somewhat smothered by cakes and
-sirup.
-
-"I don't know. They didn't say."
-
-"We can find out from the ticket-agent," I optimistically assured
-her.
-
-"They never bother to buy tickets. Pay on the train," Ptolemy
-explained.
-
-My legal habit of counter-argument asserted itself.
-
-"We can easily ascertain to what point their baggage was checked," I
-remarked, again essaying to maintain a rôle of good cheer.
-
-But the pessimistic Ptolemy was right there with another of his
-gloom-casting retaliations.
-
-"They only took suit-cases and they always keep them in the car.
-Here's a check father said to give you to pay for our board. He said
-you could write in any amount you wanted to."
-
-"He got a lot of dough yesterday," informed Pythagoras, "and he put
-half of it in the bank here."
-
-Ptolemy handed over a check which was blank except for Felix
-Polydore's signature.
-
-"I don't see," I weakly exclaimed when my wife had closed the kitchen
-door, "why she put them off on _us_. Why didn't she trade her brats
-off for antiques?"
-
-Silvia eyed the check wistfully. I could read the unspoken thought
-that here, perhaps, was the opportunity for our much-desired trip.
-
-"No, Silvia," I answered quickly, "not for any number of blank checks
-or vacation trips shall you have the care and annoyance of those wild
-Comanches."
-
-"I know what I'll do!" she exclaimed suddenly. "I'll go right down to
-the intelligence office and get anything in the shape of a maid and
-put her in charge of the Polydore caravansary with double wages and
-every night out and any other privileges she requests."
-
-This seemed a sane and sensible arrangement, and I wended my way to
-my office feeling that we were out of the woods.
-
-When I returned home at noon, I found that we had only exchanged the
-woods for water--and deep water at that.
-
-I beheld a strange sight. Silvia sat by our bedroom window twittering
-soft, cooing nonsensical nothings to Diogenes, who was clasped in her
-arms, his flushed little face pressed close to her shoulder.
-
-"He's been quite ill, Lucien. I was frightened and called the doctor.
-He said it was only the slight fever that children are subject to. He
-thought with good care that he'd be all right in a few days."
-
-"Did you succeed in getting a cook to go to the Polydores?" I asked
-anxiously. "You'll need a nurse to go there, too, to take care of
-Diogenes."
-
-She looked at me reproachfully and rebukingly.
-
-"Why, Lucien! You don't suppose I could send this sick baby back to
-that uninviting house with only hired help in charge! Besides, I don't
-believe he'd stay with a stranger. He seems to have taken a fancy to
-me."
-
-Diogenes confirmed this belief by a languid lifting of his eyelids, as
-he feelingly patted her cheek with his baby fingers.
-
-I forebore to suggest that the fancy seemed to be mutual. Diogenes,
-sick, was no longer an "imp of the devil", but a normal, appealing
-little child. It occurred to me that possibly the care of a sick
-Polydore might develop Silvia's tiny germ of child-ken.
-
-"Keep him here of course," I agreed, "but--the other children must
-return home."
-
-"Diogenes would miss them," she said quickly, "and the doctor says his
-whims must be humored while he is sick. He is almost asleep now. I
-think he will let me put him down in his own little bed. Ptolemy
-brought it over here. Pull back the covers for me, Lucien. There!"
-
-Diogenes half opened his eyes, as she laid him in the bed and smiled
-wanly.
-
-"Mudder!" he cooed.
-
-Silvia flushed and looked as if she dreaded some expression of mirth
-from me. Relieved by my silence and a suggestion of moisture in the
-region of my eyes--the day was quite warm--she confessed:
-
-"He has called me that all the morning."
-
-"It would be a wise Polydore that knows its own parents," I observed.
-
-The slight illness of Diogenes lasted three or four days. I still
-shudder to recall the memory of that hideous period. Silvia's time and
-attention were devoted to the sick child. Huldah was putting in all
-her leisure moments at the dentist's, where she was acquiring her
-third set of teeth, and joy rode unconfined and unrestrained with our
-"boarders."
-
-Polydore proclivities made the Reign of Terror formerly known as the
-French Revolution seem like an ice cream festival. I don't regard
-myself as a particularly nervous man, but there's a limit! Their war
-whoops and screeches got on my nerves and temper to the extent of
-sending me into their midst one evening brandishing a whip and
-commanding immediate silence. I got it. Not through fear of
-chastisement, for fear was an emotion unknown to a Polydore, but from
-astonishment at so unexpected a procedure from so unexpected a source.
-Heretofore I had either ignored them or frolicked with them. Before
-they had recovered from their shock, Silvia appeared on the scene.
-
-"Diogenes," she informed them, "was not used to such unwonted quiet,
-and was fretting at the unaccustomed stillness. Would the boys please
-play Indian or some of their games again?"
-
-The boys would. I backed from the room, the whip behind me, carefully
-kept without Silvia's angle of vision. Before Ptolemy resumed his rôle
-of chief, he bestowed a knowing and maddening wink upon me.
-
-I wished that we had remained neighbor-less. I wished that the
-aborigines would scalp Felix Polydore and the writer of Modern
-Antiquities. Then we could land their brats on the Probate Court. I
-wished that this were the reign of Herod. I vowed I would backslide
-from the Presbyterian faith since it no longer included in its
-articles of belief the eternal damnation of infants. How long, O
-Catiline, would--
-
-A paralyzing suspicion flashed into the maelstrom of my vituperative
-maledictions. I rushed wildly upstairs to our combination bedroom,
-sickroom, and nursery, where Silvia sat like a guardian angel beside
-the Polydore patient.
-
-"Silvia," I shouted excitedly, "do you suppose those diabolical
-Polydore parents purposely played this trick on us? Was it a
-premeditated Polydore plan to abandon their young? And can you blame
-them for playing us for easy marks? Could any parents, Polydore, or
-otherwise, ever come back to such fiends as these?"
-
-"Hush!" she cautioned, without so much as a glance in my direction.
-"You'll wake Diogenes!"
-
-Wake Diogenes! Ye Gods! And she had also implored the brothers of
-Diogenes to continue their anvil chorus! This took the last stitch of
-starch from my manly bosom. Spiritless and spineless I bore all
-things, believed all things--but hoped for nothing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-_In Which We Take a Vacation_
-
-
-Diogenes finally convalesced to his former state of ruggedness and
-obstreperousness. He continued, however, to cling to Silvia and to
-call her "mudder." To my amusement the other children followed suit
-and she was now "muddered" by all the Polydores.
-
-"I am glad," I remarked, "that they scorn to include me in their
-adoption. I wouldn't fancy being 'faddered' by the Polydores."
-
-"You won't be," Ptolemy, appearing seemingly from nowhere, assured me.
-"We've named you stepdaddy."
-
-"If it be possible, Silvia," I implored, "let this cup pass from me."
-
-"I am going down to the intelligence office today," replied Silvia
-soothingly. "Diogenes is well enough to go home now, and I can run
-over there every evening and see that he is properly put to bed."
-
-I went down town feeling like a mule relieved of his pack.
-
-When I came home that afternoon, I found Silvia sitting on the shaded
-porch serenely sewing. A Sabbath-like stillness pervaded. Not a
-Polydore in sight or sound.
-
-"Oh!" I cried buoyantly. "The Polydores have been returned to their
-home station!"
-
-"No," she replied calmly. "They told me at the intelligence office
-that it would be absolutely impossible to persuade, bribe, or hire a
-servant to assume the charge of the Polydore place."
-
-"I suppose," I said glumly, "that Gladys gave the job a double cross.
-But will you please account for the phenomenon of the utter absence of
-Polydores at the present period? Has Huldah at last carried out her
-oft-repeated threat of exterminating the Polydore race?"
-
-"Pythagoras," explained Silvia dejectedly, "has gone to the doctor's.
-He broke his wrist this morning. Diogenes is lost and Emerald has gone
-to look for him--"
-
-"Oh, why hunt him up?" I remonstrated. "Maybe Emerald, too, will get
-lost or strayed or stolen."
-
-"Huldah," continued Silvia, "has locked Demetrius in the cellar. I am
-unable to report on Ptolemy. Huldah is half sick, but she won't go to
-bed. She said no beds in Bedlamite for her. But I have a wonderful
-plan to suggest. There is relief in sight if you will consent."
-
-"I will consent to any committable crime on the calendar," I assured
-her, "that will lead to the parting of the Polydore path from ours.
-Divulge."
-
-"We both need a change and rest. Today I heard of a most alluring,
-inexpensive, unfrequented resort called Hope Haven. Unfashionable,
-fine fishing, beautiful scenery, twelve miles from a railroad, and a
-stage stops there but once a day."
-
-"If there is such a place, we'll go there at once, though why such an
-enticing spot should be unfrequented is beyond me. Do we leave the
-Polydores to their fate, or as a town charge?"
-
-"We'll leave them to Huldah. She offered to keep them here if we'd
-take the outing. She said she'd either give them free rein or beat
-their brains out."
-
-"Then I see where the Polydores land in a juvenile jail, or else I
-return to defend Huldah for a charge of murder. We'll take our
-departure by night--tomorrow night--and like the Arabs, or the
-Polydore parents, silently steal away."
-
-"Lucien," said Silvia constrainedly, when we had arranged the details
-of our plan, "if you wouldn't object too much, I should like to take
-Diogenes with us. He hasn't missed his mother, but I really believe
-he'd be homesick without me."
-
-"Take him, of course," I said. "He's manageable away from the others.
-I plainly see you've formed the Polydore habit, and maybe a partial
-parting from the Polydores would be wiser, but we'll take Diogenes as
-an antidote against too perfect a time. But I forgot to tell you that
-I had a letter from Rob today. He plans to come and make his visit
-now and will arrive next Monday. I'll write him to join us at Hope
-Haven. You must write down again for me the route we take to get
-there."
-
-Silvia laughed hopelessly.
-
-"It never rains but it pours. I had a letter from Beth this afternoon,
-and she says she would like to come to us now. She arrives Monday.
-Here is her letter."
-
-"Great minds! It is quite a coincidence," I declared.
-
-"I thought it would be so nice to have Beth go with us to this
-resort."
-
-"It can't be done," I said. "That is, they can't both go. I am not
-going to let even Rob Rossiter slight my sister."
-
-"Still it would be a triumph to have her change his mind--or his
-heart. You know a woman-hater always succumbs to the right girl."
-
-"In books, yes!"
-
-I had been scanning Beth's letter and I laughed derisively as I read
-aloud: "'I am so curious to see those next-door children. When you
-first wrote of the "Polydores" I never once thought of them as
-children.'"
-
-"She thought exactly right," I told Silvia, and then continued
-reading: "'I supposed them to be something like tadpoles or polliwogs.
-I really think I shall enjoy them.'"
-
-"It would serve her right," I said, "to let her come and stay with
-them here in our absence. She'd get the cure for enjoyment all right.
-Rob wrote of them in the same strain and says he, too, is curious to
-meet the missing links."
-
-"Does she know," asked Silvia, "how Rob regards women?"
-
-"No; I've always made some excuse to her for not having them meet. I
-didn't want to hear her make disparaging remarks about him, and she
-is such a flirt, she'd try to draw him out and he would shut up like a
-clam."
-
-"Well, I think," decided Silvia, "that the best way out of it is to
-write Rob to postpone his visit and I will write Beth to come direct
-to Hope Haven."
-
-"Yes," I agreed, "that will be fine. She shall have charge of dear
-little Di and study the evolutions of the Polydores later."
-
-I approved this plan. So we wrote our letters and stealthily, but
-joyously, prepared for our getaway, leaving the house like thieves in
-the night and bearing the sleeping cherub, Diogenes.
-
-Silvia sighed in relief when we were aboard the train.
-
-"I feel quite chesty," she declared, "at being smart enough to outwit
-Ptolemy, the wizard."
-
-"I have the feeling," I observed forebodingly, "that they may be on
-the train or underneath it."
-
-The next morning we reached Windy Creek, the station nearest our
-destination, and continued our journey by stage.
-
-"People will think you have consoled yourself very speedily for the
-death of your first husband," I observed, as we were en route.
-
-"Why, what do you mean, Lucien?"
-
-"You know Diogenes addresses me as stepdaddy. It is the only word he
-speaks plainly."
-
-"Oh!" she exclaimed in perturbation, "I never thought of that! Well,
-we can explain to everyone, or I'll teach them to leave off the
-'step.'"
-
-"Not on your life!" I demurred.
-
-"He had better call you Lucien, then. Emerald calls his father
-'Felix.'"
-
-She at once began her tutelage of the bewildered Diogenes. After
-several stabs at pronouncing Lucien he managed to evolve "Ocean" to
-which he sometimes affixed "step" so that people to whom he was not
-explained doubtless thought me the latest thing in dances.
-
-Hope Haven was like most resorts--a place safe to shun. There was a
-low, flat stretch of woods in which a clearing had been made for a
-barn-like structure called a hotel, with rooms rough and not always
-ready. The beautiful recreation grounds mentioned in the advertising
-matter consisted of a plowed field worked over into a space designated
-as a tennis court and a grass-grown croquet ground.
-
-"Anyway," claimed Silvia hopefully, "it's a treat to see woods, water,
-and sky unconfined."
-
-She devoted the remainder of the morning to unpacking and after
-luncheon set off to explore the woods, borrowing from the landlady a
-little cart for Diogenes to ride in. My plan to go in swimming was
-delayed by my garrulous landlord.
-
-I was just starting for the lake when I heard sounds from the woods
-that alarmed the landlord but which I instantly recognized as the
-Polydore yell. A moment later I saw Silvia emerging at full speed into
-the open, drawing the cart in which Diogenes was doubled up like a
-jackknife. I hastened to meet them.
-
-"Oh, Lucien," exclaimed my wife tearfully, "we are bitten to bits!
-Just look at poor little Di!"
-
-I lifted the howling child from the cart. His face, neck, and hands
-were stringy and purplish--a cross between an eggplant and a round
-steak.
-
-"Mosquitoes!" explained Silvia. "They came in flocks and they
-advertised particularly 'no mosquitoes.'"
-
-A dour-faced guest paused in passing.
-
-"There aren't--many," she declared. "Very few, in fact, compared to
-the number of black flies, sand fleas, and jiggers. However, you'll
-find more discomfort from the poison ivy, I imagine."
-
-"Lucien," began Silvia in lament.
-
-"Never mind!" I hastened to console, "you are out of the woods now,
-and you won't have to go in again. I presume they have an antidote up
-at the house. I'll give you and Diogenes first aid and then we will
-all go down to the lake shore. You can both sit on the dock and watch
-me swim."
-
-They both brightened up, and when we reached the hotel the landlady
-provided a soothing lotion for the bites and stings.
-
-By the time we had started for the lake, the afflicted two were in
-holiday spirit again.
-
-I sought cover in a small shed called a bath-house and got into my
-swimming outfit and shot out from the dipping end of the diving-board
-into the water. When I came to the surface, Silvia, sitting beside
-Diogenes on the dock, shrieked wildly.
-
-"Oh, Lucien, there are snakes all around you! Come out, quick!"
-
-"They are only water snakes," I assured her.
-
-"I don't care what kind they are. They are snakes just the same."
-
-Diogenes instantly began to bellow for me to hand him a snake to play
-with.
-
-"He recognizes his own," I told Silvia, who, however, saw nothing
-amusing in my implication.
-
-When I came out of the water, the temperature had climbed several
-degrees and we were glad to seek the hotel parlor, which was cool and
-damp.
-
-After dinner Silvia put Diogenes to bed and we sat out on the veranda.
-I was enjoying my evening smoke and the feel of the night wind in my
-face. Silvia had just finished telling me that merely to be away from
-the Polydores was Paradise enough for her, and that she didn't care
-very much about the woods, anyway--the lake was sufficient, when her
-optimism was rudely jolted by the shrill, shudder-sending song of the
-festive mosquito.
-
-She fled into the parlor. The landlady, who seemed to have a panacea
-for all ills, suggested that she might tack mosquito netting around
-the little balcony extending from our bedroom, and then she could sit
-there in comfort when the mosquitoes bothered.
-
-"That's what the last lady that had that room did," she said, "but
-when she left, she took the netting with her. We keep a supply in our
-little store."
-
-Silvia immediately sought the hotel store and bought a quantity of the
-netting and a goodly stock of the mosquito lotion.
-
-That night as I was drifting into slumber, Silvia remarked: "Only one
-of the things I heard and read about this place is true."
-
-"Which one?" I asked between winks.
-
-"That it was unfrequented. I have seen only three guests besides us so
-far. How do they make it pay?"
-
-"The hotel is evidently only a side issue," I replied.
-
-"To what?"
-
-"To the store. Think of the quantities of lotion and netting they must
-sell in the season, which, you must know, is in the fall. The hunting,
-the landlord tells me, is very good, and his hotel is quite popular
-in October and November."
-
-"I think we had better stay, Lucien. Mosquitoes don't poison you."
-
-"Even if they did," I declared, "as a choice between them and the
-Polydores I would say, 'Oh, Mosquito, where is thy sting?'"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-_A Flirt and a Woman-Hater_
-
-
-The next morning I arose early and screened in the little birdhouse
-balcony. There was a large piece of netting left and Silvia converted
-it into a robe and headgear for the swaddling of Diogenes.
-
-"He looks like the Bride of Lammermoor," I declared, as he went forth
-in this regalia.
-
-"Well, that's preferable to looking like a pest-house patient, as he
-did yesterday."
-
-His first-aid costume didn't find favor with the landlady, as it would
-seem indicative to the newly arrived of the features of the place.
-However, before another stage-coming was due, Di had rent his garment
-sufficiently to make it useless is a "skeeter skirt."
-
-During the morning I enjoyed my solitary swim with the snakes.
-Diogenes played football with the croquet balls and bruised one of his
-toes, besides hitting the landlady's child in the eye. Silvia went for
-a walk which had been pictured in the advertisements. She speedily
-returned, her ardor dampened.
-
-"There are so many sticks and stones and rocks," she said in a
-discouraged tone, "that there was no pleasure in walking. I nearly
-sprained my ankle."
-
-"Well, the real sport we haven't tried yet," I said. "We'll get a boat
-and take Diogenes and go for a row on the lake."
-
-This proposition met with instant favor. I put Silvia and Diogenes in
-the stern of the boat and pulled for the opposite shore. My endeavors
-to gain this point were balked by Silvia's remarkable conceptions of
-the art of steering craft. She was so serenely satisfied, however,
-with the way she performed her duties and the aid she thought she was
-giving me, that I forbore to criticize.
-
-In order to achieve a few strokes in the right direction, I asked her
-to get me a cigar from an inside pocket of my coat, which was on the
-seat in front of her. Then came the blight to our bliss. She looked in
-the wrong pocket and instead of producing a cigar, she extracted two
-letters with seals unbroken.
-
-[Illustration: "Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to Beth
-and Rob."]
-
-"Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to Beth and Rob.
-Well, it is my fault. I should have known better than to give them to
-you."
-
-"The plot thickens," I replied thoughtfully.
-
-"This is Monday. They must both be at the house now. What will they
-think!"
-
-"They will think we didn't receive their letters."
-
-"Isn't it unfortunate--" she began.
-
-"No," I replied. "I am not sure but what it is a good thing. It will
-give Rob a jolt to see that girls can be as nice as Beth is, and as
-for her, she is quite able to take care of the situation where a man
-is concerned."
-
-"But we must have Beth here. Maybe you'd better telegraph her."
-
-"Huldah understands conditions. She will send Beth on here."
-
-The next morning we took Diogenes and went down the road to meet the
-stage. As it came around the curve, we saw there were three
-passengers.
-
-"Tolly!" cried Diogenes with an ecstatic whoop.
-
-"Beth!" recognized Silvia.
-
-"Rob!" I ejaculated.
-
-The stage stopped to allow us to get in.
-
-Mutual explanations followed. Ours were brief and substantiated by the
-documents in evidence.
-
-"Now," I said turning threateningly to Ptolemy, "what did you come
-here for?"
-
-"To show them," indicating Beth and Rob, "how to get here and to look
-after Di so you and mudder could enjoy your vacation," he replied
-glibly.
-
-Beth laughed mirthfully.
-
-"Check! Lucien."
-
-"Didn't Huldah warn you," I asked her, "that our whereabouts were to
-remain unknown?"
-
-"Ptolemy," she replied, "is evidently a mind reader, for he told me
-where you were before I saw Huldah."
-
-"Why, Ptolemy, how did you know where we were?" asked Silvia.
-
-"I was on top of the porch when you told stepdaddy about coming. I
-didn't tell the others. I won't bother you any. And I know how to look
-after Di. You won't send me back, mudder," he pleaded, looking
-wistfully at the foam-crested water of the little lake.
-
-I wondered mutely if Silvia could resist the appeal in the eyes of the
-neglected boy when he turned his imploring gaze to hers, and the
-delight depicted in Diogenes' eyes at "Tolly's" arrival. She could
-not.
-
-"You may stay as long as we do," she said slowly, "if you are a good
-boy and will not play too rough with Diogenes."
-
-We had reached the hotel by this time, and with a wild "ki yi"
-Ptolemy dashed for the shore, dragging the delighted Diogenes with
-him.
-
-"It's only fair to Huldah to take one more off her hands," Silvia said
-apologetically.
-
-"Them Three is what bothers me," I complained. "If they, too, follow
-after, Heaven help them! I won't."
-
-"It's a good arrangement all around," declared Rob. "I judge it takes
-a Polydore to understand his ilk, so the kids can pair off together.
-Miss Wade will be company for you, while Lucien and I go fishing."
-
-He looked keenly at Beth as he spoke, but Beth was looking demurely
-down and made no sign of having heard him.
-
-Silvia and I went with Beth to her room, and then she told her story.
-
-"Knowing Lucien's failing, I was not surprised at receiving no
-response to my letter. When I got out of the cab in front of your
-house, a wild-looking boy, very bas-relief as to eyes, and who I felt
-sure must be Ptolemy of the Polydores, appeared. As soon as he saw me
-he gave utterance to a blood-curdling yell of--'Here she is!'
-
-"In response to his call three of his understudies came on with
-headlong greeting.
-
-"'You are Beth, aren't you?' Ptolemy asked me. Then he drew me aside
-and in mysterious whispers told me where you were and that you had
-written me to join you here. He added that stepdaddy never remembered
-to mail letters. I went within and interviewed Huldah who confirmed
-his information.
-
-"Presently I saw a taxi stop before the house.
-
-"'That's him!' exclaimed Ptolemy.
-
-"'Him who?' I asked.
-
-"'Rob somebody--stepdaddy's college chum. He wrote he was coming, and
-they thought they had postponed him.'
-
-"With a sprint of speed the four Polydores surrounded your Mr.
-Rossiter, all talking at once. I came to the rescue, of course, and
-explained the situation, and we decided to follow you.
-
-"Ptolemy was promoter for the trip and suggested the advisability of
-his accompanying us as courier and future nursemaid to Diogenes. He
-was intending to come anyway, but thought he'd wait for us. He had all
-his belongings packed."
-
-"He hasn't many except those he had on," said Silvia thoughtfully.
-
-"He has some swimming trunks, two collars, two shirts, some mismated
-socks, homemade fishing tackle and a battered baseball bat. We came
-away surreptitiously to escape detection by the trio left behind. I
-knew you wouldn't welcome his presence--but he said he was coming
-anyway, so we thought we might as well bring him and express him
-back."
-
-After visiting with Beth for a few moments, Silvia and I withdrew to
-talk matters over confidentially.
-
-"All's well that ends well," I quoth.
-
-"It hasn't ended yet," reminded Silvia. "I trust Ptolemy didn't reveal
-what you said about Rob's being a woman-hater and Beth a flirt."
-
-Ptolemy conveniently appeared just then, as he generally did in the
-midst of private interviews. Silvia asked him if he had repeated those
-remarks to Beth or Rob.
-
-"Why, no," he said. "I knew you didn't want her to know, because
-stepdaddy said so, and I thought he wouldn't like to be called that,
-and I wasn't going to give Beth away to him."
-
-"You're all right, Ptolemy!" I exclaimed, for the first time awarding
-him approbation.
-
-Out on the veranda we met Rob.
-
-"Say, those Polydores certainly have the punch and pep," he declared.
-"I'd like to have fetched the whole bunch along with me."
-
-"If you had," I replied dryly, "our life's friendship would have died
-on the spot."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-_In Which Nothing Much Happens_
-
-
-"Why Hope Haven?" asked Rob reflectively, when he had taken inventory
-of the possibilities of the resort.
-
-"Because," sighed Silvia, "so many hopes--vacation hopes--must have
-been buried here."
-
-Rob was of an investigating turn of mind, however, and he had heard
-from a native of H. H., as he had abbreviated the place, that there
-was a smaller lake, abounding in fish, farther on through the forest.
-It was so strongly fortified, however, by the formidable battalions of
-sharp-shooting insects that but few fishermen had ever been able to
-lay siege to it.
-
-Rob and I being poison proof decided to try our luck and pitch camp
-for a few days on the shores of this hidden treasure. As we had to
-send to town by the stage driver for the necessary supplies, we
-remained in H. H. the remainder of the day.
-
-We at once paired off in Noah's most approved style as Rob had
-outlined. Beth and Ptolemy went up shore, sticks and stones and rocks
-being no obstacles to their feet. Rob and I sought the society of the
-snakes, while Silvia and Diogenes, mosquito-netted, watched a game of
-croquet.
-
-We dined without the pleasure of the society of Ptolemy and Diogenes,
-who had been invited to sit at the table with the landlady's
-children. I might state, incidentally, that the invitation was never
-repeated.
-
-Beth was quite excited over her walk.
-
-"Ptolemy and I," she boasted, "made more of a discovery than Mr.
-Rossiter did. We found a haunted house, a perfectly haunted house."
-
-"I am not surprised," declared Silvia. "You couldn't expect any other
-kind of a house in such a region."
-
-"Where is it?" I asked, "and what is it haunted by?"
-
-"Insects," suggested Silvia.
-
-"You go around shore about two miles, only it's farther, as you have
-to make so many ups and downs over the rocks. Then you leave the shore
-and go through a low marshy stretch, sort of a Dismal Swamp, and then
-up a hill. After Ptolemy and I climbed to the top, we looked down and
-saw, hidden in a clump of lonely looking poplars, a small, rudely
-built house. We went down to explore and had hard work making our way
-through a thick growth of--everything. We crawled under some tangled
-vines and came up on the steps. The house was vacant, although there
-were a few old pieces of furniture--a couple of cots, a cook-stove,
-table, and chairs.
-
-"On our way home we met a woman who gave us a history of the house. An
-old miser lived there long ago. One night he was robbed and murdered,
-and his ghost still haunts the place. No one ventures in its vicinity,
-and she said most likely we were the first people who had gone there
-since the tragedy. She told us of a nearer way to reach it. You take
-the road to Windy Creek, and about two miles below here, turn into a
-lane and then go through a grove and over a hill."
-
-"You don't really believe the story, that is, the ghost part of it?"
-asked Rossiter.
-
-"N--o," allowed Beth. "Still, I'd like to. It makes it interesting.
-Ptolemy and I are going down there some night to see if we can find
-the ghost."
-
-"You won't see one," I assured her. "Ptolemy's presence would be
-sufficient to keep even a ghost in the background."
-
-"Ptolemy's a peach," declared Beth emphatically.
-
-"If he were older, you wouldn't think so," said Rob.
-
-"Why not?" asked Beth in surprise, or seeming surprise.
-
-He smiled enigmatically, and irrelevantly asked her if she wouldn't
-really be afraid to go to the haunted house at night with only Ptolemy
-for protection.
-
-She assured him she shouldn't be afraid of a ghost if she saw one, and
-that she shouldn't be afraid to go alone.
-
-Throughout the evening, which we spent in rowing, walking, and later
-at a little impromptu supper, I was interested in observing the
-puzzling behavior of Beth and my chum. I had expected that he would
-avoid her as much as possible and speak to her only when common
-politeness made conversation obligatory, and that she, a born
-coquette, would seek to add his scalp to her collection. Instead, to
-my surprise, their rôles were reversed. He appeared interested in her
-every remark and looked at her often and intently. He was quite
-assiduous in his attentions which, strange to say, she discouraged,
-not with the deep design of a flirt to increase his ardor, but with a
-calm firmness that admitted of no doubt as to her feelings.
-
-"Your sister," he remarked to me as we were walking down to the lake
-for a swim just before going to bed, "is a very unusual type."
-
-"Not at all!" I assured him. "Beth is the true feminine type which you
-have never taken the trouble to know."
-
-"Oh, come, Lucien! Not feminine, you know. Though she is inconsistent."
-
-I resented the imputation hotly, but he only laughed and said that he
-guessed it was true that a man didn't understand the women in his
-family as well as an outsider did.
-
-"You think," I said, "just because she says she isn't afraid of
-ghosts--"
-
-"Not at all," he denied. "That wasn't the reason, but--I like her
-type, though I always supposed I wouldn't. It is a new one to
-me--anyway. I didn't think so young a girl as she--"
-
-Our discussion was cut short by the inevitable, ever-present Ptolemy,
-who came running up to us, clad in about four inches of swimming
-trunks.
-
-"Why aren't you in bed?" I demanded.
-
-"I was in bed, but it was so warm I couldn't sleep, and I went to the
-window and saw you coming down here, so I thought I'd come, too."
-
-I repeated Rob's remarks to Silvia when I returned to our room, and
-she betrayed Beth's confidences in regard to Rob.
-
-"She says she would like him if it were not for one trait that she
-dislikes more than any other in a man and that it was sufficient in
-her estimation to counterbalance all his good qualities."
-
-"What can she mean?" I asked bewildered. "I don't see a flaw in Rob,
-except for his being a woman-hater, and he surely hasn't betrayed that
-fact to her, judging from his manner toward her. I think he is making
-an effort to be nice to her on my account, and she doesn't appreciate
-it."
-
-"I asked her what the flaw was, and she flushed and said she couldn't
-tell me."
-
-"Well, I guess all around it is a good thing we are going off on our
-fishing expedition. I don't want my friend turned down by my sister,
-and I don't want my friend calling my sister a new type and
-unfeminine."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-_Ptolemy Disappears and I Visit a Haunted House_
-
-
-When Rob and I, with our camping outfit, drove off through the woods,
-Ptolemy's eyes followed us so enviously and he pleaded so eloquently
-to be taken with us that Rob was actually on the point of considering
-it.
-
-"See here, Rob Rossiter!" I exclaimed, "This is my vacation and all I
-came to this God-forsaken place for was to escape the Polydores. If he
-goes, I stay. You know I've always tried to meet issues, but this
-antique family has got me going."
-
-"All right," he yielded.
-
-After a drive of a few miles we came to the lake and pitched our tent.
-Two days of ideal camp life followed. The weather was fine, Rob was a
-first-class cook, and the sport was beyond our most optimistic
-expectation. We landed enough of the Friday food to satisfy the most
-fastidious fishing fiend, and the mosquitoes, finding we were
-impervious to their stings, finally let us alone.
-
-I forgot all business cares and disappointments, yes, even the
-Polydores; but on the morning of the third day Rob began to show signs
-of restlessness and spoke of the likelihood of my wife's being
-lonely.
-
-"Not with Beth and Ptolemy in calling distance," I told him.
-
-"But they will be off together," he replied, "and your wife will be
-alone with that _enfant terrible_. I fancy, too, that your sister
-isn't exactly a companion for your wife."
-
-"Well, that shows how little you know her. She and Silvia are great
-friends."
-
-"Oh, yes, of course they are friendly, but I mean their tastes are so
-different, and they are so unlike. Your sister doesn't care for
-domesticity."
-
-"Sure she does. You have turned the wrong searchlight on Beth. If you
-knew her, you'd like her."
-
-"I do like her," he declared. "It's too bad she--"
-
-He stopped abruptly and quickly changed the conversation. In spite of
-my efforts to renew the controversy about Beth, he refused to return
-to the subject.
-
-[Illustration: He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us.]
-
-In the afternoon, when I was doing a little scale work preparatory to
-cooking, a messenger from the hotel drove up with a note from Silvia
-which I read aloud:
-
-"Ptolemy has been missing for twenty-four hours. We are in hopes he
-has joined you. If not, what shall I do?"
-
-"We'll go back with you," said Rob to the man. "Just lend a hand here
-and help us pull up these tent stakes."
-
-"What's Ptolemy to me or I to him?" I asked with a groan, "can't we
-give him absent treatment?"
-
-"You're positively inhuman, Lucien," protested Rob. "The boy may be at
-the bottom of the lake."
-
-"Not he! He was born to be hung."
-
-All this time, however, I had been active in making preparations for
-departure, as I knew that Silvia would feel that we were responsible
-for Ptolemy's safety, and her anxiety was reason enough for me to
-hasten to her.
-
-Rob was quite jubilant on our return trip and declared that the fish
-came too easily and too plentifully to make it real sport, but I felt
-that I had another grudge to be charged up to the fateful family.
-
-We found Silvia pale from anxiety, Beth in tears, and Diogenes loudly
-clamoring for "Tolly." We learned that the afternoon before, Silvia
-and Beth had gone with the landlady for a ride, leaving Diogenes in
-Ptolemy's care, but on their return at dinner time, Diogenes was
-playing alone in the sandpile.
-
-Nothing was thought of Ptolemy's absence until bedtime, and they had
-then sent out searching parties to the woods and the lake shores.
-Finally it occurred to Beth that he might have gone to join Rob and
-me, so they sent the messenger to investigate.
-
-"He must be lost in the woods somewhere," said Beth tearfully, "and
-he will starve to death."
-
-Rob actually touched her hand in his distress at her grief.
-
-"Ptolemy is too smart to get lost anywhere," I declared. "He knows
-fully as much about woodcraft as he does about every other kind of
-craft. He's one of his mother's antiquities personified. But haven't
-you been able to find anyone who saw him after you went for your
-ride?"
-
-"No; even the hotel help were all out on the lake."
-
-"And he left Diogenes here, absolutely unguarded?"
-
-"Well!" admitted Silvia, "he tied Diogenes to a tree near the
-sandpile."
-
-"Then he must have gone away with malice aforethought," I said,
-"and Diogenes is the only one who knows anything about his last
-movements."
-
-I lifted the child to my knee, and speaking more gently to him than I
-had ever done, I asked:
-
-"Di, did you and Tolly play in the sandpile yesterday?"
-
-He was quite emphatic in his affirmative.
-
-"Well, tell Ocean: Did Tolly go away and leave you?"
-
-"Tolly goed away," he confirmed.
-
-"Oh, Lucien!" protested Beth, laughing. "He's too little to know what
-you are talking about or to remember."
-
-"Lucien's ruling passion strong in death," murmured Rob. "He can't
-help cross-examining the cradle even!"
-
-"Which way," I resumed, ignoring these interruptions, "did Tolly
-go--that way?" pointing towards the woods.
-
-"No! Tolly goed--" and he trailed off into his baby jargon which no
-one could understand, but he pointed to the lake.
-
-"What did he say when he went away; when he tied the rope around
-you?"
-
-"Bye-bye."
-
-"What else?"
-
-Diogenes' intentions to be communicative were certainly all right, but
-not a word was intelligible. As he kept picking at his dress and
-pointing to it, I finally prompted:
-
-"Did Tolly pin a paper to Di's dress?"
-
-"'m--h'--m."
-
-"Bravo, Lucien!" applauded Rob. "They say you can induce a witness to
-admit anything."
-
-"What did Di do with the paper?" I continued.
-
-The word he wanted evidently being beyond his vocabulary and speech,
-he made a rotary motion with his fist. The gesture conveyed nothing to
-our minds, but was instantly recognized and interpreted by the
-landlady's little girl, who said he meant a windmill such as she had
-sometimes made for him.
-
-"What did Di do with the windmill?" I asked.
-
-He pointed to the sandpile, which I investigated and found a stick
-planted therein. I pulled it up and saw a pin sticking in the end of
-it. Further excavation revealed a crumpled piece of paper on which was
-written in Ptolemy's round hand:
-
- "Want to see kids. Am going home. Tell Beth I bet she dasent go to
- the haunted house alone at night. Ptolemy."
-
-"Poor Huldah!" sighed Silvia.
-
-"I thought he was having the time of his life here," said Rob.
-
-"He was sore," declared Beth, "because you and Lucien wouldn't take
-him with you on the fishing trip. He was moping by himself all the
-morning."
-
-"Trying to think up some new deviltry," I theorized, "to make us feel
-bad."
-
-"No," asserted Silvia, "I think he really misses the boys. The
-Polydores, for all their scrappings, are very clannish. But how do you
-suppose he got down to Windy Creek?"
-
-"He could catch plenty of rides along the way, but what is puzzling me
-is how he got the money to pay his fare."
-
-"He seemed very well provided with cash," informed Rob. "I tried to
-pay for his ticket down here, but he insisted on buying it himself."
-
-Silvia worried so much about what might happen to him en route that
-after dinner I motored to Windy Creek with some tourists who had
-stopped at the hotel in passing.
-
-I called up long distance and after some delay got in communication
-with our house. Ptolemy himself answered and assured me he had arrived
-all "hunky doory", that Huldah, who was out on an errand, was "hunky
-doory", and that the kids were all "hunky doory." In fact, his
-cheerful tone indicated that the whole universe was in the beatific
-state described by his expressive adjective.
-
-I was really ripping mad at his taking French leave and so giving
-Silvia cause for her anxiety, but I forbore to reprimand him by word
-or tone, lest he get even by "coming back" literally. I did tell him
-how the loss of the note for twenty-four hours had caused a general
-excitement, but he felt no remorse for his share in the situation,
-blaming Diogenes entirely and bidding me "punch the kid's face" for
-unpinning the note.
-
-On my return from Windy Creek I was fortunate enough to fall in with a
-farmer who lived near the hotel. He was driving some sort of a machine
-he called an _autoo_. He was an old-timer in the vicinity and related
-the past, present, and pluperfect of all the residents on the route. I
-had a detailed and vivid account of the midnight visitor of the
-haunted house.
-
-"I'd jest naturally like to see what there is to it," he said. "Not
-that I am afeerd at all, only it's sort of spooky to go to a lonesome
-place like that all alone. If I could git some one to go with me, I'd
-tackle the job, but I vum if every time I perpose it to anyone they
-don't make some excuse."
-
-"I'm on," I declared. "I don't dread ghosts near as much as I do some
-living folks I know."
-
-"Right you air," chuckled the old man. "If you say so we'll go right
-off now jest as sure as shootin'. We may be ghosts ourselves
-tomorrow."
-
-I assured him I was quite ready to encounter the ghost, so he
-jubilantly turned the machine from the road into a grass-grown lane.
-We zigzagged for some distance and then got out and went on foot
-through a grove. The moon and the stars were half veiled by some
-light, misty clouds, so that the little house didn't show up very
-clearly, but as we came to the top of the hill, we saw something that
-shook even my well-behaved nerves.
-
-From a window in the roof-room extended a white arm and hand, with
-index finger pointing threateningly and directly toward us.
-
-My farmer friend turned quickly and fled toward the grove. I followed
-fleetly. "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken him.
-
-"I just happened to remember," he explained gaspingly, "that there's a
-pesky autoo thief in these 'ere parts. Bukins had his stole jest last
-night."
-
-The lights on his machine must have reassured him as to its safety
-when we emerged from the woods into the open, but he didn't lessen his
-speed. We got in the "autoo" and soon said good-by to the lane. At one
-time I believed it was good-by to everything, but at last we gained
-the highway, right side up.
-
-"Well!" I said, when we were running normally again on terra firma,
-"that was some little old ghost,--beckoned to us to come right in,
-too!"
-
-"You seen it then!" he exclaimed excitedly. "I'm mighty glad I had an
-eyewitness. Folks wouldn't believe me."
-
-"They probably won't believe me, either," I assured him. "I am a
-lawyer."
-
-"You don't tell me! Well, it did jest give me a start for a minute.
-I'd like to hev gone in and seen it nigh to, if I hadn't happened to
-think of this 'ere autoo. You see I ain't got it all paid for yet. I'm
-jest clean beat. You don't mind my takin' a leetle pull at a stone
-fence, do you?"
-
-"I guess not," I assented somewhat dubiously, however. "That was a
-rail fence we took a pull at back in the lane, wasn't it? Of course,
-if we shouldn't happen to clear the stone fence as well as we did the
-rail fence, it might be more disastrous."
-
-"Oh, land!" he said with a cackling laugh, "I ain't meanin' that kind
-of a fence. I mean the kind you--Say! You ain't one of them
-teetotalers, be you?"
-
-"Only in theory," I replied, "but this stone fence drink is a new one
-on me. What's it like?"
-
-He stopped the "autoo" and pulled a bottle from an inner pocket.
-
-"You kin taste it better than I kin tell it," he declared. "Take a
-pull--a condumned good one."
-
-I rarely imbibed, confining my indulgences to the demands of
-necessity, but I thought that the flight of Ptolemy, the ghostly
-encounter, and my Mazeppa--wild ride all combined to constitute an
-occasion adequate to call for a bracer in the shape of a stone fence,
-or anything he might produce.
-
-I took what I considered a "condumned good one" from the bottle and it
-nearly strangled me, but I followed the aged stranger's advice to take
-another to "cure the chokes" caused by the first one. On general
-principles I took a third and then reluctantly returned him the
-bottle.
-
-"Here's over the moon," he jovially exclaimed as he proceeded to make
-my attempt at a "condumned good one" appear most niggardly.
-
-"May I ask," I inquired when my feeling of nerve-tense strain had
-vanished, and I felt as if I were treading thin air, "just what is in
-a stone fence?"
-
-"Well, what do you think?" he asked slyly.
-
-"I think the very devil is in it," I replied.
-
-"Well, mebby," he admitted. "It's two-thirds hard cider and one-third
-whisky. It's a healthy, hearting drink and yet it has a leetle come
-back to it--a sort o' kick, you know. But this is where I live,"
-pointing to a farmhouse well back from the road, "but I am goin' to
-run you on to your tavern though."
-
-The hotel was dark, save for a light in my room. I invited him in, but
-he was anxious to "git hum and tell the folks", so I gave him some
-cigars and went in to "tell my folks."
-
-I found them in the room waiting for me. That is, Beth was in the
-room, sitting by the table and pretending to read. Silvia and Rob were
-out in the little balcony. They came inside as soon as they heard my
-voice.
-
-"Oh, was he there?" asked Silvia anxiously.
-
-"Yes," I replied. "He answered the telephone himself."
-
-I was feeling quite exhilarated by this time. My wife looked a perfect
-vision to me. Beth, I thought, was some sister, and Rob the best
-fellow in the world. Even the Polydores at long range, and under the
-ameliorating influence of stone fences, seemed like fine little
-fellows--rather active and strenuous, to be sure, but only as all
-wholesome children should be.
-
-Silvia was relieved at the announcement of Ptolemy's safety, but very
-much disappointed that I did not succeed in interviewing Huldah and
-finding out something about domestic affairs.
-
-I assured her that everything was "hunky doory" at home, praised the
-telephone service, my expedition to town, and painted my return ride
-with "the honest farmer" in glowing terms. I was suddenly halted in my
-eulogy by becoming aware of an amazed expression on my wife's
-countenance, a most suspicious glance in Beth's wide-open eyes, and a
-very knowing wink from Rob.
-
-"Lucien," said Silvia severely, "I believe you've been drinking. I
-certainly smell spirits."
-
-"Maybe you do," I replied jocosely. "I certainly saw spirits. I went
-to the haunted house on my way back."
-
-"I thought Windy Creek was a dry town," remarked Rob innocently.
-
-"It is," I assured him, "but I rode home with an old man--a farmer."
-
-"Does he run a blind pig?" asked Rob.
-
-"It was more like a pig in a poke," I replied.
-
-"Lucien," exclaimed Silvia reproachfully, "you told me two years ago,
-after that banquet to the Bar, that you were never going to touch wine
-or whisky again. What did that horrid old man give you?"
-
-"A stone fence. That's what he said it was anyway."
-
-"It's a new one on me," commented Rob.
-
-"There was a new toast went with it. He drank to 'over the moon.'"
-
-"You must have gone there all right and taken all the shine from the
-moon-man," said Rob.
-
-"Lucien," asked Beth, "did you really go to that haunted house?"
-
-Again I was moved to eloquence, and I told of the farmer's yearning,
-the fulfillment, the beckoning hand and the beating of the retreat at
-length.
-
-"Are you sure," asked Rob, "that you didn't take that stone fence
-before you visited the haunted house?"
-
-"I know," I replied, loftily, "that a lawyer's word is worthless, but
-seeing is believing. We will all visit the haunted house tomorrow
-night and I'll make good on ghosts."
-
-This plan was unanimously approved, and then Silvia suggested that she
-thought I had better go to bed. I had no particular objection to doing
-so.
-
-"Lucien," she said solemnly, when we were alone, "I want you to
-promise me something. I want you to give me your word that you will
-never take another stone wall."
-
-I did this most readily.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-_In Which We See Ghosts_
-
-
-The next morning Rob tried earnestly and vainly to drive a wedge in
-Beth's good graces, but she treated him with a casual tolerance that
-finally put him in an ill humor which he took out on me with many a
-gibe at my "stone fence spirit."
-
-Men of my profession who have to deal with facts rather than fancy are
-not believers in the supernatural. I was sure that the extending arm
-and the beckoning finger were there, but belonged to no ghost. It
-might have been a curtain blowing out the window or a fake of some
-kind. But I knew that unless there was some kind of a showing in a
-ghostly way that night, I should never hear the last of my stone fence
-indulgence, so I resolved to make a preliminary visit alone by
-daylight and rig up something white to substantiate my spectral
-narrative.
-
-I didn't find an opportunity to escape unseen until late in the
-afternoon, when I went, ostensibly, for a solitary row on the lake.
-
-I landed and came by a circuitous route to the haunted house. The calm
-security of sunshine, of course, prevented any shivers of anticipation
-such as I had experienced the night before. On passing one of the
-windows on my way to the front entrance, I glanced in, stopped in
-sheer fright, stooped and backed to the next window, which was
-screened by a labyrinth of vines through which I peered. I am sure I
-lost my Bloom of Youth complexion for a few moments. I babbled
-aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull together and beat it to
-the lake with as much speed as my farmer friend had shown in his
-retreat. I made the boat and the hotel in double quick time.
-
-[Illustration: I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull
-together and beat it to the lake]
-
-I felt no misgivings now as to the promise of a sensation that night,
-and that sustaining thought was all that propped my flagging spirits
-throughout the day, but I resolved to keep my little party at safe
-distance from the house.
-
-"Say we keep our nocturnal noctambulation under our hats," proposed
-Rob.
-
-When this proposition was translated to Silvia, she entirely approved,
-so, committing Diogenes to the Polydores' Providence, we left the
-hotel at half past eleven for a row on the lake by moonlight.
-
-When we descended the slope leading to the House of Mystery, I
-cautioned silence and a "safety-first" distance.
-
-"Ghosts are easily vanished," I informed them. "They don't seek
-limelight, and I want you to be sure to see this one."
-
-As we came to the untrodden undergrowth we heard a weird, wailing
-sound that would have curdled my blood had I not glanced in the window
-that afternoon and so, in a measure, been prepared for this--or
-anything.
-
-"Look!" whispered Beth. "The arm!"
-
-Silvia looked at the roof window and with a stifled shriek of terror
-turned and fled up the hill, Rob chivalrously pursuing her.
-
-Beth was pale, but game.
-
-"What can it be, Lucien?" she whispered. "Do we dare go in to see?"
-
-"I wouldn't, Beth," I vetoed quickly. "Maybe some lunatic or
-half-witted person has taken up abode here."
-
-"Lucien!" called Rob peremptorily.
-
-I turned quickly. He was at the top of the hill, half supporting
-Silvia. I ran toward them, followed by Beth.
-
-"It isn't a ghost, of course, Silvia," I said soothingly, and then
-repeated my supposition about the lunatic.
-
-"Of course I don't believe in ghosts," said Silvia shudderingly, "but
-it's an awful place and those sounds are like those I have heard in
-nightmares."
-
-"We'll hurry back to the hotel and forget all about it," I urged.
-
-I rowed the boat and Silvia sat opposite me. Beth and Rob were in the
-stern and I had to listen to their conversation.
-
-"Of course I felt a little creepy," she admitted, "but then I like to
-feel that way, and I wasn't afraid."
-
-"No, of course, you wouldn't be," he replied somewhat ironically.
-"You're the new woman type."
-
-"No, I am not," she denied. "I wish I were. Silvia's really the
-strong-minded type."
-
-"She didn't act the part when she saw the ghost," he retorted.
-
-"It's very unusual for her nerves to give way. Silvia's quite a
-surprise to me this summer, but I think those funny Polydores have
-upset her more than Lucien realizes."
-
-I wondered if she were right, and once again murderous wishes toward
-the Polydores entered my brain, and I made renewed vows about
-disposing of them on our return home.
-
-One thing, however, had been accomplished by our expedition. Silvia
-was more lenient in her judgment on my indulgences of the preceding
-night.
-
-By the time we pulled in at the landing, Silvia had recovered her
-equilibrium.
-
-"Lucien, what the devil do you suppose was in that house?" asked Rob,
-when we were putting up the boat.
-
-"Loons and things," I allowed.
-
-"But what was that white arm?"
-
-"Some fake thing the village wag has put up to scare the natives."
-
-Next morning's stage brought some new arrivals, and among them were
-two college students who at once were claimed by Beth. She played
-tennis with one and later went rowing with the other. Rob smoked and
-sulked, apart.
-
-My farmer friend had been garrulous and rumors of the ghost and the
-haunted house had come to the ears of the hotel inmates, thereby
-causing a pleasurable stir of excitement. A number of them announced
-their intention of visiting the place. They asked me to be their
-guide, but I refused.
-
-"It was interesting," I said, "but I think it would be a bore to see
-the same ghost twice."
-
-"I am sure I don't care to go again," was Silvia's emphatic reply
-when asked to be one of the party.
-
-"Ghosts are scientifically admitted and explained," growled Rob, "so I
-don't see anything to be excited about."
-
-Beth accepted the offer of escort of one of the students, so Silvia,
-Rob, and I remained at home. The night was quite cool, and we played
-cards in our room. When the party returned, Beth joined us. She looked
-rather out of sorts.
-
-"Oh, yes," she replied in answer to Silvia's eager inquiry. "We saw
-the ghost. I don't know whether it was the same little old last
-night's ghost or a new one. He showed more of himself this time
-though. He had two arms and a veiled head out of the window. As soon
-as our crowd glimpsed it, they all fled quicker than we did last
-night. Those two students fell all over each other and left me in the
-lurch."
-
-"What could you expect," asked Rob, "from such ladylike things? They
-ought to be kept in the confines of the croquet ground. If they are a
-fair specimen of the kind you have met, no wonder you--"
-
-[Illustration: The landlady intears waylaid me]
-
-He stopped abruptly.
-
-"No wonder what?" she asked quickly.
-
-"Nothing," he replied glumly.
-
-When I came down to breakfast the next morning, the landlady in tears
-waylaid me.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Wade," she began in trouble-telling tone, "this affair about
-the ghost is going to hurt my business. Some of those folks say they
-are going home, and they will tell others and--"
-
-"I'll fix the ghost story. Just leave it to me!" I assured her
-optimistically, as we went into the dining-room.
-
-There were only enough guests to fill one long table, and every one
-was excitedly dissecting the ghost.
-
-I took my seat and also the floor.
-
-"I hate to dispel your illusions," I said cheerfully, "but the fact
-is, I made a daylight investigation of the haunted house. First I
-looked in the window and I saw--"
-
-"Oh, what did you see?" chorused a dozen or more expectant voices.
-
-"A lot of--mice."
-
-"Oh!" came in disappointed and skeptical tones.
-
-"But, the ghost, Mr. Wade?"
-
-"Yes! The arms and the head?"
-
-"A fake figure put up by some practical joker for the purpose of
-frightening timid people and encouraging the credulous. I didn't want
-to spoil your little picnic, so I kept still."
-
-"Those sounds, Lucien!" reminded Silvia.
-
-"Were from a cat chorus. They were prowling about the house."
-
-"You're sure some lawyer, Mr. Wade," doubtfully complimented my
-grateful landlady, as we went out of the room after breakfast.
-
-"Lucien," asked Rob _sotto voce_, joining me on the veranda, "why
-don't the cats you speak of catch that lot of mice?"
-
-Fortunately Beth came up to us, and I didn't have to explain.
-
-"Oh!" she said with a shudder. "I'll never go near that awful place!
-I'd rather see a perfectly good ghost, or a loon, or a lunatic any day
-than a mouse."
-
-"You're surely not afraid of a mouse!" exclaimed Rob.
-
-"Why not?" she asked coolly as she walked on.
-
-"I told you she was feminine," I reminded him.
-
-He shook his head.
-
-"I can't understand," he remarked, "why a girl who is afraid of mice
-should be--"
-
-"You don't understand anything about women," I interrupted.
-
-"You're right, Lucien. I don't, but your sister is surely the greatest
-enigma of them all."
-
-I rented the stone fence farmer's "autoo" and took Silvia and
-Diogenes to a neighboring town that afternoon. We didn't get back to
-the hotel until dinner time.
-
-"What have you been up to all day, Rob?" I asked.
-
-"Numerous things. For one, I strolled down to the haunted house."
-
-"What did you see?" cried the women.
-
-"I saw four--"
-
-"Ghosts?" asked Beth.
-
-I shot him a warning glance.
-
-"Young tomcats playing tag with the mice."
-
-I corralled Rob outside after dinner.
-
-"For Heaven's sake!" I implored. "Don't disturb Silvia's peace of
-mind. Did you go inside?"
-
-"No; I was sorely tempted to, but refrained out of deference to the
-evident wishes of my host, but really, Lucien, we should--"
-
-"I have only ten more days off, Rob. Don't make any unpleasant
-suggestions."
-
-"I won't," he said promptly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-_In Which We Make Some Discoveries_
-
-
-Diogenes, who, for a Polydore, had been quite placid since Ptolemy's
-departure, caused a commotion by disappearing the next morning. As he
-was possessed of a deep desire to go in the lake and get a little
-snake, he had been, when not under strict surveillance, tied to a tree
-with enough leeway in the length of rope to allow him to play
-comfortably.
-
-By some means he had managed to work himself loose from the rope and
-had evidently followed Ptolemy's example. I suggested calling up
-Huldah and asking if he had arrived yet, but I met with such chilling
-glances from Silvia and Beth that I got busy and organized searching
-parties, who reluctantly and lukewarmly engaged in the pursuit. Rob
-and I took the shore. After we had walked some little distance, we met
-a woman and stopped for inquiry. She said she had seen a child of
-about two years, clad in a blue and white striped dress and a big hat,
-going over the hill in company with a boy of about eight.
-
-"Are you going on to the hotel?" I asked.
-
-On her replying that she was, I told her to inform them that she had
-met me and that the lost child was located.
-
-Rob and I then kept on over the hill, and when we neared the haunted
-house, we heard hair-raising sounds.
-
-"If I hadn't been here before," remarked Rob, "I should think that
-Sitting Bull had been reincarnated and was reviving the warrior war
-whoops."
-
-We paused on the threshold. A human windmill of whirling legs and
-arms--Polydore legs and arms--flashed before our eyes.
-
-"Stop!" I thundered.
-
-The flying wheel of arms and legs slacked, ran a few times, then
-slowly stopped, and the Polydore quintette assumed normal positions.
-
-"Halloa, stepdaddy!"
-
-A landslide composed of Emerald, Pythagoras, and Demetrius started
-toward me. I side-stepped and let Rob receive the charge.
-
-"Line them up now, for attention," I directed Ptolemy. "I have
-something to say to you all."
-
-Ptolemy knocked the three terrors up against the wall, and I picked up
-Diogenes, who had a bump as big as an egg on his head.
-
-"I told you," said Ptolemy to Pythagoras, "that if you brought Di down
-here they'd get on our trail. He wanted to see Di," he explained, "so
-he sneaked over there and got him."
-
-"We were wise before today," I informed him. "I saw you all day before
-yesterday."
-
-"And I discovered you yesterday," added Rob.
-
-Ptolemy looked rather crestfallen, and then, seeming to consider that
-my discovery had been succeeded by inaction, which must mean
-non-interference, he heartened up.
-
-"Now," I demanded, "I want you to begin at the time you left the hotel
-and tell me everything and why you did it."
-
-"I wasn't having any fun after you two went off camping," he began
-lugubriously. "I couldn't hang around women folks all the time. I
-wanted boys to play with."
-
-I saw a gleam of sympathy and understanding come into Rob's eyes.
-
-"A harem of hens," he muttered.
-
-"I knew we could all have a grand time here and not be a bother to
-mudder, or Huldah or anyone, and it seemed too bad for this nice house
-to be empty, and no one anywhere else wanting us."
-
-I felt my first gleam of pity for a Polydore and wiped Diogenes'
-dirty, moist face carefully with my handkerchief.
-
-"So I went home and told Huldah I had come after the boys to take them
-back with me."
-
-"And told her we had sent for them?" I asked sharply.
-
-He flushed slightly at my tone.
-
-"No; I didn't tell her so. She got that idea herself, and I didn't
-tell her different."
-
-"When did you come?"
-
-"I came the same night that you telephoned, and took the train you and
-mudder came on. We got to Windy Creek in the morning. We fetched all
-our stuff here from home. I bought it."
-
-"Right here," I said, "tell me where you got the money to buy your
-stuff and to pay your fare here."
-
-"I cashed father's check."
-
-"I didn't know he left you one."
-
-"He didn't, except the one he gave me to give you for our board. You
-told mudder you wouldn't touch it, and it seemed a pity not to have it
-working."
-
-Visions of a future Polydore doing the chain and ball step flashed
-before my vision.
-
-"And they cashed it for you at the bank?"
-
-"Sure. Father always has me cash his checks for him."
-
-"What amount did you fill in?" I asked enviously.
-
-"One hundred dollars. There's a lot more in the bank, too."
-
-"How did you get your truck here from Windy Creek?" asked Rob.
-
-"We divided it up and each took a bunch and started on foot, and some
-people in an automobile, going to the town past here, took us in and
-brought us as far as the lane. We've been having a fine time."
-
-"What doing?" asked Rob interestedly.
-
-"Fishing, sailing on a raft, playing in the woods all day and--"
-
-"Playing ghost at night," said Pythagoras with a grin.
-
-"Who made that ghost in the window?" I demanded.
-
-"I did. I rigged up an arm and put it out the window the afternoon I
-left, hoping Beth would come down and see it, but we've got a jim
-dandy one now."
-
-"That was quite a shapely arm," said Rob. "Where did you learn
-sculpturing?"
-
-"Oh, I rigged it up," he said casually.
-
-"What did you bring in the way of supplies?"
-
-"Bacon, crackers, beans, candy, popcorn, gum, peanuts, pickles,
-candles, matches, and butter," was the glib inventory.
-
-"You may stay here," I said, "until we go home, but you are not to
-stir away from the woods about here and not on any account to come
-near the hotel, or let it be known that you are here. And you are to
-end this ghost business right off. Now, Di, we'll go home to mudder."
-
-"No!" bawled Di. "Stay with boys. Mudder come here."
-
-At least this was Ptolemy's interpretation of his protest.
-
-I threatened, Rob coaxed, and Ptolemy cuffed, but every time I started
-to leave and jerk him after me, he uttered such demoniac yells I was
-forced to stop.
-
-"Wish it was night," said Emerald regretfully. "Wouldn't he scare
-folks though! How does he get his voice up so high?"
-
-"Poor little Di!" said a voice commiseratingly from the doorway. "Was
-Ocean plaguing him?"
-
-Beth gathered the child in her arms, and his howls changed to sobs.
-Rob stood petrified with amazement at her appearance.
-
-"Don't want to go," said Diogenes between gulps.
-
-"Needn't go!" promised Beth. "Stay here with me, and we'll have dinner
-with the boys and then we'll go home and get some ice cream."
-
-"All yite," agreed the appeased Polydore.
-
-"May Lucien and I stay to dinner, too?" asked Rob humbly.
-
-"No," she replied icily.
-
-"But, Beth," I remonstrated. "Silvia will be worrying about Di. How
-can we explain?"
-
-"Silvia has gone to Windy Creek for the day. You see, I met that woman
-you sent to the hotel, and she told me she saw Di going over the hill
-with a boy, and I suddenly seemed to smell one of your mice, so I sent
-the woman on her way, and told Silvia you and Rob had found Diogenes.
-Just then some people she knew came along in a car and asked her to go
-to Windy Creek. I made her go and told her I'd look after Di."
-
-"You're a brick, Beth!" applauded Ptolemy.
-
-"If you boys will be very careful and not let anyone besides us know
-you are here, so mudder will not hear of it, for though she'd like to
-see you"--this without a flicker or flinch--"we want her to have a
-nice rest. I'll come over every day except tomorrow and bring things
-from the hotel store, and bake up cookies and cake for you."
-
-A yell of approval went up.
-
-"Why can't you come tomorrow?" asked the greedy Demetrius.
-
-"Because I've promised to go to the other end of the lake on a picnic.
-All the people at the hotel are going."
-
-"I'll come tomorrow and spend the whole day with you," promised Rob.
-"We'll have a ride in the sailboat and do all sorts of things."
-
-"Why, aren't you going on that infernal picnic?" I asked.
-
-"No; I'll have all the picnic I want over here. Like Ptolemy I feel
-that I want to play with some of my own kind."
-
-Beth looked at him approvingly; then she said a little sarcastically:
-
-"Maybe you'll change your mind--about going on the picnic, I
-mean--when you see the new girl who just came to the hotel on the
-morning stage. She's a blonde, and not peroxided, either."
-
-"That would certainly drive him down here, or anywhere," I laughed.
-
-"Oh, don't you like blondes?" she asked innocently.
-
-"He doesn't like--" I began, but Ptolemy rudely interrupted with an
-elaborate description of a new kind of fishing tackle he had bought.
-
-Then Beth bade Pythagoras build a fire in the cook-stove while she
-set the room to rights.
-
-"We'll eat out of doors," she said, "I think it would be more
-appetizing."
-
-"How did you get here?" Rob asked her as we were leaving.
-
-"I rowed over."
-
-"May I come over and row you back?" he asked pleadingly.
-
-She hesitated, and then, realizing that she could scarcely manage a
-boat and Diogenes at the same time, assented, bidding him not come,
-however, until five o'clock.
-
-"She'll have enough of the Polydores by that time," I said to Rob on
-our way home.
-
-"Do you know," he said reflectively, "I like Ptolemy. There's the
-making of a man in him, if he has only half a chance. I didn't suppose
-your sister understood children so well or was so fond of them. She
-looked quite the little housewife, too."
-
-"You'd discover a lot of things you don't know, if you'd cultivate the
-society of women," I informed him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-_A Bad Means to a Good End_
-
-
-When we were setting out on the proposed picnic the next day, Rob made
-himself extremely unpopular by announcing his intention to spend the
-day otherwise. The new blonde girl gave him fetching glances of
-entreaty which he never even saw. He made another sensation by
-proposing to keep Diogenes with him. To Silvia's surprise, Diogenes
-voiced his delight and chattered away, I suppose, about playing with
-the boys, but fortunately no one understood him.
-
-"Won't you change your mind and come, too?" he asked Beth.
-
-She seemed on the point of accepting and then firmly declined.
-
-When we returned at six o'clock, Rob and Diogenes were awaiting us.
-There was something in Rob's eyes I had not seen there before. He had
-the look of one in love with life.
-
-"Did you have a nice time playing solitaire?" asked Silvia.
-
-"I had a very nice time," he replied with a subtle smile, "but I
-didn't play solitaire. You know I had Diogenes."
-
-"Diogenes apparently had a good time, too," said Silvia, looking at
-the child, who was certainly a wreck in the way of garments. "What did
-you do all day, Rob?"
-
-"We went out on the water, played games, and had a picnic dinner
-outdoors."
-
-"You had huckleberry pie for one thing," she observed, with a glance
-at Diogenes' dress, "and jelly for another, and--"
-
-"Chicken, baked potatoes, milk, cake, and ice cream," he finished.
-
-"Where did you get ice cream?" she asked.
-
-"I went down to a dairy farm and got a gallon."
-
-"A gallon!" she exclaimed. "For you and Diogenes?"
-
-"We didn't eat it all," he said guardedly. "I gave what we didn't eat
-to some stray boys."
-
-"I hope Di won't be ill."
-
-"He won't," asserted Rob. "I am sure he is made of cast iron."
-
-Throughout dinner Rob remained in high spirits. He kept eyeing Beth in
-a way that disconcerted her, and then suddenly he would smile with the
-expression of one who knows something funny, but intends to keep it a
-secret.
-
-Presently Silvia left us and went upstairs to give Diogenes a bath
-before she put him to bed.
-
-"You've had two days' freedom from the last of the Polydores," I
-called after her. "Doesn't it seem delightful?"
-
-"Lucien," she answered slowly, "I've really missed the care of him. I
-was lonesome for him all day."
-
-"He isn't such a bad little kid when he is out from Polydore
-environment," I admitted, regretting that he had been restored to it.
-
-"Now tell us all about your day with the boys," Beth asked Rob, when
-we were left alone. "It really does seem too bad to keep a secret from
-Silvia, and yet it is a case of where ignorance is bliss--"
-
-"It would be folly to be otherwise," finished Rob. "Well, Diogenes and
-I left here with a boat load of supplies in the way of provender and
-things for the boys. I had to tie Diogenes in the boat, of course, so
-he would not try some aquatic feat. He objected and yelled like a
-fiend all the way. I was glad there was no one at the hotel to come
-out and arrest me for cruelty to children. Of course before we landed,
-his cries were heard by his brothers and they were all at the water's
-edge. They made mulepacks of themselves and transferred the commissary
-supplies. The ice cream and bats and balls which I found at the store
-made quite a hit.
-
-"We played baseball, fished, and had a spread on the shore. Then
-Ptolemy and I rowed out to where the sailboat was. I explained the
-mysteries of the jib and he caught on instantly. We took in the other
-Polydores and sailed for a couple of hours. Then we all went in
-swimming."
-
-"Not Diogenes!"
-
-"Certainly. I tucked him under my arm and he seemed perfectly at home,
-although greatly disappointed because we didn't succeed in catching a
-snake.
-
-"I finally landed them all safely under the roof of the Haunted House,
-and Ptolemy assured me it was the best day of his young life. In
-appreciation of the diversions I had afforded him, he made a
-confession which proved such good news to me that I was a lenient
-listener and exacted no penalty."
-
-"What was it?" I asked.
-
-"He told me that on the day of Miss Wade's and my arrival at your
-house, he had made a misstatement to each of us and had not repeated
-to us accurately what he had overheard you telling Silvia when he was
-on the porch roof. Miss Wade, what did he tell you about me?"
-
-"He said that Lucien said that your only failing was that you were
-daffy over women and made love to every one you saw."
-
-"Oh, Beth!" I cried, light bursting in, "and you believed that little
-wretch?"
-
-"I did."
-
-"Then that is why you have been so--"
-
-"Yes--so--" repeated Rob grimly.
-
-"Well, I never did have any use for a man-flirt, and I was awfully
-disappointed, for I had thought from what Rob said that you were a
-man's man."
-
-"And then, of course, when for the first time in my life I began being
-interested in a woman--in you--I played right into that little scamp's
-hands."
-
-"He is a man's man, Beth," I said warmly. "What Ptolemy heard me say
-was that Rob was a woman-hater."
-
-"I am not!" declared Rob indignantly--"just a woman-shyer, but I
-haven't finished with Ptolemy's confession. I wonder, now, if either
-of you can guess what he told me was Miss Wade's characteristic."
-
-"I don't dare guess," laughed Beth.
-
-"What I did say about Beth was that she was a born flirt."
-
-"I am not!" protested my sister, in resentment.
-
-"I should prefer that appellation to the one he gave you. He said you
-were strong-minded and a man-hater."
-
-Even Beth saw the irony of this.
-
-"I asked him," continued Rob, "what his motive was, and he said
-'Stepdaddy didn't want Beth to know about the man-hater business,' so
-he took that means of throwing you off the track.
-
-"I took the occasion to talk to him like a Dutch uncle, though I don't
-know exactly what that is. I think it was the first time anything but
-brute force had been tried on him. I must have touched some little
-flicker of the right thing in him, for he was really contrite and
-seemed to sense a different angle of vision when I explained to him
-what havoc could be worked by the misinformation of meddlers. He
-promised me he'd try to overcome his tendency to start things going
-wrong."
-
-I made no comment, but it occurred to me that Ptolemy was a shrewd
-little fellow, and that there had been wisdom back of his strategic
-speeches to Beth and Rob, for he had taken the one sure course to make
-them both "take notice."
-
-"So, Beth," said Rob, and her name seemed to come quite handily to
-him, "can't we cut out the past ten days and begin our acquaintance
-right?"
-
-"I think we can," she answered.
-
-"I had better go upstairs," I suggested, "and tell Silvia that
-Diogenes doesn't need a bath, seeing he has been in swimming."
-
-Neither of them urged me to remain, so I went up to our room and found
-Silvia tucking Diogenes under cover.
-
-"What did you come up for?" she asked. "I was just coming down to join
-you."
-
-"Beth is treating Rob so--differently, that I thought it well to
-retreat."
-
-"I am so glad! Whatever came over the spirit of her dreams?"
-
-"They've just discovered in the course of conversation that Ptolemy as
-usual crossed the wires and told Beth Rob was a flirt, and then
-informed Rob that Beth was strong-minded and a man-hater."
-
-"Oh, the little imp!" she exclaimed indignantly.
-
-"I don't know. It worked, anyway, so Ptolemy was the bad means to a
-good end."
-
-"How did they ever happen to discover what he had done?"
-
-"They caught on from something Rob said," I told her, feeling again
-guilty at keeping my first secret from her.
-
-"It will be a fine match for Beth," said Silvia. "Rob is such a
-splendid man, and then he has plenty of money. He can give her
-anything she wants."
-
-I winced. I think Silvia must have been conscious of it, even though
-the room was dark, for she came to me quickly.
-
-"I wish I could give you--everything--anything--you want, Silvia."
-
-"You have, Lucien. The things that no money could buy--love and
-protection."
-
-Well, maybe I had. I had surely given her protection from the
-Polydores, though she didn't know to what extent.
-
-"I am going to give you more material things, though, Silvia. When we
-go home, I shall start to work in earnest and see if I can't get
-enough ahead to make a good investment I know of."
-
-"I'd rather do without the necessities even, Lucien, than to have you
-work any harder than you have been doing. We must let well enough
-alone."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-"_Too Much Polydores_"
-
-
-The next morning at breakfast, Beth announced that she and Rob were
-going to spend the day camping in the woods.
-
-Silvia and I tried not to look significantly at each other, but Beth
-was very keen.
-
-"We will take Diogenes with us," she instantly added.
-
-"Oh, no!" protested Silvia. "He'll be such a bother. And then he can't
-walk very far, you know."
-
-"He'll be no bother," persisted Beth. "And we'll borrow the little
-cart to draw him in."
-
-"Yes," acquiesced Rob. "We sure want Diogenes with us."
-
-"I'll have them put up a lunch for you," proposed Silvia.
-
-"No," Rob objected. "We are going to forage and cook over a fire in
-the woods."
-
-"Then," I proposed to Silvia with alacrity, "we'll have our first day
-alone together--the first we have had since the Polydores came into
-our lives. I'll rent the 'autoo' again, and we will go through the
-country and dine at some little wayside inn."
-
-"Get the 'autoo', now, Lucien," advised Beth privately, "and make an
-early start, so Rob and I can take supplies from the store without
-arousing Silvia's suspicions."
-
-"I don't believe," said Silvia disappointedly, when we were "autooing"
-on our way, "that they are in love after all, or that he has
-proposed, or that he is going to."
-
-"Where did you draw all those pessimistic inferences from?" I asked.
-
-"From their both being so keen to take Diogenes with them."
-
-"Diogenes would be no barrier to their love-making," I told her. "He
-couldn't repeat what they said; at least, not so anyone could
-understand him."
-
-Many miles away we came upon a picturesque little old-time tavern
-where we had an appetizing dinner, and then continued on our aimless
-way. It was nearly ten o'clock when we returned to the hotel, where
-the owner of the "autoo" was waiting.
-
-Rob came down the roadway.
-
-"Where's Beth?" asked Silvia.
-
-"She has gone to bed. The day in the open made her sleepy."
-
-When Silvia had left us, the old farmer said with a chuckle: "I can't
-offer you another swig of stone fence."
-
-"It's probably just as well you can't," I replied.
-
-"I'd like to be introduced to one," said Rob, who appeared to be
-somewhat downcast. "I sure need a bracer."
-
-"What's the matter, Rob?" I asked when we were lighting our pipes. "A
-strenuous day? Two in rapid 'concussion' with the Polydores must be
-nerve-racking."
-
-"Yes; I admit there seemed to be 'too much Polydores.' We all had a
-happy reunion, and I devoted the forenoon to the entertainment of the
-famous family so I could be entitled to the afternoon off to spend
-with Beth. At noon we built a fire and cooked a sumptuous dinner. Beth
-baked up some things to keep them supplied a couple of days longer.
-After dinner I asked her to go for a row. She insisted on taking
-Diogenes along, and the others all followed us on a raft. So I decided
-to cut the water sports short, and Beth and I started for a walk in
-the woods. Three or more were constantly right on our trail. I begged
-and bribed, but to no avail. They were sticktights all right, and," he
-added morosely, "she seemed covertly to aid and abet them. When we
-started for home, I found that the young fiends had broken the cart,
-so I had to carry Diogenes most of the way, and of course he bellowed
-as usual at being parted from the whelps."
-
-[Illustration: I had to carry Diogenes most of the way]
-
-"They aren't such 'fine little chaps' after all," I couldn't resist
-commenting. "Familiarity breeds contempt, you see. I am sorry Diogenes
-had so much of their society. He'll be unendurable tomorrow. Well, you
-had some day!"
-
-"So did the Polydores. Demetrius and Diogenes fell in the fire twice.
-Emerald threw a finger out of joint, but Ptolemy quickly jerked it
-into place. Pythagoras was kicked off the raft twice, following a
-mutiny. Demetrius threw a lighted match into the vines and set fire to
-the house. They said it was a 'beaut of a day', though, and urged us
-to come tomorrow and repeat the program. By the way, they went across
-the lake on their raft yesterday and bought a tent of some campers.
-They have pitched it in the woods beyond the house."
-
-When I went upstairs Silvia met me disconsolately.
-
-"He didn't propose," she said disappointedly. "She wouldn't let him."
-
-"Did you wake her up to find out?" I asked.
-
-"She hadn't gone to bed and she wasn't sleepy. She was trimming a
-hat."
-
-"Why wouldn't she let him propose, if she cares for him?" I asked
-perplexedly.
-
-"Well, you see," explained Silvia, "that when a girl--a coquette girl
-like Beth--is as sure of a man as she is of Rob, she gets a touch of
-contrariness or offishness or something. She said it would have been
-too prosaic and cut and dried if they had gone away for a day in the
-woods and come back engaged. She wants the unexpected."
-
-"Do you think she loves him?" I asked interestedly.
-
-"She doesn't say so. You can't tell from what she says anyway. Still,
-I think she is hovering around the danger point."
-
-"She'd better watch out. Rob isn't the kind of a man who will stand
-for too much thwarting," I replied.
-
-"If he'd only play up a little bit to some one else, it would bring
-things to a climax," said my wife sagely.
-
-"There's no one else to play up to. The blonde left today because it
-was so slow here."
-
-"Maybe some new girl will come tomorrow," said Silvia, "or there's
-that trim little waitress who is waiting her way through college. He
-gave her a good big tip yesterday. I think I will give him a hint."
-
-"It wouldn't help any. He wouldn't know how to play such a game if you
-could persuade him to try. He'd probably tell the girl his motive in
-being attentive to her and then she'd back out. Maybe, after all, Beth
-doesn't love him."
-
-"I think she does," replied my wife, "because she is getting
-absent-minded. She let Diogenes go too near the fire. His shoes are
-burned, his hair singed, and his dress scorched. He woke up when I
-came in and he was so cross. He acted just the way he does when he is
-with his brothers."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-_Rob's Friend the Reporter_
-
-
-Silvia's vague prophecy was fulfilled. When the event of the day, the
-arrival of the stage, occurred, a solitary passenger alighted, a slim,
-alert, city-cut young woman.
-
-She looked us all over--not boldly, but with a business-like
-directness as if she were taking inventory of stock, or acting as
-judge at a competition. When her blue eyes lighted on Rob, they
-darkened with pleasure.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Rossiter!" she exclaimed, "this is better than I hoped for."
-
-They shook hands with the air of being old acquaintances, and he
-introduced her to us as "Miss Frayne, from my home town."
-
-She went into the office, registered, and sent her bag to her room.
-Then she asked Rob if she might have a talk with him.
-
-They walked away together down to the shore and she was talking to him
-quite excitedly. Rob suddenly stopped, threw back his head and laughed
-in the way that it is good to hear a man laugh.
-
-"Miss Frayne must be a wit," observed Beth dryly.
-
-I looked at her keenly. Something in her eyes as she gazed after the
-retreating couple told me that Silvia's surmise was right, and that
-Miss Frayne might be just the little punch needed to send Beth over
-the danger point.
-
-"I rather incline to the belief that Ptolemy told the truth in the
-first place," she continued, and then looked disappointed because I
-did not contradict her.
-
-I decided not to reveal, for the present anyway, what I knew of Miss
-Frayne, of whom I had often heard Rob speak.
-
-"She can't be going to stay long," said Silvia hopefully. "She didn't
-bring a trunk."
-
-"She doesn't need one," replied Beth. "She is probably one of those
-mannish girls who believe in a skirt and a few waists for a
-wardrobe."
-
-When Rob and the newcomer returned, he seemed to be monopolizing the
-conversation in a very emphatic and earnest manner. As they came up
-the steps to the veranda, we heard her say:
-
-"Very well, Mr. Rossiter, I will do just as you say. I have perfect
-confidence in your judgment."
-
-They passed on into the hotel and Beth jumped up and went down toward
-the lake.
-
-"Did you ever hear Rob speak of this Miss Frayne?" asked Silvia.
-
-"Often. She is engaged to his cousin, and is a reporter on a big
-newspaper."
-
-"Why didn't you say so? Oh, Lucien," she continued before I could
-speak, "were you really shrewd enough to see which way the wind was
-blowing?"
-
-"Sure. After you set my sails for me last night."
-
-Just then Rob came out of the hotel.
-
-"Say, Lucien, I want to see you a minute. Come on down the road."
-
-"We've got some work ahead," he said when we were out of Silvia's
-hearing.
-
-"What's up?" I asked.
-
-"Miss Frayne is up--and doing. What do you suppose her paper sent her
-here for?"
-
-"For a rest, or to write up the mosquitoes of H. H."
-
-"H. H. is all right, only it happens they stand for Haunted House."
-
-"Not really?"
-
-"Yes, really. The rumors of the house and the ghost, greatly
-elaborated, of course, reached the Sunday editor of the paper Miss
-Frayne is on, and he sent her up here to revive the story of the
-murder, translate the ghost, and get snapshots of the house. She was
-quite keen to have me take her there at once, so she could commence
-her article, but I headed her off, so she wouldn't discover the summer
-boarders at the hotel annex. I assured her that daytime was not the
-time to gather material and the only way she could get a proper focus
-on the ghost and acquire the thrills necessary for an inspiration was
-to see the place first by night."
-
-"If she would view Fair Melrose aright," I quoted, "she must visit it
-in the pale moonlight, but you were very clever to delay her visit
-long enough for us to get over there and warn the enemy. If she had
-gone down there and caught the Polydores unawares, she would have come
-back here and revealed our secret, and there would be the end of
-Silvia's vacation."
-
-"To tell the truth, Lucien, I wasn't thinking so much of that as I was
-of Miss Frayne's interests. You see she has come a long ways for a
-story and if it collapsed from her ghostly expectations to a showdown
-of four healthy boys, the blow might mean a good deal to her in a
-business way. I think we had better let Ptolemy plant a ghost just
-once more for her. You know you made him take a reef in the flapping
-of ghostly garments. Can't we resurrect the specter and restore the
-wails just for tonight, and bring her over here at the witching
-hour?"
-
-"Sure we will," I agreed heartily. "She shall have her ghost and all
-the trappings. It will give the Polydores the time of their lives."
-
-"Let's go over there now and put Ptolemy next so he can get busy on
-his spirits." We went down to the shore and pulled off. Midway across
-the lake, Rob suddenly rested on his oars and asked:
-
-"Where did Beth go?"
-
-"Back to first principles," I replied. "She thinks, judging from your
-excited, earnest manner in addressing Miss Frayne and your rushing
-frantically away for a walk with her before she had removed the travel
-dust, that Ptolemy was quite correct, after all, in declaring you to
-be a 'ladies' man.'"
-
-"Didn't you explain to her who Miss Frayne was?" he asked.
-
-"No," I replied. "I am on my vacation and I am not doing any
-explaining, professionally or otherwise."
-
-He swung the boat around.
-
-"Starboard!" I cried. "Don't you know a trump card when you see it?"
-
-Again he rested on his oars and stared at me.
-
-"What do you mean, Lucien? If you have a grain of hope for me, please
-let me in."
-
-I repeated Silvia's theories.
-
-"I am not going to win her that way," he said slowly, "not by playing
-a part."
-
-"Well," I declared, "if you go back to the hotel now, you can't
-explain Miss Frayne to Beth, because she went for a walk with old
-Professor Treadtop."
-
-He turned the boat again.
-
-"Silvia won't come to the Haunted House, will she?" he asked.
-
-"No, indeed. Nothing would induce her to."
-
-"Then you bring Miss Frayne here tonight and I'll bring Beth. And I'll
-be sure that there are no double boats lying around loose. I'll have
-two at the dock, see?"
-
-"I see your system," I replied, "but I am not sure how I can explain
-Miss Frayne to Silvia. Silvia is not in the least narrow-minded, but
-still to leave the hotel at midnight with a perfectly strange young
-woman--"
-
-"You can tell her I want a clear field for Beth. She will see it is in
-a good cause."
-
-The Polydores greeted us rapturously and roughly. When I had restored
-order, and they were once more right side up, I addressed the chief of
-the bandits.
-
-"Ptolemy," I began, "a young lady, who is a reporter for a big
-newspaper, has come from many miles away to write up the haunted house
-and the ghost, and they will be pictured out in the Sunday edition."
-
-Ptolemy's eyes glistened, and "Them Three" were instantly "at
-attention."
-
-"Oh, say, stepdaddy," begged the young chief, "let me play ghost right
-for her, just once, will you?"
-
-"You may for tonight," I said, "but you will have to be very careful
-and not overdo the matter, for she isn't the kind that is easily
-fooled. She's had to keep her eyes and wits sharpened, else she
-wouldn't be on a newspaper, so I want you to be very careful and not
-bungle. Make a neat job of it."
-
-"I'll do it up brown, you bet!" he cried gleefully.
-
-"Naw, do it up white," drawled Pythagoras.
-
-"Show me your ghost stuff by daylight," I demanded, "and let me see
-how you are going to rig him up."
-
-He brought forth a head and shoulders and arms that were ghastly even
-in sunlight, and proceeded to explain them.
-
-"I got this skull out of father's study, and the arms came off a
-skeleton mother had in her antiquities. I dressed them up in a pillow
-case and the white cotton gloves are Huldah's. I can get some
-phosphorus in the woods and put it in the eyes. And Demetrius bought
-two electric flashlights yesterday, and Pythagoras can snap them once
-in a while from the lower windows."
-
-"You are some little property man," said Rob in admiration. "But tell
-me who produces those heart-rending shrieks?"
-
-"That was Pythagoras who did the high ones. And Em came in with low
-groans. Show 'em, boys."
-
-Pythagoras uttered high-trebled, thin-toned whines and ever and anon
-Emerald added a _basso profundo_ accompaniment, making a combination
-that was most trying to the ears at close range.
-
-"I don't know," said Rob, "as I want Beth subjected to such a
-realistic performance. We will loiter in the distance."
-
-"Your rehearsal," I assured Ptolemy, "is very good, but you must
-remember that Miss Frayne is used to encountering things far more
-terrible than ghosts. She may insist on coming right in here to
-investigate. Of course, if she does, I can't refuse or she'll think I
-am afraid, or else that I put up a fake ghost here, myself."
-
-"We'll lock the door with a chair," suggested Emerald.
-
-"She'll be quite capable of breaking into a little house like this,
-but I'll keep her back until you have time to haul in your ghost and
-make a quick and quiet getaway by a back window. Then another thing,
-she'll be over here tomorrow morning to take some pictures of the
-house, so by sunrise I want you all to take up your abode in the tent
-you have in the woods and stay there until I come and tell you the
-coast is clear."
-
-"We're dead on," assured Ptolemy. "I'm glad there's going to be
-something doing. We're getting tired of being here alone. I had to tie
-Demetrius up this morning. He was bound to go over to the hotel and
-see mudder."
-
-"Don't one of you dare to make such an attempt," I said peremptorily.
-"You keep right on here for a few days. Some of us, either Rob, or
-Beth and I will drop over every day. If you play your ghost just as I
-tell you and keep out of sight, I'll bring you over some ice cream
-tomorrow."
-
-"Bring me a bigger bat."
-
-"Bring me a mitt."
-
-"Bring me a boat," came in chorus from Ptolemy, Emerald, and
-Demetrius.
-
-"What'll you give me to stay here?" asked Pythagoras, who was a born
-bargain-driver.
-
-"I'll give you a licking if you don't stay," was the only offer he
-gleaned from me.
-
-"Be good boys," adjured the softhearted Rob, "and I'll bring you
-everything I can find at the hotel."
-
-It was long past the luncheon hour when we returned. We found Miss
-Frayne wondering at Rob's sudden disappearance and Beth was
-accordingly mystified.
-
-I planted myself directly in front of Miss Frayne.
-
-"May I take you to the haunted house tonight at the yawning
-churchyard hour?" I asked. "I am most eminently fitted to be your
-guide, for I was the first one of this assembly to see the ghost _in
-toto_."
-
-"He saw it over a stone fence," remarked Rob.
-
-"Indeed you may, thank you very much," she said enthusiastically.
-
-Silvia's face was a study.
-
-"And will you come with me, Beth?" asked Rob. "Of course, the ghost is
-an old story to us, but we really should hover in Lucien's wake out of
-regard to the conventions."
-
-"Is Miss Frayne interested in ghosts?" asked Beth.
-
-Miss Frayne turned and answered the question.
-
-"Not personally," she admitted frankly, "but the newspaper I am on is,
-and they sent me up here to get a story."
-
-"Oh, you are a reporter?"
-
-"Yes; on the _Times_."
-
-"She won't be one long, though," asserted Rob cheerfully, "because she
-is going to marry my cousin in the fall."
-
-Beth's expression remained neutral at the announcement, but I noticed
-throughout the afternoon that she was extremely affable toward Miss
-Frayne, and that she had the whiphand again with Rob, and meanwhile he
-seemed to be gathering a grim determination to do or die.
-
-"Lucien, how did you come to ask Miss Frayne to go to that awful place
-tonight?" asked Silvia when we had gone to our room for a siesta,
-which seemed impossible by reason of the bellowing of Diogenes, who
-balked at being required to lie down.
-
-"Rob asked me to," I informed her, when I had cowed Diogenes, "so he
-could have a free field for Beth. I believe he planned this
-expedition so he could storm the citadel."
-
-She reflected.
-
-"Well, maybe he is wise. Girls like Beth have to be taken by storm
-sometimes. I shouldn't wonder if Rob could be a bit of a bully, too,
-but--"
-
-She ended her speculations in a shriek.
-
-"Oh, Lucien! Diogenes has jumped out the window."
-
-We rushed down stairs, Silvia informing the guests in transit of the
-awful catastrophe.
-
-Silvia paused at the door opening on to the veranda.
-
-"I can't see him," she said faintly, closing her eyes. "You'll have to
-tend to it alone, Lucien."
-
-Beth was already at the telephone, which connected with the country
-doctor's. Rob joined me. We located our window, and began hunting
-underneath for the pieces.
-
-"Where in the world do you suppose he landed?" asked Rob.
-
-Just then the missing one came around the house clasping a bologna
-sausage in his fist.
-
-"Ye Gods and little Polydores!" exclaimed Rob.
-
-I caught Diogenes by the arm and rushed him in to Silvia.
-
-I found her in company with an old colored mammy, who was laundress
-for the hotel.
-
-"Sho'," she was saying, "I done gwine by de windah with ma baby cab
-full o' cloes, an' dis yer white chile done come tumblin' down an'
-fall right in ma cab. Now, what do you think o' dat? I reckon I was
-nevah so done clean skeert afoah in ma life. An' ef de chile didn't
-grab one of ma bolognas and done git out de cab an' run around de
-house."
-
-"Oh," cried Silvia, "poor little baby! Come to mudder. Lucien, where
-are you going with him?"
-
-I had picked up the acrobatic Polydore and was going up the stairs two
-at a time. I gained our room, locked the door and proceeded to give
-the "poor little baby" all that was coming to him. Now and then above
-his howls, I heard Silvia's plaintive protests outside the door, but I
-finished my job completely and satisfactorily, and laid the penitent
-Polydore in his little bed. Then I went out into the hall, feeling
-better than I had in months.
-
-Silvia essayed to pass me, but I took her arm and led her to a recess
-in the hall.
-
-"I am convinced," I told her, "that we have Diogenes as a permanent
-pensioner on our hands, so it was up to me to show him where to get
-off. You can't go to him for a quarter of an hour."
-
-We went down stairs and I was sure I read suppressed regret in the
-faces of most of the guests at learning of the soft place in which
-Diogenes' lot had been cast. Silvia tearfully told Rob and Beth of my
-cruelty.
-
-[Illustration: Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia's plaintive
-protests outside the door]
-
-"Do him good!" approved Rob heartily.
-
-"How mean men are!" declared Beth indignantly. "I am going up and
-comfort the poor little thing."
-
-I held up the key to the room with a grin, and she had to content
-herself by making unkind remarks about me.
-
-At the expiration of the allotted time, I handed Silvia the key. She
-took it from me without a word or a look. It was quite evident I was
-in wrong.
-
-In half an hour my wife came down, carrying Diogenes, who, dressed in
-fresh white clothes, was a good picture of an angel child. She passed
-me and went to a remote corner of the veranda and sat down. When he
-spied me, he leaped from her arms and ran to me.
-
-"Ocean," he said propitiatingly, "me love oo."
-
-I took him up. His arms clasped about my neck, and over his curly
-head, I winked at Silvia and Beth.
-
-Rob roared.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-_A Midnight Excursion_
-
-
-The night was Satan's own: dark, wind-shrieking, and Polydorish. No
-one saw us leave the hotel when, at a late hour, we started on our
-little excursion. On account of the darkness and the poor landing near
-the haunted house, we decided to go by the overland route. I managed
-to purloin a lantern from the kitchen to light our path.
-
-Rob and Beth kept behind Miss Frayne and myself, and in spite of the
-wildness of the weather, he was evidently pleading his suit, for now
-and then above the roar of the wind, I heard his ardent voice.
-Apparently Beth had not yet given him any encouragement.
-
-Going down the lane my lantern underwent a total eclipse, so we had a
-Jordan-like road to travel. Miss Frayne was quite impervious to
-unfavorable conditions, as it was a matter of bread and butter to her,
-she said, and she was accustomed to braving worse storms than this,
-and anyway she hadn't come here for a summer picnic.
-
-When we came into the grove it was so dark, I lost my bearings.
-
-"Why didn't we bring a flashlight?" asked Beth.
-
-"There were none at the hotel," I told her.
-
-"I know some boys," said Rob with a little laugh, "who would have lent
-us one--maybe."
-
-Fortunately we were well provided with safety matches and after
-striking a box or so, we gained the open. A rise of ground hid the
-house, but when we climbed to the top, the ghost loomed up ghastlier
-than ever.
-
-I felt the business-like Miss Frayne start and shiver as a little
-scream escaped her. I didn't wonder. Even I, knowing that it was an
-illusion and a snare, felt my flesh creeping as I looked at the
-ghastly thing in the window.
-
-Every now and then according to schedule a light flashed from the
-windows below. And then came the blood-curdling sounds--whimpers and
-groans that were rivaling the whistling of the wind.
-
-"This is awful!" said Miss Frayne in a hoarse whisper.
-
-"Do you want to go inside the house?" I asked.
-
-"No--o! I couldn't. Not tonight."
-
-We were some little in advance of Rob and Beth. When one spectral
-sound came like a tense whisper, Miss Frayne turned and fled, and of
-course I followed her. We could not see our two companions, but
-suddenly in an interim of wind and ghost whispers, we heard Beth say:
-
-"Yes, Rob. I think we should really be cosier in a story-and-a-half
-cottage than we should in a bungalow."
-
-"Ye Gods!" muttered Miss Frayne, "did he propose in the face of that
-awful Thing?"
-
-"Ship ahoy!" I called.
-
-"Oh, didn't you go inside?" asked Rob.
-
-"Go in! I wouldn't go inside that place; not if I lose my job on the
-paper. What can it be? You don't seem to mind it, Miss Wade."
-
-"Well, you know," said Beth apologetically, "this is my third
-performance."
-
-We were now down the hill out of sight of the gruesome, ghastly window
-display, and Miss Frayne gained courage as we retreated.
-
-"Of course I don't believe in ghosts," she said, "but what do you
-suppose that is?"
-
-"I had a theory," I said, "that it is the work of a lunatic, but I've
-since concluded it is due to practical jokers. I'll tell you what I'll
-do. If you wait here, I'll investigate and see what I can find out for
-you."
-
-"Oh, would you really dare, Mr. Wade? I don't believe men ever have
-creepy nerves," she exclaimed.
-
-I began to feel ashamed of my deception.
-
-"I wouldn't go, Lucien," warned Rob, coming to my rescue. "There may
-be a gang of desperadoes in there, or counterfeit money-makers, or
-something of that kind. Besides, I have a far more interesting piece
-of news than anything the ghost could give you."
-
-"Rob!" protested Beth.
-
-"We know it already," I laughed. "It's to be a story-and-a-half
-high."
-
-"I think I am getting material for quite a story," declared Miss
-Frayne.
-
-I knew Beth's dislike of scenes and display of emotions--mock
-heroics--she called them, so I made no congratulatory speeches of the
-bless-you-my-children order, but presently under the cover of
-darkness, I felt a little hand slipped in mine, and my clasp was
-eloquent of what I felt.
-
-"I hope," said Miss Frayne, "that daylight will make me so ashamed of
-my cowardice that I can come down here and take some pictures and go
-inside the house."
-
-"We'll all come with you," promised Beth. "There's safety in
-numbers."
-
-When we were back at the hotel I managed to have a few words with Rob
-before we went upstairs.
-
-"Bless the ghost!" he said cheerily. "When Beth first glimpsed it, she
-just turned and fell into my arms. She was really frightened for the
-first time. I shall feel under obligations to Ptolemy for a
-lifetime."
-
-"Thank goodness!" I ejaculated fervently, "that I am under no
-obligations to a Polydore. Ptolemy certainly did put up the most
-ghastly thing in the way of ghosts. The lights in the eyes of the
-skeleton were frightful."
-
-"Did you see the ghost?" asked Silvia sleepily, when I came in.
-
-"Yes; same old ghost, only more of him," I assured her.
-
-She was asleep before I had uttered this reply.
-
-"Silvia," I said, "I have a more startling piece of news for you than
-that."
-
-She sat bolt upright.
-
-"Are they engaged, Lucien?"
-
-"They are. They are building their castle--I mean their story-and-a-half
-cottage already."
-
-Alas for my own desire to sleep! I had so effectually awakened Silvia
-that she planned Beth's trousseau, the wedding, honeymoon, and the
-furnishing of their house before she subsided.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-_What Miss Frayne Found Out_
-
-
-We had planned to go to the haunted house at nine o'clock the next
-morning, but owing to my dissipation of the night before, it was long
-after the appointed hour when Silvia awoke me.
-
-I hurried down stairs and ate my breakfast in solitude. I inquired for
-Beth and Rob, but the waitress told me they had left the dining-room
-at seven o'clock and gone for a walk in the woods. She said it with a
-knowing smile that told me she, too, must be a "sister of the Golden
-Circle."
-
-"And Miss Frayne?" I asked.
-
-"She went down the road over an hour ago."
-
-Evidently her courage had come up with the sun. I was greatly
-disturbed at the chance of her stumbling over one or more Polydores,
-and Rob didn't want to let the cat out of the bag until her article
-was written, as he believed that if the ghostly spell were broken, she
-would lose her "punch."
-
-I was unable to think of any plausible explanation to offer Silvia as
-to why I should start in pursuit, and I wished all sorts of dire
-calamities on Rob's blond head. Lovers were surely blind and selfish.
-
-About ten o'clock they came strolling in.
-
-"We didn't know it was so late," said Beth cheerfully, "but the boys
-will keep in the woods all right."
-
-"With her nose for news, there is no telling how far into the woods
-Miss Frayne's investigation will take her."
-
-"Say we go down by the lane and meet her," proposed Beth, "so that if
-she has run across the boys we can explain to her why we desire
-secrecy from Silvia."
-
-"You and Rob go," I advised. "It would seem odd to Silvia if we didn't
-ask her to go with us."
-
-So the newly engaged couple started down the road, but in their
-self-absorption they didn't notice the turn to the lane, and they got
-half way to Windy Creek before they came back to earth and the hotel.
-Miss Frayne still had not shown up, and I began to have misgivings
-lest the Polydores had locked her up in the house, but finally just as
-we were having a happy family gathering and discussing the new event
-under the shade of the one resort tree, she came excitedly up to us.
-
-"Such an interesting morning as I have had!" she exclaimed
-enthusiastically. "I made some corking pictures of the place, and I've
-found out about not only that ghost, but all ghosts--the whole race of
-ghosts."
-
-I hurriedly interrupted her and made elaborate and jumbled apologies
-for not keeping our engagement, which evidently bored her and
-mystified Silvia.
-
-"I am glad I went alone," she finally replied. "Otherwise I might not
-have got such an interesting interview."
-
-Beth, Rob, and I made frantic and appealing gestures to her behind
-Silvia's back, but she didn't seem to notice them.
-
-"Whom did you interview, the ghost?" asked Silvia.
-
-"No, indeed. Some very interesting and unusual people who are staying
-there."
-
-I threw her a wildly beseeching glance and Beth and Rob began at the
-same time to ply her with distracting questions. I think she seemed to
-divine that there was something in the situation that was not to be
-explained, but Silvia interrupted them.
-
-"Do let Miss Frayne tell us about her interview," she said. "We all
-seem to be very talkative today."
-
-I saw there was no way to dodge the dénouement, so I awaited the
-finale in dread desperation. It proved to be more of a stunner than I
-had expected.
-
-"I went down the lane," she said, "and through the grove, up the
-little hill, and laughed at myself for the hallucinations of the night
-before. There were no ghosts visible and the door to the haunted
-house was hospitably open. I stood on the hill long enough to make
-some pictures and then went on. I walked up the steps fearlessly and
-looked within. A woman, an untidy, disheveled-looking woman, sat at a
-table writing furiously in just the same breathless way I write when I
-have a scoop, and the presses are waiting open-mouthed for my copy.
-
-"She looked up and scowled at my intrusion.
-
-"'Don't bother me,' she said, and continued writing.
-
-"I went through the house and came outside again where I met an
-absent-minded, spectacled man. I told him who I was and of my object
-in coming to the house. Then he showed signs of coming to.
-
-"'Oh, the ghost!' he said. 'That is what brought me here. My wife is
-interested in more tangible, more material things. We have just
-returned from a long journey, and when we were nearly to our
-destination, our place of residence, I happened to read in a paper
-about this haunted house and its apparition, so we came right up here
-this morning to remain overnight and see if the article were true.'
-
-"I told him how successful I had been and he became quite alert and
-enthusiastic. He showed me why I should not have been alarmed, because
-ghosts, he said, were scientific facts. He then explained to me at
-length how the gases from the dead arise and form a nebulous vapor or
-a vaporous nebula. It sounded very simple and plausible when he told
-me, but I can't seem to remember it. Fortunately I have it all down in
-writing."
-
-Silvia's eyes and mine had met in speechless horror since she had
-mentioned the "writing woman."
-
-"Lucien!" Silvia now said in a tragic, hoarse whisper--"the
-Polydores!"
-
-"Oh, do you know them?" asked Miss Frayne. "Dr. Felix Polydore, the
-eminent LL.D. or something like that."
-
-"The whole family are D's," I said.
-
-"His wife is the highest of high-brows, and they are averse to
-interviews. They moved to a small city sometime ago to be secluded.
-Just think of my opportunity! I have them headlined! 'The Haunted
-House of Hope Haven. Ghost that appears at midnight scientifically
-explained by the distinguished Dr. Felix Polydore.'"
-
-"I think we are in luck," I said to Silvia, on second thoughts. "We
-will take them home by the nape of the neck and deliver their children
-into their keeping to have and to hold."
-
-"I can't turn Diogenes over to them," she said plaintively.
-
-"Diogenes!" repeated Miss Frayne in astonishment.
-
-I then narrated to her the history of our next-door neighbors, and how
-they planted their five children upon us.
-
-"We had better go down at once and see them," said Silvia, "before
-they escape. No telling where they might take it in their heads to
-go."
-
-"We will," I said, "we'll go soon after luncheon."
-
-"Thrice blessed haunted house," quoted Rob. "It gave me Beth, and it
-has restored the parents of the wise Ptolemy and 'Them Three.'"
-
-"And gave me a ripping story," said Miss Frayne.
-
-Just then the gong sounded, and after luncheon while I was comfortably
-tipped back in a chair, my feet on the veranda rail, seeing in the
-smoke from my pipe dream visions of Polydoreless days, a faint cry
-from Silvia brought me back to earth.
-
-"Lucien, look!"
-
-I looked.
-
-My chair came down to all fours and my feet slipped from the rail.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-_Ptolemy's Tale_
-
-
-Four defiant, determined-looking Polydores came up the steps and bore
-down upon us. Then Silvia as usual thought she saw land ahead.
-
-"Oh, boys," she asked hopefully, "did your father send for you to meet
-him here? And when is he going to take you home?"
-
-"Didn't I tell you," I thundered at Ptolemy, "that you were not to
-leave that house--"
-
-"It left us," interrupted Emerald with a grin.
-
-"Went up in smoke," added Pythagoras blithely, "ghost and all."
-
-"Four minutes quicker," said Demetrius, "and it would have took father
-and mother, too."
-
-"Oh, is it the haunted house they are talking about?" asked Miss
-Frayne joyfully. "What a story I'll have!"
-
-Life to Miss Frayne seemed to be one story after another. Well, it was
-certainly becoming the same way to us.
-
-"Did the ghost set fire to the house?" asked Beth.
-
-"What are you all talking about," demanded Silvia, "and how did you
-know these boys were there? How long have you been here?" she asked,
-turning to Ptolemy.
-
-"I told you," I repeated angrily to the subdued boy, "not to leave.
-Those were plain orders. If the house did burn up, you could have
-stayed in your tent in the woods."
-
-Ptolemy's lips twitched faintly.
-
-"The house burned up and all our clothes and our stuff to eat, and our
-bats and things, and father and mother went away and I didn't know
-what to do, so--I came here. But we'll go back to our own house. We
-have learned to cook. Come on, boys."
-
-"You'll stay right here with me, son," and Rob's hand came down
-intimately on Ptolemy's shoulder.
-
-"It isn't likely we'll turn them out into the woods, when they haven't
-a roof over their heads," declared Silvia, drawing Emerald to her
-side.
-
-"I think you are absolutely inhuman, Lucien," cried Beth. "I don't see
-what has changed you so," and she proceeded to make room for
-Pythagoras in the porch swing.
-
-"Did the fire scare you?" asked Miss Frayne gently, as she put her
-arms about Demetrius.
-
-"Et tu, Brute? Well, I plainly see this is no place for an inhuman,
-childless, married man," I said with a laugh, walking down the
-veranda.
-
-In the doorway I met Diogenes, who raised his chubby arms invitingly.
-
-"Up, up, Ocean!" he begged sweetly.
-
-I lifted him to my shoulder, and then turned and walked triumphantly
-back to the family group.
-
-"Now," I said, "here is the whole d-dashed family. And I propose that
-each keep unto his charge the child he has now under his wing."
-
-Miss Frayne quickly relinquished the dirty Demetrius. Beth shrank away
-from Pythagoras.
-
-As I seated myself still holding Diogenes, his brothers sprang toward
-him in greeting, but he spat at one, kicked at another, and pulled the
-hair of a third, although he patted Ptolemy's cheek gently.
-
-"Now, we'll have this affair thrashed out," I declared in my most
-authoritative, professional manner, and I then proceeded to explain to
-Silvia the housing of the Polydores, and our strategies to keep their
-arrival a secret simply on her account.
-
-"Because you know," interpolated Beth, with a consideration for the
-feelings of the young Polydores--a consideration they had never before
-encountered--"we wanted you to have a nice rest."
-
-Silvia looked quite penitent and remorseful for her seeming lack of
-appreciation of our combined efforts. When I had answered all her
-inquiries satisfactorily, Miss Frayne's curiosity regarding the
-progeny of the eminent Polydores had to be fully relieved.
-
-"And do you mean that the scribbling lady I saw at the table is really
-the mother of these five boys?" she asked, unable to grasp the fact.
-
-"Yes; and the father hereof is the man who explained the ghosts to you
-so scientifically that you cannot remember what he said. Now, Ptolemy,
-we'll hear your story of the fire and the whereabouts of your parents.
-Take your time and tell it accurately."
-
-"Well, you see we did just as you said to, and took the ghost out of
-the window and went out to the woods early this morning so as not to
-let the paper lady see us."
-
-"Oh!" cried Miss Frayne, "am I the paper lady? I begin to see
-daylight. Are these boys the ghost perpetrators, and were you in on
-the put-up job?"
-
-"You're a good guesser," I replied.
-
-"And why wasn't I taken into your confidence?"
-
-"For two reasons. First, because your friend Rob said you'd get better
-results for copy--more inspirations and thrills, if you weren't behind
-the scenes on the ghost business,--and then we didn't want to tell you
-about the presence of the Polydores lest inadvertently you betray the
-fact to my wife. Now, proceed, Ptolemy."
-
-"After we were in the woods, I heard an automobile coming down the
-lane, and I went up near the edge of the woods and peeked out behind a
-tree, and pretty soon I saw father and mother come over the hill and
-go in our haunted house, so I came up there and hid under the window
-and heard mother say: 'What an ideal place to write this is. It looks
-as if I might really get a chance to write unmo--'
-
-"'--lested,'" I finished for him.
-
-"I guess so," he allowed. "Well, she began writing, so I didn't go in,
-but when father came outside I went up to him and told him you and
-mudder were at the hotel and that we were all with you. He told me
-they came up here to write an article for some big magazine about the
-ghost. He hired an automobile down at Windy Creek to bring them up to
-the house and the man was going to come back for them tomorrow
-morning. I didn't let on the ghost was a fake, because I thought he'd
-be so disappointed to have all his trouble for nothing, and he'd be
-mad at me for swiping his skull. I told him a paper lady was coming
-and then I went back to the woods. He went down with me to see the
-boys, and he said he would come back and have lunch with us. Mother
-doesn't ever stop to eat at noon when she is writing.
-
-"He went back and talked to the paper lady and pretty soon he came
-down and ate with us. I told him all about how we couldn't get any
-girl to do the work for us and so we had been living with you, and how
-Di got sick and mudder was all worn out taking care of him and came
-down here to rest, and that you wouldn't cash the check, so I did and
-was spending it and he said that was all right." Here Ptolemy flashed
-me a most triumphant glance.
-
-"He said you must be paid for all your expense and trouble, so he made
-out a check and gave it to me and told me to make mudder a nice
-present. He ain't so bad when he ain't thinking about dead stuff. When
-he felt in his pocket for his check book, he found a letter he had got
-yesterday and forgotten to open, so he read it then and found it was
-from some magazine, and the man said he'd pay his and mother's
-expenses to go to Chili and write up some stuff about--something. So
-father said they must go at once."
-
-"Not to Chili!" I exclaimed.
-
-"Yes; we all went up to the house with him and I took mother's pencil
-and paper away so she would have to listen. She was wild for Chili,
-and I had to go and hunt up a farmer who had a machine to take them
-down to Windy Creek. Father signed another blank check for you and
-said you could board us with it or do anything you thought best.
-
-"Then mother took a lot of papers out of her bag, some stuff she had
-written and didn't get suited with, and she stuffed them in the stove
-and set fire to them. Then we all went down to the lane to see father
-and mother off and when we got back the house was on fire. The chimney
-burned out."
-
-"Guess mother must have written some hot stuff," said Emerald.
-
-"It was burning so fast," continued Ptolemy, "that we didn't dast go
-in to save anything and all our food and clothes and balls and bats
-and fishing tackle are gone, and we didn't know what to do, or what to
-eat, and so--we came here."
-
-"You did just right, Ptolemy," I admitted. "I shouldn't have called
-you down--not until I heard your story, anyway."
-
-I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an injured air.
-
-"Do you mean to tell me," asked Miss Frayne, "that your father and
-mother went away without seeing the baby?"
-
-Ptolemy flushed a little.
-
-"You see," he explained apologetically, "mother gets woolly when she
-writes and she's forgotten there's Di. She thinks Demetrius is the
-youngest. She's mad about writing. If she sees a blank paper
-anywhere, she ain't happy until she has written something on it, and
-the sight of a pencil makes her fingers itch."
-
-[Illustration: I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an
-injured air]
-
-"Take warning, Miss Frayne," I said, "and don't get too literary."
-
-"Some day," resumed Ptolemy, "mother'll get the antiques all out of
-her system and then she'll remember us."
-
-I liked the boy's defense of his mother, and I began to see that Rob
-was right in thinking there were possibilities in the lad, but it was
-Silvia's influence that had developed them, for in the days when he
-borrowed soup plates of us, there had been no redeeming trait that I
-could discern.
-
-And while I was recalling this, I heard Silvia saying to him kindly:
-"And in the meantime, I'll be 'mudder' to you."
-
-"So will I," chimed in Beth.
-
-"I'll be a big brother," offered Rob.
-
-"I'll be next friend, Ptolemy," I contributed.
-
-Strange to say, my offer seemed to make the most impression on him. He
-came to me and gazed into my eyes earnestly.
-
-"I'll do just as you say," he promised.
-
-"Where do we'uns come in?" asked Pythagoras, with one of his satanic
-grins.
-
-Miss Frayne saved the day.
-
-"You all come in with me," she said, "and have lunch. I haven't eaten
-since breakfast, and I understand there is warm ginger cake and
-huckleberry pie. Aren't you hungry?"
-
-"You bet," spoke up Pythagoras. "We only had coffee, peanuts, and
-beans down in the woods, and father ate the beans and drank all the
-coffee."
-
-"We're out of the frying pan into the fire," said Silvia woefully,
-when we were alone.
-
-"I wish the Polydore parents had gone up in smoke," I declared.
-
-"Then your last hope of getting rid of the children would have gone up
-in smoke, too," argued Beth.
-
-"No; in case of the demise of their parents, we could have turned them
-over body and soul to the probate court," I informed her.
-
-"We will fill out this blank check for any amount, Lucien," declared
-Silvia, "that will induce a housekeeper to take charge of their house.
-I shall keep Diogenes, though, until he is older."
-
-"I wouldn't mind Ptolemy, either," I admitted. "I shall be interested
-in seeing what I can make of him, and he hasn't a bad influence over
-Diogenes, but I'll be hanged if anything would induce me to have 'Them
-Three' Chessy cats running wild over us. They can live in their house
-alone, or be put in a reformatory. We won't have them. We're under no
-obligations, pecuniary or moral, to look after them."
-
-"I think, Lucien, we might as well go home now. We've had a good rest
-and a good time, and I am anxious to be back and see how Huldah is
-getting on."
-
-As Huldah had never mastered two of the three R's, we had not been
-able to receive any reports from her.
-
-"I'll tell you what we'll do," proposed Beth. "Rob and I will take all
-the Polydores save Diogenes, and go home tomorrow and prepare the
-house and Huldah for the overflow. Then you two can come on with
-Diogenes the next day."
-
-"Good idea, Beth!" I approved. "I'd hate to face Huldah, unprepared,
-with the return of the Polydores _en masse_."
-
-"I am glad," said Silvia, "that Huldah has been having a rest from
-them for a few days."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-_All About Uncle Issachar's Visit_
-
-
-The next morning's stage carried seven passengers to Windy Creek, as
-Miss Frayne with a big roll of "copy" also took her departure.
-
-Diogenes had been quite docile and amenable to my rule since the
-licking I gave him, so we had a pleasant and comfortable return
-journey on the following day.
-
-"I hope, Lucien," said Silvia, "you won't refuse to cash this check
-for a good amount. The Polydore parents may never show up, and it's
-only right we should be reimbursed for their keep."
-
-"I will cash it," I assured her, "and use it for a housekeeper or else
-send the boys off to a school. I should like very much to have it out
-with Felix Polydore, but, as you suggest, I may never have the
-opportunity to see him at close range."
-
-Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy met us at the station.
-
-"Where are 'Them Three'?" I asked hopefully.
-
-"Huldah is feeding them little pies hot from the kettle--the kind she
-cooks like doughnuts, you know."
-
-"Huldah cooking for 'Them Three'!" I exclaimed. "She must have passed
-into her second childhood. She grudged them even an apple to piece
-on."
-
-"She has pampered them ever since our return," said Rob.
-
-"Poor Huldah! She must indeed be afflicted with softening of the
-brain," I decided.
-
-"She has probably been so lonely, shut in here by herself," said
-Silvia, "that even 'Them Three' looked good to her."
-
-In the hallway Huldah met us. She was beaming with pleasure, but
-except in her bearing toward the children, she was quite normal.
-
-"We've all had a real good rest," she observed, "and you do look so
-well, Mrs. Wade. My! but this place has been lonesome. I'm glad we're
-all together again."
-
-"Now, Silvia, shut your eyes," directed Beth, "and come into the
-library. Ptolemy has bought you a present with the check his father
-gave him."
-
-"Beth helped me pick it out," said Ptolemy.
-
-Beth led the way into the library, and we followed.
-
-"Open your eyes."
-
-Silvia gave a little cry of pleasure, and looking over her shoulder, I
-beheld a baby grand piano.
-
-"Oh, Ptolemy!" she cried, giving him a fervent kiss and fond hug, "I
-can never let you do so much."
-
-"Oh, yes," he said, flushing a little under the endearments which were
-doubtless the first ever bestowed upon him. "Father's got a whole lot
-of money grandpa left him and it's fixed so he can't draw out only so
-much each year. He said the board and bother of us was worth more than
-this and we'll all enjoy the music. But Thag and Em and Dem ain't to
-touch it. I'll knock tar out of the first one that comes near it."
-
-I was disconsolate. I didn't see how we could return it and I didn't
-want the Polydore web woven any tighter. To think of Silvia's
-receiving from them what it had been my longing to give her! But as I
-was to learn later, she was to acquire much more than a piano from the
-eminent family.
-
-After dinner Silvia asked Huldah to come in and hear the music, and
-when Silvia's repertoire was exhausted, we gave our faithful servant
-all the little details of our trip which Beth had not supplied.
-
-"Now tell us, Huldah, how things went along here," said Silvia.
-
-"Well, you think some wonderful things happened to you all on your
-trip mebby--ghosts and proposals," looking at Beth and Rob, "and fires
-and Polydores, but back here in this quiet house something happened
-that has your ghosts and things skinned by a mile."
-
-"Oh, dear!" cried Silvia apprehensively, "what is it?"
-
-"Break it very gently, Huldah," I cautioned. "You know we've borne a
-good deal."
-
-"Your uncle Issachar was here for a couple of days."
-
-She certainly had made a sensation.
-
-"Not Uncle Issachar! Not here?" exclaimed Silvia incredulously.
-
-"Yes, ma'am. He came the next day after Beth and Mr. Rossiter and
-Polly left. I told him you'd gone away for a little vacation and rest.
-I didn't let on that I knew where you had gone, because I didn't want
-him straggling up there, too, or sending for you to come back. He said
-your absence would make no difference to his plans; that he never let
-nothing do that. He come to pay a visit and he should pay one."
-
-"Yes," said Silvia feebly. "That sounds like Uncle Issachar."
-
-"I told him to make himself perfectly at home; that every one did that
-to this place, and he said he would. I'd just slicked up the big front
-room upstairs and I seen to it that he had everything all right. I
-cooked the best dinner I knew how, and he said it was the first white
-man's meal he had eat since his ma died, so I found out what she used
-to cook and fed him on it. Them three kids and him eat like they was
-holler. I guess if Polly hadn't took them away your grocery bill would
-'a looked like Barb'ry Allen's grave.
-
-"Well, as I was saying, your uncle he eat till he got over his
-grouches, and like enough he'd be here eating yet, if he hadn't got a
-telegraph to hit the line for home, some big business deal, he said,
-and I guess it was a great deal, for he licked his chops and smacked
-his lips over it, and he give me a ten dollar bill to get a new dress
-and each of Them Three one dollar fer candy."
-
-"The old tightwad!" I exclaimed. "It was your cooking, sure, that made
-him loosen up that way."
-
-"Tightwad nothing!" she declared indignantly. "You won't think he was
-tight-wadded when you read this here letter he left for you. He told
-me what was in it, and I've just been busting to tell it to Beth, but
-I waited for you to know it first."
-
-With great excitement Silvia opened the letter, read it, gasped,
-re-read it, and then in consternation handed it to me.
-
-"Read it aloud, Lucien," she bade. "Maybe I can believe it then."
-
-This was the letter.
-
- "My dear Niece:
-
- "I was sorry not to see you, but glad to learn that, as every wise
- and good woman should do, you are raising a fine family--a family
- of _sons_, which is what our country most needs. Your son
- Pythagoras informed me that you had taken your oldest child,
- Ptolemy, and your youngest, Diogenes, with you, I am glad you left
- three such promising samples for me to see.
-
- "As you have five sons, I have, agreeable to my promise, placed in
- your name in the First National Bank of your city the sum of
- twenty-five thousand dollars.
-
- "Your affectionate uncle,
- "Issachar Innes."
-
-"Huldah," I asked, "did you tell him the Polydores were our
-children?"
-
-"Me?" she repeated indignantly. "Me tell a lie like that! No; I didn't
-get no chance to tell him anything about them. 'Them Three' done the
-telling. The first thing that one"--pointing to Pythagoras--"said was,
-'Mudder went away and took the baby, Diogenes, with her.' And then
-that next one"--indicating Emerald--"said: 'Yes, and our oldest
-brother, Ptolemy, went on with Beth to see them.'
-
-"The old gent asked them all their names and ages and he was so
-pleased and said he thought it was just fine for you to raise five
-sons, so I didn't have no heart to tell him no different. 'Twan't none
-of my business anyhow. Then 'Them Three' kept talking about stepdaddy,
-and your Uncle Issachar asks 'Who the devil is he? Did my niece marry
-again?' And I told him as how Mr. Wade was all the husband you ever
-had, and that stepdaddy was nothing but a sort of pet-name the kids
-had give Mr. Wade."
-
-"I told him," said Demetrius, "that stepdaddy was cross to us
-sometimes and not as nice as mudder, and he said--"
-
-"You shut up," commanded Huldah quickly, "and let me talk."
-
-"No," I intercepted, "I'd really be interested in hearing what he told
-Uncle Issachar. What was it, Demetrius, that your great-uncle said to
-you?"
-
-"He said," stated the imp, darting his tongue out in triumph at his
-victory over Huldah, "that he always thought you was a stiff."
-
-"He didn't say nothing of the kind!" declared Huldah. "He said you was
-stiff-necked, and that he presumed you would act more like a
-stepfather than the real thing. Well, as I was saying, he asked their
-names, and he liked them fine. Said they were so classy."
-
-"Didn't he say classic, Huldah?" inquired Rob.
-
-"Mebby. What's the difference?" snapped Huldah.
-
-"None," I assured her quickly, dodging a definition.
-
-"She told him--" began Emerald.
-
-"You shut up," again adjured Huldah, "or I'll never bake you one of
-those small pies no more."
-
-"Oh, please, Huldah," I coaxed. "Let us hear everything. I've always
-told you my life's secrets, and I don't mind what you or the boys told
-him."
-
-"Well, I suppose what he was going to tattle was that I thought the
-old gent might feel hurt, 'cause none of them was named after him, so
-I told him Polly's middle name was Issachar."
-
-"Why, Huldah," remonstrated Silvia.
-
-"Well, he's always wanted a middle name, and he's never been baptized,
-so you can stick it in and have him ducked next Sunday and then that
-will square that. 'Them Three' stuck to him like a hive of bees, and I
-was scairt for fear they'd let the cat out of the bag, and so long as
-they had put it in, I thought it might just as well stay in, but they
-were just as slick as grease in all they said. They'll hang in that
-rogues' gallery yet."
-
-"I suppose they were pretty--strenuous," said Silvia with a sigh.
-
-"They was more than that. The first afternoon right after dinner when
-he was sitting on the front porch, sleeping peaceful and snoring, that
-there one--" pointing to Pythagoras--
-
-"Tattle-tale!" he began, but I administered a cuff and he subsided
-into surprised silence.
-
-[Illustration: "He went to the front window and dropped a young kitten
-down on the old gent's head."]
-
-"He," said Huldah, looking pleased at this little attention to the
-boy, "went to the front window and dropped a young kitten down on the
-old gent's head. It clawed something fierce. We had just got things
-going smooth again when Emmy got one of his earaches. I roasted an
-onion and put in his ear, and what did he do but take it out of his
-ear and slip it down your poor uncle's back."
-
-"Why didn't you beat them?" I asked indignantly.
-
-"Because the old gent did that. He put 'em across his knee, and
-believe me, it was some licking they caught. They didn't let out a
-whimper and that pleased him."
-
-"Huh!" said Emerald. "Thag don't know how to cry. He hasn't got any
-tears, and old Uncle Iz didn't hurt me, because, you see, when I heard
-Thag getting his, I went and stuffed the Declaration of Independence,
-that book of stepdaddy's that Demetrius tore the pictures out of, in
-my pants."
-
-"Go on!" urged Rob delightedly. "What else did you all do? Uncle must
-have had some time. It would make a fine scenario. 'The first visit of
-the rich uncle.'"
-
-"Well," resumed Huldah. "One of 'em put red pepper in the old man's
-bed, and he like to sneeze his head off, but he said as how sneezing
-was healthy, and showed you'd got rid of a cold."
-
-"He never got on to the pepper," said Demetrius gleefully.
-
-"In the morning, that second one put a toad in his new uncle's pocket,
-and Emmy broke his specs. Then Meetie he dropped his watch. They used
-his razor to cut the lawn with. And then they took him down to the
-creek to go fishing, and they put the fish in Uncle's silk hat, and
-and----"
-
-"Stop!" implored Silvia, who was now in tears. "Uncle Issachar
-believes them mine! Ours! And that I brought them up! Oh, why did we
-ever go away?"
-
-"Oh, pshaw," exclaimed Huldah comfortingly, "he said you had brung
-them up fine; that they were no mollycoddles or Lizzie boys, and he
-didn't suppose you had so much sense as to leave them natural."
-
-"A left-handed one for mudder," laughed Beth.
-
-"He must be a very peculiar man--ready for the asylum, I should say,"
-commented Rob.
-
-"He would have been if he'd stayed any longer, or else I would have
-been," declared Huldah.
-
-"Couldn't you make them behave, someway?" asked Silvia.
-
-"Well, at first I tried to, and every time I pinched one of 'em when
-the old gent wasn't looking, or knocked 'em down when I got 'em alone,
-they would threaten to tell who they was, and then when I seen how
-your uncle liked the way they acted, I just let 'em go it, head on.
-And seeing as how they each brung you five thousand, I've treated 'em
-best I know how. They're worth it, now. They done one thing more that
-was awful. Could you stand it to hear?" turning to Silvia.
-
-"Please, Silvia," implored Rob.
-
-"Well," argued Silvia faintly. "I suppose we might as well know the
-worst."
-
-"You see the old gent didn't always get up to breakfast with the kids
-and one morning when I brought in the cakes Emmy looked up and
-grinned. I nearly dropped the plate. He had both sets of the old man's
-false teeth in his mouth. I got 'em back in his room without his
-waking, but I'd have liked a picture of Emmy."
-
-"Pythagoras," I demanded, when we had recovered from this recital,
-"why didn't you tell him who you were, and how you all came to be
-here with us?"
-
-"Because she is our mudder, and we are going to stay with her, always.
-We've got a snap. So has father and mother. And Ptolemy told us that
-if you ever got any kids, you'd get five thousand each for them, and I
-thought we'd just make that much for you. So we played Uncle Iz for
-it. Easy money, all right, all right."
-
-"Talk about fine financiering," quoth Rob. "'Them Three' will surely
-land on Wall Street."
-
-But poor Silvia had no heart for humor and was weeping silently.
-
-"Why, look here, my dear," I said in consolation, "this is a very
-simple matter to adjust. In the morning when you feel better, just
-write a full explanation of the affair and inclose your check for
-twenty-five thousand."
-
-Silvia quickly wiped away her tears.
-
-"I'll do it tonight, Lucien. I feel better now. I never thought of
-writing."
-
-Huldah and "Them Three" looked most lugubrious.
-
-"The old skinflint won't miss it as much as I would a penny," declared
-our faithful handmaiden. "And I'm sure you've earnt that twenty-five
-thousand if anyone ever did. You've had as much care and worry about
-them brats as you would if they'd been your own."
-
-"Huldah," I said severely, "there is a pretty stiff penalty for
-obtaining money under false pretences."
-
-"After all the pains we took to make things lively for him, so he
-wouldn't get bored and think he was having a poor time!" regretted
-Pythagoras.
-
-"And us watching every word we spoke so as not to give it away,"
-wailed Emerald.
-
-"Cake's all dough," muttered Demetrius.
-
-Ptolemy regarded the three disapprovingly. He had the old inscrutable
-look, the look that foreboded mischief, in his eyes.
-
-"You bungled, you fool kids!" he said in disgust, "and Huldah, what
-did you want to let on to mudder for that he thought we was hers? You
-ought to have torn up the note he left and just said he'd put
-twenty-five thousand in the bank for her."
-
-"Huh! you're just jealous because you weren't in the Uncle Izzy deal
-yourself," jeered Pythagoras. "You always think you're the only one
-that can do anything right."
-
-"I wish you had been here, Polly," said Huldah, "I am sure you could
-have worked it through somehow."
-
-"I wish I had stayed and put it across," he answered. "If you and the
-kids would only learn not to blab everything you know. It's the only
-way to work anything. Minute you tell a thing, it's all off."
-
-There was still a great deal of development work to be put on
-Ptolemy's moral standard.
-
-"You'll find, my lad," remonstrated Rob, "that honesty is the best
-policy."
-
-"I'd have been perfectly honest about it," he defended. "I would have
-told him the truth, and how our parents had deserted us, and how
-mudder took us in when we were homeless and was bringing us up like
-her own because she hadn't got any, and how stepdaddy wanted to turn
-us out, and she wouldn't let him, and then he would have decided
-against stepdaddy and given mudder the money so she could keep us."
-
-"Ptolemy," I said warningly, "there is a way of telling the truth, or
-rather of coloring white lies with enough truth to make them deceive,
-that is more dishonorable than an out and out lie."
-
-"Tell me, Ptolemy," asked Silvia, "how did you know about that offer
-of five thousand dollars for each child?"
-
-"I overheard it," he said guardedly; "but I can't remember where."
-
-"He heard me say so," confessed Huldah.
-
-"It was when he first come here and he was making us so much trouble,
-and I told him it was too bad we had to have other folks' brats around
-when, if we only had our own, they'd be bringing in something."
-
-The recital now broke up and Silvia sat down to write a long
-explanatory letter to Uncle Issachar. The next morning I procured her
-a check from the First National Bank and she filled it out.
-
-"Oh!" she said with indrawn breath, when she had asked me how to write
-twenty-five thousand dollars, "I never expected to be able to sign my
-name to a check for such an amount."
-
-"You never will again, I fear," was my sad prophecy.
-
-"It must feel rich," said Beth, "just to have a large check pass
-through your fingers."
-
-"Them Three" came the nearest to tears that they were able to do.
-
-"We worked so hard for it," they sighed.
-
-"So did I!" muttered Huldah.
-
-"I couldn't live a double life," declared Silvia.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-_In Which I Decide on Extreme Measures_
-
-
-Everyone in our house, which was now filled to overflowing--in fact,
-there were Polydores on sofas and in beds on the floor--save Silvia
-and myself, was on the alert for a response to the letter during the
-succeeding few days. Knowing Uncle Issachar, we felt sure he would
-make no response, or notice the matter in any way save to cash the
-check promptly.
-
-The monotony was somewhat relieved by the difficulties under which
-Beth and Rob were pursuing their courtship. On the third evening
-succeeding our return, Silvia and I started upstairs early to give
-them a chance to have the exclusive use of the library, the Polydores
-having all been sent to bed. As we were making some plausible excuse
-for going to our room, Beth remarked with a smile:
-
-"Your motive in retiring so early is commendable, but of no particular
-benefit to Rob and me. The Polydores, like the poor, we always have
-with us."
-
-"I saw that every one of them except Ptolemy was in bed at eight
-o'clock last night and the night before," said Silvia. "You don't mean
-to tell me--"
-
-"Yes, I do mean," laughed Beth. "Not Ptolemy, though. He has become
-too dignified to spy on us, but last night as we sat here on the
-settee, we heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from
-underneath."
-
-"How in the world did he ever squeeze under there?" I asked, gazing at
-the slight space between the floor and settee.
-
-[Illustration: "We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from
-underneath."]
-
-"He did look a little flattened, as if he had been put in a letter
-press," said Rob. "I gave him a dime to go to bed and stay there. Beth
-and I had just resumed our conversation when a still, small voice
-said: 'I'll go to bed for a dime, too.' I then hauled Demetrius from
-behind the davenport."
-
-"And the night before," said Beth, "when we were sitting on the porch,
-Pythagoras rolled off the roof, where he had been listening to us, and
-came down into the vines."
-
-"Now I'll stop that," I declared. "I'll tie them in their beds and
-lock the doors and windows."
-
-"No," refused Rob. "I'd like to try to circumvent them by their own
-weapons of wits. I have a little plan which I don't dare whisper to
-you lest their long-range ears get in their work. We are just about to
-start for a walk."
-
-"In this pouring rain!" protested Silvia.
-
-"We like the rain," he replied, "and we--are not going far."
-
-Pythagoras entered the room just then and looked astounded and
-disappointed when he saw Beth and Rob departing.
-
-"We are going out to a small party," Rob remarked to me, casually.
-
-It was after eleven when we heard them returning.
-
-"Do you suppose they have been walking all this time?" said Silvia in
-concern. "Beth wore no rubbers."
-
-The next day was Sunday and Huldah put into execution a plan for
-procuring one happy hour each week. This plan was the admission of the
-Polydores, _en masse_, to one of the Sunday schools. She chose the
-church most remote from home so they would be a long time going and
-coming, which she said would "help some."
-
-"Now," said Beth, as she watched them march away, "I can dare to tell
-you where we spent last evening. We were at the Polydore house next
-door. There is a little vine-screened porch on the other side of the
-house. Rob managed to open one of the windows and brought out a couple
-of chairs. It was as snug as could be."
-
-"I'll corral them every night," I said, "until you make your getaway,
-and I'll give you the key so you can go inside when it is cool or
-stormy."
-
-"We'll go around the block by way of precaution," said Rob.
-
-Presently Huldah returned from the Sunday school with triumphant
-mien.
-
-"They made them all into one class and put a redheaded woman with
-spectacles in for their teacher. I gave them street car tickets to
-come home on."
-
-When the Polydores returned, however, they were dragging Diogenes
-along and he looked quite weary.
-
-"Didn't you come home on the street car?" I asked Ptolemy.
-
-"No; we sold our tickets and got ice cream sodas," he explained. "We
-took turns carrying Diogenes on our backs."
-
-"You only had one ticket for yourself, and two half fares for Thag and
-Emmy," said Huldah suspiciously. "I thought Meetie and Di could ride
-free. You couldn't have sold them tickets for enough for sodies."
-
-"Rob gave us three nickels to put in the plate," said Pythagoras. "We
-only put in one of them, seeing we were all in one family and one
-class. That gave us four nickels for ice cream sodas and the clerk
-gave Di half a glass some one had left."
-
-"I gave you a penny for Di to put in," said Huldah. "What did you do
-with that?"
-
-"We wanted him to put it in, and when they took up the collection, he
-wouldn't give it," said Emerald. "I tried to take it away from him
-and he swallowed it. The redhead teacher was awful scared, but I told
-her he was used to swallowing things and that you said he carried a
-whole department store in his insides."
-
-"Poor little Di," said Silvia; "it's the only way he has of keeping
-things away from you all."
-
-That night I saw to it personally that each and every Polydore was in
-his little bed. It should have aroused my suspicions that none of them
-rebelled, or had evinced the slightest degree of interest or curiosity
-when Beth and Rob announced their intention of going out for the
-evening.
-
-At ten-thirty the lovers returned, bringing in Pythagoras, who was
-clad in his pajamas.
-
-"Where did you pick him up?" I asked in astonishment.
-
-"He picked us up," said Beth.
-
-"He was wise, maybe, in discovering where we were," said Rob, "but he
-fell down when he tried to work off the ghost screeches on us. We
-recognized them at once, and ran him down inside, so our party broke
-up."
-
-"Come here, Pythagoras," I commanded.
-
-He obeyed promptly and fearlessly.
-
-"How did you know they were there, and when did you go over there?"
-
-"I was playing over in our house today," he replied, "and I found one
-of Beth's hairpins with the little stones in, in the big chair, so I
-knew that was where they hid last night. As soon as you went down
-stairs tonight, I got out the window and slid down the roof and came
-over to scare them."
-
-"You've missed a lot of sleep the last few nights," I said quietly,
-"so you will have to make it up. You can stay in bed all day
-tomorrow."
-
-"Hold on, Lucien!" exclaimed Rob. "Tomorrow's the big baseball game of
-the season, and I promised to take them all."
-
-"So much the better," I said. "He will learn to mind."
-
-Pythagoras looked as if he had been struck, and quickly put his arms
-across his eyes. In a moment his shoulders were heaving. At last I had
-found a vulnerable spot in the stoic, and I began to relent.
-
-"See here, Pythagoras," I said, "if I let you up in time to go to the
-game, will you promise me something?"
-
-"Anything," came in a muffled voice.
-
-"Will you promise not to spy on Beth and Rob and keep Emerald and
-Demetrius from doing it?"
-
-"Yes," he promised quickly, his arm coming down and his face
-brightening. "Sure I will, but I did want to hear what they said."
-
-"Why?" asked Rob interestedly.
-
-"We're getting up a show, and Em is going to take the part of a girl
-and he spoons with Tolly, and we didn't know what to have them say to
-each other."
-
-"I'll rehearse you on the play, and prompt you," said Beth with a
-little giggle.
-
-"Come on upstairs with me now," I said to Pythagoras.
-
-When I landed him at his door, he leaned up against me, and rubbed his
-cheek against my arm.
-
-"Thank you for letting me go to the game," he said.
-
-I found myself responding to his affectionate advance. This would
-clearly never do. I couldn't let another Polydore squeeze himself into
-my regard.
-
-"Silvia," I said abruptly, as I came into our room, "we must really
-make some immediate plan for disposing of the Polydores, or, at
-least, of 'Them Three.'"
-
-"Huldah is managing them tolerably well," demurred Silvia. "Since they
-depreciated in market value from five thousand per to nothing, she has
-resumed her former harsh treatment of them."
-
-"Well, we are not going to keep them," I replied with finality. "We
-are under no obligations to do so. I am going to put them in a school
-for boys and use the blank check Felix Polydore left to pay for their
-tuition."
-
-"I suppose that is what we will have to do," she admitted with a
-little sigh. "Yet, Lucien, it doesn't seem quite right. If they are in
-a boys' school, they will keep on right along the same lines. They
-need home influence and contact with women. Demetrius is fond of music
-and will sit still and listen when I play. Emerald obeyed me today the
-first time I spoke, and I even thought I saw a glimmer of good in
-Pythagoras."
-
-I didn't tell her that this glimmer was what had decided me to dispose
-of him.
-
-"It would, doubtless, be better for them to stay," I admitted, "but I
-am not going to be a martyr to the cause. They are going."
-
-The next morning I wrote for catalogues and prospectus to the
-different schools, and I felt as if three old men of the sea had been
-lifted from my shoulders.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-_Which Has to Do with Some Letters_
-
-
-One morning when I came down to my office, I found a letter postmarked
-from the city in which Uncle Issachar lived addressed to me. I opened
-it and found inclosed, with seal unbroken, the letter Silvia had
-mailed to her uncle and which she had marked "personal." There was a
-note addressed to me accompanying it:
-
- "Dear Sir:
-
- "I am returning herewith your personal letter to Mr. Innes, as he
- has gone to South America and left no forwarding address. Should
- such be received from him at any future date, you will be duly
- notified thereof.
-
- "Very truly yours,
- "Chester K. Winslow,
- "Secretary."
-
-I read the above to Silvia at luncheon. She was grievously disappointed
-because her uncle had not received her letter of explanation.
-
-"It is most fortunate," she said, "that I sent it in one of your
-office envelopes."
-
-As usual, she had found the bright spot she always looked for and
-generally discovered.
-
-"I wouldn't care," she said, "to have Uncle Issachar's private
-secretary or the dead-letter office know all our private affairs, but
-I shall feel like an impostor until Uncle Issachar is undeceived."
-
-"I feel a hunch," said Rob, "that Uncle Issachar will run across
-Doctor Felix and his wife down there in Chili and find you out."
-
-"He may run across the Polydores," I replied, "but he'll never find
-out from them that they are the parents of Silvia's children. They
-would not mention a subject in which they have so little interest."
-
-"But," argued Beth, "naturally they'd tell him where they lived, and
-then, of course, he'd say he had a niece living in the same town. They
-would inquire her name and inform him that they were her near
-neighbors, and then he'd tell them what fine sons you have, and then,
-of course, the Polydores would claim their own."
-
-"Which theory goes to show," said Silvia, "how little you know Uncle
-Issachar and the Polydore seniors. He would not think of speaking to
-strangers, and if he did, he wouldn't say any of those usual
-conversational things you mentioned. The Polydores wouldn't be
-interested, in the least, in knowing he had a niece unless she
-happened to know something about antiques, and if he should describe
-her children, she wouldn't recognize them."
-
-After luncheon I went out on the porch. While I sat there, the mail
-carrier came along and handed me a letter--a returned letter. It was
-directed in Ptolemy's round hand to Mr. Issachar Innes. He had
-evidently used the envelope to Silvia's letter to her uncle as his
-model, for the address was written in the same way. "Personal" was
-added in the left-hand corner, and his name and our house number was
-in the upper left-hand corner.
-
-I went into the library where my wife, Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy were
-sitting.
-
-"Ptolemy," I said, handing him the letter, "here is your communication
-to Uncle Issachar, returned."
-
-He lost some of his usual _sang froid_ and appeared quite disconcerted.
-
-"Why, Ptolemy," exclaimed Silvia in consternation, "what in the world
-did you write to Uncle Issachar about?"
-
-Ptolemy had recovered and was quite himself again.
-
-"About us," he said innocently. "As the oldest of our family, I
-thought I ought to do a little explaining."
-
-"And I think," I said, looking at him keenly, "that we have the right
-to know what your explanation was."
-
-Ptolemy handed me over the letter.
-
-"Read it aloud," he said, with the air of one who is proud of his
-productions.
-
-Rob's eyes shone in anticipation.
-
-I broke the seal. A note from the secretary fell out. It was an
-apology for not returning the letter sooner, but it had been
-inadvertently mislaid. I then read aloud the letter Ptolemy had
-written:
-
- "Dear Uncle Issachar
-
- "I am sorry Diogenes and I were away when you were here. You
- thought the others were fine, but you should have seen--Diogenes.
- I hope you will send mudder back her check, because there is lots
- of things she needs, and it takes a lot of money to take care of
- all us. You see our own father and mother don't want to be
- bothered with us and they went away and left us, and so we are
- living with mudder the same as if we were really her adopted
- children, and if her own would have been worth five thousand per
- to you, I think her adopted children ought to be worth half as
- much anyway, so it would only be fair to send her a check for
- $12,500 anyway, and if you are a good sport like the kids said you
- were, you'll send back her check.
-
- "Yours truly,
- "P. Issachar Polydore Wade."
-
-Rob's laughter was so free and spontaneous that I had to join in
-against my will. Ptolemy, who had seemed a little apprehensive of the
-verdict, looked accordingly relieved.
-
-"That's a fine letter, young man," approved Rob. "Stepdaddy ought to
-take you into his law firm."
-
-"No," declared Beth. "I think Ptolemy has inherited his mother's gift.
-He should be a writer."
-
-"Not on your life!" cried Ptolemy with feeling. "I want to live
-things instead of writing about them."
-
-A tear or two came into Silvia's eyes.
-
-"It was very sweet in you, Ptolemy, to try to get the money for
-mudder."
-
-I felt that all this commendation was bad for Ptolemy, and that it was
-up to me to take a reef in his sails.
-
-"It was a well-meant letter, Ptolemy," I said, "and I know that your
-motive was unselfish, but it is very poor policy to meddle in other
-people's affairs. Meddlers are mischief makers in spite of their good
-intentions. I am very glad it did not fall into Uncle Issachar's
-hands."
-
-Ptolemy looked sufficiently squelched.
-
-"By the way, Silvia," I said. "I wrote Mr. Winslow and told him not to
-forget to forward Uncle Issachar's address as soon as he possibly
-could do so, as I had matters of importance to communicate to him."
-
-"He may travel about like father and mother," said Ptolemy, again
-regaining confidence, "so why don't you put that check for twenty-five
-thousand in the Savings Department and get the interest on it
-anyway?"
-
-"I think, Ptolemy," said Rob, "that you are too good a financier,
-after all, to become a lawyer. I will go back to my first conviction
-that you should be a promoter."
-
-"We'll give him to Uncle Issachar," I proposed, "for a partner."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-_"The Money We Earnt for You"_
-
-
-Life went on uneventfully save for the dire doings of "Them Three."
-Knowing that they were to be sent to school, they were having their
-last fling at life untrammeled. September came, and Rob set the day
-for his departure, as he was going home to arrange his affairs, so he
-and Beth could leave for an extended honeymoon trip. I planned to go
-with Rob and install the Polydore three in their distant school. They
-were so despondent at leaving, as the time drew near, that a feeling
-of gloom hung over the household, all the members of which, even to
-Huldah, urged me to relent. But I remained adamant until the evening
-before the day set for the dissolution of the Polydore family, when
-something happened that changed all our plans.
-
-We were assembled in the library in a state of forced cheerfulness
-when the doorbell rang. I answered it, and receipted for a telegram
-which I opened and read in the hall. It was from Chester K. Winslow.
-
-"Silvia," I said gravely, as I returned to the library, "your Uncle
-Issachar is dead. Died in South America. Heart disease. Very sudden."
-
-Conflicting emotions were depicted in Silvia's expression.
-
-The thought uppermost in all our minds was expressed simultaneously by
-"Them Three."
-
-"Gee! Then you can keep the money we earnt for you."
-
-"You know," interpolated Rob in soft-pedaled tone, "they are going to
-train school children toward the military--teach the young ideas how
-to shoot, as it were. It won't be long before they are ordered to
-Mexico to protect us."
-
-"If Them Three ever meets that there Viller man," commented Huldah
-confidently, "the fur will fly some."
-
-"Lucien," said Silvia thoughtfully, "we are under obligations to these
-children, you see, after all."
-
-"Yes," I acknowledged with a sigh, "seeing they are now ours, bought
-and paid for, I suppose we'll have to treat them as such."
-
-"You wouldn't send your own kids away to school," said Pythagoras
-significantly.
-
-"No," I reluctantly allowed, answering the protest of Pythagoras, "and
-we won't send you. You will all go to the public school tomorrow."
-
-The deafening Polydore powwow that followed made me hope that Uncle
-Issachar had met with his just deserts.
-
-
-
-
-"By the author of Mildew Manse."
-
-AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY
-
-By BELLE K. MANIATES
-
-Illustrated. 12mo. $1.00 net.
-
-A book for the many who are weary of problem novels. How prosperity came
-to the Jenkins family, how Amarilly got an education, how the Boarder
-married Lily Rose and built the Annex, and the adventures of the rector's
-surplice, are told in a wholesome little story, between whose covers await
-many laughs, and a tear or two as well.
-
-Amarilly is blessed with a large family and amiable neighbors, and their
-doings are amusing, but her fancies and devices are captivating.... The
-little heroine is all right.--_New York Sun._
-
-The sort of story which pulls at the heartstrings of all readers who like
-a real and genuine character.... No one can afford to miss the sweet humor
-and helpful cheeriness which the author serves in generous
-measure.--_Boston Globe_.
-
-"Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley" is a dear companion for vacation days
-and comes deservedly under the books of real amusement.... Dear Amarilly!
-she brightens every hour spent with her.--_Buffalo News_.
-
-LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Publishers
-
-34 Beacon Street, Boston
-
-
-
-
-
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-Project Gutenberg's Our Next-Door Neighbors, by Belle Kanaris Maniates
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
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-Title: Our Next-Door Neighbors
-
-Author: Belle Kanaris Maniates
-
-Illustrator: Tony Sarg
-
-Release Date: September 24, 2009 [EBook #30075]
-
-Language: English
-
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS ***
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-
-
-<h1>OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS</h1>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:10px;'>By Belle K. Maniates</p>
-<table summary=''><tr><td>
-<p class='cg'>AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY<br />
-MILDEW MANCE<br />
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS</p>
-</td></tr></table>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-000.jpg' alt='' title='' width='338' height='453' /><br />
-<p class='caption'>
-&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your rush?&rdquo; I asked, when I had overtaken him.<br />
-<span class='smcap'>Frontispiece.</span> <i>See page 114.</i><br />
-</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:2.2em;margin-top:40px;margin-bottom:20px;'>Our Next-Door<br />Neighbors</p>
-<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:10px;'>By</p>
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:20px;'>Belle Kanaris Maniates</p>
-<p class='tp' >With illustrations by</p>
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:larger;'>Tony Sarg</p>
-<div style='margin:25px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-001.jpg' />
-</div>
-<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:40px;font-size:1.3em;'>Boston<br />
-Little, Brown, and Company<br />
-1917</p>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<p class='tp' ><i>Copyright, 1917</i>,</p>
-<p class='tp' ><span class='smcap'>By Little, Brown, and Company.</span></p>
-<hr class='p10' />
-<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:20px;'><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
-<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:60px;'>Published February, 1917</p>
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.8em;margin-bottom:40px;'>Norwood Press<br />
-Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.<br />
-Presswork by The Colonial Press, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.</p>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-002.jpg' />
-</div>
-<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>I</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>About Silvia and Myself</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_I__ABOUT_SILVIA_AND_MYSELF'>1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>II</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Introducing Our Next-door Neighbors</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_II__INTRODUCING_OUR_NEXTDOOR_NEIGHBORS'>9</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>III</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Are Pestered by Polydores</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_III__IN_WHICH_WE_ARE_PESTERED_BY_POLYDORES'>28</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IV</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Take Boarders</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IV__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_BOARDERS'>45</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>V</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Take a Vacation</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_V__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_A_VACATION'>62</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VI</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Flirt and a Woman-Hater</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VI__A_FLIRT_AND_A_WOMANHATER'>78</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which Nothing Much Happens</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VII__IN_WHICH_NOTHING_MUCH_HAPPENS'>91</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VIII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Ptolemy Disappears and I Visit a Haunted House</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VIII__PTOLEMY_DISAPPEARS_AND_I_VISIT_A_HAUNTED_HOUSE'>100</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IX</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We See Ghosts</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IX__IN_WHICH_WE_SEE_GHOSTS'>124</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>X</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which We Make Some Discoveries</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_X_IN_WHICH_WE_MAKE_SOME_DISCOVERIES'>139</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XI</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Bad Means to a Good End</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XI__A_BAD_MEANS_TO_A_GOOD_END'>153</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>Too Much Polydores</span>&rdquo;</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XII__TOO_MUCH_POLYDORES'>165</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Rob&rsquo;s Friend the Reporter</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIII__ROBS_FRIEND_THE_REPORTER'>174</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIV</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Midnight Excursion</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIV__A_MIDNIGHT_EXCURSION'>196</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XV</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>What Miss Frayne Found Out</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XV__WHAT_MISS_FRAYNE_FOUND_OUT'>204</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVI</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Ptolemy&rsquo;s Tale</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVI__PTOLEMYS_TALE'>214</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>All About Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s Visit</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVII__ALL_ABOUT_UNCLE_ISSACHARS_VISIT'>230</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVIII</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In Which I Decide on Extreme Measures</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVIII__IN_WHICH_I_DECIDE_ON_EXTREME_MEASURES'>255</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIX</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Which Has to Do with Some Letters</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIX_WHICH_HAS_TO_DO_WITH_SOME_LETTERS'>268</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XX</td>
- <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>&ldquo;The Money We Earnt for You&rdquo;</span></td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XX_THE_MONEY_WE_EARNT_FOR_YOU'>277</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-003.jpg' />
-</div>
-<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Illustrations' style='margin:1em auto;'>
-<col style='width:75%;' />
-<col style='width:25%;' />
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your rush?&rdquo; I asked, when I had overtaken him.</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_1'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>Uncle Issachar</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_2'>10</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>Dr. Felix Polydore</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_3'>23</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;Lucien Wade!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Here are our letters to Beth and Rob.&rdquo;</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_12'>81</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us.</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_17'>103</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull together and beat it to the lake</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_20'>127</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>The landlady intears waylaid me</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_21'>133</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>I had to carry Diogenes most of the way</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_28'>169</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia&rsquo;s plaintive protests outside the door</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_31'>193</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an injured air</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_38'>225</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;He went to the front window and dropped a young kitten down on the old gent&rsquo;s head.&rdquo;</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_41'>243</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from underneath.&rdquo;</td>
- <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_44'>257</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_1' name='page_1'></a>1</span></div>
-<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1.5em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:1.4em;'>OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOURS</p>
-<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-004.jpg' />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_I__ABOUT_SILVIA_AND_MYSELF' id='CHAPTER_I__ABOUT_SILVIA_AND_MYSELF'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter I</span></h2>
-<h3><i>About Silvia and Myself</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Some people have children born unto
-them, some acquire children and
-others have children thrust upon
-them. Silvia and I are of the last named
-class. We have no offspring of our own,
-but yesterday, today, and forever we have
-those of our neighbor.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_2' name='page_2'></a>2</span></div>
-<p>We were born and bred in the same little
-home-grown city and as a small boy, even,
-I was Silvia&rsquo;s worshiper, but perforce a
-worshiper from afar.</p>
-<p>Her upcoming had been supervised by a
-grimalkin governess who drew around the
-form of her young charge the awful circle
-of exclusiveness, intercourse with child-kind
-being strictly prohibited.</p>
-<p>Children are naturally gregarious little
-creatures, however, and Silvia on rare
-occasions managed to break parole and
-make adroit escape from surveillance.
-Then she would speed to the top of the
-boundary wall that separated the stable
-precincts from an alluring alley which
-was the playground of the plebeian progeny
-of the humble born.</p>
-<p>To the circle of dirty but fascinating
-ragamuffins she became an interested tangent,
-a silent observer. Here I had my
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3' name='page_3'></a>3</span>
-first meeting with her. I was not of her
-class, neither was I to the alley born, but
-sailed in the sane mid-channel that ameliorates
-the distinction between high and
-low life.</p>
-<p>On this eventful day I was taking a
-short cut on my way to school. One of
-the group of alleyites, with the inherent
-friendliness of the unchartered but big-hearted
-members of the silt of the stream
-of humans, had proffered to little Silvia
-a chip on which was a patch of mud designed
-to become a fruitcake stuffed with
-pebbles in lieu of raisins and frosted with
-moistened ashes. Before the enticing
-pastime of transformation was begun,
-however, Silvia was swiftly snatched from
-the contaminating midst and borne away
-over the ramparts.</p>
-<p>Thereafter I haunted the alley, hoping
-for another glimpse of the little picture
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4' name='page_4'></a>4</span>
-girl on the wall. At last I attained my
-desire. One Saturday afternoon I saw her
-coming, alone, down a long rosebush bordered
-path. A thrill ran through me.
-Our eyes met. Yet all I found to say
-was: &ldquo;C&rsquo;mon over.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She responded to this invitation and I
-helped her over the wall. She looked
-longingly at the Irish playing in the mud,
-but a clean sandpile in my own backyard
-not far away seemed to me a more fitting
-environment for one so daintily clad.</p>
-<p>We played undisturbed for a never-to-be-forgotten
-half hour and then they found
-her out. Reprimanding voices jangled and
-the whole world was out of tune.</p>
-<p>Thereafter a strict watch was kept on
-little Silvia&rsquo;s movements and I saw her
-only at rare intervals, when she was
-going into church or as she rode past our
-house. She always remembered me and
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5' name='page_5'></a>5</span>
-on such meetings a faint, reminiscent smile
-lighted the somber little face and her
-eyes met mine as if in a mysterious promise.</p>
-<p>She grew up an outlawed, isolated child
-deprived of her birthright, but in spite of
-the handicaps of so barren a childhood,
-she achieved young womanhood unspoiled
-and in possession of her early democratic
-tendencies.</p>
-<p>When I was making a modest start
-in a legal way, her parents died and left
-her with that most unprofitable of legacies,
-an encumbered estate. Then I dared
-to renew our acquaintance begun on the
-sandpile. She went to live with a poor
-but practical relation and was initiated
-into the science of stretching an inadequate
-income to meet everyday needs.
-In time I wooed and won her.</p>
-<p>We set up housekeeping in a small,
-thriving mid-Western city where I secured
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6' name='page_6'></a>6</span>
-a partnership in a legal firm. Silvia
-had all the requisites of mind and manner
-and Domestic Science necessary to a
-&ldquo;hearth-and home-&rdquo; maker.</p>
-<p>We lived in a house which was one of
-many made to the same measure with
-the inevitable street porch, big window,
-trimmed lawn in front and garden in
-the rear. We had attained the standard of
-prosperity maintained in our home town
-by keeping &ldquo;hired help&rdquo; and installing
-a telephone, so our social status was
-fixed.</p>
-<p>There was but one adjunct missing to
-our little Arcadia. While at a word or
-look children flocked to me like friendly
-puppies in response to a call, to Silvia
-they were still an unknown quantity.</p>
-<p>I had hoped that her understanding
-and love for children might be developed
-in the usual and natural way, but we had
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7' name='page_7'></a>7</span>
-now been married ten years and this hope
-had not been realized.</p>
-<p>She had tried most assiduously to cultivate
-an acquaintance with members of
-child-world, but into that kingdom there
-is no open sesame. The sure keen intuition
-of a child recognizes on sight a kindred
-spirit and Silvia&rsquo;s forced advances
-met with but indifferent response. She
-wistfully proposed to me one day that we
-adopt a child. My doubts as to the
-advisability of such a course were confirmed
-by Huldah, our strong staff in
-household help. In our section of the
-country servants were generally quite conversant
-with the intimate and personal
-affairs of the home.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you never do it, Mr. Wade,&rdquo; she
-counseled. &ldquo;Ready-mades ain&rsquo;t for the
-likes of her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When, in acting on this advice, I vetoed
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8' name='page_8'></a>8</span>
-Silvia&rsquo;s lukewarm proposition, I was convinced
-of Huldah&rsquo;s wisdom by seeing the
-look of relief that flashed into my wife&rsquo;s
-troubled countenance, and I knew that
-her suggestion had been but a perfunctory
-prompting of duty.</p>
-<p>Time alone could overcome the effects of
-her early environment!</p>
-<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-005.jpg' />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9' name='page_9'></a>9</span></div>
-<div style='margin:10px auto; text-align:center;'>
-<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-006.jpg' />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_II__INTRODUCING_OUR_NEXTDOOR_NEIGHBORS' id='CHAPTER_II__INTRODUCING_OUR_NEXTDOOR_NEIGHBORS'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter II</span></h2>
-<h3><i>Introducing Our Next-door Neighbors</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>One morning Silvia and I lingered
-over our coffee cups discussing our
-plans for the coming summer, which
-included visits from my sister Beth and my
-college chum, Rob Rossiter. We wished
-to avoid having their arrivals occur
-simultaneously, however, because Rob was
-a woman-hater, or thought he was. We
-decided to have Beth pay her visit first
-and later take Rob with us on our vacation
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10' name='page_10'></a>10</span>
-trip to some place where the fishing facilities
-would be to our liking. However,
-summer vacation time like our plans was
-yet far, vague and dim.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-007.jpg' alt='' title='' width='210' height='278' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>While I was putting on my overcoat,
-Silvia had gone to the window and was
-looking pensively at the vacant house next
-to ours.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I fear,&rdquo; she said abruptly and irrelevantly,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span>
-&ldquo;that we are destined to receive
-no part of Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s fortune.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Uncle Issachar was a wealthy but eccentric
-relative of my wife. He had made us
-no wedding gift beyond his best wishes,
-but he had then informed us that at the
-birth of each of our prospective sons he
-should place in the bank to Silvia&rsquo;s account
-the sum of five thousand dollars. We had
-never invited him to visit us or made any
-overtures in the way of communication with
-him, lest he should think we were cultivating
-his acquaintance from mercenary motives.</p>
-<p>While I was debating whether the
-lament in Silvia&rsquo;s tone was for the loss of
-the money or the lack of children, she
-again spoke; this time in a tone which
-had lost its languor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There is a big moving van in front of
-the house next door. At last we will
-have some near neighbors.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Are they unloading furniture?&rdquo; I
-asked inanely, crossing to the window.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; course not,&rdquo; came cheerfully from
-Huldah, who had come in to remove the
-dishes. &ldquo;Most likely they are unloading
-lions and tigers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As I have already intimated, Huldah
-was a privileged servant.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They are unloading children!&rdquo; explained
-Silvia, in a tone implying that
-Huldah&rsquo;s sarcastic implication would be
-infinitely more preferable. &ldquo;The van
-seems to be overflowing with them&ndash;&ndash;a
-perfect crowd. Do you suppose the house
-is to be used as an orphan asylum?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; I assured her as I counted
-the flock. Five children would seem like
-a crowd to Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Boys!&rdquo; exclaimed Huldah tragically,
-as she joined us for a survey. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see that
-they don&rsquo;t keep the grass off our lawn.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span></div>
-<p>Late that afternoon I opened the outer
-door of the dining-room in response to the
-rap of strenuously applied knuckles.</p>
-<p>A lad of about eleven years with the
-sardonic face of a satyr and diabolically
-bright eyes peered into the room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re going to have soup for dinner,&rdquo;
-he announced, &ldquo;and mother wants to borrow
-a soup plate for father to eat his out of.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia stared at him aghast. She seemed
-to feel something compelling in the boy&rsquo;s
-personnel, however, and she went to the
-china closet and brought forth a soup plate
-which she handed to him without comment.</p>
-<p>In silence we watched him run across
-the lawn, twirling the plate deftly above
-his head in juggler fashion.</p>
-<p>The next day when we sat down to
-dinner our new young neighbor again
-appeared on our threshold.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Halloa!&rdquo; he called chummily. &ldquo;We
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span>
-are going to have soup again and we want
-a soup plate for father.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where is the one I loaned you yesterday?&rdquo;
-demanded Silvia in a tone far
-below thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit, while
-her features assumed a frigidity that would
-have congealed father&rsquo;s favorite sustenance
-had it been in her vicinity.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, we broke that!&rdquo; he casually and
-cheerfully explained.</p>
-<p>With much reluctance Silvia bestowed
-another plate upon the young applicant.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; I said as he started to leave,
-&ldquo;don&rsquo;t you want the soup tureen, too, or
-the ladle and some soup spoons?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, thank you,&rdquo; he answered politely.
-&ldquo;None of the rest of us like soup, so we
-dish father&rsquo;s up in the kitchen. He
-doesn&rsquo;t like soup particularly, but he eats
-it because it goes down quick and lets him
-have more time for work.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span></div>
-<p>This time as he sped homeward, he
-didn&rsquo;t spin the plate in air, but tried
-out a new plan of balancing it on a
-stick.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; I suggested gently, when our
-young neighbor was lost to our sorrowful
-sight, &ldquo;that it might be well to invest in
-another dozen or so of soup plates. I will
-see about getting them at wholesale rates.
-Our supply will soon give out if our new
-neighbors continue to cultivate the soup
-and borrowing habit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will buy some at the five cent store,&rdquo;
-replied Silvia. &ldquo;I think I had better call
-upon them tomorrow and see what manner
-of people they can be.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When I came home the next day it was
-quite evident that she had called.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I inquired, &ldquo;what do they keep&ndash;&ndash;a
-soup house?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They are literary people, the highest of
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span>
-high-brows. Their name is Polydore, and
-the head of the house&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. or Mrs.?&rdquo; I interrupted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The head of the house,&rdquo; pursued Silvia,
-ignoring my question, &ldquo;is a collector.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So I inferred. Has he a large collection
-of soup plates?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She collects antiquities and writes their
-history. He pursues science.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They were seemingly communicative.
-What did they look like?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t see them. After I rang I heard
-a woman&rsquo;s voice bidding some one not to
-answer the bell. She said she couldn&rsquo;t be
-bothered with interruptions, so I went on
-up the street to call on Mrs. Fleming, who
-told me all about them. She was also refused
-admittance when she called. On my way
-home I met that boy&ndash;&ndash;that awful boy&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She paused, evidently overcome by the
-consideration of his awfulness.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;He had been digging bait&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Again she paused as if words were inadequate
-for her climax.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I encouraged.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He was carrying his bait&ndash;&ndash;horrid,
-wriggling angleworms&ndash;&ndash;in our soup
-plate!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then it is not broken yet!&rdquo; I exclaimed
-joyfully. &ldquo;Let us hope it is given
-an antiseptic bath before father&rsquo;s next
-indulgence in consomm&eacute;. After dinner I
-will go over and try my luck at paying my
-respects to the soup savant.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They won&rsquo;t let you in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In that case I shall follow their lead of
-setting aside all ceremony and formality
-and admit myself, as their heir apparent
-does here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After dinner and my twilight smoke, I
-went next door, first asking Silvia if there
-was anything we needed that I could
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
-borrow, just to show them there were no
-hard feelings.</p>
-<p>My third vigorous ring brought results.
-A slipshod servant appeared and
-reluctantly seated me in the hall. She
-read with seeming interest the card I
-handed to her and then, pushing aside
-some mangy looking porti&egrave;res, vanished
-from view.</p>
-<p>She evidently delivered my card, for I
-heard a woman&rsquo;s voice read my name,
-&ldquo;Mr. Lucien Wade.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After another short interval the slovenly
-servant returned and offered me my
-card.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She seen it,&rdquo; she assured me in answer
-to my look of surprise.</p>
-<p>She again put the porti&egrave;res between us
-and I was obliged to own myself baffled
-in my efforts to break in. I was showing
-myself out when my onward course was
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span>
-deflected by a troop of noisy children
-leaded by the soup plate skirmisher, who
-was the oldest and apparently the leader
-of the brood.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, halloa!&rdquo; he greeted me with the
-air of an old acquaintance, &ldquo;didn&rsquo;t you
-see the folks?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On my informing him that I had seen
-no one but the servant, he exclaimed:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, that chicken wouldn&rsquo;t know
-enough to ask you in! Just follow us.
-Mother wouldn&rsquo;t remember to come out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I was loth to force my presence on
-mother, but by this time my hospitable
-young friend had pulled the porti&egrave;res so
-strenuously that they parted from the pole,
-and I was presented willy nilly to the
-collector of antiquities, who had the
-angular sharp-cut face and form of a
-rocking horse. She was seated at a table
-strewn with books and papers, writing at
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span>
-a rate of speed that convinced me she was
-in the throes of an inspiration. I forebore
-to interrupt. My scruples, however, were
-not shared by her eldest son. He gave
-her elbow a jog of reminder which sent her
-pencil to the floor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mother!&rdquo; he shouted in megaphone
-voice, &ldquo;here&rsquo;s the man next door&ndash;&ndash;the
-one we get our soup plates from.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She looked up abstractedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she said in dismayed tone, &ldquo;I
-thought you had gone. I am very much
-engaged in writing a paper on modern
-antiquities.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I murmured some sort of an apology for
-my untimely interruption.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am so absorbed in my great work,&rdquo;
-she explained, &ldquo;that I am oblivious to all
-else. I have the rare and great gift of
-concentration in a marked degree.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I was quite sure of this fact. She took
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
-another pencil from a supply box and
-resumed her literary occupation. As my
-presence seemed of so little moment, I
-lingered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; shouted one of the boys,
-snatching the pencil from her grasp, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
-hungry. I didn&rsquo;t have any supper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, you did!&rdquo; she asserted. &ldquo;I saw
-Gladys give you a bowl of bread and
-milk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Emerald took it away from me and
-drank it up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t neither!&rdquo; denied a shaggy looking
-boy. &ldquo;I spilled it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He accompanied this denial by a fierce
-punch in his accuser&rsquo;s ribs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here!&rdquo; said the author of Modern
-Antiquities, taking a nickel from her
-pocket, &ldquo;go get yourself some popcorn,
-Demetrius.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t Demetrius! I&rsquo;m Pythagoras.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;It makes no difference. Go and get it
-and don&rsquo;t speak to me again tonight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The boy had already snatched the coin,
-and he now started for the exit, but his
-outgoing way was instantly blocked by a
-promiscuous pack of pugilistic Polydores,
-and an ardent and general onslaught
-followed.</p>
-<p>I endeavored to untangle the arms and
-legs of the attackers and the attacked in
-a desire to rescue the youngest, a child
-of two, but I soon beat a retreat, having
-no mind to become a punching bag for
-Polydores.</p>
-<p>The concentrator at the writing table,
-looking up vaguely, perceived the general
-joust.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How provoking!&rdquo; she exclaimed indignantly.
-&ldquo;I was in search of an antonym
-and now they&rsquo;ve driven it out of my
-memory.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span></div>
-<p>I politely offered my sympathy for her loss.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you ever see such misbehaved
-children?&rdquo; she asked casually and impersonally
-as she calmly surveyed the
-free-for-all fight.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-008.jpg' alt='' title='' width='157' height='293' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Children always misbehave before company,&rdquo;
-I remarked propitiatingly. &ldquo;Of
-course they know better.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why no, they don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; she declared,
-looking at me in surprise, &ldquo;they&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At this instant the errant antonym
-evidently flashed upon her mental vision
-and her pencil hastened to record it and
-then flew on at lightning speed.</p>
-<p>I was about to try to make an escape
-when a momentary cessation of hostilities
-was caused by the entrance of a moth-eaten,
-abstracted-looking man. As the
-<i>two-year-old</i> hailed him as &ldquo;fadder&rdquo;, I
-gathered that he was the person responsible
-for the family now fighting at his feet.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the trouble?&rdquo; he asked helplessly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She gave Thag a nickel,&rdquo; explained the
-eldest boy, &ldquo;and we want it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The man drew a sigh of relief. The
-solution of this family problem was instantly
-and satisfactorily met by an impartial
-distribution of nickels.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span></div>
-<p>With demoniac whoops of delight, the
-contestants fled from the room.</p>
-<p>I introduced myself to the man of the
-house, who seemed to realize that some
-sort of compulsory conventionalities must
-be observed. He looked hopelessly at his
-wife, and seeing that she was beyond response
-to an S O S call to things mundane,
-he frankly but impressively informed me
-that I must expect nothing of them socially
-as their lives were devoted to research
-and study. The children, however,
-he assured me, could run over frequently
-to see us.</p>
-<p>I instinctively felt that my call was considered
-ended, so I took my departure. I
-related the details of my neighborly visit
-to Silvia, but her sense of humor was not
-stirred. It was entirely dominated by her
-dread of the young Polydores.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How many children are there?&rdquo; she
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span>
-asked faintly. &ldquo;More than the five you
-said you counted that first day?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They seemed not so many as much.
-That is, though I suppose in round
-numbers there are but five, yet each of
-those five is equal to at least three ordinary
-children.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are they all boys? Huldah says the
-youngest wears dresses.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nevertheless he is a boy. They are all
-unmistakably boys. I think they must
-have been born with boots on and,&rdquo; conscious
-of the imprints of my shins, &ldquo;hobnail
-boots at that. Even the youngest, a
-two-year old, seems to have been graduated
-from Home Rule.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t bear to think of their going to
-bed hungry,&rdquo; she said wistfully. &ldquo;Think
-of that unnatural mother expecting them
-to satisfy their hunger by popcorn.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They didn&rsquo;t though,&rdquo; I assured her.
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span>
-&ldquo;I saw them stop a street vender below
-here and invest their nickels in hot
-dogs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hot dogs!&rdquo; repeated Silvia in horror.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wienerwursts,&rdquo; I hastened to interpret.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_4' id='linki_4'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-009.jpg' alt='' title='' width='323' height='257' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_5' id='linki_5'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-010.jpg' alt='' title='' width='344' height='116' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_III__IN_WHICH_WE_ARE_PESTERED_BY_POLYDORES' id='CHAPTER_III__IN_WHICH_WE_ARE_PESTERED_BY_POLYDORES'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter III</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which We Are Pestered by Polydores</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Our life now became one long round
-of Polydores. They were with us
-burr-tight, and attached themselves
-to me with dog-like devotion, remaining
-utterly impervious to Silvia&rsquo;s aloofness
-and repulses. At last, however, she succumbed
-to their presence as one of the
-things inevitable.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Polydores are here to stay,&rdquo; she
-acknowledged in a calmness-of-despair voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They don&rsquo;t seem to be homebodies,&rdquo;
-I allowed.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span></div>
-<p>The children were not literary like the
-other productions of their profound
-parents, but were a band of robust, active
-youngsters unburdened with brains, excepting
-Ptolemy of soup plate fame. Not
-that he betrayed any tendencies toward a
-learned line, but he was possessed of an
-occult, uncanny, wizard-like wisdom that
-was disconcerting. His contemplative eyes
-seemed to search my soul and read my inmost
-thoughts.</p>
-<p>Pythagoras, Emerald, and Demetrius,
-aged respectively nine, eight, and seven,
-were very much alike in looks and size,
-being so many pinched caricatures of their
-mother. To Silvia they were bewildering
-whirlwinds, but Huldah, who seemed to
-have difficulty in telling them apart, always
-classified them as &ldquo;Them three&rdquo;, and
-Silvia and I fell into the habit of referring
-to them in the same way. Huldah could
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
-not master the Polydore given names either
-by memory or pronunciation. Ptolemy,
-whose name was shortened to &ldquo;Tolly&rdquo; by
-Diogenes, she called &ldquo;Polly.&rdquo; When she
-was on speaking terms with &ldquo;Them three&rdquo;
-she nicknamed them &ldquo;Thaggy, Emmy, and
-Meetie.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Diogenes, the two-year old, was a Tartar
-when emulating his brothers. Alone, he
-was sometimes normal and a shade more
-like ordinary children.</p>
-<p>When they first began swarming in
-upon us, Silvia drew many lines which,
-however, the Polydores promptly effaced.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They shall not eat here, anyway,&rdquo;
-she emphatically declared.</p>
-<p>This was her last stand and she went
-down ingloriously.</p>
-<p>One day while we were seated at the
-table enjoying some of Huldah&rsquo;s most
-palatable dishes, Ptolemy came in. There
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span>
-ensued on our part a silence which the lad
-made no effort to break. Silvia and I
-each slipped him a side glance. He stood
-statuesque, watching us with the mute
-wistfulness of a hungry animal. There
-were unwonted small red specks high upon
-his cheekbones, symptoms, Silvia thought,
-of starvation.</p>
-<p>She was moved to ask, though reluctantly
-and perfunctorily:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t you been to dinner, Ptolemy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he admitted quickly, &ldquo;but I
-could eat another.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Assuming that the forced inquiry was
-an invitation, before protest could be
-entered he supplied himself with a plate
-and helped himself to food. His need and
-relish of the meal weakened Silvia&rsquo;s fortifications.</p>
-<p>This opening, of course, was the wedge
-that let in other Polydores, and thereafter
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span>
-we seldom sat down to a meal without the
-presence of one or more members of the
-illustrious and famished family, who made
-themselves as entirely at home as would
-a troop of foraging soldiers. Silvia gazed
-upon their devouring of food with the
-same surprised, shocked, and yet interested
-manner in which one watches the
-feeding of animals.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose he ought not to eat so many
-pickles,&rdquo; she remarked one day, as Emerald
-consumed his ninth Dill.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t kill a Polydore,&rdquo; I assured her.</p>
-<p>I never opened a door but more or less
-Polydores fell in. They were at the left
-of us and at the right of us, with Diogenes
-always under foot. We had no privacy.
-I found myself waking suddenly in the
-night with the uncomfortable feeling that
-Ptolemy lurked in a dark corner or two
-of my bedroom.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span></div>
-<p>Even Silvia&rsquo;s boudoir was not free from
-their invasion. But one door in our house
-remained closed to them. They found no
-open sesame to Huldah&rsquo;s apartment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish she would let me in on her system,&rdquo;
-I said. &ldquo;I wonder how she manages
-to keep them on the outside?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can tell you,&rdquo; confided Silvia. &ldquo;Emerald
-and Demetrius went in one day and
-she dropped Demetrius out the window
-and kicked Emerald out the door. You
-know, Lucien, you are too softhearted to
-resort to such measures.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was once,&rdquo; I confessed, &ldquo;but I think
-under Polydore r&eacute;gime I am getting stoical
-enough to follow in Huldah&rsquo;s footsteps
-and go her one better.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Our conversation was interrupted by
-the entrance of Diogenes.</p>
-<p>Silvia screamed.</p>
-<p>Turning to see what the latest Polydore
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
-perpetration might be, I saw that Diogenes
-was frothing at the mouth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s having a fit!&rdquo; exclaimed
-Silvia frantically. &ldquo;Call Huldah! Put
-him in a hot bath. Quick, Lucien, turn
-on the hot water.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not I,&rdquo; I refused grimly. &ldquo;Let him
-have a fit and fall in it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He ain&rsquo;t got no fit,&rdquo; was the cheerful
-assurance of Pythagoras, as he sauntered in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your mother would have one,&rdquo; I told
-him, &ldquo;if she could hear your English.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is the matter with him?&rdquo; asked
-Silvia. &ldquo;Does he often foam in this way?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s been eating your tooth powder,&rdquo;
-explained Pythagoras. &ldquo;He likes it &rsquo;cause
-it tastes like peppermint, and then he
-drank some water before he swallowed
-the powder and it all fizzed up and run out
-his mouth.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wondered,&rdquo; said Silvia ruefully,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
-&ldquo;what made my tooth powder disappear
-so rapidly. What shall I do!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Resort to strategy!&rdquo; I advised. &ldquo;Lock
-up your powder hereafter and fill an empty
-bottle with powdered alum or something
-worse and leave it around handy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien!&rdquo; exclaimed my wife, who could
-not seem to recover from this latest annoyance,
-&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see how you can be so
-fond of children. I did hope&ndash;&ndash;for your
-sake and&ndash;&ndash;on account of Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s
-offer that I&rsquo;d like to have one&ndash;&ndash;but I&rsquo;d
-rather go to the poorhouse! I&rsquo;d almost lose
-your affection rather than have a child.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But, Silvia!&rdquo; I remonstrated in dismay,
-&ldquo;you shouldn&rsquo;t judge all by these.
-They&rsquo;re not fair samples. They&rsquo;re not
-children&ndash;&ndash;not home-grown children.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I should say not!&rdquo; agreed Huldah,
-who had come into the room. &ldquo;They are
-imps&ndash;&ndash;imps of the devil.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span></div>
-<p>I believe she was right. They had a
-generally demoralizing effect on our household.
-I was growing irritable, Silvia careworn.
-Even Huldah showed their influence
-by acquiring the very latest in slang
-from them. Once in a while to my amusement
-I heard Silvia unconsciously adopting
-the Polydore argot.</p>
-<p>As the result of their better nourishment
-at our table, the imps of the devil
-daily grew more obstreperous and life
-became so burdensome to Silvia that I
-proposed moving away to a childless neighborhood.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;d find us out,&rdquo; said Silvia wearily,
-&ldquo;wherever we went. Distance would be
-no obstacle to them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then we might move out of town, as a
-last resort,&rdquo; I suggested. &ldquo;Rob says he
-thinks there is a good legal field in&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, Lucien,&rdquo; vetoed Silvia. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span>
-a fine practice here, and then there&rsquo;s that
-attorneyship for the Bartwell Manufacturing
-Company.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>My hope of securing this appointment
-meant a good deal to us. We were now
-living up to every cent of my income
-and though we had the necessities, it was
-the luxuries of life I craved&ndash;&ndash;for Silvia&rsquo;s
-sake. She was a lover of music and we
-had no piano. She yearned to ride and
-she had no horse. We both had longings
-for a touring-car and we wanted to travel.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve thought of a scheme for a little
-respite from the sight and sound of the
-Polydores,&rdquo; I remarked one day. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll
-enter them in the public school. There
-are four more weeks yet before the long
-summer vacation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That would be too good to be true,&rdquo;
-declared Silvia. &ldquo;Five or six hours each
-day, and then, too, their deportment will
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span>
-be so dreadful that they will have to stay
-after school hours.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I thought more likely their deportment
-would lead to suspension, but forbore to
-wet-blanket Silvia&rsquo;s hopes.</p>
-<p>I made my second call upon the male
-head of the House of Polydore to recommend
-and urge that its young scions be
-sent to the public school. I had misgivings
-as to the outcome of my proposition,
-as the Polydore parents believed
-themselves to be the only fount of learning
-in the town. To my surprise and
-intense gratification, my suggestion met
-with no objections whatever. Felix Polydore
-referred me to his wife and said he
-would abide by her decision. I found her,
-of course, buried in books, but remembering
-Ptolemy&rsquo;s mode of gaining attention,
-I peremptorily closed the volume she was
-studying.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span></div>
-<p>My audacity attained its object and I
-proferred my request, laying great stress
-on the quietude she would gain thereby.
-She replied that attendance at school would
-doubtless do them no harm, although she
-expressed her belief that the most thorough
-educations were those obtained outside of
-schools.</p>
-<p>Silvia was wafted into the eighth heaven
-of bliss and then some, as the result of my
-diplomatic mission. Of course the task of
-preparing pupils out of the pestiferous
-Polydores devolved upon her, but she was
-actively aided by the eager and willing
-Huldah and between them they pushed the
-project that promised such an elysium with
-all speed. The prospective pupils themselves
-were not wildly enthusiastic over this
-curtailment of their liberty, but Huldah
-won the day by proposing that they carry
-their luncheon with them, promising an
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span>
-abundant supply of sugared doughnuts
-and small pies.</p>
-<p>Pythagoras foresaw recreation ahead in
-the opportunity to &ldquo;lick all the kids,&rdquo;
-and I assumed that Ptolemy had deep
-laid schemes for the outmaneuvering of
-teachers, but as his left hand never made
-confidant of his right, I could not expect to
-fathom the workings of his mind.</p>
-<p>Early on a Monday morning, therefore,
-our household arose to lick our Polydore
-prot&eacute;g&eacute;s into a shape presentable for admission
-to school. It took two hours to
-pull up stockings and make them stay
-pulled, tie shoestrings, comb out tangles,
-adjust collars and neckties, to say nothing
-of vigorous scrubbings to five grimy faces
-and ten dirt-stained hands.</p>
-<p>At last with an air of achievement Silvia
-corralled her round-up and unloaded the
-four eldest upon the public school and then
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span>
-proceeded to install the protesting Diogenes
-in a nursery kindergarten. Huldah
-stood in the doorway as they marched off
-and sped the parting guests with a muttered
-&ldquo;Good riddance to bad rubbish.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia returned radiant, but her rejoicing
-was shortlived. She had scarcely taken
-off her hat and gloves when the four oldest
-came trooping and whooping into the house.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; gasped Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Got to be vaccinated,&rdquo; explained
-Ptolemy with an appreciative grin. Of all
-the Polydores he was the one who had least
-objected to scholastic pursuits, but he
-seemed quite jubilant at our discomfiture.</p>
-<p>We were somewhat reluctant to undertake
-the responsibility of their inoculation,
-especially after Ptolemy told us that his
-mother didn&rsquo;t believe in vaccination.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll take &rsquo;em down and get &rsquo;em vaccinated
-right,&rdquo; declared Huldah. &ldquo;Their
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span>
-ma won&rsquo;t never notice the scars, and if
-one of you young uns blabs about it,&rdquo;
-she added, turning upon them ferociously,
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll cut your tongue out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Suppose there should be some ill result
-from it,&rdquo; said Silvia apprehensively.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you worry!&rdquo; exclaimed Huldah.
-&ldquo;Most likely it won&rsquo;t amount to anything.
-It&rsquo;ll take some new kind of scabs to work
-in these brats. They&rsquo;re too tough to take
-anything. Come on now with me,&rdquo; she
-commanded, &ldquo;and after it&rsquo;s done, I&rsquo;ll
-get you each an ice cream sody.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Through Huldah&rsquo;s efficiency the vaccination
-was quickly accomplished and
-the children of our neighbor were reluctantly
-accepted by the school authorities.</p>
-<p>The Polydores were not parted by reason
-of dissimilarity of age or learning, as
-they were put into the ungraded room.
-To keep them there enrolled taxed to the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span>
-utmost our ingenuity in the way of framing
-excuses for their repeated cases of
-tardiness and suspension.</p>
-<p>Silvia felt a little remorseful when she
-listened to the tale of woe recited to her
-by their teacher at a card party one Saturday
-afternoon.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She said,&rdquo; my wife repeated, &ldquo;that
-yesterday Pythagoras brought two mice to
-school in his marble-bag and let them loose.
-She doesn&rsquo;t believe in corporal punishment,
-but she determined to experiment with its
-effect on Pythagoras, so she kept him and
-Emerald, who was slightly implicated, after
-school and sent the latter out to get a
-whip. When he came back he said: &lsquo;I
-couldn&rsquo;t find any stick, but here&rsquo;s some
-rocks you can throw at him,&rsquo; and handed
-her a hat full of stones. This made her
-too hysterical to try her experiment, so
-she took away his recess for a week.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;We ought to make her a present,&rdquo; I
-observed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She said,&rdquo; continued Silvia, &ldquo;that they
-had given her nervous prostration, but
-she had no time to prostrate, and if she
-didn&rsquo;t succeed in getting them graded by
-the coming fall term, she should accept an
-offer of marriage she had received from a
-cross-eyed man, and you know how unlucky
-that would be, Lucien!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We may be driven to worse things than
-that by fall,&rdquo; I replied ruefully.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_6' id='linki_6'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-011.jpg' alt='' title='' width='337' height='143' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_7' id='linki_7'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-012.jpg' alt='' title='' width='299' height='194' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_IV__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_BOARDERS' id='CHAPTER_IV__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_BOARDERS'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter IV</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which We Take Boarders</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Four weeks of unalloyed bliss and
-then the summer vacation times
-arrived, bringing joy to the heart
-of the Polydores and the teacher of the
-ungraded room, but deep gloom to the
-hearthside of the Wades.</p>
-<p>One misfortune always brings another.
-A rival applicant received the coveted attorneyship
-and we bade a sad farewell to piano,
-saddle-horse, automobile and journey, the
-furnishings to our Little House of Dreams.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I did want you to have a car, Lucien,&rdquo;
-sighed Silvia, regretfully, &ldquo;and you worked
-so hard this last year, you need a trip.
-Won&rsquo;t you go somewhere with Rob&ndash;&ndash;without
-me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I assured her it would be no vacation
-without her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you know, Lucien,&rdquo; she proposed
-diffidently, &ldquo;I think it would be an excellent
-plan to invite Uncle Issachar to visit
-us. He knows no more about children than
-I do&ndash;&ndash;than I did, I mean, and if he should
-see the Polydores he&rsquo;d give us five thousand
-each for the children we didn&rsquo;t have.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I wouldn&rsquo;t consent to this plan. I had
-met Uncle Issachar once. He was a crusty
-old bachelor with a morbid suspicion that
-everyone was working him for his money.
-I don&rsquo;t wonder he thought so. He had no
-other attractions.</p>
-<p>Perceiving the strength of my opposition
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span>
-Silvia sweetly and sagaciously refrained
-from further pressure.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We should not repine,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We
-have health and happiness and love.
-What are pianos and cars and trips compared
-to such assets?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>What, indeed! I admitted that things
-might be worse.</p>
-<p>Alas! All too soon was my statement
-substantiated. That night after we had
-gone to bed, I heard a taxicab sputtering
-away at the house next door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Polydores must have unexpected
-guests,&rdquo; I remarked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I trust they brought no children with
-them,&rdquo; murmured Silvia drowsily.</p>
-<p>The next morning while we were at
-breakfast, the odor of June roses wafting
-in through the open window, the delicious
-flavor of red-ripe strawberries tickling our
-palate, and the anticipation of rice griddle-cakes
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span>
-exhilarating us, the millennium
-came.</p>
-<p>For the five young Polydores bore down
-upon us <i>en masse</i>.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Father and mother have gone away,&rdquo;
-proclaimed Ptolemy, who was always
-spokesman for the quintette.</p>
-<p>This intelligence was of no particular
-interest to us&ndash;&ndash;not then, at least. We
-rarely saw father and mother Polydore,
-and they were apparently of no need to
-their offspring.</p>
-<p>Ptolemy&rsquo;s next announcement, however,
-was startling and effective in its dramatic
-intensity.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve come over to stay with you
-while they are away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I laughed; jocosely, I thought.</p>
-<p>Silvia paid no heed to my forced hilarity,
-but ejaculated gaspingly:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, what do you mean!&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;They have gone away somewhere,&rdquo;
-enlightened our oracle. &ldquo;They went to the
-train last night in a taxi. They have gone
-somewhere to find out something about
-some kind of aborigines.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which reminds me,&rdquo; I remarked reminiscently,
-&ldquo;of the man who traveled far
-and vainly in search of a certain plant
-which, on his return, he found growing
-beside his own doorstep.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia paid no heed to my misplaced
-pleasantry. She was right&ndash;&ndash;as usual. It
-was no time for levity.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see,&rdquo; spoke my unappreciative
-wife, addressing Ptolemy, &ldquo;why their absence
-should make any difference in your
-remaining at home. Gladys can cook your
-meals and put Diogenes to bed as usual.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gladys has gone,&rdquo; piped Demetrius.
-&ldquo;She left yesterday afternoon. She was
-only staying till she could get her pay.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Father forgot to get another girl in her
-place,&rdquo; informed Ptolemy, &ldquo;and he forgot
-to tell mother he had forgotten until just
-before they went to the train. She said it
-didn&rsquo;t matter&ndash;&ndash;that we could just as well
-come over here and stay with you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She said,&rdquo; added Pythagoras, &ldquo;that
-you were so crazy over children, that
-probably you&rsquo;d be glad to have us stay
-with you all the time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>My last strawberry remained poised in
-mid-air. It was quite apparent to me now
-that there was nothing funny about this
-situation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Milk, milk!&rdquo; whimpered Diogenes, pulling
-at Silvia&rsquo;s dress and making frantic
-efforts to reach the cream pitcher.</p>
-<p>Huldah had come in with the griddle-cakes
-during this avalanche of news.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here, all you kids!&rdquo; commanded our
-field marshal, as she picked up Diogenes,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span>
-&ldquo;beat it to the kitchen, and I&rsquo;ll give you
-some breakfast. Hustle up!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Polydores, whose eyes were bulging
-with expectancy and semi-starvation, tumbled
-over each other in their eagerness to
-&ldquo;hustle up and beat it to the kitchen.&rdquo;
-Our oiler of troubled waters followed, and
-there was assurance of a brief lull.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What shall we do!&rdquo; I exclaimed helplessly
-when the door had closed on the
-last Polydore. I felt too limp and impotent
-to cope with the situation. Not so
-Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do!&rdquo; she echoed with an intensity of
-tone and feeling I had never known her to
-display. &ldquo;Do! We&rsquo;ll do something, I am
-sure! I will not for a moment submit to
-such an imposition. Who ever heard of
-such colossal nerve! That father and
-mother should be brought back and prosecuted.
-I shall report them to the Society
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span>
-for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.
-But we won&rsquo;t wait for such procedure.
-We&rsquo;ll express each and every Polydore to
-them at once.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I should certainly do that P.D.Q. and
-C.O.D.,&rdquo; I acquiesced, &ldquo;if the Polydore
-parents could be located, but you know
-the abodes of aborigines are many and
-scattered.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>My remarks seemed to fall as flat as
-the flapjacks I was siruping.</p>
-<p>Silvia arose, determination in every lineament
-and muscle, and crossed the room.
-She opened the door leading into the kitchen.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; she demanded, &ldquo;where have
-your father and mother gone?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He came forward and replied in a voice
-somewhat smothered by cakes and sirup.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. They didn&rsquo;t say.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We can find out from the ticket-agent,&rdquo;
-I optimistically assured her.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;They never bother to buy tickets. Pay
-on the train,&rdquo; Ptolemy explained.</p>
-<p>My legal habit of counter-argument asserted
-itself.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We can easily ascertain to what point
-their baggage was checked,&rdquo; I remarked,
-again essaying to maintain a r&ocirc;le of good
-cheer.</p>
-<p>But the pessimistic Ptolemy was right
-there with another of his gloom-casting
-retaliations.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They only took suit-cases and they
-always keep them in the car. Here&rsquo;s a
-check father said to give you to pay for
-our board. He said you could write in
-any amount you wanted to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He got a lot of dough yesterday,&rdquo; informed
-Pythagoras, &ldquo;and he put half of it
-in the bank here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy handed over a check which was
-blank except for Felix Polydore&rsquo;s signature.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see,&rdquo; I weakly exclaimed when
-my wife had closed the kitchen door, &ldquo;why
-she put them off on <i>us</i>. Why didn&rsquo;t she
-trade her brats off for antiques?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia eyed the check wistfully. I could
-read the unspoken thought that here, perhaps,
-was the opportunity for our much-desired
-trip.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, Silvia,&rdquo; I answered quickly, &ldquo;not
-for any number of blank checks or vacation
-trips shall you have the care and annoyance
-of those wild Comanches.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know what I&rsquo;ll do!&rdquo; she exclaimed
-suddenly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go right down to the intelligence
-office and get anything in the
-shape of a maid and put her in charge of
-the Polydore caravansary with double
-wages and every night out and any other
-privileges she requests.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This seemed a sane and sensible arrangement,
-and I wended my way to my
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span>
-office feeling that we were out of the
-woods.</p>
-<p>When I returned home at noon, I found
-that we had only exchanged the woods for
-water&ndash;&ndash;and deep water at that.</p>
-<p>I beheld a strange sight. Silvia sat by
-our bedroom window twittering soft, cooing
-nonsensical nothings to Diogenes, who
-was clasped in her arms, his flushed little
-face pressed close to her shoulder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s been quite ill, Lucien. I was
-frightened and called the doctor. He said
-it was only the slight fever that children are
-subject to. He thought with good care
-that he&rsquo;d be all right in a few days.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you succeed in getting a cook to
-go to the Polydores?&rdquo; I asked anxiously.
-&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll need a nurse to go there, too, to
-take care of Diogenes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She looked at me reproachfully and rebukingly.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, Lucien! You don&rsquo;t suppose I
-could send this sick baby back to that uninviting
-house with only hired help in
-charge! Besides, I don&rsquo;t believe he&rsquo;d stay
-with a stranger. He seems to have taken
-a fancy to me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Diogenes confirmed this belief by a
-languid lifting of his eyelids, as he feelingly
-patted her cheek with his baby fingers.</p>
-<p>I forebore to suggest that the fancy
-seemed to be mutual. Diogenes, sick, was
-no longer an &ldquo;imp of the devil&rdquo;, but a
-normal, appealing little child. It occurred
-to me that possibly the care of a sick
-Polydore might develop Silvia&rsquo;s tiny germ
-of child-ken.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Keep him here of course,&rdquo; I agreed,
-&ldquo;but&ndash;&ndash;the other children must return
-home.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Diogenes would miss them,&rdquo; she said
-quickly, &ldquo;and the doctor says his whims
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span>
-must be humored while he is sick. He is
-almost asleep now. I think he will let me
-put him down in his own little bed. Ptolemy
-brought it over here. Pull back the
-covers for me, Lucien. There!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Diogenes half opened his eyes, as she
-laid him in the bed and smiled wanly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mudder!&rdquo; he cooed.</p>
-<p>Silvia flushed and looked as if she dreaded
-some expression of mirth from me. Relieved
-by my silence and a suggestion of
-moisture in the region of my eyes&ndash;&ndash;the
-day was quite warm&ndash;&ndash;she confessed:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He has called me that all the morning.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It would be a wise Polydore that knows
-its own parents,&rdquo; I observed.</p>
-<p>The slight illness of Diogenes lasted three
-or four days. I still shudder to recall the
-memory of that hideous period. Silvia&rsquo;s
-time and attention were devoted to the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span>
-sick child. Huldah was putting in all her
-leisure moments at the dentist&rsquo;s, where
-she was acquiring her third set of teeth,
-and joy rode unconfined and unrestrained
-with our &ldquo;boarders.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Polydore proclivities made the Reign of
-Terror formerly known as the French
-Revolution seem like an ice cream festival.
-I don&rsquo;t regard myself as a particularly
-nervous man, but there&rsquo;s a limit! Their
-war whoops and screeches got on my
-nerves and temper to the extent of sending
-me into their midst one evening brandishing
-a whip and commanding immediate
-silence. I got it. Not through fear of
-chastisement, for fear was an emotion
-unknown to a Polydore, but from astonishment
-at so unexpected a procedure
-from so unexpected a source. Heretofore
-I had either ignored them or frolicked
-with them. Before they had recovered
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span>
-from their shock, Silvia appeared on the
-scene.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Diogenes,&rdquo; she informed them, &ldquo;was
-not used to such unwonted quiet, and was
-fretting at the unaccustomed stillness.
-Would the boys please play Indian or some
-of their games again?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The boys would. I backed from the
-room, the whip behind me, carefully kept
-without Silvia&rsquo;s angle of vision. Before
-Ptolemy resumed his r&ocirc;le of chief, he bestowed
-a knowing and maddening wink
-upon me.</p>
-<p>I wished that we had remained neighbor-less.
-I wished that the aborigines would
-scalp Felix Polydore and the writer of
-Modern Antiquities. Then we could land
-their brats on the Probate Court. I wished
-that this were the reign of Herod. I vowed
-I would backslide from the Presbyterian
-faith since it no longer included in its
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span>
-articles of belief the eternal damnation of
-infants. How long, O Catiline, would&ndash;&ndash;</p>
-<p>A paralyzing suspicion flashed into the
-maelstrom of my vituperative maledictions.
-I rushed wildly upstairs to our combination
-bedroom, sickroom, and nursery, where
-Silvia sat like a guardian angel beside the
-Polydore patient.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I shouted excitedly, &ldquo;do you
-suppose those diabolical Polydore parents
-purposely played this trick on us? Was
-it a premeditated Polydore plan to abandon
-their young? And can you blame
-them for playing us for easy marks? Could
-any parents, Polydore, or otherwise, ever
-come back to such fiends as these?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; she cautioned, without so much
-as a glance in my direction. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll wake
-Diogenes!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Wake Diogenes! Ye Gods! And she
-had also implored the brothers of Diogenes
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span>
-to continue their anvil chorus! This took
-the last stitch of starch from my manly
-bosom. Spiritless and spineless I bore all
-things, believed all things&ndash;&ndash;but hoped
-for nothing.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_8' id='linki_8'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-013.jpg' alt='' title='' width='228' height='246' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_9' id='linki_9'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span>
-<img src='images/illus-014.jpg' alt='' title='' width='341' height='181' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_V__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_A_VACATION' id='CHAPTER_V__IN_WHICH_WE_TAKE_A_VACATION'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter V</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which We Take a Vacation</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Diogenes finally convalesced to
-his former state of ruggedness and
-obstreperousness. He continued,
-however, to cling to Silvia and to call her
-&ldquo;mudder.&rdquo; To my amusement the other
-children followed suit and she was now
-&ldquo;muddered&rdquo; by all the Polydores.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am glad,&rdquo; I remarked, &ldquo;that they
-scorn to include me in their adoption. I
-wouldn&rsquo;t fancy being &lsquo;faddered&rsquo; by the
-Polydores.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t be,&rdquo; Ptolemy, appearing
-seemingly from nowhere, assured me.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve named you stepdaddy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If it be possible, Silvia,&rdquo; I implored,
-&ldquo;let this cup pass from me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am going down to the intelligence
-office today,&rdquo; replied Silvia soothingly.
-&ldquo;Diogenes is well enough to go home now,
-and I can run over there every evening
-and see that he is properly put to bed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I went down town feeling like a mule
-relieved of his pack.</p>
-<p>When I came home that afternoon, I found
-Silvia sitting on the shaded porch serenely
-sewing. A Sabbath-like stillness pervaded.
-Not a Polydore in sight or sound.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; I cried buoyantly. &ldquo;The Polydores
-have been returned to their home
-station!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she replied calmly. &ldquo;They told
-me at the intelligence office that it would
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span>
-be absolutely impossible to persuade, bribe,
-or hire a servant to assume the charge of
-the Polydore place.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; I said glumly, &ldquo;that Gladys
-gave the job a double cross. But will you
-please account for the phenomenon of the
-utter absence of Polydores at the present
-period? Has Huldah at last carried out
-her oft-repeated threat of exterminating
-the Polydore race?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pythagoras,&rdquo; explained Silvia dejectedly,
-&ldquo;has gone to the doctor&rsquo;s. He broke
-his wrist this morning. Diogenes is lost
-and Emerald has gone to look for him&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, why hunt him up?&rdquo; I remonstrated.
-&ldquo;Maybe Emerald, too, will get lost or
-strayed or stolen.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah,&rdquo; continued Silvia, &ldquo;has locked
-Demetrius in the cellar. I am unable to
-report on Ptolemy. Huldah is half sick,
-but she won&rsquo;t go to bed. She said no beds
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span>
-in Bedlamite for her. But I have a wonderful
-plan to suggest. There is relief in sight
-if you will consent.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will consent to any committable
-crime on the calendar,&rdquo; I assured her,
-&ldquo;that will lead to the parting of the Polydore
-path from ours. Divulge.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We both need a change and rest. Today
-I heard of a most alluring, inexpensive,
-unfrequented resort called Hope Haven.
-Unfashionable, fine fishing, beautiful scenery,
-twelve miles from a railroad, and a
-stage stops there but once a day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If there is such a place, we&rsquo;ll go there
-at once, though why such an enticing spot
-should be unfrequented is beyond me. Do
-we leave the Polydores to their fate, or as
-a town charge?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll leave them to Huldah. She
-offered to keep them here if we&rsquo;d take
-the outing. She said she&rsquo;d either give
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span>
-them free rein or beat their brains out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then I see where the Polydores land
-in a juvenile jail, or else I return to defend
-Huldah for a charge of murder. We&rsquo;ll
-take our departure by night&ndash;&ndash;tomorrow
-night&ndash;&ndash;and like the Arabs, or the Polydore
-parents, silently steal away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia constrainedly, when
-we had arranged the details of our plan, &ldquo;if
-you wouldn&rsquo;t object too much, I should
-like to take Diogenes with us. He hasn&rsquo;t
-missed his mother, but I really believe he&rsquo;d
-be homesick without me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Take him, of course,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
-manageable away from the others. I
-plainly see you&rsquo;ve formed the Polydore
-habit, and maybe a partial parting from
-the Polydores would be wiser, but we&rsquo;ll
-take Diogenes as an antidote against
-too perfect a time. But I forgot to tell
-you that I had a letter from Rob today.
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
-He plans to come and make his visit now
-and will arrive next Monday. I&rsquo;ll write
-him to join us at Hope Haven. You must
-write down again for me the route we take
-to get there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia laughed hopelessly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It never rains but it pours. I had a
-letter from Beth this afternoon, and she
-says she would like to come to us now.
-She arrives Monday. Here is her letter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Great minds! It is quite a coincidence,&rdquo;
-I declared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought it would be so nice to have
-Beth go with us to this resort.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It can&rsquo;t be done,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;That is,
-they can&rsquo;t both go. I am not going to let
-even Rob Rossiter slight my sister.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Still it would be a triumph to have her
-change his mind&ndash;&ndash;or his heart. You
-know a woman-hater always succumbs to
-the right girl.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;In books, yes!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I had been scanning Beth&rsquo;s letter and I
-laughed derisively as I read aloud: &ldquo;&lsquo;I am
-so curious to see those next-door children.
-When you first wrote of the &ldquo;Polydores&rdquo;
-I never once thought of them as children.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She thought exactly right,&rdquo; I told
-Silvia, and then continued reading: &ldquo;&lsquo;I
-supposed them to be something like tadpoles
-or polliwogs. I really think I shall
-enjoy them.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It would serve her right,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;to
-let her come and stay with them here in
-our absence. She&rsquo;d get the cure for enjoyment
-all right. Rob wrote of them in
-the same strain and says he, too, is curious
-to meet the missing links.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Does she know,&rdquo; asked Silvia, &ldquo;how
-Rob regards women?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; I&rsquo;ve always made some excuse to
-her for not having them meet. I didn&rsquo;t
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span>
-want to hear her make disparaging remarks
-about him, and she is such a flirt, she&rsquo;d try
-to draw him out and he would shut up like
-a clam.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I think,&rdquo; decided Silvia, &ldquo;that the
-best way out of it is to write Rob to postpone
-his visit and I will write Beth to come
-direct to Hope Haven.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I agreed, &ldquo;that will be fine. She
-shall have charge of dear little Di and
-study the evolutions of the Polydores later.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I approved this plan. So we wrote our
-letters and stealthily, but joyously, prepared
-for our getaway, leaving the house
-like thieves in the night and bearing the
-sleeping cherub, Diogenes.</p>
-<p>Silvia sighed in relief when we were
-aboard the train.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I feel quite chesty,&rdquo; she declared, &ldquo;at
-being smart enough to outwit Ptolemy, the
-wizard.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I have the feeling,&rdquo; I observed forebodingly,
-&ldquo;that they may be on the train
-or underneath it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The next morning we reached Windy
-Creek, the station nearest our destination,
-and continued our journey by stage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;People will think you have consoled
-yourself very speedily for the death of
-your first husband,&rdquo; I observed, as we were
-en route.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, what do you mean, Lucien?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You know Diogenes addresses me as
-stepdaddy. It is the only word he speaks
-plainly.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she exclaimed in perturbation,
-&ldquo;I never thought of that! Well, we can
-explain to everyone, or I&rsquo;ll teach them to
-leave off the &lsquo;step.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not on your life!&rdquo; I demurred.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He had better call you Lucien, then.
-Emerald calls his father &lsquo;Felix.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span></div>
-<p>She at once began her tutelage of the bewildered
-Diogenes. After several stabs at
-pronouncing Lucien he managed to evolve
-&ldquo;Ocean&rdquo; to which he sometimes affixed
-&ldquo;step&rdquo; so that people to whom he was not
-explained doubtless thought me the latest
-thing in dances.</p>
-<p>Hope Haven was like most resorts&ndash;&ndash;a
-place safe to shun. There was a low, flat
-stretch of woods in which a clearing had
-been made for a barn-like structure called
-a hotel, with rooms rough and not always
-ready. The beautiful recreation grounds
-mentioned in the advertising matter consisted
-of a plowed field worked over into a
-space designated as a tennis court and a
-grass-grown croquet ground.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anyway,&rdquo; claimed Silvia hopefully,
-&ldquo;it&rsquo;s a treat to see woods, water, and sky
-unconfined.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She devoted the remainder of the morning
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span>
-to unpacking and after luncheon set
-off to explore the woods, borrowing from
-the landlady a little cart for Diogenes to
-ride in. My plan to go in swimming was
-delayed by my garrulous landlord.</p>
-<p>I was just starting for the lake when I
-heard sounds from the woods that alarmed
-the landlord but which I instantly recognized
-as the Polydore yell. A moment
-later I saw Silvia emerging at full speed
-into the open, drawing the cart in which
-Diogenes was doubled up like a jackknife.
-I hastened to meet them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien,&rdquo; exclaimed my wife tearfully,
-&ldquo;we are bitten to bits! Just look
-at poor little Di!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I lifted the howling child from the cart.
-His face, neck, and hands were stringy and
-purplish&ndash;&ndash;a cross between an eggplant
-and a round steak.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mosquitoes!&rdquo; explained Silvia. &ldquo;They
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span>
-came in flocks and they advertised particularly
-&lsquo;no mosquitoes.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A dour-faced guest paused in passing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There aren&rsquo;t&ndash;&ndash;many,&rdquo; she declared.
-&ldquo;Very few, in fact, compared to the number
-of black flies, sand fleas, and jiggers. However,
-you&rsquo;ll find more discomfort from the
-poison ivy, I imagine.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; began Silvia in lament.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never mind!&rdquo; I hastened to console,
-&ldquo;you are out of the woods now, and you
-won&rsquo;t have to go in again. I presume they
-have an antidote up at the house. I&rsquo;ll
-give you and Diogenes first aid and then
-we will all go down to the lake shore. You
-can both sit on the dock and watch me
-swim.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They both brightened up, and when we
-reached the hotel the landlady provided
-a soothing lotion for the bites and stings.</p>
-<p>By the time we had started for the lake,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span>
-the afflicted two were in holiday spirit
-again.</p>
-<p>I sought cover in a small shed called a
-bath-house and got into my swimming outfit
-and shot out from the dipping end of the
-diving-board into the water. When I came
-to the surface, Silvia, sitting beside Diogenes
-on the dock, shrieked wildly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien, there are snakes all around
-you! Come out, quick!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They are only water snakes,&rdquo; I assured
-her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care what kind they are. They
-are snakes just the same.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Diogenes instantly began to bellow for
-me to hand him a snake to play with.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He recognizes his own,&rdquo; I told Silvia,
-who, however, saw nothing amusing in my
-implication.</p>
-<p>When I came out of the water, the temperature
-had climbed several degrees and
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span>
-we were glad to seek the hotel parlor, which
-was cool and damp.</p>
-<p>After dinner Silvia put Diogenes to bed
-and we sat out on the veranda. I was enjoying
-my evening smoke and the feel of
-the night wind in my face. Silvia had just
-finished telling me that merely to be away
-from the Polydores was Paradise enough
-for her, and that she didn&rsquo;t care very much
-about the woods, anyway&ndash;&ndash;the lake was
-sufficient, when her optimism was rudely
-jolted by the shrill, shudder-sending song
-of the festive mosquito.</p>
-<p>She fled into the parlor. The landlady,
-who seemed to have a panacea for all ills,
-suggested that she might tack mosquito
-netting around the little balcony extending
-from our bedroom, and then she could sit
-there in comfort when the mosquitoes
-bothered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what the last lady that had that
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span>
-room did,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but when she left,
-she took the netting with her. We keep a
-supply in our little store.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia immediately sought the hotel store
-and bought a quantity of the netting and a
-goodly stock of the mosquito lotion.</p>
-<p>That night as I was drifting into slumber,
-Silvia remarked: &ldquo;Only one of the
-things I heard and read about this place is
-true.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which one?&rdquo; I asked between winks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That it was unfrequented. I have seen
-only three guests besides us so far. How do
-they make it pay?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The hotel is evidently only a side issue,&rdquo;
-I replied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To what?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To the store. Think of the quantities
-of lotion and netting they must sell in
-the season, which, you must know, is in the
-fall. The hunting, the landlord tells me, is
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span>
-very good, and his hotel is quite popular in
-October and November.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think we had better stay, Lucien.
-Mosquitoes don&rsquo;t poison you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Even if they did,&rdquo; I declared, &ldquo;as a
-choice between them and the Polydores I
-would say, &lsquo;Oh, Mosquito, where is thy
-sting?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_10' id='linki_10'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-015.jpg' alt='' title='' width='198' height='311' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_11' id='linki_11'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-016.jpg' alt='' title='' width='339' height='169' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_VI__A_FLIRT_AND_A_WOMANHATER' id='CHAPTER_VI__A_FLIRT_AND_A_WOMANHATER'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter VI</span></h2>
-<h3><i>A Flirt and a Woman-Hater</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>The next morning I arose early and
-screened in the little birdhouse balcony.
-There was a large piece of
-netting left and Silvia converted it into a
-robe and headgear for the swaddling of
-Diogenes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He looks like the Bride of Lammermoor,&rdquo;
-I declared, as he went forth in this
-regalia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s preferable to looking like a
-pest-house patient, as he did yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span></div>
-<p>His first-aid costume didn&rsquo;t find favor
-with the landlady, as it would seem indicative
-to the newly arrived of the features
-of the place. However, before another
-stage-coming was due, Di had rent
-his garment sufficiently to make it useless
-is a &ldquo;skeeter skirt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>During the morning I enjoyed my solitary
-swim with the snakes. Diogenes
-played football with the croquet balls and
-bruised one of his toes, besides hitting the
-landlady&rsquo;s child in the eye. Silvia went
-for a walk which had been pictured in the
-advertisements. She speedily returned, her
-ardor dampened.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There are so many sticks and stones
-and rocks,&rdquo; she said in a discouraged tone,
-&ldquo;that there was no pleasure in walking.
-I nearly sprained my ankle.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, the real sport we haven&rsquo;t tried
-yet,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll get a boat and take
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span>
-Diogenes and go for a row on the lake.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This proposition met with instant favor.
-I put Silvia and Diogenes in the stern of the
-boat and pulled for the opposite shore. My
-endeavors to gain this point were balked by
-Silvia&rsquo;s remarkable conceptions of the art
-of steering craft. She was so serenely
-satisfied, however, with the way she performed
-her duties and the aid she thought
-she was giving me, that I forbore to
-criticize.</p>
-<p>In order to achieve a few strokes in the
-right direction, I asked her to get me a
-cigar from an inside pocket of my coat,
-which was on the seat in front of her.
-Then came the blight to our bliss. She
-looked in the wrong pocket and instead
-of producing a cigar, she extracted two
-letters with seals unbroken.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_12' id='linki_12'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
-<img src='images/illus-017.jpg' alt='' title='' width='357' height='391' /><br />
-<p class='caption'>
-&ldquo;Lucien Wade!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Here are our letters to Beth and Rob.&rdquo;<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien Wade!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Here
-are our letters to Beth and Rob. Well, it
-is my fault. I should have known better
-than to give them to you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The plot thickens,&rdquo; I replied thoughtfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is Monday. They must both be
-at the house now. What will they think!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They will think we didn&rsquo;t receive their
-letters.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it unfortunate&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; she began.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;I am not sure but
-what it is a good thing. It will give Rob
-a jolt to see that girls can be as nice as Beth
-is, and as for her, she is quite able to take
-care of the situation where a man is concerned.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But we must have Beth here. Maybe
-you&rsquo;d better telegraph her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah understands conditions. She
-will send Beth on here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The next morning we took Diogenes and
-went down the road to meet the stage. As
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span>
-it came around the curve, we saw there
-were three passengers.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tolly!&rdquo; cried Diogenes with an ecstatic
-whoop.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Beth!&rdquo; recognized Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rob!&rdquo; I ejaculated.</p>
-<p>The stage stopped to allow us to get in.</p>
-<p>Mutual explanations followed. Ours
-were brief and substantiated by the documents
-in evidence.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; I said turning threateningly to
-Ptolemy, &ldquo;what did you come here for?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To show them,&rdquo; indicating Beth and
-Rob, &ldquo;how to get here and to look after
-Di so you and mudder could enjoy your
-vacation,&rdquo; he replied glibly.</p>
-<p>Beth laughed mirthfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Check! Lucien.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t Huldah warn you,&rdquo; I asked her,
-&ldquo;that our whereabouts were to remain unknown?&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;is evidently a
-mind reader, for he told me where you were
-before I saw Huldah.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, Ptolemy, how did you know where
-we were?&rdquo; asked Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was on top of the porch when you
-told stepdaddy about coming. I didn&rsquo;t
-tell the others. I won&rsquo;t bother you any.
-And I know how to look after Di. You
-won&rsquo;t send me back, mudder,&rdquo; he pleaded,
-looking wistfully at the foam-crested water
-of the little lake.</p>
-<p>I wondered mutely if Silvia could resist
-the appeal in the eyes of the neglected boy
-when he turned his imploring gaze to hers,
-and the delight depicted in Diogenes&rsquo; eyes
-at &ldquo;Tolly&rsquo;s&rdquo; arrival. She could not.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You may stay as long as we do,&rdquo; she
-said slowly, &ldquo;if you are a good boy and will
-not play too rough with Diogenes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We had reached the hotel by this time,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span>
-and with a wild &ldquo;ki yi&rdquo; Ptolemy dashed
-for the shore, dragging the delighted Diogenes
-with him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s only fair to Huldah to take one
-more off her hands,&rdquo; Silvia said apologetically.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Them Three is what bothers me,&rdquo; I
-complained. &ldquo;If they, too, follow after,
-Heaven help them! I won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a good arrangement all around,&rdquo;
-declared Rob. &ldquo;I judge it takes a Polydore
-to understand his ilk, so the kids can pair
-off together. Miss Wade will be company
-for you, while Lucien and I go fishing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He looked keenly at Beth as he spoke,
-but Beth was looking demurely down and
-made no sign of having heard him.</p>
-<p>Silvia and I went with Beth to her room,
-and then she told her story.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Knowing Lucien&rsquo;s failing, I was not
-surprised at receiving no response to my
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
-letter. When I got out of the cab in front
-of your house, a wild-looking boy, very bas-relief
-as to eyes, and who I felt sure must
-be Ptolemy of the Polydores, appeared.
-As soon as he saw me he gave utterance
-to a blood-curdling yell of&ndash;&ndash;&lsquo;Here she
-is!&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In response to his call three of his understudies
-came on with headlong greeting.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;You are Beth, aren&rsquo;t you?&rsquo; Ptolemy
-asked me. Then he drew me aside and in
-mysterious whispers told me where you
-were and that you had written me to join
-you here. He added that stepdaddy never
-remembered to mail letters. I went within
-and interviewed Huldah who confirmed
-his information.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Presently I saw a taxi stop before the
-house.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That&rsquo;s him!&rsquo; exclaimed Ptolemy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Him who?&rsquo; I asked.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Rob somebody&ndash;&ndash;stepdaddy&rsquo;s college
-chum. He wrote he was coming, and they
-thought they had postponed him.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;With a sprint of speed the four Polydores
-surrounded your Mr. Rossiter, all
-talking at once. I came to the rescue, of
-course, and explained the situation, and we
-decided to follow you.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy was promoter for the trip and
-suggested the advisability of his accompanying
-us as courier and future nursemaid to
-Diogenes. He was intending to come anyway,
-but thought he&rsquo;d wait for us. He
-had all his belongings packed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He hasn&rsquo;t many except those he had
-on,&rdquo; said Silvia thoughtfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He has some swimming trunks, two
-collars, two shirts, some mismated socks,
-homemade fishing tackle and a battered
-baseball bat. We came away surreptitiously
-to escape detection by the trio left
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span>
-behind. I knew you wouldn&rsquo;t welcome
-his presence&ndash;&ndash;but he said he was coming
-anyway, so we thought we might as well
-bring him and express him back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After visiting with Beth for a few moments,
-Silvia and I withdrew to talk matters
-over confidentially.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All&rsquo;s well that ends well,&rdquo; I quoth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It hasn&rsquo;t ended yet,&rdquo; reminded Silvia.
-&ldquo;I trust Ptolemy didn&rsquo;t reveal what you
-said about Rob&rsquo;s being a woman-hater and
-Beth a flirt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy conveniently appeared just then,
-as he generally did in the midst of private
-interviews. Silvia asked him if he had
-repeated those remarks to Beth or Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I knew you didn&rsquo;t
-want her to know, because stepdaddy said
-so, and I thought he wouldn&rsquo;t like to be
-called that, and I wasn&rsquo;t going to give Beth
-away to him.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re all right, Ptolemy!&rdquo; I exclaimed,
-for the first time awarding him
-approbation.</p>
-<p>Out on the veranda we met Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say, those Polydores certainly have
-the punch and pep,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d
-like to have fetched the whole bunch along
-with me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you had,&rdquo; I replied dryly, &ldquo;our life&rsquo;s
-friendship would have died on the spot.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_13' id='linki_13'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-018.jpg' alt='' title='' width='263' height='266' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_14' id='linki_14'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-019.jpg' alt='' title='' width='367' height='130' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_VII__IN_WHICH_NOTHING_MUCH_HAPPENS' id='CHAPTER_VII__IN_WHICH_NOTHING_MUCH_HAPPENS'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcaplc'>CHAPTER VII</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which Nothing Much Happens</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why Hope Haven?&rdquo; asked Rob
-reflectively, when he had taken
-inventory of the possibilities
-of the resort.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; sighed Silvia, &ldquo;so many
-hopes&ndash;&ndash;vacation hopes&ndash;&ndash;must have been
-buried here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Rob was of an investigating turn of
-mind, however, and he had heard from a
-native of H. H., as he had abbreviated the
-place, that there was a smaller lake, abounding
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
-in fish, farther on through the forest.
-It was so strongly fortified, however, by
-the formidable battalions of sharp-shooting
-insects that but few fishermen had ever
-been able to lay siege to it.</p>
-<p>Rob and I being poison proof decided to
-try our luck and pitch camp for a few days
-on the shores of this hidden treasure. As
-we had to send to town by the stage driver
-for the necessary supplies, we remained in
-H. H. the remainder of the day.</p>
-<p>We at once paired off in Noah&rsquo;s most
-approved style as Rob had outlined. Beth
-and Ptolemy went up shore, sticks and
-stones and rocks being no obstacles to their
-feet. Rob and I sought the society of the
-snakes, while Silvia and Diogenes, mosquito-netted,
-watched a game of croquet.</p>
-<p>We dined without the pleasure of the
-society of Ptolemy and Diogenes, who had
-been invited to sit at the table with the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span>
-landlady&rsquo;s children. I might state, incidentally,
-that the invitation was never
-repeated.</p>
-<p>Beth was quite excited over her walk.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy and I,&rdquo; she boasted, &ldquo;made
-more of a discovery than Mr. Rossiter did.
-We found a haunted house, a perfectly
-haunted house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am not surprised,&rdquo; declared Silvia.
-&ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t expect any other kind of a
-house in such a region.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where is it?&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;and what is
-it haunted by?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Insects,&rdquo; suggested Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You go around shore about two miles,
-only it&rsquo;s farther, as you have to make so
-many ups and downs over the rocks. Then
-you leave the shore and go through a
-low marshy stretch, sort of a Dismal
-Swamp, and then up a hill. After Ptolemy
-and I climbed to the top, we looked
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span>
-down and saw, hidden in a clump of lonely
-looking poplars, a small, rudely built house.
-We went down to explore and had hard
-work making our way through a thick
-growth of&ndash;&ndash;everything. We crawled
-under some tangled vines and came up
-on the steps. The house was vacant, although
-there were a few old pieces of
-furniture&ndash;&ndash;a couple of cots, a cook-stove,
-table, and chairs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;On our way home we met a woman
-who gave us a history of the house. An
-old miser lived there long ago. One night
-he was robbed and murdered, and his
-ghost still haunts the place. No one
-ventures in its vicinity, and she said most
-likely we were the first people who had
-gone there since the tragedy. She told
-us of a nearer way to reach it. You take
-the road to Windy Creek, and about two
-miles below here, turn into a lane and
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span>
-then go through a grove and over a
-hill.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t really believe the story, that
-is, the ghost part of it?&rdquo; asked Rossiter.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;N&ndash;&ndash;o,&rdquo; allowed Beth. &ldquo;Still, I&rsquo;d like
-to. It makes it interesting. Ptolemy and
-I are going down there some night to see
-if we can find the ghost.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t see one,&rdquo; I assured her.
-&ldquo;Ptolemy&rsquo;s presence would be sufficient
-to keep even a ghost in the background.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy&rsquo;s a peach,&rdquo; declared Beth
-emphatically.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If he were older, you wouldn&rsquo;t think
-so,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; asked Beth in surprise,
-or seeming surprise.</p>
-<p>He smiled enigmatically, and irrelevantly
-asked her if she wouldn&rsquo;t really be afraid
-to go to the haunted house at night with
-only Ptolemy for protection.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span></div>
-<p>She assured him she shouldn&rsquo;t be afraid
-of a ghost if she saw one, and that she
-shouldn&rsquo;t be afraid to go alone.</p>
-<p>Throughout the evening, which we
-spent in rowing, walking, and later at a
-little impromptu supper, I was interested
-in observing the puzzling behavior of Beth
-and my chum. I had expected that he
-would avoid her as much as possible and
-speak to her only when common politeness
-made conversation obligatory, and
-that she, a born coquette, would seek to
-add his scalp to her collection. Instead,
-to my surprise, their r&ocirc;les were reversed.
-He appeared interested in her every remark
-and looked at her often and intently.
-He was quite assiduous in his attentions
-which, strange to say, she discouraged,
-not with the deep design of a flirt to increase
-his ardor, but with a calm firmness
-that admitted of no doubt as to her feelings.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Your sister,&rdquo; he remarked to me as
-we were walking down to the lake for a
-swim just before going to bed, &ldquo;is a very
-unusual type.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not at all!&rdquo; I assured him. &ldquo;Beth is
-the true feminine type which you have
-never taken the trouble to know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, come, Lucien! Not feminine,
-you know. Though she is inconsistent.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I resented the imputation hotly, but he
-only laughed and said that he guessed it
-was true that a man didn&rsquo;t understand the
-women in his family as well as an outsider
-did.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You think,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;just because she
-says she isn&rsquo;t afraid of ghosts&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; he denied. &ldquo;That wasn&rsquo;t
-the reason, but&ndash;&ndash;I like her type, though
-I always supposed I wouldn&rsquo;t. It is a
-new one to me&ndash;&ndash;anyway. I didn&rsquo;t
-think so young a girl as she&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span></div>
-<p>Our discussion was cut short by the
-inevitable, ever-present Ptolemy, who
-came running up to us, clad in about four
-inches of swimming trunks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why aren&rsquo;t you in bed?&rdquo; I demanded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was in bed, but it was so warm I
-couldn&rsquo;t sleep, and I went to the window
-and saw you coming down here, so I thought
-I&rsquo;d come, too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I repeated Rob&rsquo;s remarks to Silvia when
-I returned to our room, and she betrayed
-Beth&rsquo;s confidences in regard to Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She says she would like him if it were
-not for one trait that she dislikes more
-than any other in a man and that it was
-sufficient in her estimation to counterbalance
-all his good qualities.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What can she mean?&rdquo; I asked bewildered.
-&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see a flaw in Rob,
-except for his being a woman-hater, and
-he surely hasn&rsquo;t betrayed that fact to her,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span>
-judging from his manner toward her. I
-think he is making an effort to be nice to
-her on my account, and she doesn&rsquo;t appreciate
-it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I asked her what the flaw was, and she
-flushed and said she couldn&rsquo;t tell me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I guess all around it is a good
-thing we are going off on our fishing expedition.
-I don&rsquo;t want my friend turned
-down by my sister, and I don&rsquo;t want my
-friend calling my sister a new type and
-unfeminine.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_15' id='linki_15'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-020.jpg' alt='' title='' width='152' height='196' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_16' id='linki_16'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-021.jpg' alt='' title='' width='360' height='116' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_VIII__PTOLEMY_DISAPPEARS_AND_I_VISIT_A_HAUNTED_HOUSE' id='CHAPTER_VIII__PTOLEMY_DISAPPEARS_AND_I_VISIT_A_HAUNTED_HOUSE'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcaplc'>CHAPTER VIII</span></h2>
-<h3><i>Ptolemy Disappears and I Visit a Haunted House</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>When Rob and I, with our camping
-outfit, drove off through the
-woods, Ptolemy&rsquo;s eyes followed
-us so enviously and he pleaded so eloquently
-to be taken with us that Rob
-was actually on the point of considering
-it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;See here, Rob Rossiter!&rdquo; I exclaimed,
-&ldquo;This is my vacation and all I came to
-this God-forsaken place for was to escape
-the Polydores. If he goes, I stay. You
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span>
-know I&rsquo;ve always tried to meet issues,
-but this antique family has got me going.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; he yielded.</p>
-<p>After a drive of a few miles we came
-to the lake and pitched our tent. Two
-days of ideal camp life followed. The
-weather was fine, Rob was a first-class
-cook, and the sport was beyond our most
-optimistic expectation. We landed enough
-of the Friday food to satisfy the most
-fastidious fishing fiend, and the mosquitoes,
-finding we were impervious to their
-stings, finally let us alone.</p>
-<p>I forgot all business cares and disappointments,
-yes, even the Polydores; but on
-the morning of the third day Rob began
-to show signs of restlessness and spoke
-of the likelihood of my wife&rsquo;s being lonely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not with Beth and Ptolemy in calling
-distance,&rdquo; I told him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But they will be off together,&rdquo; he
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span>
-replied, &ldquo;and your wife will be alone with
-that <i>enfant terrible</i>. I fancy, too, that
-your sister isn&rsquo;t exactly a companion for
-your wife.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, that shows how little you know
-her. She and Silvia are great friends.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, of course they are friendly,
-but I mean their tastes are so different,
-and they are so unlike. Your sister doesn&rsquo;t
-care for domesticity.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure she does. You have turned the
-wrong searchlight on Beth. If you knew
-her, you&rsquo;d like her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I do like her,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s too
-bad she&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He stopped abruptly and quickly
-changed the conversation. In spite of
-my efforts to renew the controversy about
-Beth, he refused to return to the subject.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_17' id='linki_17'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span>
-<img src='images/illus-022.jpg' alt='' title='' width='336' height='477' /><br />
-<p class='caption'>
-He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span></div>
-<p>In the afternoon, when I was doing a
-little scale work preparatory to cooking,
-a messenger from the hotel drove up with
-a note from Silvia which I read aloud:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy has been missing for twenty-four
-hours. We are in hopes he has
-joined you. If not, what shall I do?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll go back with you,&rdquo; said Rob to
-the man. &ldquo;Just lend a hand here and
-help us pull up these tent stakes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s Ptolemy to me or I to him?&rdquo;
-I asked with a groan, &ldquo;can&rsquo;t we give him
-absent treatment?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re positively inhuman, Lucien,&rdquo;
-protested Rob. &ldquo;The boy may be at
-the bottom of the lake.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not he! He was born to be hung.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All this time, however, I had been active
-in making preparations for departure, as
-I knew that Silvia would feel that we were
-responsible for Ptolemy&rsquo;s safety, and her
-anxiety was reason enough for me to hasten
-to her.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span></div>
-<p>Rob was quite jubilant on our return trip
-and declared that the fish came too easily
-and too plentifully to make it real sport,
-but I felt that I had another grudge to be
-charged up to the fateful family.</p>
-<p>We found Silvia pale from anxiety, Beth
-in tears, and Diogenes loudly clamoring for
-&ldquo;Tolly.&rdquo; We learned that the afternoon
-before, Silvia and Beth had gone with the
-landlady for a ride, leaving Diogenes in
-Ptolemy&rsquo;s care, but on their return at
-dinner time, Diogenes was playing alone
-in the sandpile.</p>
-<p>Nothing was thought of Ptolemy&rsquo;s absence
-until bedtime, and they had then
-sent out searching parties to the woods
-and the lake shores. Finally it occurred
-to Beth that he might have gone to join
-Rob and me, so they sent the messenger
-to investigate.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He must be lost in the woods
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span>
-somewhere,&rdquo; said Beth tearfully, &ldquo;and he will
-starve to death.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Rob actually touched her hand in his
-distress at her grief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy is too smart to get lost anywhere,&rdquo;
-I declared. &ldquo;He knows fully as
-much about woodcraft as he does about
-every other kind of craft. He&rsquo;s one of
-his mother&rsquo;s antiquities personified. But
-haven&rsquo;t you been able to find anyone who
-saw him after you went for your ride?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; even the hotel help were all out
-on the lake.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And he left Diogenes here, absolutely
-unguarded?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well!&rdquo; admitted Silvia, &ldquo;he tied Diogenes
-to a tree near the sandpile.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then he must have gone away with
-malice aforethought,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;and Diogenes
-is the only one who knows anything
-about his last movements.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span></div>
-<p>I lifted the child to my knee, and speaking
-more gently to him than I had ever
-done, I asked:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Di, did you and Tolly play in the
-sandpile yesterday?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He was quite emphatic in his affirmative.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, tell Ocean: Did Tolly go away
-and leave you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tolly goed away,&rdquo; he confirmed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien!&rdquo; protested Beth, laughing.
-&ldquo;He&rsquo;s too little to know what you are
-talking about or to remember.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien&rsquo;s ruling passion strong in death,&rdquo;
-murmured Rob. &ldquo;He can&rsquo;t help cross-examining
-the cradle even!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which way,&rdquo; I resumed, ignoring these
-interruptions, &ldquo;did Tolly go&ndash;&ndash;that way?&rdquo;
-pointing towards the woods.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No! Tolly goed&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; and he trailed off
-into his baby jargon which no one could
-understand, but he pointed to the lake.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;What did he say when he went away;
-when he tied the rope around you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bye-bye.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What else?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Diogenes&rsquo; intentions to be communicative
-were certainly all right, but not a
-word was intelligible. As he kept picking
-at his dress and pointing to it, I finally
-prompted:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did Tolly pin a paper to Di&rsquo;s dress?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;m&ndash;&ndash;h&rsquo;&ndash;&ndash;m.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bravo, Lucien!&rdquo; applauded Rob.
-&ldquo;They say you can induce a witness to
-admit anything.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did Di do with the paper?&rdquo; I
-continued.</p>
-<p>The word he wanted evidently being
-beyond his vocabulary and speech, he
-made a rotary motion with his fist. The
-gesture conveyed nothing to our minds,
-but was instantly recognized and interpreted
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
-by the landlady&rsquo;s little girl, who
-said he meant a windmill such as she had
-sometimes made for him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did Di do with the windmill?&rdquo;
-I asked.</p>
-<p>He pointed to the sandpile, which I
-investigated and found a stick planted
-therein. I pulled it up and saw a pin
-sticking in the end of it. Further excavation
-revealed a crumpled piece of paper
-on which was written in Ptolemy&rsquo;s round
-hand:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;Want to see kids. Am going home.
-Tell Beth I bet she dasent go to the haunted
-house alone at night. Ptolemy.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor Huldah!&rdquo; sighed Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought he was having the time of
-his life here,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He was sore,&rdquo; declared Beth, &ldquo;because
-you and Lucien wouldn&rsquo;t take him with
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span>
-you on the fishing trip. He was moping
-by himself all the morning.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Trying to think up some new deviltry,&rdquo;
-I theorized, &ldquo;to make us feel bad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; asserted Silvia, &ldquo;I think he really
-misses the boys. The Polydores, for all
-their scrappings, are very clannish. But
-how do you suppose he got down to Windy
-Creek?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He could catch plenty of rides along
-the way, but what is puzzling me is how
-he got the money to pay his fare.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He seemed very well provided with
-cash,&rdquo; informed Rob. &ldquo;I tried to pay
-for his ticket down here, but he insisted
-on buying it himself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia worried so much about what
-might happen to him en route that after
-dinner I motored to Windy Creek with
-some tourists who had stopped at the
-hotel in passing.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span></div>
-<p>I called up long distance and after some
-delay got in communication with our house.
-Ptolemy himself answered and assured me
-he had arrived all &ldquo;hunky doory&rdquo;, that
-Huldah, who was out on an errand, was
-&ldquo;hunky doory&rdquo;, and that the kids were
-all &ldquo;hunky doory.&rdquo; In fact, his cheerful
-tone indicated that the whole universe
-was in the beatific state described by his
-expressive adjective.</p>
-<p>I was really ripping mad at his taking
-French leave and so giving Silvia cause
-for her anxiety, but I forbore to reprimand
-him by word or tone, lest he get even by
-&ldquo;coming back&rdquo; literally. I did tell him
-how the loss of the note for twenty-four
-hours had caused a general excitement,
-but he felt no remorse for his share in the
-situation, blaming Diogenes entirely and
-bidding me &ldquo;punch the kid&rsquo;s face&rdquo; for
-unpinning the note.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span></div>
-<p>On my return from Windy Creek I was
-fortunate enough to fall in with a farmer
-who lived near the hotel. He was driving
-some sort of a machine he called an <i>autoo</i>.
-He was an old-timer in the vicinity and
-related the past, present, and pluperfect of
-all the residents on the route. I had a
-detailed and vivid account of the midnight
-visitor of the haunted house.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d jest naturally like to see what there
-is to it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Not that I am afeerd
-at all, only it&rsquo;s sort of spooky to go to a
-lonesome place like that all alone. If I
-could git some one to go with me, I&rsquo;d tackle
-the job, but I vum if every time I perpose
-it to anyone they don&rsquo;t make some excuse.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m on,&rdquo; I declared. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t dread
-ghosts near as much as I do some living
-folks I know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right you air,&rdquo; chuckled the old man.
-&ldquo;If you say so we&rsquo;ll go right off now jest
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span>
-as sure as shootin&rsquo;. We may be ghosts
-ourselves tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I assured him I was quite ready to encounter
-the ghost, so he jubilantly turned
-the machine from the road into a grass-grown
-lane. We zigzagged for some distance
-and then got out and went on foot
-through a grove. The moon and the stars
-were half veiled by some light, misty clouds,
-so that the little house didn&rsquo;t show up
-very clearly, but as we came to the top
-of the hill, we saw something that shook
-even my well-behaved nerves.</p>
-<p>From a window in the roof-room extended
-a white arm and hand, with index
-finger pointing threateningly and directly
-toward us.</p>
-<p>My farmer friend turned quickly and
-fled toward the grove. I followed fleetly.
-&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your rush?&rdquo; I asked, when I
-had overtaken him.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I just happened to remember,&rdquo; he explained
-gaspingly, &ldquo;that there&rsquo;s a pesky
-autoo thief in these &rsquo;ere parts. Bukins
-had his stole jest last night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The lights on his machine must have
-reassured him as to its safety when we
-emerged from the woods into the open, but
-he didn&rsquo;t lessen his speed. We got in the
-&ldquo;autoo&rdquo; and soon said good-by to the
-lane. At one time I believed it was
-good-by to everything, but at last we
-gained the highway, right side up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well!&rdquo; I said, when we were running
-normally again on terra firma, &ldquo;that
-was some little old ghost,&ndash;&ndash;beckoned to
-us to come right in, too!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You seen it then!&rdquo; he exclaimed excitedly.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m mighty glad I had an eyewitness.
-Folks wouldn&rsquo;t believe me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They probably won&rsquo;t believe me,
-either,&rdquo; I assured him. &ldquo;I am a lawyer.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t tell me! Well, it did jest
-give me a start for a minute. I&rsquo;d like to
-hev gone in and seen it nigh to, if I hadn&rsquo;t
-happened to think of this &rsquo;ere autoo. You
-see I ain&rsquo;t got it all paid for yet. I&rsquo;m jest
-clean beat. You don&rsquo;t mind my takin&rsquo;
-a leetle pull at a stone fence, do you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess not,&rdquo; I assented somewhat
-dubiously, however. &ldquo;That was a rail
-fence we took a pull at back in the lane,
-wasn&rsquo;t it? Of course, if we shouldn&rsquo;t
-happen to clear the stone fence as well
-as we did the rail fence, it might be more
-disastrous.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, land!&rdquo; he said with a cackling
-laugh, &ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t meanin&rsquo; that kind of a
-fence. I mean the kind you&ndash;&ndash;Say!
-You ain&rsquo;t one of them teetotalers, be you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Only in theory,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;but this
-stone fence drink is a new one on me.
-What&rsquo;s it like?&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span></div>
-<p>He stopped the &ldquo;autoo&rdquo; and pulled a
-bottle from an inner pocket.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You kin taste it better than I kin tell
-it,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;Take a pull&ndash;&ndash;a condumned
-good one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I rarely imbibed, confining my indulgences
-to the demands of necessity, but I
-thought that the flight of Ptolemy, the
-ghostly encounter, and my Mazeppa&ndash;&ndash;wild
-ride all combined to constitute an occasion
-adequate to call for a bracer in the shape
-of a stone fence, or anything he might
-produce.</p>
-<p>I took what I considered a &ldquo;condumned
-good one&rdquo; from the bottle and it nearly
-strangled me, but I followed the aged
-stranger&rsquo;s advice to take another to &ldquo;cure
-the chokes&rdquo; caused by the first one. On
-general principles I took a third and then
-reluctantly returned him the bottle.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s over the moon,&rdquo; he jovially
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span>
-exclaimed as he proceeded to make my
-attempt at a &ldquo;condumned good one&rdquo;
-appear most niggardly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;May I ask,&rdquo; I inquired when my feeling
-of nerve-tense strain had vanished, and
-I felt as if I were treading thin air, &ldquo;just
-what is in a stone fence?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, what do you think?&rdquo; he asked
-slyly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think the very devil is in it,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, mebby,&rdquo; he admitted. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-two-thirds hard cider and one-third whisky.
-It&rsquo;s a healthy, hearting drink and yet
-it has a leetle come back to it&ndash;&ndash;a sort
-o&rsquo; kick, you know. But this is where I
-live,&rdquo; pointing to a farmhouse well back
-from the road, &ldquo;but I am goin&rsquo; to run you
-on to your tavern though.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The hotel was dark, save for a light in
-my room. I invited him in, but he was
-anxious to &ldquo;git hum and tell the folks&rdquo;,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span>
-so I gave him some cigars and went in to
-&ldquo;tell my folks.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I found them in the room waiting for
-me. That is, Beth was in the room, sitting
-by the table and pretending to read. Silvia
-and Rob were out in the little balcony.
-They came inside as soon as they heard my
-voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, was he there?&rdquo; asked Silvia anxiously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;He answered the
-telephone himself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I was feeling quite exhilarated by this
-time. My wife looked a perfect vision to
-me. Beth, I thought, was some sister,
-and Rob the best fellow in the world. Even
-the Polydores at long range, and under
-the ameliorating influence of stone fences,
-seemed like fine little fellows&ndash;&ndash;rather active
-and strenuous, to be sure, but only as
-all wholesome children should be.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span></div>
-<p>Silvia was relieved at the announcement
-of Ptolemy&rsquo;s safety, but very much disappointed
-that I did not succeed in interviewing
-Huldah and finding out something
-about domestic affairs.</p>
-<p>I assured her that everything was &ldquo;hunky
-doory&rdquo; at home, praised the telephone
-service, my expedition to town, and painted
-my return ride with &ldquo;the honest farmer&rdquo;
-in glowing terms. I was suddenly halted in
-my eulogy by becoming aware of an amazed
-expression on my wife&rsquo;s countenance, a
-most suspicious glance in Beth&rsquo;s wide-open
-eyes, and a very knowing wink from
-Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia severely, &ldquo;I believe
-you&rsquo;ve been drinking. I certainly
-smell spirits.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe you do,&rdquo; I replied jocosely.
-&ldquo;I certainly saw spirits. I went to the
-haunted house on my way back.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought Windy Creek was a dry
-town,&rdquo; remarked Rob innocently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is,&rdquo; I assured him, &ldquo;but I rode home
-with an old man&ndash;&ndash;a farmer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Does he run a blind pig?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was more like a pig in a poke,&rdquo; I
-replied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; exclaimed Silvia reproachfully,
-&ldquo;you told me two years ago, after
-that banquet to the Bar, that you were
-never going to touch wine or whisky again.
-What did that horrid old man give you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A stone fence. That&rsquo;s what he said
-it was anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a new one on me,&rdquo; commented
-Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There was a new toast went with it.
-He drank to &lsquo;over the moon.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You must have gone there all right and
-taken all the shine from the moon-man,&rdquo;
-said Rob.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; asked Beth, &ldquo;did you really
-go to that haunted house?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Again I was moved to eloquence, and I
-told of the farmer&rsquo;s yearning, the fulfillment,
-the beckoning hand and the beating
-of the retreat at length.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you sure,&rdquo; asked Rob, &ldquo;that you
-didn&rsquo;t take that stone fence before you
-visited the haunted house?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; I replied, loftily, &ldquo;that a
-lawyer&rsquo;s word is worthless, but seeing is
-believing. We will all visit the haunted
-house tomorrow night and I&rsquo;ll make good
-on ghosts.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This plan was unanimously approved,
-and then Silvia suggested that she thought
-I had better go to bed. I had no particular
-objection to doing so.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; she said solemnly, when we
-were alone, &ldquo;I want you to promise me
-something. I want you to give me your
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span>
-word that you will never take another
-stone wall.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I did this most readily.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_18' id='linki_18'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-023.jpg' alt='' title='' width='307' height='284' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_19' id='linki_19'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-024.jpg' alt='' title='' width='378' height='100' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_IX__IN_WHICH_WE_SEE_GHOSTS' id='CHAPTER_IX__IN_WHICH_WE_SEE_GHOSTS'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter IX</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which We See Ghosts</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>The next morning Rob tried earnestly
-and vainly to drive a wedge in
-Beth&rsquo;s good graces, but she treated
-him with a casual tolerance that finally
-put him in an ill humor which he took out
-on me with many a gibe at my &ldquo;stone fence
-spirit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Men of my profession who have to deal
-with facts rather than fancy are not believers
-in the supernatural. I was sure
-that the extending arm and the beckoning
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span>
-finger were there, but belonged to no
-ghost. It might have been a curtain
-blowing out the window or a fake of some
-kind. But I knew that unless there was
-some kind of a showing in a ghostly way
-that night, I should never hear the last of
-my stone fence indulgence, so I resolved
-to make a preliminary visit alone by daylight
-and rig up something white to substantiate
-my spectral narrative.</p>
-<p>I didn&rsquo;t find an opportunity to escape
-unseen until late in the afternoon, when I
-went, ostensibly, for a solitary row on the
-lake.</p>
-<p>I landed and came by a circuitous route
-to the haunted house. The calm security
-of sunshine, of course, prevented any shivers
-of anticipation such as I had experienced
-the night before. On passing one of the
-windows on my way to the front entrance,
-I glanced in, stopped in sheer fright, stooped
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span>
-and backed to the next window, which was
-screened by a labyrinth of vines through
-which I peered. I am sure I lost my Bloom
-of Youth complexion for a few moments.
-I babbled aimlessly to myself and then
-managed to pull together and beat it to
-the lake with as much speed as my farmer
-friend had shown in his retreat. I made the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span>
-boat and the hotel in double quick time.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_20' id='linki_20'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-025.jpg' alt='' title='' width='324' height='296' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>I felt no misgivings now as to the promise
-of a sensation that night, and that sustaining
-thought was all that propped my flagging
-spirits throughout the day, but I
-resolved to keep my little party at safe
-distance from the house.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say we keep our nocturnal noctambulation
-under our hats,&rdquo; proposed Rob.</p>
-<p>When this proposition was translated to
-Silvia, she entirely approved, so, committing
-Diogenes to the Polydores&rsquo; Providence, we
-left the hotel at half past eleven for a row
-on the lake by moonlight.</p>
-<p>When we descended the slope leading
-to the House of Mystery, I cautioned silence
-and a &ldquo;safety-first&rdquo; distance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ghosts are easily vanished,&rdquo; I informed
-them. &ldquo;They don&rsquo;t seek limelight,
-and I want you to be sure to see
-this one.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span></div>
-<p>As we came to the untrodden undergrowth
-we heard a weird, wailing sound
-that would have curdled my blood had I
-not glanced in the window that afternoon
-and so, in a measure, been prepared for
-this&ndash;&ndash;or anything.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look!&rdquo; whispered Beth. &ldquo;The arm!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia looked at the roof window and with
-a stifled shriek of terror turned and fled up
-the hill, Rob chivalrously pursuing her.</p>
-<p>Beth was pale, but game.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What can it be, Lucien?&rdquo; she whispered.
-&ldquo;Do we dare go in to see?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t, Beth,&rdquo; I vetoed quickly.
-&ldquo;Maybe some lunatic or half-witted person
-has taken up abode here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien!&rdquo; called Rob peremptorily.</p>
-<p>I turned quickly. He was at the top of
-the hill, half supporting Silvia. I ran
-toward them, followed by Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t a ghost, of course, Silvia,&rdquo; I
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span>
-said soothingly, and then repeated my supposition
-about the lunatic.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course I don&rsquo;t believe in ghosts,&rdquo;
-said Silvia shudderingly, &ldquo;but it&rsquo;s an awful
-place and those sounds are like those I
-have heard in nightmares.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll hurry back to the hotel and forget
-all about it,&rdquo; I urged.</p>
-<p>I rowed the boat and Silvia sat opposite
-me. Beth and Rob were in the stern
-and I had to listen to their conversation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course I felt a little creepy,&rdquo; she admitted,
-&ldquo;but then I like to feel that way,
-and I wasn&rsquo;t afraid.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, of course, you wouldn&rsquo;t be,&rdquo; he
-replied somewhat ironically. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re the
-new woman type.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I am not,&rdquo; she denied. &ldquo;I wish
-I were. Silvia&rsquo;s really the strong-minded
-type.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;She didn&rsquo;t act the part when she saw
-the ghost,&rdquo; he retorted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s very unusual for her nerves to give
-way. Silvia&rsquo;s quite a surprise to me this
-summer, but I think those funny Polydores
-have upset her more than Lucien realizes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I wondered if she were right, and once
-again murderous wishes toward the Polydores
-entered my brain, and I made renewed
-vows about disposing of them on
-our return home.</p>
-<p>One thing, however, had been accomplished
-by our expedition. Silvia was more
-lenient in her judgment on my indulgences
-of the preceding night.</p>
-<p>By the time we pulled in at the landing,
-Silvia had recovered her equilibrium.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien, what the devil do you suppose
-was in that house?&rdquo; asked Rob, when we
-were putting up the boat.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Loons and things,&rdquo; I allowed.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;But what was that white arm?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some fake thing the village wag has
-put up to scare the natives.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Next morning&rsquo;s stage brought some new
-arrivals, and among them were two college
-students who at once were claimed by Beth.
-She played tennis with one and later went
-rowing with the other. Rob smoked and
-sulked, apart.</p>
-<p>My farmer friend had been garrulous
-and rumors of the ghost and the haunted
-house had come to the ears of the hotel
-inmates, thereby causing a pleasurable
-stir of excitement. A number of them
-announced their intention of visiting the
-place. They asked me to be their guide,
-but I refused.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was interesting,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;but I think
-it would be a bore to see the same ghost
-twice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am sure I don&rsquo;t care to go again,&rdquo; was
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span>
-Silvia&rsquo;s emphatic reply when asked to be
-one of the party.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ghosts are scientifically admitted and
-explained,&rdquo; growled Rob, &ldquo;so I don&rsquo;t see
-anything to be excited about.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth accepted the offer of escort of one
-of the students, so Silvia, Rob, and I remained
-at home. The night was quite
-cool, and we played cards in our room.
-When the party returned, Beth joined us.
-She looked rather out of sorts.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; she replied in answer to
-Silvia&rsquo;s eager inquiry. &ldquo;We saw the ghost.
-I don&rsquo;t know whether it was the same
-little old last night&rsquo;s ghost or a new one.
-He showed more of himself this time though.
-He had two arms and a veiled head out of
-the window. As soon as our crowd glimpsed
-it, they all fled quicker than we did last
-night. Those two students fell all over
-each other and left me in the lurch.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;What could you expect,&rdquo; asked Rob,
-&ldquo;from such ladylike things? They ought
-to be kept in the confines of the croquet
-ground. If they are a fair specimen of
-the kind you have met, no wonder you&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_21' id='linki_21'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-026.jpg' alt='' title='' width='309' height='287' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>He stopped abruptly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No wonder what?&rdquo; she asked quickly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; he replied glumly.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span></div>
-<p>When I came down to breakfast the
-next morning, the landlady in tears waylaid
-me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Wade,&rdquo; she began in trouble-telling
-tone, &ldquo;this affair about the ghost is
-going to hurt my business. Some of those
-folks say they are going home, and they
-will tell others and&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll fix the ghost story. Just leave it to
-me!&rdquo; I assured her optimistically, as we
-went into the dining-room.</p>
-<p>There were only enough guests to fill one
-long table, and every one was excitedly
-dissecting the ghost.</p>
-<p>I took my seat and also the floor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hate to dispel your illusions,&rdquo; I said
-cheerfully, &ldquo;but the fact is, I made a daylight
-investigation of the haunted house.
-First I looked in the window and I saw&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, what did you see?&rdquo; chorused a
-dozen or more expectant voices.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;A lot of&ndash;&ndash;mice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; came in disappointed and skeptical
-tones.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But, the ghost, Mr. Wade?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes! The arms and the head?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A fake figure put up by some practical
-joker for the purpose of frightening timid
-people and encouraging the credulous. I
-didn&rsquo;t want to spoil your little picnic, so
-I kept still.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Those sounds, Lucien!&rdquo; reminded
-Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Were from a cat chorus. They were
-prowling about the house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re sure some lawyer, Mr. Wade,&rdquo;
-doubtfully complimented my grateful landlady,
-as we went out of the room after
-breakfast.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; asked Rob <i>sotto voce</i>, joining
-me on the veranda, &ldquo;why don&rsquo;t the cats
-you speak of catch that lot of mice?&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span></div>
-<p>Fortunately Beth came up to us, and I
-didn&rsquo;t have to explain.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she said with a shudder. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
-never go near that awful place! I&rsquo;d rather
-see a perfectly good ghost, or a loon, or a
-lunatic any day than a mouse.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re surely not afraid of a mouse!&rdquo;
-exclaimed Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; she asked coolly as she
-walked on.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told you she was feminine,&rdquo; I reminded
-him.</p>
-<p>He shook his head.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t understand,&rdquo; he remarked, &ldquo;why
-a girl who is afraid of mice should be&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t understand anything about
-women,&rdquo; I interrupted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right, Lucien. I don&rsquo;t, but
-your sister is surely the greatest enigma of
-them all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I rented the stone fence farmer&rsquo;s &ldquo;autoo&rdquo;
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span>
-and took Silvia and Diogenes to a neighboring
-town that afternoon. We didn&rsquo;t
-get back to the hotel until dinner time.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What have you been up to all day,
-Rob?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Numerous things. For one, I strolled
-down to the haunted house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you see?&rdquo; cried the women.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I saw four&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ghosts?&rdquo; asked Beth.</p>
-<p>I shot him a warning glance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Young tomcats playing tag with the
-mice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I corralled Rob outside after dinner.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For Heaven&rsquo;s sake!&rdquo; I implored.
-&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t disturb Silvia&rsquo;s peace of mind.
-Did you go inside?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; I was sorely tempted to, but refrained
-out of deference to the evident
-wishes of my host, but really, Lucien, we
-should&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I have only ten more days off, Rob.
-Don&rsquo;t make any unpleasant suggestions.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he said promptly.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_22' id='linki_22'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-027.jpg' alt='' title='' width='223' height='266' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_23' id='linki_23'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-028.jpg' alt='' title='' width='349' height='109' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_X_IN_WHICH_WE_MAKE_SOME_DISCOVERIES' id='CHAPTER_X_IN_WHICH_WE_MAKE_SOME_DISCOVERIES'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter</span> X</h2>
-<h3><i>In Which We Make Some Discoveries</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Diogenes, who, for a Polydore, had
-been quite placid since Ptolemy&rsquo;s
-departure, caused a commotion
-by disappearing the next morning. As he
-was possessed of a deep desire to go in the
-lake and get a little snake, he had been,
-when not under strict surveillance, tied to
-a tree with enough leeway in the length of
-rope to allow him to play comfortably.</p>
-<p>By some means he had managed to work
-himself loose from the rope and had evidently
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
-followed Ptolemy&rsquo;s example. I suggested
-calling up Huldah and asking if he
-had arrived yet, but I met with such chilling
-glances from Silvia and Beth that I got
-busy and organized searching parties, who
-reluctantly and lukewarmly engaged in the
-pursuit. Rob and I took the shore. After
-we had walked some little distance, we
-met a woman and stopped for inquiry.
-She said she had seen a child of about two
-years, clad in a blue and white striped dress
-and a big hat, going over the hill in company
-with a boy of about eight.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you going on to the hotel?&rdquo; I
-asked.</p>
-<p>On her replying that she was, I told her
-to inform them that she had met me and
-that the lost child was located.</p>
-<p>Rob and I then kept on over the hill, and
-when we neared the haunted house, we
-heard hair-raising sounds.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;If I hadn&rsquo;t been here before,&rdquo; remarked
-Rob, &ldquo;I should think that Sitting Bull had
-been reincarnated and was reviving the
-warrior war whoops.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We paused on the threshold. A human
-windmill of whirling legs and arms&ndash;&ndash;Polydore
-legs and arms&ndash;&ndash;flashed before our
-eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; I thundered.</p>
-<p>The flying wheel of arms and legs slacked,
-ran a few times, then slowly stopped, and
-the Polydore quintette assumed normal
-positions.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Halloa, stepdaddy!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A landslide composed of Emerald, Pythagoras,
-and Demetrius started toward
-me. I side-stepped and let Rob receive
-the charge.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Line them up now, for attention,&rdquo; I
-directed Ptolemy. &ldquo;I have something to
-say to you all.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span></div>
-<p>Ptolemy knocked the three terrors up
-against the wall, and I picked up Diogenes,
-who had a bump as big as an egg on his
-head.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told you,&rdquo; said Ptolemy to Pythagoras,
-&ldquo;that if you brought Di down here
-they&rsquo;d get on our trail. He wanted to see
-Di,&rdquo; he explained, &ldquo;so he sneaked over
-there and got him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We were wise before today,&rdquo; I informed
-him. &ldquo;I saw you all day before
-yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And I discovered you yesterday,&rdquo; added
-Rob.</p>
-<p>Ptolemy looked rather crestfallen, and
-then, seeming to consider that my discovery
-had been succeeded by inaction, which must
-mean non-interference, he heartened up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; I demanded, &ldquo;I want you to
-begin at the time you left the hotel and tell
-me everything and why you did it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I wasn&rsquo;t having any fun after you two
-went off camping,&rdquo; he began lugubriously.
-&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t hang around women folks all
-the time. I wanted boys to play with.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I saw a gleam of sympathy and understanding
-come into Rob&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A harem of hens,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I knew we could all have a grand time
-here and not be a bother to mudder, or
-Huldah or anyone, and it seemed too bad
-for this nice house to be empty, and no
-one anywhere else wanting us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I felt my first gleam of pity for a Polydore
-and wiped Diogenes&rsquo; dirty, moist face
-carefully with my handkerchief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So I went home and told Huldah I had
-come after the boys to take them back
-with me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And told her we had sent for them?&rdquo;
-I asked sharply.</p>
-<p>He flushed slightly at my tone.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;No; I didn&rsquo;t tell her so. She got that
-idea herself, and I didn&rsquo;t tell her different.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When did you come?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I came the same night that you telephoned,
-and took the train you and mudder
-came on. We got to Windy Creek in the
-morning. We fetched all our stuff here
-from home. I bought it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right here,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;tell me where you
-got the money to buy your stuff and to pay
-your fare here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I cashed father&rsquo;s check.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know he left you one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t, except the one he gave me
-to give you for our board. You told
-mudder you wouldn&rsquo;t touch it, and it seemed
-a pity not to have it working.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Visions of a future Polydore doing the
-chain and ball step flashed before my vision.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And they cashed it for you at the
-bank?&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure. Father always has me cash his
-checks for him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What amount did you fill in?&rdquo; I asked
-enviously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One hundred dollars. There&rsquo;s a lot
-more in the bank, too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How did you get your truck here
-from Windy Creek?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We divided it up and each took a
-bunch and started on foot, and some people
-in an automobile, going to the town past
-here, took us in and brought us as far
-as the lane. We&rsquo;ve been having a fine
-time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What doing?&rdquo; asked Rob interestedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fishing, sailing on a raft, playing in
-the woods all day and&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Playing ghost at night,&rdquo; said Pythagoras
-with a grin.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who made that ghost in the window?&rdquo;
-I demanded.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I did. I rigged up an arm and put it
-out the window the afternoon I left, hoping
-Beth would come down and see it, but
-we&rsquo;ve got a jim dandy one now.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was quite a shapely arm,&rdquo; said
-Rob. &ldquo;Where did you learn sculpturing?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I rigged it up,&rdquo; he said casually.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you bring in the way of
-supplies?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bacon, crackers, beans, candy, popcorn,
-gum, peanuts, pickles, candles, matches,
-and butter,&rdquo; was the glib inventory.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You may stay here,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;until we
-go home, but you are not to stir away from
-the woods about here and not on any
-account to come near the hotel, or let it
-be known that you are here. And you are
-to end this ghost business right off. Now,
-Di, we&rsquo;ll go home to mudder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; bawled Di. &ldquo;Stay with boys.
-Mudder come here.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span></div>
-<p>At least this was Ptolemy&rsquo;s interpretation
-of his protest.</p>
-<p>I threatened, Rob coaxed, and Ptolemy
-cuffed, but every time I started to leave
-and jerk him after me, he uttered such
-demoniac yells I was forced to stop.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wish it was night,&rdquo; said Emerald
-regretfully. &ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t he scare folks
-though! How does he get his voice up so
-high?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor little Di!&rdquo; said a voice commiseratingly
-from the doorway. &ldquo;Was
-Ocean plaguing him?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth gathered the child in her arms,
-and his howls changed to sobs. Rob
-stood petrified with amazement at her
-appearance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t want to go,&rdquo; said Diogenes
-between gulps.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Needn&rsquo;t go!&rdquo; promised Beth. &ldquo;Stay
-here with me, and we&rsquo;ll have dinner with
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span>
-the boys and then we&rsquo;ll go home and get
-some ice cream.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All yite,&rdquo; agreed the appeased Polydore.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;May Lucien and I stay to dinner,
-too?&rdquo; asked Rob humbly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she replied icily.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But, Beth,&rdquo; I remonstrated. &ldquo;Silvia
-will be worrying about Di. How can we
-explain?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia has gone to Windy Creek for the
-day. You see, I met that woman you
-sent to the hotel, and she told me she saw
-Di going over the hill with a boy, and I
-suddenly seemed to smell one of your
-mice, so I sent the woman on her way,
-and told Silvia you and Rob had found
-Diogenes. Just then some people she
-knew came along in a car and asked her
-to go to Windy Creek. I made her go and
-told her I&rsquo;d look after Di.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a brick, Beth!&rdquo; applauded
-Ptolemy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you boys will be very careful and not
-let anyone besides us know you are here,
-so mudder will not hear of it, for though
-she&rsquo;d like to see you&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;this without a
-flicker or flinch&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;we want her to have a
-nice rest. I&rsquo;ll come over every day except
-tomorrow and bring things from the hotel
-store, and bake up cookies and cake for
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A yell of approval went up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why can&rsquo;t you come tomorrow?&rdquo;
-asked the greedy Demetrius.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because I&rsquo;ve promised to go to the
-other end of the lake on a picnic. All
-the people at the hotel are going.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll come tomorrow and spend the
-whole day with you,&rdquo; promised Rob.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have a ride in the sailboat and do
-all sorts of things.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, aren&rsquo;t you going on that infernal
-picnic?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; I&rsquo;ll have all the picnic I want
-over here. Like Ptolemy I feel that I
-want to play with some of my own kind.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth looked at him approvingly; then
-she said a little sarcastically:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe you&rsquo;ll change your mind&ndash;&ndash;about
-going on the picnic, I mean&ndash;&ndash;when
-you see the new girl who just came to the
-hotel on the morning stage. She&rsquo;s a
-blonde, and not peroxided, either.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That would certainly drive him down
-here, or anywhere,&rdquo; I laughed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t you like blondes?&rdquo; she asked
-innocently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He doesn&rsquo;t like&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; I began, but
-Ptolemy rudely interrupted with an elaborate
-description of a new kind of fishing
-tackle he had bought.</p>
-<p>Then Beth bade Pythagoras build a fire
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span>
-in the cook-stove while she set the room to
-rights.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll eat out of doors,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I
-think it would be more appetizing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How did you get here?&rdquo; Rob asked
-her as we were leaving.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I rowed over.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;May I come over and row you back?&rdquo;
-he asked pleadingly.</p>
-<p>She hesitated, and then, realizing that
-she could scarcely manage a boat and
-Diogenes at the same time, assented, bidding
-him not come, however, until five
-o&rsquo;clock.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll have enough of the Polydores
-by that time,&rdquo; I said to Rob on our way
-home.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you know,&rdquo; he said reflectively,
-&ldquo;I like Ptolemy. There&rsquo;s the making of
-a man in him, if he has only half a chance.
-I didn&rsquo;t suppose your sister understood
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span>
-children so well or was so fond of them.
-She looked quite the little housewife, too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d discover a lot of things you
-don&rsquo;t know, if you&rsquo;d cultivate the society
-of women,&rdquo; I informed him.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_24' id='linki_24'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-029.jpg' alt='' title='' width='256' height='214' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_25' id='linki_25'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-030.jpg' alt='' title='' width='345' height='114' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XI__A_BAD_MEANS_TO_A_GOOD_END' id='CHAPTER_XI__A_BAD_MEANS_TO_A_GOOD_END'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XI</span></h2>
-<h3><i>A Bad Means to a Good End</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>When we were setting out on the
-proposed picnic the next day,
-Rob made himself extremely unpopular
-by announcing his intention to spend
-the day otherwise. The new blonde girl
-gave him fetching glances of entreaty which
-he never even saw. He made another sensation
-by proposing to keep Diogenes with
-him. To Silvia&rsquo;s surprise, Diogenes voiced
-his delight and chattered away, I suppose,
-about playing with the boys, but fortunately
-no one understood him.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you change your mind and
-come, too?&rdquo; he asked Beth.</p>
-<p>She seemed on the point of accepting
-and then firmly declined.</p>
-<p>When we returned at six o&rsquo;clock, Rob
-and Diogenes were awaiting us. There
-was something in Rob&rsquo;s eyes I had not seen
-there before. He had the look of one in
-love with life.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you have a nice time playing solitaire?&rdquo;
-asked Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had a very nice time,&rdquo; he replied
-with a subtle smile, &ldquo;but I didn&rsquo;t play
-solitaire. You know I had Diogenes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Diogenes apparently had a good time,
-too,&rdquo; said Silvia, looking at the child, who
-was certainly a wreck in the way of garments.
-&ldquo;What did you do all day, Rob?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We went out on the water, played
-games, and had a picnic dinner outdoors.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You had huckleberry pie for one thing,&rdquo;
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span>
-she observed, with a glance at Diogenes&rsquo;
-dress, &ldquo;and jelly for another, and&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Chicken, baked potatoes, milk, cake,
-and ice cream,&rdquo; he finished.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did you get ice cream?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I went down to a dairy farm and got
-a gallon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A gallon!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;For you
-and Diogenes?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t eat it all,&rdquo; he said guardedly.
-&ldquo;I gave what we didn&rsquo;t eat to some stray
-boys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hope Di won&rsquo;t be ill.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; asserted Rob. &ldquo;I am sure
-he is made of cast iron.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Throughout dinner Rob remained in high
-spirits. He kept eyeing Beth in a way
-that disconcerted her, and then suddenly
-he would smile with the expression of one
-who knows something funny, but intends
-to keep it a secret.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span></div>
-<p>Presently Silvia left us and went upstairs
-to give Diogenes a bath before she
-put him to bed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve had two days&rsquo; freedom from
-the last of the Polydores,&rdquo; I called after
-her. &ldquo;Doesn&rsquo;t it seem delightful?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; she answered slowly, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
-really missed the care of him. I was lonesome
-for him all day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He isn&rsquo;t such a bad little kid when he is
-out from Polydore environment,&rdquo; I admitted,
-regretting that he had been restored
-to it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now tell us all about your day with the
-boys,&rdquo; Beth asked Rob, when we were
-left alone. &ldquo;It really does seem too bad
-to keep a secret from Silvia, and yet it
-is a case of where ignorance is bliss&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It would be folly to be otherwise,&rdquo;
-finished Rob. &ldquo;Well, Diogenes and I left
-here with a boat load of supplies in the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span>
-way of provender and things for the boys.
-I had to tie Diogenes in the boat, of course,
-so he would not try some aquatic feat. He
-objected and yelled like a fiend all the
-way. I was glad there was no one at the
-hotel to come out and arrest me for cruelty
-to children. Of course before we landed,
-his cries were heard by his brothers and
-they were all at the water&rsquo;s edge. They
-made mulepacks of themselves and transferred
-the commissary supplies. The ice
-cream and bats and balls which I found at
-the store made quite a hit.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We played baseball, fished, and had a
-spread on the shore. Then Ptolemy and
-I rowed out to where the sailboat was. I
-explained the mysteries of the jib and he
-caught on instantly. We took in the other
-Polydores and sailed for a couple of hours.
-Then we all went in swimming.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not Diogenes!&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Certainly. I tucked him under my
-arm and he seemed perfectly at home, although
-greatly disappointed because we
-didn&rsquo;t succeed in catching a snake.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I finally landed them all safely under
-the roof of the Haunted House, and
-Ptolemy assured me it was the best day of
-his young life. In appreciation of the
-diversions I had afforded him, he made a
-confession which proved such good news
-to me that I was a lenient listener and
-exacted no penalty.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What was it?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He told me that on the day of Miss
-Wade&rsquo;s and my arrival at your house, he
-had made a misstatement to each of us
-and had not repeated to us accurately what
-he had overheard you telling Silvia when
-he was on the porch roof. Miss Wade,
-what did he tell you about me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He said that Lucien said that your only
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span>
-failing was that you were daffy over women
-and made love to every one you saw.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Beth!&rdquo; I cried, light bursting in,
-&ldquo;and you believed that little wretch?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I did.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then that is why you have been so&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes&ndash;&ndash;so&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; repeated Rob grimly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I never did have any use for a
-man-flirt, and I was awfully disappointed,
-for I had thought from what Rob said
-that you were a man&rsquo;s man.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And then, of course, when for the first
-time in my life I began being interested in
-a woman&ndash;&ndash;in you&ndash;&ndash;I played right into
-that little scamp&rsquo;s hands.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He is a man&rsquo;s man, Beth,&rdquo; I said
-warmly. &ldquo;What Ptolemy heard me say
-was that Rob was a woman-hater.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am not!&rdquo; declared Rob indignantly&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;just
-a woman-shyer, but I haven&rsquo;t
-finished with Ptolemy&rsquo;s confession. I
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span>
-wonder, now, if either of you can guess
-what he told me was Miss Wade&rsquo;s characteristic.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t dare guess,&rdquo; laughed Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What I did say about Beth was that
-she was a born flirt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am not!&rdquo; protested my sister, in resentment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I should prefer that appellation to the
-one he gave you. He said you were
-strong-minded and a man-hater.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Even Beth saw the irony of this.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I asked him,&rdquo; continued Rob, &ldquo;what
-his motive was, and he said &lsquo;Stepdaddy
-didn&rsquo;t want Beth to know about the man-hater
-business,&rsquo; so he took that means of
-throwing you off the track.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I took the occasion to talk to him like
-a Dutch uncle, though I don&rsquo;t know
-exactly what that is. I think it was the
-first time anything but brute force had
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span>
-been tried on him. I must have touched
-some little flicker of the right thing in
-him, for he was really contrite and seemed
-to sense a different angle of vision when I
-explained to him what havoc could be
-worked by the misinformation of meddlers.
-He promised me he&rsquo;d try to overcome his
-tendency to start things going wrong.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I made no comment, but it occurred to
-me that Ptolemy was a shrewd little fellow,
-and that there had been wisdom back of
-his strategic speeches to Beth and Rob,
-for he had taken the one sure course to
-make them both &ldquo;take notice.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So, Beth,&rdquo; said Rob, and her name
-seemed to come quite handily to him,
-&ldquo;can&rsquo;t we cut out the past ten days and
-begin our acquaintance right?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think we can,&rdquo; she answered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had better go upstairs,&rdquo; I suggested,
-&ldquo;and tell Silvia that Diogenes doesn&rsquo;t
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span>
-need a bath, seeing he has been in swimming.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Neither of them urged me to remain, so
-I went up to our room and found Silvia
-tucking Diogenes under cover.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you come up for?&rdquo; she asked.
-&ldquo;I was just coming down to join you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Beth is treating Rob so&ndash;&ndash;differently,
-that I thought it well to retreat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am so glad! Whatever came over
-the spirit of her dreams?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve just discovered in the course
-of conversation that Ptolemy as usual
-crossed the wires and told Beth Rob was
-a flirt, and then informed Rob that Beth
-was strong-minded and a man-hater.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, the little imp!&rdquo; she exclaimed indignantly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. It worked, anyway, so
-Ptolemy was the bad means to a good
-end.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;How did they ever happen to discover
-what he had done?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They caught on from something Rob
-said,&rdquo; I told her, feeling again guilty at
-keeping my first secret from her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It will be a fine match for Beth,&rdquo; said
-Silvia. &ldquo;Rob is such a splendid man,
-and then he has plenty of money. He
-can give her anything she wants.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I winced. I think Silvia must have
-been conscious of it, even though the room
-was dark, for she came to me quickly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish I could give you&ndash;&ndash;everything&ndash;&ndash;anything&ndash;&ndash;you
-want, Silvia.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You have, Lucien. The things that
-no money could buy&ndash;&ndash;love and protection.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Well, maybe I had. I had surely given
-her protection from the Polydores, though
-she didn&rsquo;t know to what extent.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am going to give you more material
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span>
-things, though, Silvia. When we go home,
-I shall start to work in earnest and see if
-I can&rsquo;t get enough ahead to make a good
-investment I know of.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d rather do without the necessities
-even, Lucien, than to have you work any
-harder than you have been doing. We
-must let well enough alone.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_26' id='linki_26'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-032.jpg' alt='' title='' width='157' height='254' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_27' id='linki_27'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-031.jpg' alt='' title='' width='342' height='124' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XII__TOO_MUCH_POLYDORES' id='CHAPTER_XII__TOO_MUCH_POLYDORES'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XII</span></h2>
-<h3>&ldquo;<i>Too Much Polydores</i>&rdquo;</h3>
-</div>
-<p>The next morning at breakfast, Beth
-announced that she and Rob were
-going to spend the day camping in
-the woods.</p>
-<p>Silvia and I tried not to look significantly
-at each other, but Beth was very keen.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We will take Diogenes with us,&rdquo; she
-instantly added.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; protested Silvia. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll be
-such a bother. And then he can&rsquo;t walk
-very far, you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll be no bother,&rdquo; persisted Beth.
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span>
-&ldquo;And we&rsquo;ll borrow the little cart to draw
-him in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; acquiesced Rob. &ldquo;We sure
-want Diogenes with us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have them put up a lunch for you,&rdquo;
-proposed Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Rob objected. &ldquo;We are going to
-forage and cook over a fire in the woods.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; I proposed to Silvia with alacrity,
-&ldquo;we&rsquo;ll have our first day alone together&ndash;&ndash;the
-first we have had since the
-Polydores came into our lives. I&rsquo;ll rent the
-&lsquo;autoo&rsquo; again, and we will go through the
-country and dine at some little wayside inn.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get the &lsquo;autoo&rsquo;, now, Lucien,&rdquo; advised
-Beth privately, &ldquo;and make an early start,
-so Rob and I can take supplies from the
-store without arousing Silvia&rsquo;s suspicions.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe,&rdquo; said Silvia disappointedly,
-when we were &ldquo;autooing&rdquo; on
-our way, &ldquo;that they are in love after all,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span>
-or that he has proposed, or that he is going
-to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did you draw all those pessimistic
-inferences from?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;From their both being so keen to take
-Diogenes with them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Diogenes would be no barrier to their
-love-making,&rdquo; I told her. &ldquo;He couldn&rsquo;t
-repeat what they said; at least, not so
-anyone could understand him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Many miles away we came upon a picturesque
-little old-time tavern where we
-had an appetizing dinner, and then continued
-on our aimless way. It was nearly
-ten o&rsquo;clock when we returned to the hotel,
-where the owner of the &ldquo;autoo&rdquo; was waiting.</p>
-<p>Rob came down the roadway.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s Beth?&rdquo; asked Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She has gone to bed. The day in the
-open made her sleepy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When Silvia had left us, the old farmer
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span>
-said with a chuckle: &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t offer you another
-swig of stone fence.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s probably just as well you can&rsquo;t,&rdquo;
-I replied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to be introduced to one,&rdquo; said
-Rob, who appeared to be somewhat downcast.
-&ldquo;I sure need a bracer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter, Rob?&rdquo; I asked
-when we were lighting our pipes. &ldquo;A
-strenuous day? Two in rapid &lsquo;concussion&rsquo;
-with the Polydores must be nerve-racking.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; I admit there seemed to be &lsquo;too
-much Polydores.&rsquo; We all had a happy reunion,
-and I devoted the forenoon to the
-entertainment of the famous family so I
-could be entitled to the afternoon off to
-spend with Beth. At noon we built a fire
-and cooked a sumptuous dinner. Beth
-baked up some things to keep them supplied
-a couple of days longer. After dinner
-I asked her to go for a row. She insisted
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span>
-on taking Diogenes along, and the
-others all followed us on a raft. So I
-decided to cut the water sports short, and
-Beth and I started for a walk in the woods.
-Three or more were constantly right on
-our trail. I begged and bribed, but to
-no avail. They were sticktights all right,
-and,&rdquo; he added morosely, &ldquo;she seemed
-covertly to aid and abet them. When we
-started for home, I found that the young
-fiends had broken the cart, so I had to
-carry Diogenes most of the way, and of
-course he bellowed as usual at being parted
-from the whelps.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_28' id='linki_28'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-033.jpg' alt='' title='' width='177' height='289' /><br />
-</div>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;They aren&rsquo;t such &lsquo;fine little chaps&rsquo;
-after all,&rdquo; I couldn&rsquo;t resist commenting.
-&ldquo;Familiarity breeds contempt, you see. I
-am sorry Diogenes had so much of their
-society. He&rsquo;ll be unendurable tomorrow.
-Well, you had some day!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So did the Polydores. Demetrius and
-Diogenes fell in the fire twice. Emerald
-threw a finger out of joint, but Ptolemy
-quickly jerked it into place. Pythagoras
-was kicked off the raft twice, following a
-mutiny. Demetrius threw a lighted match
-into the vines and set fire to the house.
-They said it was a &lsquo;beaut of a day&rsquo;, though,
-and urged us to come tomorrow and repeat
-the program. By the way, they went
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span>
-across the lake on their raft yesterday and
-bought a tent of some campers. They have
-pitched it in the woods beyond the house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When I went upstairs Silvia met me
-disconsolately.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t propose,&rdquo; she said disappointedly.
-&ldquo;She wouldn&rsquo;t let him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you wake her up to find out?&rdquo; I
-asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She hadn&rsquo;t gone to bed and she wasn&rsquo;t
-sleepy. She was trimming a hat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why wouldn&rsquo;t she let him propose, if
-she cares for him?&rdquo; I asked perplexedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you see,&rdquo; explained Silvia, &ldquo;that
-when a girl&ndash;&ndash;a coquette girl like Beth&ndash;&ndash;is
-as sure of a man as she is of Rob, she
-gets a touch of contrariness or offishness
-or something. She said it would have been
-too prosaic and cut and dried if they had
-gone away for a day in the woods and come
-back engaged. She wants the unexpected.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you think she loves him?&rdquo; I asked
-interestedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t say so. You can&rsquo;t tell
-from what she says anyway. Still, I think
-she is hovering around the danger point.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;d better watch out. Rob isn&rsquo;t
-the kind of a man who will stand for too
-much thwarting,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If he&rsquo;d only play up a little bit to some
-one else, it would bring things to a climax,&rdquo;
-said my wife sagely.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no one else to play up to. The
-blonde left today because it was so slow
-here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe some new girl will come tomorrow,&rdquo;
-said Silvia, &ldquo;or there&rsquo;s that
-trim little waitress who is waiting her way
-through college. He gave her a good big tip
-yesterday. I think I will give him a hint.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t help any. He wouldn&rsquo;t
-know how to play such a game if you could
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span>
-persuade him to try. He&rsquo;d probably tell
-the girl his motive in being attentive to her
-and then she&rsquo;d back out. Maybe, after
-all, Beth doesn&rsquo;t love him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think she does,&rdquo; replied my wife,
-&ldquo;because she is getting absent-minded.
-She let Diogenes go too near the fire. His
-shoes are burned, his hair singed, and his
-dress scorched. He woke up when I came
-in and he was so cross. He acted just
-the way he does when he is with his
-brothers.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_29' id='linki_29'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-034.jpg' alt='' title='' width='256' height='218' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_30' id='linki_30'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-035.jpg' alt='' title='' width='361' height='118' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XIII__ROBS_FRIEND_THE_REPORTER' id='CHAPTER_XIII__ROBS_FRIEND_THE_REPORTER'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XIII</span></h2>
-<h3><i>Rob&rsquo;s Friend the Reporter</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Silvia&rsquo;s vague prophecy was fulfilled.
-When the event of the day,
-the arrival of the stage, occurred, a
-solitary passenger alighted, a slim, alert,
-city-cut young woman.</p>
-<p>She looked us all over&ndash;&ndash;not boldly, but
-with a business-like directness as if she
-were taking inventory of stock, or acting
-as judge at a competition. When her
-blue eyes lighted on Rob, they darkened
-with pleasure.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Rossiter!&rdquo; she exclaimed,
-&ldquo;this is better than I hoped for.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They shook hands with the air of being
-old acquaintances, and he introduced her to
-us as &ldquo;Miss Frayne, from my home town.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She went into the office, registered, and
-sent her bag to her room. Then she asked
-Rob if she might have a talk with him.</p>
-<p>They walked away together down to
-the shore and she was talking to him quite
-excitedly. Rob suddenly stopped, threw
-back his head and laughed in the way
-that it is good to hear a man laugh.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Frayne must be a wit,&rdquo; observed
-Beth dryly.</p>
-<p>I looked at her keenly. Something in
-her eyes as she gazed after the retreating
-couple told me that Silvia&rsquo;s surmise was
-right, and that Miss Frayne might be just
-the little punch needed to send Beth over
-the danger point.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I rather incline to the belief that
-Ptolemy told the truth in the first place,&rdquo;
-she continued, and then looked disappointed
-because I did not contradict her.</p>
-<p>I decided not to reveal, for the present
-anyway, what I knew of Miss Frayne, of
-whom I had often heard Rob speak.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She can&rsquo;t be going to stay long,&rdquo; said Silvia
-hopefully. &ldquo;She didn&rsquo;t bring a trunk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t need one,&rdquo; replied Beth.
-&ldquo;She is probably one of those mannish
-girls who believe in a skirt and a few
-waists for a wardrobe.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When Rob and the newcomer returned,
-he seemed to be monopolizing the conversation
-in a very emphatic and earnest
-manner. As they came up the steps to the
-veranda, we heard her say:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Very well, Mr. Rossiter, I will do just
-as you say. I have perfect confidence in
-your judgment.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span></div>
-<p>They passed on into the hotel and
-Beth jumped up and went down toward
-the lake.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you ever hear Rob speak of this
-Miss Frayne?&rdquo; asked Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Often. She is engaged to his cousin,
-and is a reporter on a big newspaper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you say so? Oh, Lucien,&rdquo;
-she continued before I could speak, &ldquo;were
-you really shrewd enough to see which way
-the wind was blowing?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure. After you set my sails for me
-last night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Just then Rob came out of the hotel.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say, Lucien, I want to see you a minute.
-Come on down the road.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got some work ahead,&rdquo; he said
-when we were out of Silvia&rsquo;s hearing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s up?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Miss Frayne is up&ndash;&ndash;and doing. What
-do you suppose her paper sent her here for?&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;For a rest, or to write up the mosquitoes
-of H. H.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;H. H. is all right, only it happens they
-stand for Haunted House.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not really?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, really. The rumors of the house
-and the ghost, greatly elaborated, of course,
-reached the Sunday editor of the paper
-Miss Frayne is on, and he sent her up here
-to revive the story of the murder, translate
-the ghost, and get snapshots of the house.
-She was quite keen to have me take her
-there at once, so she could commence her
-article, but I headed her off, so she wouldn&rsquo;t
-discover the summer boarders at the hotel
-annex. I assured her that daytime was
-not the time to gather material and the
-only way she could get a proper focus on
-the ghost and acquire the thrills necessary
-for an inspiration was to see the place
-first by night.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;If she would view Fair Melrose aright,&rdquo;
-I quoted, &ldquo;she must visit it in the pale
-moonlight, but you were very clever to
-delay her visit long enough for us to get
-over there and warn the enemy. If she
-had gone down there and caught the
-Polydores unawares, she would have come
-back here and revealed our secret, and
-there would be the end of Silvia&rsquo;s vacation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To tell the truth, Lucien, I wasn&rsquo;t
-thinking so much of that as I was of Miss
-Frayne&rsquo;s interests. You see she has come
-a long ways for a story and if it collapsed
-from her ghostly expectations to a showdown
-of four healthy boys, the blow might
-mean a good deal to her in a business way.
-I think we had better let Ptolemy plant a
-ghost just once more for her. You know
-you made him take a reef in the flapping of
-ghostly garments. Can&rsquo;t we resurrect the
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span>
-specter and restore the wails just for tonight,
-and bring her over here at the
-witching hour?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure we will,&rdquo; I agreed heartily. &ldquo;She
-shall have her ghost and all the trappings.
-It will give the Polydores the time of their
-lives.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go over there now and put Ptolemy
-next so he can get busy on his spirits.&rdquo;
-We went down to the shore and pulled
-off. Midway across the lake, Rob suddenly
-rested on his oars and asked:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did Beth go?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Back to first principles,&rdquo; I replied.
-&ldquo;She thinks, judging from your excited,
-earnest manner in addressing Miss Frayne
-and your rushing frantically away for a
-walk with her before she had removed the
-travel dust, that Ptolemy was quite correct,
-after all, in declaring you to be a
-&lsquo;ladies&rsquo; man.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you explain to her who Miss
-Frayne was?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;I am on my vacation
-and I am not doing any explaining, professionally
-or otherwise.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He swung the boat around.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Starboard!&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you
-know a trump card when you see it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Again he rested on his oars and stared
-at me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you mean, Lucien? If you
-have a grain of hope for me, please let me
-in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I repeated Silvia&rsquo;s theories.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am not going to win her that way,&rdquo;
-he said slowly, &ldquo;not by playing a part.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I declared, &ldquo;if you go back to
-the hotel now, you can&rsquo;t explain Miss
-Frayne to Beth, because she went for a
-walk with old Professor Treadtop.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He turned the boat again.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia won&rsquo;t come to the Haunted
-House, will she?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, indeed. Nothing would induce
-her to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you bring Miss Frayne here tonight
-and I&rsquo;ll bring Beth. And I&rsquo;ll be sure
-that there are no double boats lying around
-loose. I&rsquo;ll have two at the dock, see?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see your system,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;but I
-am not sure how I can explain Miss Frayne
-to Silvia. Silvia is not in the least narrow-minded,
-but still to leave the hotel at
-midnight with a perfectly strange young
-woman&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can tell her I want a clear field for
-Beth. She will see it is in a good cause.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Polydores greeted us rapturously
-and roughly. When I had restored order,
-and they were once more right side up, I
-addressed the chief of the bandits.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; I began, &ldquo;a young lady,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span>
-who is a reporter for a big newspaper, has
-come from many miles away to write up
-the haunted house and the ghost, and they
-will be pictured out in the Sunday edition.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy&rsquo;s eyes glistened, and &ldquo;Them
-Three&rdquo; were instantly &ldquo;at attention.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, say, stepdaddy,&rdquo; begged the young
-chief, &ldquo;let me play ghost right for her, just
-once, will you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You may for tonight,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;but
-you will have to be very careful and not
-overdo the matter, for she isn&rsquo;t the kind
-that is easily fooled. She&rsquo;s had to keep
-her eyes and wits sharpened, else she
-wouldn&rsquo;t be on a newspaper, so I want
-you to be very careful and not bungle.
-Make a neat job of it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do it up brown, you bet!&rdquo; he cried
-gleefully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Naw, do it up white,&rdquo; drawled Pythagoras.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Show me your ghost stuff by daylight,&rdquo;
-I demanded, &ldquo;and let me see how you are
-going to rig him up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He brought forth a head and shoulders
-and arms that were ghastly even in sunlight,
-and proceeded to explain them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I got this skull out of father&rsquo;s study,
-and the arms came off a skeleton mother
-had in her antiquities. I dressed them
-up in a pillow case and the white cotton
-gloves are Huldah&rsquo;s. I can get some
-phosphorus in the woods and put it in the
-eyes. And Demetrius bought two electric
-flashlights yesterday, and Pythagoras
-can snap them once in a while from the
-lower windows.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are some little property man,&rdquo;
-said Rob in admiration. &ldquo;But tell me
-who produces those heart-rending
-shrieks?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was Pythagoras who did the high
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span>
-ones. And Em came in with low groans.
-Show &rsquo;em, boys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Pythagoras uttered high-trebled, thin-toned
-whines and ever and anon Emerald
-added a <i>basso profundo</i> accompaniment,
-making a combination that was most trying
-to the ears at close range.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;as I want
-Beth subjected to such a realistic performance.
-We will loiter in the distance.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your rehearsal,&rdquo; I assured Ptolemy,
-&ldquo;is very good, but you must remember
-that Miss Frayne is used to encountering
-things far more terrible than ghosts. She
-may insist on coming right in here to investigate.
-Of course, if she does, I can&rsquo;t
-refuse or she&rsquo;ll think I am afraid, or else
-that I put up a fake ghost here, myself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll lock the door with a chair,&rdquo; suggested
-Emerald.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll be quite capable of breaking into
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span>
-a little house like this, but I&rsquo;ll keep her
-back until you have time to haul in your
-ghost and make a quick and quiet getaway
-by a back window. Then another thing,
-she&rsquo;ll be over here tomorrow morning to
-take some pictures of the house, so by sunrise
-I want you all to take up your abode
-in the tent you have in the woods and
-stay there until I come and tell you the
-coast is clear.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re dead on,&rdquo; assured Ptolemy.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad there&rsquo;s going to be something
-doing. We&rsquo;re getting tired of being here
-alone. I had to tie Demetrius up this
-morning. He was bound to go over to
-the hotel and see mudder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t one of you dare to make such an
-attempt,&rdquo; I said peremptorily. &ldquo;You keep
-right on here for a few days. Some of us,
-either Rob, or Beth and I will drop over
-every day. If you play your ghost just
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span>
-as I tell you and keep out of sight, I&rsquo;ll
-bring you over some ice cream tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bring me a bigger bat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bring me a mitt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bring me a boat,&rdquo; came in chorus from
-Ptolemy, Emerald, and Demetrius.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;ll you give me to stay here?&rdquo;
-asked Pythagoras, who was a born bargain-driver.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give you a licking if you don&rsquo;t stay,&rdquo;
-was the only offer he gleaned from me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Be good boys,&rdquo; adjured the softhearted
-Rob, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll bring you everything
-I can find at the hotel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was long past the luncheon hour
-when we returned. We found Miss Frayne
-wondering at Rob&rsquo;s sudden disappearance
-and Beth was accordingly mystified.</p>
-<p>I planted myself directly in front of
-Miss Frayne.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;May I take you to the haunted house
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span>
-tonight at the yawning churchyard hour?&rdquo;
-I asked. &ldquo;I am most eminently fitted to
-be your guide, for I was the first one of
-this assembly to see the ghost <i>in toto</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He saw it over a stone fence,&rdquo; remarked
-Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Indeed you may, thank you very
-much,&rdquo; she said enthusiastically.</p>
-<p>Silvia&rsquo;s face was a study.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And will you come with me, Beth?&rdquo;
-asked Rob. &ldquo;Of course, the ghost is an
-old story to us, but we really should hover
-in Lucien&rsquo;s wake out of regard to the
-conventions.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is Miss Frayne interested in ghosts?&rdquo;
-asked Beth.</p>
-<p>Miss Frayne turned and answered the
-question.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not personally,&rdquo; she admitted frankly,
-&ldquo;but the newspaper I am on is, and they
-sent me up here to get a story.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, you are a reporter?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; on the <i>Times</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She won&rsquo;t be one long, though,&rdquo; asserted
-Rob cheerfully, &ldquo;because she is
-going to marry my cousin in the fall.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth&rsquo;s expression remained neutral at
-the announcement, but I noticed throughout
-the afternoon that she was extremely
-affable toward Miss Frayne, and that she
-had the whiphand again with Rob, and
-meanwhile he seemed to be gathering a
-grim determination to do or die.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien, how did you come to ask Miss
-Frayne to go to that awful place tonight?&rdquo;
-asked Silvia when we had gone to our room
-for a siesta, which seemed impossible by
-reason of the bellowing of Diogenes, who
-balked at being required to lie down.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rob asked me to,&rdquo; I informed her,
-when I had cowed Diogenes, &ldquo;so he could
-have a free field for Beth. I believe he
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span>
-planned this expedition so he could storm
-the citadel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She reflected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, maybe he is wise. Girls like
-Beth have to be taken by storm sometimes.
-I shouldn&rsquo;t wonder if Rob could
-be a bit of a bully, too, but&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She ended her speculations in a shriek.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Lucien! Diogenes has jumped out
-the window.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We rushed down stairs, Silvia informing
-the guests in transit of the awful catastrophe.</p>
-<p>Silvia paused at the door opening on to
-the veranda.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t see him,&rdquo; she said faintly,
-closing her eyes. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to tend to
-it alone, Lucien.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth was already at the telephone,
-which connected with the country doctor&rsquo;s.
-Rob joined me. We located our window,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span>
-and began hunting underneath for the
-pieces.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where in the world do you suppose he
-landed?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
-<p>Just then the missing one came around
-the house clasping a bologna sausage in
-his fist.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ye Gods and little Polydores!&rdquo; exclaimed
-Rob.</p>
-<p>I caught Diogenes by the arm and
-rushed him in to Silvia.</p>
-<p>I found her in company with an old
-colored mammy, who was laundress for
-the hotel.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sho&rsquo;,&rdquo; she was saying, &ldquo;I done gwine
-by de windah with ma baby cab full o&rsquo;
-cloes, an&rsquo; dis yer white chile done come
-tumblin&rsquo; down an&rsquo; fall right in ma cab.
-Now, what do you think o&rsquo; dat? I reckon
-I was nevah so done clean skeert afoah
-in ma life. An&rsquo; ef de chile didn&rsquo;t grab one
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span>
-of ma bolognas and done git out de cab
-an&rsquo; run around de house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; cried Silvia, &ldquo;poor little baby!
-Come to mudder. Lucien, where are you
-going with him?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I had picked up the acrobatic Polydore
-and was going up the stairs two at a
-time. I gained our room, locked the
-door and proceeded to give the &ldquo;poor
-little baby&rdquo; all that was coming to him.
-Now and then above his howls, I heard
-Silvia&rsquo;s plaintive protests outside the door,
-but I finished my job completely and
-satisfactorily, and laid the penitent Polydore
-in his little bed. Then I went out into
-the hall, feeling better than I had in months.</p>
-<p>Silvia essayed to pass me, but I took
-her arm and led her to a recess in the hall.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am convinced,&rdquo; I told her, &ldquo;that we
-have Diogenes as a permanent pensioner
-on our hands, so it was up to me to show
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span>
-him where to get off. You can&rsquo;t go to him
-for a quarter of an hour.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We went down stairs and I was sure I
-read suppressed regret in the faces of most
-of the guests at learning of the soft place
-in which Diogenes&rsquo; lot had been cast.
-Silvia tearfully told Rob and Beth of my
-cruelty.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_31' id='linki_31'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-036.jpg' alt='' title='' width='228' height='299' /><br />
-</div>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Do him good!&rdquo; approved Rob heartily.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How mean men are!&rdquo; declared Beth
-indignantly. &ldquo;I am going up and comfort
-the poor little thing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I held up the key to the room with a
-grin, and she had to content herself by
-making unkind remarks about me.</p>
-<p>At the expiration of the allotted time, I
-handed Silvia the key. She took it from
-me without a word or a look. It was
-quite evident I was in wrong.</p>
-<p>In half an hour my wife came down,
-carrying Diogenes, who, dressed in fresh
-white clothes, was a good picture of an
-angel child. She passed me and went to
-a remote corner of the veranda and sat
-down. When he spied me, he leaped from
-her arms and ran to me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ocean,&rdquo; he said propitiatingly, &ldquo;me
-love oo.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span></div>
-<p>I took him up. His arms clasped about
-my neck, and over his curly head, I winked
-at Silvia and Beth.</p>
-<p>Rob roared.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_32' id='linki_32'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-037.jpg' alt='' title='' width='227' height='213' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_33' id='linki_33'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-038.jpg' alt='' title='' width='353' height='129' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XIV__A_MIDNIGHT_EXCURSION' id='CHAPTER_XIV__A_MIDNIGHT_EXCURSION'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XIV</span></h2>
-<h3><i>A Midnight Excursion</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>The night was Satan&rsquo;s own: dark,
-wind-shrieking, and Polydorish.
-No one saw us leave the hotel when,
-at a late hour, we started on our little
-excursion. On account of the darkness
-and the poor landing near the haunted
-house, we decided to go by the overland
-route. I managed to purloin a lantern
-from the kitchen to light our path.</p>
-<p>Rob and Beth kept behind Miss Frayne
-and myself, and in spite of the wildness of
-the weather, he was evidently pleading his
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span>
-suit, for now and then above the roar of
-the wind, I heard his ardent voice. Apparently
-Beth had not yet given him any
-encouragement.</p>
-<p>Going down the lane my lantern underwent
-a total eclipse, so we had a Jordan-like
-road to travel. Miss Frayne was
-quite impervious to unfavorable conditions,
-as it was a matter of bread and butter to
-her, she said, and she was accustomed to
-braving worse storms than this, and anyway
-she hadn&rsquo;t come here for a summer picnic.</p>
-<p>When we came into the grove it was so
-dark, I lost my bearings.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t we bring a flashlight?&rdquo;
-asked Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There were none at the hotel,&rdquo; I told
-her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know some boys,&rdquo; said Rob with a
-little laugh, &ldquo;who would have lent us one&ndash;&ndash;maybe.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span></div>
-<p>Fortunately we were well provided with
-safety matches and after striking a box or
-so, we gained the open. A rise of ground
-hid the house, but when we climbed to the
-top, the ghost loomed up ghastlier than
-ever.</p>
-<p>I felt the business-like Miss Frayne start
-and shiver as a little scream escaped her.
-I didn&rsquo;t wonder. Even I, knowing that it
-was an illusion and a snare, felt my flesh
-creeping as I looked at the ghastly thing in
-the window.</p>
-<p>Every now and then according to schedule
-a light flashed from the windows below.
-And then came the blood-curdling sounds&ndash;&ndash;whimpers
-and groans that were rivaling
-the whistling of the wind.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is awful!&rdquo; said Miss Frayne in a
-hoarse whisper.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you want to go inside the house?&rdquo;
-I asked.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;No&ndash;&ndash;o! I couldn&rsquo;t. Not tonight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We were some little in advance of Rob
-and Beth. When one spectral sound came
-like a tense whisper, Miss Frayne turned
-and fled, and of course I followed her. We
-could not see our two companions, but
-suddenly in an interim of wind and ghost
-whispers, we heard Beth say:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Rob. I think we should really
-be cosier in a story-and-a-half cottage than
-we should in a bungalow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ye Gods!&rdquo; muttered Miss Frayne, &ldquo;did
-he propose in the face of that awful Thing?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ship ahoy!&rdquo; I called.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, didn&rsquo;t you go inside?&rdquo; asked Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go in! I wouldn&rsquo;t go inside that place;
-not if I lose my job on the paper. What
-can it be? You don&rsquo;t seem to mind it,
-Miss Wade.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you know,&rdquo; said Beth apologetically,
-&ldquo;this is my third performance.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span></div>
-<p>We were now down the hill out of sight
-of the gruesome, ghastly window display,
-and Miss Frayne gained courage as we
-retreated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course I don&rsquo;t believe in ghosts,&rdquo;
-she said, &ldquo;but what do you suppose that
-is?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had a theory,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;that it is the
-work of a lunatic, but I&rsquo;ve since concluded
-it is due to practical jokers. I&rsquo;ll tell you
-what I&rsquo;ll do. If you wait here, I&rsquo;ll investigate
-and see what I can find out for you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, would you really dare, Mr. Wade?
-I don&rsquo;t believe men ever have creepy
-nerves,&rdquo; she exclaimed.</p>
-<p>I began to feel ashamed of my deception.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t go, Lucien,&rdquo; warned Rob,
-coming to my rescue. &ldquo;There may be a
-gang of desperadoes in there, or counterfeit
-money-makers, or something of that kind.
-Besides, I have a far more interesting piece
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span>
-of news than anything the ghost could
-give you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rob!&rdquo; protested Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We know it already,&rdquo; I laughed. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-to be a story-and-a-half high.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think I am getting material for quite
-a story,&rdquo; declared Miss Frayne.</p>
-<p>I knew Beth&rsquo;s dislike of scenes and display
-of emotions&ndash;&ndash;mock heroics&ndash;&ndash;she
-called them, so I made no congratulatory
-speeches of the bless-you-my-children order,
-but presently under the cover of darkness,
-I felt a little hand slipped in mine, and my
-clasp was eloquent of what I felt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; said Miss Frayne, &ldquo;that daylight
-will make me so ashamed of my
-cowardice that I can come down here and
-take some pictures and go inside the
-house.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll all come with you,&rdquo; promised
-Beth. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s safety in numbers.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span></div>
-<p>When we were back at the hotel I managed
-to have a few words with Rob before
-we went upstairs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bless the ghost!&rdquo; he said cheerily.
-&ldquo;When Beth first glimpsed it, she just
-turned and fell into my arms. She was
-really frightened for the first time. I shall
-feel under obligations to Ptolemy for a
-lifetime.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank goodness!&rdquo; I ejaculated fervently,
-&ldquo;that I am under no obligations to
-a Polydore. Ptolemy certainly did put
-up the most ghastly thing in the way of
-ghosts. The lights in the eyes of the
-skeleton were frightful.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you see the ghost?&rdquo; asked Silvia
-sleepily, when I came in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; same old ghost, only more of
-him,&rdquo; I assured her.</p>
-<p>She was asleep before I had uttered this
-reply.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;I have a more startling
-piece of news for you than that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She sat bolt upright.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are they engaged, Lucien?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They are. They are building their
-castle&ndash;&ndash;I mean their story-and-a-half
-cottage already.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Alas for my own desire to sleep! I had
-so effectually awakened Silvia that she
-planned Beth&rsquo;s trousseau, the wedding,
-honeymoon, and the furnishing of their
-house before she subsided.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_34' id='linki_34'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-039.jpg' alt='' title='' width='324' height='221' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_35' id='linki_35'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-040.jpg' alt='' title='' width='366' height='133' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XV__WHAT_MISS_FRAYNE_FOUND_OUT' id='CHAPTER_XV__WHAT_MISS_FRAYNE_FOUND_OUT'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XV</span></h2>
-<h3><i>What Miss Frayne Found Out</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>We had planned to go to the haunted
-house at nine o&rsquo;clock the next
-morning, but owing to my dissipation
-of the night before, it was long
-after the appointed hour when Silvia awoke
-me.</p>
-<p>I hurried down stairs and ate my breakfast
-in solitude. I inquired for Beth and
-Rob, but the waitress told me they had left
-the dining-room at seven o&rsquo;clock and gone
-for a walk in the woods. She said it with
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span>
-a knowing smile that told me she, too, must
-be a &ldquo;sister of the Golden Circle.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And Miss Frayne?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She went down the road over an hour
-ago.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Evidently her courage had come up with
-the sun. I was greatly disturbed at the
-chance of her stumbling over one or more
-Polydores, and Rob didn&rsquo;t want to let the
-cat out of the bag until her article was
-written, as he believed that if the ghostly
-spell were broken, she would lose her
-&ldquo;punch.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I was unable to think of any plausible
-explanation to offer Silvia as to why I
-should start in pursuit, and I wished all
-sorts of dire calamities on Rob&rsquo;s blond
-head. Lovers were surely blind and selfish.</p>
-<p>About ten o&rsquo;clock they came strolling
-in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t know it was so late,&rdquo; said
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span>
-Beth cheerfully, &ldquo;but the boys will keep
-in the woods all right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;With her nose for news, there is no
-telling how far into the woods Miss Frayne&rsquo;s
-investigation will take her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say we go down by the lane and meet
-her,&rdquo; proposed Beth, &ldquo;so that if she has
-run across the boys we can explain to her
-why we desire secrecy from Silvia.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You and Rob go,&rdquo; I advised. &ldquo;It
-would seem odd to Silvia if we didn&rsquo;t ask
-her to go with us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So the newly engaged couple started
-down the road, but in their self-absorption
-they didn&rsquo;t notice the turn to the lane, and
-they got half way to Windy Creek before
-they came back to earth and the hotel.
-Miss Frayne still had not shown up, and I
-began to have misgivings lest the Polydores
-had locked her up in the house, but
-finally just as we were having a happy
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span>
-family gathering and discussing the new
-event under the shade of the one resort
-tree, she came excitedly up to us.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Such an interesting morning as I have
-had!&rdquo; she exclaimed enthusiastically. &ldquo;I
-made some corking pictures of the place,
-and I&rsquo;ve found out about not only that
-ghost, but all ghosts&ndash;&ndash;the whole race of
-ghosts.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I hurriedly interrupted her and made
-elaborate and jumbled apologies for not
-keeping our engagement, which evidently
-bored her and mystified Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am glad I went alone,&rdquo; she finally
-replied. &ldquo;Otherwise I might not have
-got such an interesting interview.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth, Rob, and I made frantic and appealing
-gestures to her behind Silvia&rsquo;s
-back, but she didn&rsquo;t seem to notice them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Whom did you interview, the ghost?&rdquo;
-asked Silvia.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;No, indeed. Some very interesting and
-unusual people who are staying there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I threw her a wildly beseeching glance
-and Beth and Rob began at the same time
-to ply her with distracting questions. I
-think she seemed to divine that there was
-something in the situation that was not
-to be explained, but Silvia interrupted
-them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do let Miss Frayne tell us about her
-interview,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;We all seem to be
-very talkative today.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I saw there was no way to dodge the
-d&eacute;nouement, so I awaited the finale in
-dread desperation. It proved to be more
-of a stunner than I had expected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I went down the lane,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and
-through the grove, up the little hill, and
-laughed at myself for the hallucinations
-of the night before. There were no ghosts
-visible and the door to the haunted house
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span>
-was hospitably open. I stood on the hill
-long enough to make some pictures and
-then went on. I walked up the steps
-fearlessly and looked within. A woman,
-an untidy, disheveled-looking woman, sat
-at a table writing furiously in just the same
-breathless way I write when I have a scoop,
-and the presses are waiting open-mouthed
-for my copy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She looked up and scowled at my intrusion.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Don&rsquo;t bother me,&rsquo; she said, and continued
-writing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I went through the house and came
-outside again where I met an absent-minded,
-spectacled man. I told him who
-I was and of my object in coming to the
-house. Then he showed signs of coming to.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Oh, the ghost!&rsquo; he said. &lsquo;That is
-what brought me here. My wife is interested
-in more tangible, more material
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span>
-things. We have just returned from a long
-journey, and when we were nearly to our
-destination, our place of residence, I happened
-to read in a paper about this haunted
-house and its apparition, so we came right
-up here this morning to remain overnight
-and see if the article were true.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told him how successful I had been
-and he became quite alert and enthusiastic.
-He showed me why I should not have been
-alarmed, because ghosts, he said, were
-scientific facts. He then explained to me
-at length how the gases from the dead
-arise and form a nebulous vapor or a vaporous
-nebula. It sounded very simple and
-plausible when he told me, but I can&rsquo;t seem
-to remember it. Fortunately I have it all
-down in writing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia&rsquo;s eyes and mine had met in speechless
-horror since she had mentioned the
-&ldquo;writing woman.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien!&rdquo; Silvia now said in a tragic,
-hoarse whisper&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;the Polydores!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, do you know them?&rdquo; asked Miss
-Frayne. &ldquo;Dr. Felix Polydore, the eminent
-LL.D. or something like that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The whole family are D&rsquo;s,&rdquo; I said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;His wife is the highest of high-brows,
-and they are averse to interviews. They
-moved to a small city sometime ago to be
-secluded. Just think of my opportunity!
-I have them headlined! &lsquo;The Haunted
-House of Hope Haven. Ghost that appears
-at midnight scientifically explained
-by the distinguished Dr. Felix Polydore.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think we are in luck,&rdquo; I said to Silvia,
-on second thoughts. &ldquo;We will take them
-home by the nape of the neck and deliver
-their children into their keeping to have
-and to hold.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t turn Diogenes over to them,&rdquo;
-she said plaintively.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Diogenes!&rdquo; repeated Miss Frayne in
-astonishment.</p>
-<p>I then narrated to her the history of
-our next-door neighbors, and how they
-planted their five children upon us.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We had better go down at once and see
-them,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;before they escape.
-No telling where they might take it in their
-heads to go.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We will,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll go soon after
-luncheon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thrice blessed haunted house,&rdquo; quoted
-Rob. &ldquo;It gave me Beth, and it has restored
-the parents of the wise Ptolemy and
-&lsquo;Them Three.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And gave me a ripping story,&rdquo; said
-Miss Frayne.</p>
-<p>Just then the gong sounded, and after
-luncheon while I was comfortably tipped
-back in a chair, my feet on the veranda
-rail, seeing in the smoke from my pipe
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span>
-dream visions of Polydoreless days, a faint
-cry from Silvia brought me back to earth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien, look!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I looked.</p>
-<p>My chair came down to all fours and my
-feet slipped from the rail.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_36' id='linki_36'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-041.jpg' alt='' title='' width='220' height='230' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_37' id='linki_37'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-042.jpg' alt='' title='' width='359' height='115' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XVI__PTOLEMYS_TALE' id='CHAPTER_XVI__PTOLEMYS_TALE'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XVI</span></h2>
-<h3><i>Ptolemy&rsquo;s Tale</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Four defiant, determined-looking
-Polydores came up the steps and
-bore down upon us. Then Silvia
-as usual thought she saw land ahead.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, boys,&rdquo; she asked hopefully, &ldquo;did
-your father send for you to meet him here?
-And when is he going to take you home?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t I tell you,&rdquo; I thundered at
-Ptolemy, &ldquo;that you were not to leave that
-house&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It left us,&rdquo; interrupted Emerald with
-a grin.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Went up in smoke,&rdquo; added Pythagoras
-blithely, &ldquo;ghost and all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Four minutes quicker,&rdquo; said Demetrius,
-&ldquo;and it would have took father and mother,
-too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, is it the haunted house they are
-talking about?&rdquo; asked Miss Frayne joyfully.
-&ldquo;What a story I&rsquo;ll have!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Life to Miss Frayne seemed to be one
-story after another. Well, it was certainly
-becoming the same way to us.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did the ghost set fire to the house?&rdquo;
-asked Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What are you all talking about,&rdquo; demanded
-Silvia, &ldquo;and how did you know
-these boys were there? How long have
-you been here?&rdquo; she asked, turning to
-Ptolemy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told you,&rdquo; I repeated angrily to the
-subdued boy, &ldquo;not to leave. Those were
-plain orders. If the house did burn up,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span>
-you could have stayed in your tent in the
-woods.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy&rsquo;s lips twitched faintly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The house burned up and all our
-clothes and our stuff to eat, and our bats
-and things, and father and mother went
-away and I didn&rsquo;t know what to do, so&ndash;&ndash;I
-came here. But we&rsquo;ll go back to our
-own house. We have learned to cook.
-Come on, boys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll stay right here with me, son,&rdquo;
-and Rob&rsquo;s hand came down intimately
-on Ptolemy&rsquo;s shoulder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t likely we&rsquo;ll turn them out into
-the woods, when they haven&rsquo;t a roof over
-their heads,&rdquo; declared Silvia, drawing
-Emerald to her side.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think you are absolutely inhuman,
-Lucien,&rdquo; cried Beth. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see what has
-changed you so,&rdquo; and she proceeded to make
-room for Pythagoras in the porch swing.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Did the fire scare you?&rdquo; asked Miss
-Frayne gently, as she put her arms about
-Demetrius.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Et tu, Brute? Well, I plainly see
-this is no place for an inhuman, childless,
-married man,&rdquo; I said with a laugh, walking
-down the veranda.</p>
-<p>In the doorway I met Diogenes, who
-raised his chubby arms invitingly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Up, up, Ocean!&rdquo; he begged sweetly.</p>
-<p>I lifted him to my shoulder, and then
-turned and walked triumphantly back to
-the family group.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;here is the whole
-d-dashed family. And I propose that each
-keep unto his charge the child he has now
-under his wing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Miss Frayne quickly relinquished the
-dirty Demetrius. Beth shrank away from
-Pythagoras.</p>
-<p>As I seated myself still holding Diogenes,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span>
-his brothers sprang toward him in greeting,
-but he spat at one, kicked at another, and
-pulled the hair of a third, although he patted
-Ptolemy&rsquo;s cheek gently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, we&rsquo;ll have this affair thrashed
-out,&rdquo; I declared in my most authoritative,
-professional manner, and I then proceeded
-to explain to Silvia the housing of the Polydores,
-and our strategies to keep their
-arrival a secret simply on her account.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because you know,&rdquo; interpolated Beth,
-with a consideration for the feelings of the
-young Polydores&ndash;&ndash;a consideration they
-had never before encountered&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;we
-wanted you to have a nice rest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia looked quite penitent and remorseful
-for her seeming lack of appreciation of
-our combined efforts. When I had answered
-all her inquiries satisfactorily, Miss Frayne&rsquo;s
-curiosity regarding the progeny of the eminent
-Polydores had to be fully relieved.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;And do you mean that the scribbling
-lady I saw at the table is really the mother
-of these five boys?&rdquo; she asked, unable to
-grasp the fact.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; and the father hereof is the man
-who explained the ghosts to you so scientifically
-that you cannot remember what
-he said. Now, Ptolemy, we&rsquo;ll hear your
-story of the fire and the whereabouts of
-your parents. Take your time and tell
-it accurately.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you see we did just as you said
-to, and took the ghost out of the window
-and went out to the woods early this
-morning so as not to let the paper lady
-see us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; cried Miss Frayne, &ldquo;am I the
-paper lady? I begin to see daylight.
-Are these boys the ghost perpetrators, and
-were you in on the put-up job?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a good guesser,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;And why wasn&rsquo;t I taken into your
-confidence?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For two reasons. First, because
-your friend Rob said you&rsquo;d get better
-results for copy&ndash;&ndash;more inspirations and
-thrills, if you weren&rsquo;t behind the scenes
-on the ghost business,&ndash;&ndash;and then we
-didn&rsquo;t want to tell you about the presence
-of the Polydores lest inadvertently you
-betray the fact to my wife. Now, proceed,
-Ptolemy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;After we were in the woods, I heard
-an automobile coming down the lane, and
-I went up near the edge of the woods and
-peeked out behind a tree, and pretty soon
-I saw father and mother come over the hill
-and go in our haunted house, so I came up
-there and hid under the window and heard
-mother say: &lsquo;What an ideal place to
-write this is. It looks as if I might really
-get a chance to write unmo&ndash;&ndash;&rsquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;&ndash;&ndash;lested,&rsquo;&rdquo; I finished for him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess so,&rdquo; he allowed. &ldquo;Well, she
-began writing, so I didn&rsquo;t go in, but when
-father came outside I went up to him and
-told him you and mudder were at the hotel
-and that we were all with you. He told
-me they came up here to write an article
-for some big magazine about the ghost.
-He hired an automobile down at Windy
-Creek to bring them up to the house and
-the man was going to come back for them
-tomorrow morning. I didn&rsquo;t let on the
-ghost was a fake, because I thought he&rsquo;d
-be so disappointed to have all his trouble
-for nothing, and he&rsquo;d be mad at me for
-swiping his skull. I told him a paper lady
-was coming and then I went back to the
-woods. He went down with me to see the
-boys, and he said he would come back and
-have lunch with us. Mother doesn&rsquo;t ever
-stop to eat at noon when she is writing.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;He went back and talked to the paper
-lady and pretty soon he came down and
-ate with us. I told him all about how we
-couldn&rsquo;t get any girl to do the work for us
-and so we had been living with you, and
-how Di got sick and mudder was all worn
-out taking care of him and came down
-here to rest, and that you wouldn&rsquo;t cash
-the check, so I did and was spending it and
-he said that was all right.&rdquo; Here Ptolemy
-flashed me a most triumphant glance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He said you must be paid for all your
-expense and trouble, so he made out a
-check and gave it to me and told me to
-make mudder a nice present. He ain&rsquo;t
-so bad when he ain&rsquo;t thinking about dead
-stuff. When he felt in his pocket for his
-check book, he found a letter he had got
-yesterday and forgotten to open, so he
-read it then and found it was from some
-magazine, and the man said he&rsquo;d pay his
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span>
-and mother&rsquo;s expenses to go to Chili and
-write up some stuff about&ndash;&ndash;something.
-So father said they must go at once.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not to Chili!&rdquo; I exclaimed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; we all went up to the house with
-him and I took mother&rsquo;s pencil and paper
-away so she would have to listen. She
-was wild for Chili, and I had to go and hunt
-up a farmer who had a machine to take
-them down to Windy Creek. Father
-signed another blank check for you and said
-you could board us with it or do anything
-you thought best.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then mother took a lot of papers out
-of her bag, some stuff she had written and
-didn&rsquo;t get suited with, and she stuffed them
-in the stove and set fire to them. Then
-we all went down to the lane to see father
-and mother off and when we got back the
-house was on fire. The chimney burned
-out.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Guess mother must have written some
-hot stuff,&rdquo; said Emerald.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was burning so fast,&rdquo; continued
-Ptolemy, &ldquo;that we didn&rsquo;t dast go in to
-save anything and all our food and clothes
-and balls and bats and fishing tackle are
-gone, and we didn&rsquo;t know what to do, or
-what to eat, and so&ndash;&ndash;we came here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You did just right, Ptolemy,&rdquo; I admitted.
-&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t have called you down&ndash;&ndash;not
-until I heard your story, anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I held out my hand, which he shook
-solemnly, but with an injured air.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you mean to tell me,&rdquo; asked Miss
-Frayne, &ldquo;that your father and mother
-went away without seeing the baby?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy flushed a little.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; he explained apologetically,
-&ldquo;mother gets woolly when she writes and
-she&rsquo;s forgotten there&rsquo;s Di. She thinks
-Demetrius is the youngest. She&rsquo;s mad
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span>
-about writing. If she sees a blank
-paper anywhere, she ain&rsquo;t happy until she
-has written something on it, and the sight
-of a pencil makes her fingers itch.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_38' id='linki_38'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-043.jpg' alt='' title='' width='206' height='276' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Take warning, Miss Frayne,&rdquo; I said,
-&ldquo;and don&rsquo;t get too literary.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some day,&rdquo; resumed Ptolemy,
-&ldquo;mother&rsquo;ll get the antiques all out of
-her system and then she&rsquo;ll remember us.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span></div>
-<p>I liked the boy&rsquo;s defense of his mother,
-and I began to see that Rob was right in
-thinking there were possibilities in the
-lad, but it was Silvia&rsquo;s influence that had
-developed them, for in the days when he
-borrowed soup plates of us, there had been
-no redeeming trait that I could discern.</p>
-<p>And while I was recalling this, I heard
-Silvia saying to him kindly: &ldquo;And in the
-meantime, I&rsquo;ll be &lsquo;mudder&rsquo; to you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So will I,&rdquo; chimed in Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be a big brother,&rdquo; offered Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be next friend, Ptolemy,&rdquo; I contributed.</p>
-<p>Strange to say, my offer seemed to make
-the most impression on him. He came to
-me and gazed into my eyes earnestly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do just as you say,&rdquo; he promised.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where do we&rsquo;uns come in?&rdquo; asked
-Pythagoras, with one of his satanic grins.</p>
-<p>Miss Frayne saved the day.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You all come in with me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and
-have lunch. I haven&rsquo;t eaten since breakfast,
-and I understand there is warm ginger cake
-and huckleberry pie. Aren&rsquo;t you hungry?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You bet,&rdquo; spoke up Pythagoras. &ldquo;We
-only had coffee, peanuts, and beans down in
-the woods, and father ate the beans and
-drank all the coffee.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re out of the frying pan into the
-fire,&rdquo; said Silvia woefully, when we were
-alone.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish the Polydore parents had gone
-up in smoke,&rdquo; I declared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then your last hope of getting rid of
-the children would have gone up in smoke,
-too,&rdquo; argued Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No; in case of the demise of their
-parents, we could have turned them over
-body and soul to the probate court,&rdquo; I
-informed her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We will fill out this blank check for
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span>
-any amount, Lucien,&rdquo; declared Silvia,
-&ldquo;that will induce a housekeeper to take
-charge of their house. I shall keep
-Diogenes, though, until he is older.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t mind Ptolemy, either,&rdquo; I
-admitted. &ldquo;I shall be interested in seeing
-what I can make of him, and he hasn&rsquo;t a
-bad influence over Diogenes, but I&rsquo;ll be
-hanged if anything would induce me to
-have &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; Chessy cats running wild
-over us. They can live in their house alone,
-or be put in a reformatory. We won&rsquo;t
-have them. We&rsquo;re under no obligations,
-pecuniary or moral, to look after them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think, Lucien, we might as well go
-home now. We&rsquo;ve had a good rest and a
-good time, and I am anxious to be back
-and see how Huldah is getting on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As Huldah had never mastered two of
-the three R&rsquo;s, we had not been able to
-receive any reports from her.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you what we&rsquo;ll do,&rdquo; proposed
-Beth. &ldquo;Rob and I will take all the Polydores
-save Diogenes, and go home tomorrow
-and prepare the house and Huldah
-for the overflow. Then you two can come
-on with Diogenes the next day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good idea, Beth!&rdquo; I approved. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d
-hate to face Huldah, unprepared, with the
-return of the Polydores <i>en masse</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am glad,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;that Huldah
-has been having a rest from them for a
-few days.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_39' id='linki_39'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-044.jpg' alt='' title='' width='166' height='214' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_40' id='linki_40'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-045.jpg' alt='' title='' width='350' height='124' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XVII__ALL_ABOUT_UNCLE_ISSACHARS_VISIT' id='CHAPTER_XVII__ALL_ABOUT_UNCLE_ISSACHARS_VISIT'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XVII</span></h2>
-<h3><i>All About Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s Visit</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>The next morning&rsquo;s stage carried
-seven passengers to Windy Creek,
-as Miss Frayne with a big roll of
-&ldquo;copy&rdquo; also took her departure.</p>
-<p>Diogenes had been quite docile and
-amenable to my rule since the licking I
-gave him, so we had a pleasant and
-comfortable return journey on the following
-day.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hope, Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;you
-won&rsquo;t refuse to cash this check for a good
-amount. The Polydore parents may never
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span>
-show up, and it&rsquo;s only right we should be
-reimbursed for their keep.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will cash it,&rdquo; I assured her, &ldquo;and use
-it for a housekeeper or else send the boys
-off to a school. I should like very much
-to have it out with Felix Polydore, but,
-as you suggest, I may never have the
-opportunity to see him at close range.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy met us at the
-station.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where are &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo;?&rdquo; I asked
-hopefully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah is feeding them little pies hot
-from the kettle&ndash;&ndash;the kind she cooks like
-doughnuts, you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah cooking for &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo;!&rdquo;
-I exclaimed. &ldquo;She must have passed into
-her second childhood. She grudged them
-even an apple to piece on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She has pampered them ever since our
-return,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor Huldah! She must indeed be
-afflicted with softening of the brain,&rdquo; I
-decided.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She has probably been so lonely, shut
-in here by herself,&rdquo; said Silvia, &ldquo;that
-even &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; looked good to her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the hallway Huldah met us. She
-was beaming with pleasure, but except in
-her bearing toward the children, she was
-quite normal.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve all had a real good rest,&rdquo; she
-observed, &ldquo;and you do look so well, Mrs.
-Wade. My! but this place has been
-lonesome. I&rsquo;m glad we&rsquo;re all together
-again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, Silvia, shut your eyes,&rdquo; directed
-Beth, &ldquo;and come into the library.
-Ptolemy has bought you a present with the
-check his father gave him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Beth helped me pick it out,&rdquo; said
-Ptolemy.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span></div>
-<p>Beth led the way into the library, and
-we followed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Open your eyes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Silvia gave a little cry of pleasure, and
-looking over her shoulder, I beheld a
-baby grand piano.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Ptolemy!&rdquo; she cried, giving him a
-fervent kiss and fond hug, &ldquo;I can never
-let you do so much.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; he said, flushing a little under
-the endearments which were doubtless the
-first ever bestowed upon him. &ldquo;Father&rsquo;s
-got a whole lot of money grandpa left him
-and it&rsquo;s fixed so he can&rsquo;t draw out only so
-much each year. He said the board and
-bother of us was worth more than this and
-we&rsquo;ll all enjoy the music. But Thag and
-Em and Dem ain&rsquo;t to touch it. I&rsquo;ll
-knock tar out of the first one that comes
-near it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I was disconsolate. I didn&rsquo;t see how we
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span>
-could return it and I didn&rsquo;t want the Polydore
-web woven any tighter. To think of
-Silvia&rsquo;s receiving from them what it had
-been my longing to give her! But as I
-was to learn later, she was to acquire much
-more than a piano from the eminent
-family.</p>
-<p>After dinner Silvia asked Huldah to
-come in and hear the music, and when
-Silvia&rsquo;s repertoire was exhausted, we gave
-our faithful servant all the little details of
-our trip which Beth had not supplied.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now tell us, Huldah, how things went
-along here,&rdquo; said Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you think some wonderful things
-happened to you all on your trip mebby&ndash;&ndash;ghosts
-and proposals,&rdquo; looking at Beth
-and Rob, &ldquo;and fires and Polydores, but
-back here in this quiet house something
-happened that has your ghosts and things
-skinned by a mile.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, dear!&rdquo; cried Silvia apprehensively,
-&ldquo;what is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Break it very gently, Huldah,&rdquo; I
-cautioned. &ldquo;You know we&rsquo;ve borne a
-good deal.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your uncle Issachar was here for a
-couple of days.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She certainly had made a sensation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not Uncle Issachar! Not here?&rdquo; exclaimed
-Silvia incredulously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, ma&rsquo;am. He came the next day
-after Beth and Mr. Rossiter and Polly
-left. I told him you&rsquo;d gone away for a
-little vacation and rest. I didn&rsquo;t let on
-that I knew where you had gone, because
-I didn&rsquo;t want him straggling up there, too,
-or sending for you to come back. He
-said your absence would make no difference
-to his plans; that he never let nothing
-do that. He come to pay a visit and he
-should pay one.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Silvia feebly. &ldquo;That
-sounds like Uncle Issachar.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told him to make himself perfectly
-at home; that every one did that to this
-place, and he said he would. I&rsquo;d just
-slicked up the big front room upstairs
-and I seen to it that he had everything
-all right. I cooked the best dinner I
-knew how, and he said it was the first
-white man&rsquo;s meal he had eat since his ma
-died, so I found out what she used to cook
-and fed him on it. Them three kids and
-him eat like they was holler. I guess if
-Polly hadn&rsquo;t took them away your grocery
-bill would &rsquo;a looked like Barb&rsquo;ry
-Allen&rsquo;s grave.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, as I was saying, your uncle he
-eat till he got over his grouches, and like
-enough he&rsquo;d be here eating yet, if he hadn&rsquo;t
-got a telegraph to hit the line for home,
-some big business deal, he said, and I
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span>
-guess it was a great deal, for he licked his
-chops and smacked his lips over it, and he
-give me a ten dollar bill to get a new dress
-and each of Them Three one dollar fer
-candy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The old tightwad!&rdquo; I exclaimed. &ldquo;It
-was your cooking, sure, that made him
-loosen up that way.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tightwad nothing!&rdquo; she declared indignantly.
-&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t think he was tight-wadded
-when you read this here letter he
-left for you. He told me what was in it,
-and I&rsquo;ve just been busting to tell it to
-Beth, but I waited for you to know it
-first.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With great excitement Silvia opened the
-letter, read it, gasped, re-read it, and then
-in consternation handed it to me.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Read it aloud, Lucien,&rdquo; she bade.
-&ldquo;Maybe I can believe it then.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This was the letter.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span></div>
-<blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;My dear Niece:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was sorry not to see you, but glad to
-learn that, as every wise and good woman
-should do, you are raising a fine family&ndash;&ndash;a
-family of <i>sons</i>, which is what our country
-most needs. Your son Pythagoras informed
-me that you had taken your oldest
-child, Ptolemy, and your youngest, Diogenes,
-with you, I am glad you left three
-such promising samples for me to see.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;As you have five sons, I have, agreeable
-to my promise, placed in your name in
-the First National Bank of your city the
-sum of twenty-five thousand dollars.</p>
-<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Your affectionate uncle,<br />
-&ldquo;Issachar Innes.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;did you tell him
-the Polydores were our children?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Me?&rdquo; she repeated indignantly. &ldquo;Me
-tell a lie like that! No; I didn&rsquo;t get no
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span>
-chance to tell him anything about them.
-&lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; done the telling. The first
-thing that one&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;pointing to Pythagoras&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;said
-was, &lsquo;Mudder went away and took
-the baby, Diogenes, with her.&rsquo; And then
-that next one&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;indicating Emerald&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;said:
-&lsquo;Yes, and our oldest brother,
-Ptolemy, went on with Beth to see them.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The old gent asked them all their names
-and ages and he was so pleased and said he
-thought it was just fine for you to raise five
-sons, so I didn&rsquo;t have no heart to tell him
-no different. &lsquo;Twan&rsquo;t none of my business
-anyhow. Then &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; kept talking
-about stepdaddy, and your Uncle Issachar
-asks &lsquo;Who the devil is he? Did my
-niece marry again?&rsquo; And I told him as how
-Mr. Wade was all the husband you ever had,
-and that stepdaddy was nothing but a sort
-of pet-name the kids had give Mr. Wade.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told him,&rdquo; said Demetrius, &ldquo;that
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span>
-stepdaddy was cross to us sometimes and
-not as nice as mudder, and he said&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You shut up,&rdquo; commanded Huldah
-quickly, &ldquo;and let me talk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I intercepted, &ldquo;I&rsquo;d really be
-interested in hearing what he told Uncle
-Issachar. What was it, Demetrius, that
-your great-uncle said to you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He said,&rdquo; stated the imp, darting his
-tongue out in triumph at his victory over
-Huldah, &ldquo;that he always thought you was
-a stiff.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t say nothing of the kind!&rdquo;
-declared Huldah. &ldquo;He said you was stiff-necked,
-and that he presumed you would
-act more like a stepfather than the real
-thing. Well, as I was saying, he asked
-their names, and he liked them fine. Said
-they were so classy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t he say classic, Huldah?&rdquo; inquired
-Rob.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Mebby. What&rsquo;s the difference?&rdquo;
-snapped Huldah.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;None,&rdquo; I assured her quickly, dodging
-a definition.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She told him&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; began Emerald.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You shut up,&rdquo; again adjured Huldah,
-&ldquo;or I&rsquo;ll never bake you one of those small
-pies no more.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, please, Huldah,&rdquo; I coaxed. &ldquo;Let
-us hear everything. I&rsquo;ve always told you
-my life&rsquo;s secrets, and I don&rsquo;t mind what
-you or the boys told him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I suppose what he was going to
-tattle was that I thought the old gent
-might feel hurt, &rsquo;cause none of them was
-named after him, so I told him Polly&rsquo;s
-middle name was Issachar.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, Huldah,&rdquo; remonstrated Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;s always wanted a middle
-name, and he&rsquo;s never been baptized, so
-you can stick it in and have him ducked
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span>
-next Sunday and then that will square
-that. &lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; stuck to him like
-a hive of bees, and I was scairt for fear
-they&rsquo;d let the cat out of the bag, and so
-long as they had put it in, I thought it
-might just as well stay in, but they were
-just as slick as grease in all they said.
-They&rsquo;ll hang in that rogues&rsquo; gallery yet.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose they were pretty&ndash;&ndash;strenuous,&rdquo;
-said Silvia with a sigh.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They was more than that. The first
-afternoon right after dinner when he was
-sitting on the front porch, sleeping peaceful
-and snoring, that there one&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; pointing
-to Pythagoras&ndash;&ndash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tattle-tale!&rdquo; he began, but I administered
-a cuff and he subsided into surprised
-silence.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_41' id='linki_41'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span>
-<img src='images/illus-046.jpg' alt='' title='' width='360' height='464' /><br />
-<p class='caption'>
-&ldquo;He went to the front window and dropped a young kitten down on the old gent&rsquo;s head.&rdquo;<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;He,&rdquo; said Huldah, looking pleased at
-this little attention to the boy, &ldquo;went to
-the front window and dropped a young
-kitten down on the old gent&rsquo;s head. It
-clawed something fierce. We had just got
-things going smooth again when Emmy
-got one of his earaches. I roasted an
-onion and put in his ear, and what did he
-do but take it out of his ear and slip it down
-your poor uncle&rsquo;s back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you beat them?&rdquo; I asked
-indignantly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because the old gent did that. He put
-&rsquo;em across his knee, and believe me, it was
-some licking they caught. They didn&rsquo;t
-let out a whimper and that pleased him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huh!&rdquo; said Emerald. &ldquo;Thag don&rsquo;t
-know how to cry. He hasn&rsquo;t got any tears,
-and old Uncle Iz didn&rsquo;t hurt me, because,
-you see, when I heard Thag getting his,
-I went and stuffed the Declaration of Independence,
-that book of stepdaddy&rsquo;s that
-Demetrius tore the pictures out of, in my
-pants.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Go on!&rdquo; urged Rob delightedly.
-&ldquo;What else did you all do? Uncle must
-have had some time. It would make a
-fine scenario. &lsquo;The first visit of the rich
-uncle.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; resumed Huldah. &ldquo;One of &rsquo;em
-put red pepper in the old man&rsquo;s bed, and
-he like to sneeze his head off, but he said
-as how sneezing was healthy, and showed
-you&rsquo;d got rid of a cold.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He never got on to the pepper,&rdquo; said
-Demetrius gleefully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the morning, that second one put a
-toad in his new uncle&rsquo;s pocket, and Emmy
-broke his specs. Then Meetie he dropped
-his watch. They used his razor to cut the
-lawn with. And then they took him down
-to the creek to go fishing, and they put the
-fish in Uncle&rsquo;s silk hat, and and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; implored Silvia, who was now
-in tears. &ldquo;Uncle Issachar believes them
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span>
-mine! Ours! And that I brought them
-up! Oh, why did we ever go away?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, pshaw,&rdquo; exclaimed Huldah comfortingly,
-&ldquo;he said you had brung them up
-fine; that they were no mollycoddles or
-Lizzie boys, and he didn&rsquo;t suppose you had
-so much sense as to leave them natural.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A left-handed one for mudder,&rdquo; laughed
-Beth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He must be a very peculiar man&ndash;&ndash;ready
-for the asylum, I should say,&rdquo; commented
-Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He would have been if he&rsquo;d stayed any
-longer, or else I would have been,&rdquo; declared
-Huldah.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t you make them behave, someway?&rdquo;
-asked Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, at first I tried to, and every time
-I pinched one of &rsquo;em when the old gent
-wasn&rsquo;t looking, or knocked &rsquo;em down when
-I got &rsquo;em alone, they would threaten to tell
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span>
-who they was, and then when I seen how
-your uncle liked the way they acted, I just
-let &rsquo;em go it, head on. And seeing as how
-they each brung you five thousand, I&rsquo;ve
-treated &rsquo;em best I know how. They&rsquo;re
-worth it, now. They done one thing more
-that was awful. Could you stand it to
-hear?&rdquo; turning to Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Please, Silvia,&rdquo; implored Rob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; argued Silvia faintly. &ldquo;I suppose
-we might as well know the worst.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You see the old gent didn&rsquo;t always get
-up to breakfast with the kids and one morning
-when I brought in the cakes Emmy
-looked up and grinned. I nearly dropped
-the plate. He had both sets of the old
-man&rsquo;s false teeth in his mouth. I got &rsquo;em
-back in his room without his waking, but
-I&rsquo;d have liked a picture of Emmy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pythagoras,&rdquo; I demanded, when we
-had recovered from this recital, &ldquo;why
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span>
-didn&rsquo;t you tell him who you were, and how
-you all came to be here with us?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because she is our mudder, and we are
-going to stay with her, always. We&rsquo;ve
-got a snap. So has father and mother.
-And Ptolemy told us that if you ever got
-any kids, you&rsquo;d get five thousand each for
-them, and I thought we&rsquo;d just make that
-much for you. So we played Uncle Iz
-for it. Easy money, all right, all right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Talk about fine financiering,&rdquo; quoth
-Rob. &ldquo;&lsquo;Them Three&rsquo; will surely land on
-Wall Street.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But poor Silvia had no heart for humor
-and was weeping silently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, look here, my dear,&rdquo; I said in
-consolation, &ldquo;this is a very simple matter
-to adjust. In the morning when you feel
-better, just write a full explanation of the
-affair and inclose your check for twenty-five
-thousand.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span></div>
-<p>Silvia quickly wiped away her tears.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do it tonight, Lucien. I feel better
-now. I never thought of writing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Huldah and &ldquo;Them Three&rdquo; looked most
-lugubrious.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The old skinflint won&rsquo;t miss it as much
-as I would a penny,&rdquo; declared our faithful
-handmaiden. &ldquo;And I&rsquo;m sure you&rsquo;ve earnt
-that twenty-five thousand if anyone ever
-did. You&rsquo;ve had as much care and worry
-about them brats as you would if they&rsquo;d
-been your own.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah,&rdquo; I said severely, &ldquo;there is a
-pretty stiff penalty for obtaining money
-under false pretences.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;After all the pains we took to make
-things lively for him, so he wouldn&rsquo;t get
-bored and think he was having a poor time!&rdquo;
-regretted Pythagoras.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And us watching every word we spoke
-so as not to give it away,&rdquo; wailed Emerald.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Cake&rsquo;s all dough,&rdquo; muttered Demetrius.</p>
-<p>Ptolemy regarded the three disapprovingly.
-He had the old inscrutable look,
-the look that foreboded mischief, in his eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You bungled, you fool kids!&rdquo; he said
-in disgust, &ldquo;and Huldah, what did you
-want to let on to mudder for that he thought
-we was hers? You ought to have torn up
-the note he left and just said he&rsquo;d put
-twenty-five thousand in the bank for her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huh! you&rsquo;re just jealous because you
-weren&rsquo;t in the Uncle Izzy deal yourself,&rdquo;
-jeered Pythagoras. &ldquo;You always think
-you&rsquo;re the only one that can do anything
-right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish you had been here, Polly,&rdquo; said
-Huldah, &ldquo;I am sure you could have worked
-it through somehow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish I had stayed and put it across,&rdquo;
-he answered. &ldquo;If you and the kids would
-only learn not to blab everything you know.
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span>
-It&rsquo;s the only way to work anything. Minute
-you tell a thing, it&rsquo;s all off.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was still a great deal of development
-work to be put on Ptolemy&rsquo;s moral standard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll find, my lad,&rdquo; remonstrated
-Rob, &ldquo;that honesty is the best policy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d have been perfectly honest about
-it,&rdquo; he defended. &ldquo;I would have told him
-the truth, and how our parents had deserted
-us, and how mudder took us in when we
-were homeless and was bringing us up like
-her own because she hadn&rsquo;t got any, and
-how stepdaddy wanted to turn us out, and
-she wouldn&rsquo;t let him, and then he would
-have decided against stepdaddy and given
-mudder the money so she could keep us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; I said warningly, &ldquo;there is a
-way of telling the truth, or rather of coloring
-white lies with enough truth to make
-them deceive, that is more dishonorable
-than an out and out lie.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me, Ptolemy,&rdquo; asked Silvia, &ldquo;how
-did you know about that offer of five thousand
-dollars for each child?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I overheard it,&rdquo; he said guardedly;
-&ldquo;but I can&rsquo;t remember where.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He heard me say so,&rdquo; confessed Huldah.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was when he first come here and he
-was making us so much trouble, and I told
-him it was too bad we had to have other
-folks&rsquo; brats around when, if we only had
-our own, they&rsquo;d be bringing in something.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The recital now broke up and Silvia sat
-down to write a long explanatory letter to
-Uncle Issachar. The next morning I procured
-her a check from the First National
-Bank and she filled it out.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she said with indrawn breath,
-when she had asked me how to write
-twenty-five thousand dollars, &ldquo;I never expected
-to be able to sign my name to a
-check for such an amount.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;You never will again, I fear,&rdquo; was my
-sad prophecy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It must feel rich,&rdquo; said Beth, &ldquo;just to
-have a large check pass through your
-fingers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Them Three&rdquo; came the nearest to tears
-that they were able to do.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We worked so hard for it,&rdquo; they sighed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So did I!&rdquo; muttered Huldah.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t live a double life,&rdquo; declared
-Silvia.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_42' id='linki_42'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-048.jpg' alt='' title='' width='217' height='215' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_43' id='linki_43'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-047.jpg' alt='' title='' width='336' height='89' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XVIII__IN_WHICH_I_DECIDE_ON_EXTREME_MEASURES' id='CHAPTER_XVIII__IN_WHICH_I_DECIDE_ON_EXTREME_MEASURES'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter XVIII</span></h2>
-<h3><i>In Which I Decide on Extreme Measures</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Everyone in our house, which was
-now filled to overflowing&ndash;&ndash;in fact,
-there were Polydores on sofas and
-in beds on the floor&ndash;&ndash;save Silvia and
-myself, was on the alert for a response to
-the letter during the succeeding few days.
-Knowing Uncle Issachar, we felt sure he
-would make no response, or notice the
-matter in any way save to cash the check
-promptly.
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span></p>
-<p>The monotony was somewhat relieved
-by the difficulties under which Beth and
-Rob were pursuing their courtship. On
-the third evening succeeding our return,
-Silvia and I started upstairs early to give
-them a chance to have the exclusive use of
-the library, the Polydores having all been
-sent to bed. As we were making some
-plausible excuse for going to our room,
-Beth remarked with a smile:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your motive in retiring so early is commendable,
-but of no particular benefit to
-Rob and me. The Polydores, like the poor,
-we always have with us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I saw that every one of them except
-Ptolemy was in bed at eight o&rsquo;clock last
-night and the night before,&rdquo; said Silvia.
-&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean to tell me&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I do mean,&rdquo; laughed Beth. &ldquo;Not
-Ptolemy, though. He has become too
-dignified to spy on us, but last night as we
-sat here on the settee, we heard a suppressed
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span>
-sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald
-from underneath.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How in the world did he ever squeeze
-under there?&rdquo; I asked, gazing at the
-slight space between the floor and settee.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_44' id='linki_44'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-049.jpg' alt='' title='' width='357' height='266' /><br />
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;He did look a little flattened, as if he
-had been put in a letter press,&rdquo; said Rob.
-&ldquo;I gave him a dime to go to bed and stay
-there. Beth and I had just resumed our
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span>
-conversation when a still, small voice said:
-&lsquo;I&rsquo;ll go to bed for a dime, too.&rsquo; I then
-hauled Demetrius from behind the davenport.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And the night before,&rdquo; said Beth, &ldquo;when
-we were sitting on the porch, Pythagoras
-rolled off the roof, where he had been listening
-to us, and came down into the vines.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now I&rsquo;ll stop that,&rdquo; I declared. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
-tie them in their beds and lock the doors
-and windows.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; refused Rob. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to try
-to circumvent them by their own weapons
-of wits. I have a little plan which I don&rsquo;t
-dare whisper to you lest their long-range
-ears get in their work. We are just about
-to start for a walk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In this pouring rain!&rdquo; protested Silvia.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We like the rain,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;and we&ndash;&ndash;are
-not going far.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Pythagoras entered the room just then
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
-and looked astounded and disappointed
-when he saw Beth and Rob departing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We are going out to a small party,&rdquo;
-Rob remarked to me, casually.</p>
-<p>It was after eleven when we heard them
-returning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you suppose they have been walking
-all this time?&rdquo; said Silvia in concern.
-&ldquo;Beth wore no rubbers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The next day was Sunday and Huldah
-put into execution a plan for procuring
-one happy hour each week. This plan was
-the admission of the Polydores, <i>en masse</i>,
-to one of the Sunday schools. She chose
-the church most remote from home so they
-would be a long time going and coming,
-which she said would &ldquo;help some.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Beth, as she watched them
-march away, &ldquo;I can dare to tell you where
-we spent last evening. We were at the
-Polydore house next door. There is a little
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span>
-vine-screened porch on the other side of
-the house. Rob managed to open one
-of the windows and brought out a couple
-of chairs. It was as snug as could be.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll corral them every night,&rdquo; I said,
-&ldquo;until you make your getaway, and I&rsquo;ll
-give you the key so you can go inside when
-it is cool or stormy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll go around the block by way of
-precaution,&rdquo; said Rob.</p>
-<p>Presently Huldah returned from the
-Sunday school with triumphant mien.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They made them all into one class and
-put a redheaded woman with spectacles
-in for their teacher. I gave them street
-car tickets to come home on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When the Polydores returned, however,
-they were dragging Diogenes along and he
-looked quite weary.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you come home on the street
-car?&rdquo; I asked Ptolemy.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;No; we sold our tickets and got ice
-cream sodas,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;We took
-turns carrying Diogenes on our backs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You only had one ticket for yourself,
-and two half fares for Thag and Emmy,&rdquo;
-said Huldah suspiciously. &ldquo;I thought
-Meetie and Di could ride free. You
-couldn&rsquo;t have sold them tickets for enough
-for sodies.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rob gave us three nickels to put in the
-plate,&rdquo; said Pythagoras. &ldquo;We only put in
-one of them, seeing we were all in one family
-and one class. That gave us four nickels
-for ice cream sodas and the clerk gave
-Di half a glass some one had left.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I gave you a penny for Di to put in,&rdquo;
-said Huldah. &ldquo;What did you do with
-that?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We wanted him to put it in, and when
-they took up the collection, he wouldn&rsquo;t
-give it,&rdquo; said Emerald. &ldquo;I tried to take
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span>
-it away from him and he swallowed it.
-The redhead teacher was awful scared,
-but I told her he was used to swallowing
-things and that you said he carried a whole
-department store in his insides.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor little Di,&rdquo; said Silvia; &ldquo;it&rsquo;s the
-only way he has of keeping things away
-from you all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>That night I saw to it personally that
-each and every Polydore was in his little
-bed. It should have aroused my suspicions
-that none of them rebelled, or had
-evinced the slightest degree of interest or
-curiosity when Beth and Rob announced
-their intention of going out for the evening.</p>
-<p>At ten-thirty the lovers returned, bringing
-in Pythagoras, who was clad in his
-pajamas.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did you pick him up?&rdquo; I asked
-in astonishment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He picked us up,&rdquo; said Beth.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;He was wise, maybe, in discovering
-where we were,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;but he fell
-down when he tried to work off the ghost
-screeches on us. We recognized them at
-once, and ran him down inside, so our
-party broke up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come here, Pythagoras,&rdquo; I commanded.</p>
-<p>He obeyed promptly and fearlessly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How did you know they were there,
-and when did you go over there?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was playing over in our house today,&rdquo;
-he replied, &ldquo;and I found one of Beth&rsquo;s
-hairpins with the little stones in, in the big
-chair, so I knew that was where they hid
-last night. As soon as you went down stairs
-tonight, I got out the window and slid down
-the roof and came over to scare them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve missed a lot of sleep the last
-few nights,&rdquo; I said quietly, &ldquo;so you will
-have to make it up. You can stay in bed
-all day tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Hold on, Lucien!&rdquo; exclaimed Rob.
-&ldquo;Tomorrow&rsquo;s the big baseball game of
-the season, and I promised to take them all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So much the better,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;He
-will learn to mind.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Pythagoras looked as if he had been
-struck, and quickly put his arms across
-his eyes. In a moment his shoulders were
-heaving. At last I had found a vulnerable
-spot in the stoic, and I began to relent.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;See here, Pythagoras,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;if I let
-you up in time to go to the game, will you
-promise me something?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anything,&rdquo; came in a muffled voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Will you promise not to spy on Beth
-and Rob and keep Emerald and Demetrius
-from doing it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he promised quickly, his arm
-coming down and his face brightening.
-&ldquo;Sure I will, but I did want to hear what
-they said.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; asked Rob interestedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re getting up a show, and Em is
-going to take the part of a girl and he spoons
-with Tolly, and we didn&rsquo;t know what to
-have them say to each other.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll rehearse you on the play, and
-prompt you,&rdquo; said Beth with a little
-giggle.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come on upstairs with me now,&rdquo; I
-said to Pythagoras.</p>
-<p>When I landed him at his door, he leaned
-up against me, and rubbed his cheek against
-my arm.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you for letting me go to the
-game,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-<p>I found myself responding to his affectionate
-advance. This would clearly never
-do. I couldn&rsquo;t let another Polydore squeeze
-himself into my regard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I said abruptly, as I came into
-our room, &ldquo;we must really make some immediate
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span>
-plan for disposing of the Polydores,
-or, at least, of &lsquo;Them Three.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huldah is managing them tolerably
-well,&rdquo; demurred Silvia. &ldquo;Since they depreciated
-in market value from five thousand
-per to nothing, she has resumed her
-former harsh treatment of them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, we are not going to keep them,&rdquo;
-I replied with finality. &ldquo;We are under no
-obligations to do so. I am going to put them
-in a school for boys and use the blank check
-Felix Polydore left to pay for their tuition.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose that is what we will have to
-do,&rdquo; she admitted with a little sigh. &ldquo;Yet,
-Lucien, it doesn&rsquo;t seem quite right. If
-they are in a boys&rsquo; school, they will keep
-on right along the same lines. They need
-home influence and contact with women.
-Demetrius is fond of music and will sit
-still and listen when I play. Emerald
-obeyed me today the first time I spoke,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span>
-and I even thought I saw a glimmer of good
-in Pythagoras.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I didn&rsquo;t tell her that this glimmer was
-what had decided me to dispose of him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It would, doubtless, be better for them
-to stay,&rdquo; I admitted, &ldquo;but I am not going to
-be a martyr to the cause. They are going.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The next morning I wrote for catalogues
-and prospectus to the different schools,
-and I felt as if three old men of the sea
-had been lifted from my shoulders.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_45' id='linki_45'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-050.jpg' alt='' title='' width='197' height='246' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_46' id='linki_46'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-051.jpg' alt='' title='' width='365' height='153' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XIX_WHICH_HAS_TO_DO_WITH_SOME_LETTERS' id='CHAPTER_XIX_WHICH_HAS_TO_DO_WITH_SOME_LETTERS'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter</span> XIX</h2>
-<h3><i>Which Has to Do with Some Letters</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>One morning when I came down to
-my office, I found a letter postmarked
-from the city in which
-Uncle Issachar lived addressed to me. I
-opened it and found inclosed, with seal
-unbroken, the letter Silvia had mailed to
-her uncle and which she had marked &ldquo;personal.&rdquo;
-There was a note addressed to
-me accompanying it:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Dear Sir:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am returning herewith your personal
-letter to Mr. Innes, as he has gone to
-South America and left no forwarding
-address. Should such be received from
-him at any future date, you will be duly
-notified thereof.</p>
-<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Very truly yours,<span class='rindent8'>&nbsp;</span><br />
-&ldquo;Chester K. Winslow,<span class='rindent6'>&nbsp;</span><br />
-&ldquo;Secretary.&rdquo;<span class='rindent4'>&nbsp;</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>I read the above to Silvia at luncheon.
-She was grievously disappointed because
-her uncle had not received her letter of
-explanation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is most fortunate,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that
-I sent it in one of your office envelopes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As usual, she had found the bright spot
-she always looked for and generally discovered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t care,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;to have
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span>
-Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s private secretary or the
-dead-letter office know all our private
-affairs, but I shall feel like an impostor
-until Uncle Issachar is undeceived.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I feel a hunch,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;that Uncle
-Issachar will run across Doctor Felix and his
-wife down there in Chili and find you out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He may run across the Polydores,&rdquo; I
-replied, &ldquo;but he&rsquo;ll never find out from
-them that they are the parents of Silvia&rsquo;s
-children. They would not mention a subject
-in which they have so little interest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; argued Beth, &ldquo;naturally they&rsquo;d
-tell him where they lived, and then, of
-course, he&rsquo;d say he had a niece living in
-the same town. They would inquire her
-name and inform him that they were her
-near neighbors, and then he&rsquo;d tell them
-what fine sons you have, and then, of course,
-the Polydores would claim their own.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Which theory goes to show,&rdquo; said
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span>
-Silvia, &ldquo;how little you know Uncle Issachar
-and the Polydore seniors. He would
-not think of speaking to strangers, and if
-he did, he wouldn&rsquo;t say any of those usual
-conversational things you mentioned. The
-Polydores wouldn&rsquo;t be interested, in the
-least, in knowing he had a niece unless she
-happened to know something about
-antiques, and if he should describe her
-children, she wouldn&rsquo;t recognize them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After luncheon I went out on the porch.
-While I sat there, the mail carrier came
-along and handed me a letter&ndash;&ndash;a returned
-letter. It was directed in Ptolemy&rsquo;s round
-hand to Mr. Issachar Innes. He had
-evidently used the envelope to Silvia&rsquo;s
-letter to her uncle as his model, for the
-address was written in the same way.
-&ldquo;Personal&rdquo; was added in the left-hand
-corner, and his name and our house number
-was in the upper left-hand corner.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span></div>
-<p>I went into the library where my wife,
-Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy were sitting.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ptolemy,&rdquo; I said, handing him the
-letter, &ldquo;here is your communication to
-Uncle Issachar, returned.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He lost some of his usual <i>sang froid</i>
-and appeared quite disconcerted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, Ptolemy,&rdquo; exclaimed Silvia in
-consternation, &ldquo;what in the world did
-you write to Uncle Issachar about?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy had recovered and was quite
-himself again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;About us,&rdquo; he said innocently. &ldquo;As
-the oldest of our family, I thought I ought
-to do a little explaining.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And I think,&rdquo; I said, looking at him
-keenly, &ldquo;that we have the right to know
-what your explanation was.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy handed me over the letter.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Read it aloud,&rdquo; he said, with the air
-of one who is proud of his productions.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span></div>
-<p>Rob&rsquo;s eyes shone in anticipation.</p>
-<p>I broke the seal. A note from the
-secretary fell out. It was an apology for
-not returning the letter sooner, but it had
-been inadvertently mislaid. I then read
-aloud the letter Ptolemy had written:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;Dear Uncle Issachar</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am sorry Diogenes and I were away
-when you were here. You thought the
-others were fine, but you should have
-seen&ndash;&ndash;Diogenes. I hope you will send
-mudder back her check, because there is lots
-of things she needs, and it takes a lot of
-money to take care of all us. You see
-our own father and mother don&rsquo;t want to
-be bothered with us and they went away
-and left us, and so we are living with
-mudder the same as if we were really her
-adopted children, and if her own would
-have been worth five thousand per to you,
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span>
-I think her adopted children ought to be
-worth half as much anyway, so it would
-only be fair to send her a check for $12,500
-anyway, and if you are a good sport like
-the kids said you were, you&rsquo;ll send back
-her check.</p>
-<p class='ralign'>&ldquo;Yours truly,<span class='rindent11'>&nbsp;</span><br />
-&ldquo;P. Issachar Polydore Wade.&rdquo;<span class='rindent4'>&nbsp;</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Rob&rsquo;s laughter was so free and spontaneous
-that I had to join in against my
-will. Ptolemy, who had seemed a little
-apprehensive of the verdict, looked accordingly
-relieved.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a fine letter, young man,&rdquo; approved
-Rob. &ldquo;Stepdaddy ought to take
-you into his law firm.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; declared Beth. &ldquo;I think Ptolemy
-has inherited his mother&rsquo;s gift. He
-should be a writer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not on your life!&rdquo; cried Ptolemy with
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span>
-feeling. &ldquo;I want to live things instead
-of writing about them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A tear or two came into Silvia&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was very sweet in you, Ptolemy, to
-try to get the money for mudder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I felt that all this commendation was
-bad for Ptolemy, and that it was up to
-me to take a reef in his sails.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was a well-meant letter, Ptolemy,&rdquo;
-I said, &ldquo;and I know that your motive was
-unselfish, but it is very poor policy to
-meddle in other people&rsquo;s affairs. Meddlers
-are mischief makers in spite of their
-good intentions. I am very glad it did
-not fall into Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s hands.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Ptolemy looked sufficiently squelched.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;By the way, Silvia,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;I wrote
-Mr. Winslow and told him not to forget
-to forward Uncle Issachar&rsquo;s address as soon
-as he possibly could do so, as I had matters
-of importance to communicate to him.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;He may travel about like father and
-mother,&rdquo; said Ptolemy, again regaining
-confidence, &ldquo;so why don&rsquo;t you put that
-check for twenty-five thousand in the
-Savings Department and get the interest
-on it anyway?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think, Ptolemy,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;that you
-are too good a financier, after all, to become
-a lawyer. I will go back to my first
-conviction that you should be a promoter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll give him to Uncle Issachar,&rdquo; I
-proposed, &ldquo;for a partner.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_47' id='linki_47'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-053.jpg' alt='' title='' width='271' height='218' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_48' id='linki_48'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-052.jpg' alt='' title='' width='326' height='114' /><br />
-</div>
-<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
-<a name='CHAPTER_XX_THE_MONEY_WE_EARNT_FOR_YOU' id='CHAPTER_XX_THE_MONEY_WE_EARNT_FOR_YOU'></a>
-<h2><span class='smcap'>Chapter</span> XX</h2>
-<h3><i>&ldquo;The Money We Earnt for You&rdquo;</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p>Life went on uneventfully save for
-the dire doings of &ldquo;Them Three.&rdquo;
-Knowing that they were to be sent
-to school, they were having their last fling
-at life untrammeled. September came,
-and Rob set the day for his departure, as
-he was going home to arrange his affairs,
-so he and Beth could leave for an extended
-honeymoon trip. I planned to go with
-Rob and install the Polydore three in their
-distant school. They were so despondent
-at leaving, as the time drew near, that a
-<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span>
-feeling of gloom hung over the household,
-all the members of which, even to Huldah,
-urged me to relent. But I remained adamant
-until the evening before the day set
-for the dissolution of the Polydore family,
-when something happened that changed
-all our plans.</p>
-<p>We were assembled in the library in a
-state of forced cheerfulness when the doorbell
-rang. I answered it, and receipted
-for a telegram which I opened and read in
-the hall. It was from Chester K. Winslow.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Silvia,&rdquo; I said gravely, as I returned
-to the library, &ldquo;your Uncle Issachar is
-dead. Died in South America. Heart disease.
-Very sudden.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Conflicting emotions were depicted in
-Silvia&rsquo;s expression.</p>
-<p>The thought uppermost in all our minds
-was expressed simultaneously by &ldquo;Them
-Three.&rdquo;</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;Gee! Then you can keep the money
-we earnt for you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You know,&rdquo; interpolated Rob in soft-pedaled
-tone, &ldquo;they are going to train
-school children toward the military&ndash;&ndash;teach
-the young ideas how to shoot, as it were.
-It won&rsquo;t be long before they are ordered
-to Mexico to protect us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If Them Three ever meets that there
-Viller man,&rdquo; commented Huldah confidently,
-&ldquo;the fur will fly some.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lucien,&rdquo; said Silvia thoughtfully, &ldquo;we
-are under obligations to these children,
-you see, after all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I acknowledged with a sigh,
-&ldquo;seeing they are now ours, bought and
-paid for, I suppose we&rsquo;ll have to treat them
-as such.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You wouldn&rsquo;t send your own kids
-away to school,&rdquo; said Pythagoras significantly.</p>
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span></div>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I reluctantly allowed, answering
-the protest of Pythagoras, &ldquo;and we won&rsquo;t
-send you. You will all go to the public
-school tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The deafening Polydore powwow that
-followed made me hope that Uncle Issachar
-had met with his just deserts.</p>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_49' id='linki_49'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-054.jpg' alt='' title='' width='184' height='275' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span></div>
-<div class='figtag'>
-<a name='linki_50' id='linki_50'></a>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illus-055.jpg' alt='' title='' width='104' height='139' /><br />
-</div>
-<hr class='pb' />
-<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:20px;'><i>&ldquo;By the author of &ldquo;Mildew Manse.&rdquo;</i></p>
-
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.4em;margin-bottom:20px;'>AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY</p>
-
-<p class='tp' ><i>By</i> BELLE K. MANIATES</p>
-<p class='tp' >Illustrated. 12mo. $1.00 <i>net</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A book for the many who are weary of problem novels.
-How prosperity came to the Jenkins family, how Amarilly
-got an education, how the Boarder married Lily Rose
-and built the Annex, and the adventures of the rector&rsquo;s
-surplice, are told in a wholesome little story, between
-whose covers await many laughs, and a tear or two as well.</p>
-
-<p>Amarilly is blessed with a large family and amiable neighbors,
-and their doings are amusing, but her fancies and devices
-are captivating.... The little heroine is all right.&ndash;&ndash;<i>New
-York Sun.</i></p>
-
-<p>The sort of story which pulls at the heartstrings of all
-readers who like a real and genuine character.... No one can
-afford to miss the sweet humor and helpful cheeriness which
-the author serves in generous measure.&ndash;&ndash;<i>Boston Globe</i>.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley&rdquo; is a dear companion for
-vacation days and comes deservedly under the books of real
-amusement.... Dear Amarilly! she brightens every hour
-spent with her.&ndash;&ndash;<i>Buffalo News</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='tp' style='font-size:larger;'>LITTLE, BROWN &amp; CO., <span class='smcap'>Publishers</span></p>
-<p class='tp' ><span class='smcap'>34 Beacon Street, Boston</span></p>
-
-<!-- generated by ppg.rb version: 3.14 -->
-<!-- timestamp: Thu Sep 24 06:15:03 -0400 2009 -->
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Our Next-Door Neighbors, by Belle Kanaris Maniates
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-Project Gutenberg's Our Next-Door Neighbors, by Belle Kanaris Maniates
-
-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: Our Next-Door Neighbors
-
-Author: Belle Kanaris Maniates
-
-Illustrator: Tony Sarg
-
-Release Date: September 24, 2009 [EBook #30075]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
-
-
-
-
-By Belle K. Maniates
-
-AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY
-
-MILDEW MANCE
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken him.
-FRONTISPIECE. _See page 114._]
-
-
-
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS
-
-By
-
-Belle Kanaris Maniates
-
-With illustrations by
-
-Tony Sarg
-
-Boston
-
-Little, Brown, and Company
-
-1917
-
-
-
-
-Copyright, 1917,
-
-By Little, Brown, and Company.
-
-All rights reserved
-
-Published February, 1917
-
-Norwood Press
-
-Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
-
-Presswork by The Colonial Press, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- I ABOUT SILVIA AND MYSELF 1
- II INTRODUCING OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS 9
- III IN WHICH WE ARE PESTERED BY POLYDORES 28
- IV IN WHICH WE TAKE BOARDERS 45
- V IN WHICH WE TAKE A VACATION 61
- VI A FLIRT AND A WOMAN-HATER 77
- VII IN WHICH NOTHING MUCH HAPPENS 90
- VIII PTOLEMY DISAPPEARS AND I VISIT A HAUNTED HOUSE 99
- IX IN WHICH WE SEE GHOSTS 123
- X IN WHICH WE MAKE SOME DISCOVERIES 138
- XI A BAD MEANS TO A GOOD END 152
- XII "TOO MUCH POLYDORES" 164
- XIII ROB'S FRIEND THE REPORTER 173
- XIV A MIDNIGHT EXCURSION 195
- XV WHAT MISS FRAYNE FOUND OUT 203
- XVI PTOLEMY'S TALE 213
- XVII ALL ABOUT UNCLE ISSACHAR'S VISIT 229
- XVIII IN WHICH I DECIDE ON EXTREME MEASURES 254
- XIX WHICH HAS TO DO WITH SOME LETTERS 267
- XX "THE MONEY WE EARNT FOR YOU" 276
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken
- him. _Frontispiece_
- Uncle Issachar 10
- Dr. Felix Polydore 23
- "Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to
- Beth and Rob." 80
- He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us. 102
- I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to
- pull together and beat it to the lake 126
- The landlady intears waylaid me 132
- I had to carry Diogenes most of the way 168
- Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia's
- plaintive protests outside the door 192
- I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but
- with an injured air 224
- "He went to the front window and dropped a young
- kitten down on the old gent's head." 242
- "We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled
- Emerald from underneath." 256
-
-
-
-
-OUR NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOURS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-_About Silvia and Myself_
-
-
-Some people have children born unto them, some acquire children and
-others have children thrust upon them. Silvia and I are of the last
-named class. We have no offspring of our own, but yesterday, today,
-and forever we have those of our neighbor.
-
-We were born and bred in the same little home-grown city and as a
-small boy, even, I was Silvia's worshiper, but perforce a worshiper
-from afar.
-
-Her upcoming had been supervised by a grimalkin governess who drew
-around the form of her young charge the awful circle of exclusiveness,
-intercourse with child-kind being strictly prohibited.
-
-Children are naturally gregarious little creatures, however, and
-Silvia on rare occasions managed to break parole and make adroit
-escape from surveillance. Then she would speed to the top of the
-boundary wall that separated the stable precincts from an alluring
-alley which was the playground of the plebeian progeny of the humble
-born.
-
-To the circle of dirty but fascinating ragamuffins she became an
-interested tangent, a silent observer. Here I had my first meeting
-with her. I was not of her class, neither was I to the alley born, but
-sailed in the sane mid-channel that ameliorates the distinction
-between high and low life.
-
-On this eventful day I was taking a short cut on my way to school. One
-of the group of alleyites, with the inherent friendliness of the
-unchartered but big-hearted members of the silt of the stream of
-humans, had proffered to little Silvia a chip on which was a patch of
-mud designed to become a fruitcake stuffed with pebbles in lieu of
-raisins and frosted with moistened ashes. Before the enticing pastime
-of transformation was begun, however, Silvia was swiftly snatched from
-the contaminating midst and borne away over the ramparts.
-
-Thereafter I haunted the alley, hoping for another glimpse of the
-little picture girl on the wall. At last I attained my desire. One
-Saturday afternoon I saw her coming, alone, down a long rosebush
-bordered path. A thrill ran through me. Our eyes met. Yet all I found
-to say was: "C'mon over."
-
-She responded to this invitation and I helped her over the wall. She
-looked longingly at the Irish playing in the mud, but a clean sandpile
-in my own backyard not far away seemed to me a more fitting
-environment for one so daintily clad.
-
-We played undisturbed for a never-to-be-forgotten half hour and then
-they found her out. Reprimanding voices jangled and the whole world
-was out of tune.
-
-Thereafter a strict watch was kept on little Silvia's movements and I
-saw her only at rare intervals, when she was going into church or as
-she rode past our house. She always remembered me and on such
-meetings a faint, reminiscent smile lighted the somber little face and
-her eyes met mine as if in a mysterious promise.
-
-She grew up an outlawed, isolated child deprived of her birthright,
-but in spite of the handicaps of so barren a childhood, she achieved
-young womanhood unspoiled and in possession of her early democratic
-tendencies.
-
-When I was making a modest start in a legal way, her parents died and
-left her with that most unprofitable of legacies, an encumbered
-estate. Then I dared to renew our acquaintance begun on the sandpile.
-She went to live with a poor but practical relation and was initiated
-into the science of stretching an inadequate income to meet everyday
-needs. In time I wooed and won her.
-
-We set up housekeeping in a small, thriving mid-Western city where I
-secured a partnership in a legal firm. Silvia had all the requisites
-of mind and manner and Domestic Science necessary to a "hearth-and
-home-" maker.
-
-We lived in a house which was one of many made to the same measure
-with the inevitable street porch, big window, trimmed lawn in front
-and garden in the rear. We had attained the standard of prosperity
-maintained in our home town by keeping "hired help" and installing a
-telephone, so our social status was fixed.
-
-There was but one adjunct missing to our little Arcadia. While at a
-word or look children flocked to me like friendly puppies in response
-to a call, to Silvia they were still an unknown quantity.
-
-I had hoped that her understanding and love for children might be
-developed in the usual and natural way, but we had now been married
-ten years and this hope had not been realized.
-
-She had tried most assiduously to cultivate an acquaintance with
-members of child-world, but into that kingdom there is no open sesame.
-The sure keen intuition of a child recognizes on sight a kindred
-spirit and Silvia's forced advances met with but indifferent response.
-She wistfully proposed to me one day that we adopt a child. My doubts
-as to the advisability of such a course were confirmed by Huldah, our
-strong staff in household help. In our section of the country servants
-were generally quite conversant with the intimate and personal affairs
-of the home.
-
-"Don't you never do it, Mr. Wade," she counseled. "Ready-mades ain't
-for the likes of her."
-
-When, in acting on this advice, I vetoed Silvia's lukewarm
-proposition, I was convinced of Huldah's wisdom by seeing the look of
-relief that flashed into my wife's troubled countenance, and I knew
-that her suggestion had been but a perfunctory prompting of duty.
-
-Time alone could overcome the effects of her early environment!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-_Introducing Our Next-door Neighbors_
-
-
-One morning Silvia and I lingered over our coffee cups discussing our
-plans for the coming summer, which included visits from my sister Beth
-and my college chum, Rob Rossiter. We wished to avoid having their
-arrivals occur simultaneously, however, because Rob was a woman-hater,
-or thought he was. We decided to have Beth pay her visit first and
-later take Rob with us on our vacation trip to some place where the
-fishing facilities would be to our liking. However, summer vacation
-time like our plans was yet far, vague and dim.
-
-[Illustration: Uncle Issachar]
-
-While I was putting on my overcoat, Silvia had gone to the window and
-was looking pensively at the vacant house next to ours.
-
-"I fear," she said abruptly and irrelevantly, "that we are destined
-to receive no part of Uncle Issachar's fortune."
-
-Uncle Issachar was a wealthy but eccentric relative of my wife. He had
-made us no wedding gift beyond his best wishes, but he had then
-informed us that at the birth of each of our prospective sons he
-should place in the bank to Silvia's account the sum of five thousand
-dollars. We had never invited him to visit us or made any overtures in
-the way of communication with him, lest he should think we were
-cultivating his acquaintance from mercenary motives.
-
-While I was debating whether the lament in Silvia's tone was for the
-loss of the money or the lack of children, she again spoke; this time
-in a tone which had lost its languor.
-
-"There is a big moving van in front of the house next door. At last we
-will have some near neighbors."
-
-"Are they unloading furniture?" I asked inanely, crossing to the
-window.
-
-"No; course not," came cheerfully from Huldah, who had come in to
-remove the dishes. "Most likely they are unloading lions and tigers."
-
-As I have already intimated, Huldah was a privileged servant.
-
-"They are unloading children!" explained Silvia, in a tone implying
-that Huldah's sarcastic implication would be infinitely more
-preferable. "The van seems to be overflowing with them--a perfect
-crowd. Do you suppose the house is to be used as an orphan asylum?"
-
-"I think not," I assured her as I counted the flock. Five children
-would seem like a crowd to Silvia.
-
-"Boys!" exclaimed Huldah tragically, as she joined us for a survey.
-"I'll see that they don't keep the grass off our lawn."
-
-Late that afternoon I opened the outer door of the dining-room in
-response to the rap of strenuously applied knuckles.
-
-A lad of about eleven years with the sardonic face of a satyr and
-diabolically bright eyes peered into the room.
-
-"We're going to have soup for dinner," he announced, "and mother wants
-to borrow a soup plate for father to eat his out of."
-
-Silvia stared at him aghast. She seemed to feel something compelling
-in the boy's personnel, however, and she went to the china closet and
-brought forth a soup plate which she handed to him without comment.
-
-In silence we watched him run across the lawn, twirling the plate
-deftly above his head in juggler fashion.
-
-The next day when we sat down to dinner our new young neighbor again
-appeared on our threshold.
-
-"Halloa!" he called chummily. "We are going to have soup again and we
-want a soup plate for father."
-
-"Where is the one I loaned you yesterday?" demanded Silvia in a tone
-far below thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit, while her features assumed a
-frigidity that would have congealed father's favorite sustenance had
-it been in her vicinity.
-
-"Oh, we broke that!" he casually and cheerfully explained.
-
-With much reluctance Silvia bestowed another plate upon the young
-applicant.
-
-"Wait!" I said as he started to leave, "don't you want the soup
-tureen, too, or the ladle and some soup spoons?"
-
-"No, thank you," he answered politely. "None of the rest of us like
-soup, so we dish father's up in the kitchen. He doesn't like soup
-particularly, but he eats it because it goes down quick and lets him
-have more time for work."
-
-This time as he sped homeward, he didn't spin the plate in air, but
-tried out a new plan of balancing it on a stick.
-
-"I think," I suggested gently, when our young neighbor was lost to our
-sorrowful sight, "that it might be well to invest in another dozen or
-so of soup plates. I will see about getting them at wholesale rates.
-Our supply will soon give out if our new neighbors continue to
-cultivate the soup and borrowing habit."
-
-"I will buy some at the five cent store," replied Silvia. "I think I
-had better call upon them tomorrow and see what manner of people they
-can be."
-
-When I came home the next day it was quite evident that she had
-called.
-
-"Well," I inquired, "what do they keep--a soup house?"
-
-"They are literary people, the highest of high-brows. Their name is
-Polydore, and the head of the house----"
-
-"Mr. or Mrs.?" I interrupted.
-
-"The head of the house," pursued Silvia, ignoring my question, "is a
-collector."
-
-"So I inferred. Has he a large collection of soup plates?"
-
-"She collects antiquities and writes their history. He pursues
-science."
-
-"They were seemingly communicative. What did they look like?"
-
-"I didn't see them. After I rang I heard a woman's voice bidding some
-one not to answer the bell. She said she couldn't be bothered with
-interruptions, so I went on up the street to call on Mrs. Fleming, who
-told me all about them. She was also refused admittance when she
-called. On my way home I met that boy--that awful boy----"
-
-She paused, evidently overcome by the consideration of his awfulness.
-
-"He had been digging bait--"
-
-Again she paused as if words were inadequate for her climax.
-
-"Well," I encouraged.
-
-"He was carrying his bait--horrid, wriggling angleworms--in our soup
-plate!"
-
-"Then it is not broken yet!" I exclaimed joyfully. "Let us hope it is
-given an antiseptic bath before father's next indulgence in consomme.
-After dinner I will go over and try my luck at paying my respects to
-the soup savant."
-
-"They won't let you in."
-
-"In that case I shall follow their lead of setting aside all ceremony
-and formality and admit myself, as their heir apparent does here."
-
-After dinner and my twilight smoke, I went next door, first asking
-Silvia if there was anything we needed that I could borrow, just to
-show them there were no hard feelings.
-
-My third vigorous ring brought results. A slipshod servant appeared
-and reluctantly seated me in the hall. She read with seeming interest
-the card I handed to her and then, pushing aside some mangy looking
-portieres, vanished from view.
-
-She evidently delivered my card, for I heard a woman's voice read my
-name, "Mr. Lucien Wade."
-
-After another short interval the slovenly servant returned and offered
-me my card.
-
-"She seen it," she assured me in answer to my look of surprise.
-
-She again put the portieres between us and I was obliged to own myself
-baffled in my efforts to break in. I was showing myself out when my
-onward course was deflected by a troop of noisy children leaded by
-the soup plate skirmisher, who was the oldest and apparently the
-leader of the brood.
-
-"Oh, halloa!" he greeted me with the air of an old acquaintance,
-"didn't you see the folks?"
-
-On my informing him that I had seen no one but the servant, he
-exclaimed:
-
-"Oh, that chicken wouldn't know enough to ask you in! Just follow us.
-Mother wouldn't remember to come out."
-
-I was loth to force my presence on mother, but by this time my
-hospitable young friend had pulled the portieres so strenuously that
-they parted from the pole, and I was presented willy nilly to the
-collector of antiquities, who had the angular sharp-cut face and form
-of a rocking horse. She was seated at a table strewn with books and
-papers, writing at a rate of speed that convinced me she was in the
-throes of an inspiration. I forebore to interrupt. My scruples,
-however, were not shared by her eldest son. He gave her elbow a jog of
-reminder which sent her pencil to the floor.
-
-"Mother!" he shouted in megaphone voice, "here's the man next
-door--the one we get our soup plates from."
-
-She looked up abstractedly.
-
-"Oh," she said in dismayed tone, "I thought you had gone. I am very
-much engaged in writing a paper on modern antiquities."
-
-I murmured some sort of an apology for my untimely interruption.
-
-"I am so absorbed in my great work," she explained, "that I am
-oblivious to all else. I have the rare and great gift of concentration
-in a marked degree."
-
-I was quite sure of this fact. She took another pencil from a supply
-box and resumed her literary occupation. As my presence seemed of so
-little moment, I lingered.
-
-"Mother," shouted one of the boys, snatching the pencil from her
-grasp, "I'm hungry. I didn't have any supper."
-
-"Yes, you did!" she asserted. "I saw Gladys give you a bowl of bread
-and milk."
-
-"Emerald took it away from me and drank it up."
-
-"Didn't neither!" denied a shaggy looking boy. "I spilled it."
-
-He accompanied this denial by a fierce punch in his accuser's ribs.
-
-"Here!" said the author of Modern Antiquities, taking a nickel from
-her pocket, "go get yourself some popcorn, Demetrius."
-
-"I ain't Demetrius! I'm Pythagoras."
-
-"It makes no difference. Go and get it and don't speak to me again
-tonight."
-
-The boy had already snatched the coin, and he now started for the
-exit, but his outgoing way was instantly blocked by a promiscuous pack
-of pugilistic Polydores, and an ardent and general onslaught
-followed.
-
-I endeavored to untangle the arms and legs of the attackers and the
-attacked in a desire to rescue the youngest, a child of two, but I
-soon beat a retreat, having no mind to become a punching bag for
-Polydores.
-
-The concentrator at the writing table, looking up vaguely, perceived
-the general joust.
-
-"How provoking!" she exclaimed indignantly. "I was in search of an
-antonym and now they've driven it out of my memory."
-
-I politely offered my sympathy for her loss.
-
-"Did you ever see such misbehaved children?" she asked casually and
-impersonally as she calmly surveyed the free-for-all fight.
-
-[Illustration: Dr. Felix Polydore]
-
-"Children always misbehave before company," I remarked propitiatingly.
-"Of course they know better."
-
-"Why no, they don't!" she declared, looking at me in surprise,
-"they----"
-
-At this instant the errant antonym evidently flashed upon her mental
-vision and her pencil hastened to record it and then flew on at
-lightning speed.
-
-I was about to try to make an escape when a momentary cessation of
-hostilities was caused by the entrance of a moth-eaten, abstracted-looking
-man. As the _two-year-old_ hailed him as "fadder", I gathered that he
-was the person responsible for the family now fighting at his feet.
-
-"What's the trouble?" he asked helplessly.
-
-"She gave Thag a nickel," explained the eldest boy, "and we want it."
-
-The man drew a sigh of relief. The solution of this family problem was
-instantly and satisfactorily met by an impartial distribution of
-nickels.
-
-With demoniac whoops of delight, the contestants fled from the room.
-
-I introduced myself to the man of the house, who seemed to realize
-that some sort of compulsory conventionalities must be observed. He
-looked hopelessly at his wife, and seeing that she was beyond response
-to an S O S call to things mundane, he frankly but impressively
-informed me that I must expect nothing of them socially as their lives
-were devoted to research and study. The children, however, he assured
-me, could run over frequently to see us.
-
-I instinctively felt that my call was considered ended, so I took my
-departure. I related the details of my neighborly visit to Silvia, but
-her sense of humor was not stirred. It was entirely dominated by her
-dread of the young Polydores.
-
-"How many children are there?" she asked faintly. "More than the five
-you said you counted that first day?"
-
-"They seemed not so many as much. That is, though I suppose in round
-numbers there are but five, yet each of those five is equal to at
-least three ordinary children."
-
-"Are they all boys? Huldah says the youngest wears dresses."
-
-"Nevertheless he is a boy. They are all unmistakably boys. I think
-they must have been born with boots on and," conscious of the imprints
-of my shins, "hobnail boots at that. Even the youngest, a two-year
-old, seems to have been graduated from Home Rule."
-
-"I can't bear to think of their going to bed hungry," she said
-wistfully. "Think of that unnatural mother expecting them to satisfy
-their hunger by popcorn."
-
-"They didn't though," I assured her. "I saw them stop a street vender
-below here and invest their nickels in hot dogs."
-
-"Hot dogs!" repeated Silvia in horror.
-
-"Wienerwursts," I hastened to interpret.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-_In Which We Are Pestered by Polydores_
-
-
-Our life now became one long round of Polydores. They were with us
-burr-tight, and attached themselves to me with dog-like devotion,
-remaining utterly impervious to Silvia's aloofness and repulses. At
-last, however, she succumbed to their presence as one of the things
-inevitable.
-
-"The Polydores are here to stay," she acknowledged in a
-calmness-of-despair voice.
-
-"They don't seem to be homebodies," I allowed.
-
-The children were not literary like the other productions of their
-profound parents, but were a band of robust, active youngsters
-unburdened with brains, excepting Ptolemy of soup plate fame. Not that
-he betrayed any tendencies toward a learned line, but he was possessed
-of an occult, uncanny, wizard-like wisdom that was disconcerting. His
-contemplative eyes seemed to search my soul and read my inmost
-thoughts.
-
-Pythagoras, Emerald, and Demetrius, aged respectively nine, eight, and
-seven, were very much alike in looks and size, being so many pinched
-caricatures of their mother. To Silvia they were bewildering
-whirlwinds, but Huldah, who seemed to have difficulty in telling them
-apart, always classified them as "Them three", and Silvia and I fell
-into the habit of referring to them in the same way. Huldah could not
-master the Polydore given names either by memory or pronunciation.
-Ptolemy, whose name was shortened to "Tolly" by Diogenes, she called
-"Polly." When she was on speaking terms with "Them three" she
-nicknamed them "Thaggy, Emmy, and Meetie."
-
-Diogenes, the two-year old, was a Tartar when emulating his brothers.
-Alone, he was sometimes normal and a shade more like ordinary
-children.
-
-When they first began swarming in upon us, Silvia drew many lines
-which, however, the Polydores promptly effaced.
-
-"They shall not eat here, anyway," she emphatically declared.
-
-This was her last stand and she went down ingloriously.
-
-One day while we were seated at the table enjoying some of Huldah's
-most palatable dishes, Ptolemy came in. There ensued on our part a
-silence which the lad made no effort to break. Silvia and I each
-slipped him a side glance. He stood statuesque, watching us with the
-mute wistfulness of a hungry animal. There were unwonted small red
-specks high upon his cheekbones, symptoms, Silvia thought, of
-starvation.
-
-She was moved to ask, though reluctantly and perfunctorily:
-
-"Haven't you been to dinner, Ptolemy?"
-
-"Yes," he admitted quickly, "but I could eat another."
-
-Assuming that the forced inquiry was an invitation, before protest
-could be entered he supplied himself with a plate and helped
-himself to food. His need and relish of the meal weakened Silvia's
-fortifications.
-
-This opening, of course, was the wedge that let in other Polydores,
-and thereafter we seldom sat down to a meal without the presence of
-one or more members of the illustrious and famished family, who made
-themselves as entirely at home as would a troop of foraging soldiers.
-Silvia gazed upon their devouring of food with the same surprised,
-shocked, and yet interested manner in which one watches the feeding of
-animals.
-
-"I suppose he ought not to eat so many pickles," she remarked one day,
-as Emerald consumed his ninth Dill.
-
-"You can't kill a Polydore," I assured her.
-
-I never opened a door but more or less Polydores fell in. They were at
-the left of us and at the right of us, with Diogenes always under
-foot. We had no privacy. I found myself waking suddenly in the night
-with the uncomfortable feeling that Ptolemy lurked in a dark corner or
-two of my bedroom.
-
-Even Silvia's boudoir was not free from their invasion. But one door
-in our house remained closed to them. They found no open sesame to
-Huldah's apartment.
-
-"I wish she would let me in on her system," I said. "I wonder how she
-manages to keep them on the outside?"
-
-"I can tell you," confided Silvia. "Emerald and Demetrius went in one
-day and she dropped Demetrius out the window and kicked Emerald out
-the door. You know, Lucien, you are too softhearted to resort to such
-measures."
-
-"I was once," I confessed, "but I think under Polydore regime I am
-getting stoical enough to follow in Huldah's footsteps and go her one
-better."
-
-Our conversation was interrupted by the entrance of Diogenes.
-
-Silvia screamed.
-
-Turning to see what the latest Polydore perpetration might be, I saw
-that Diogenes was frothing at the mouth.
-
-"Oh, he's having a fit!" exclaimed Silvia frantically. "Call Huldah!
-Put him in a hot bath. Quick, Lucien, turn on the hot water."
-
-"Not I," I refused grimly. "Let him have a fit and fall in it."
-
-"He ain't got no fit," was the cheerful assurance of Pythagoras, as he
-sauntered in.
-
-"Your mother would have one," I told him, "if she could hear your
-English."
-
-"What is the matter with him?" asked Silvia. "Does he often foam in
-this way?"
-
-"He's been eating your tooth powder," explained Pythagoras. "He likes
-it 'cause it tastes like peppermint, and then he drank some water
-before he swallowed the powder and it all fizzed up and run out his
-mouth."
-
-"I wondered," said Silvia ruefully, "what made my tooth powder
-disappear so rapidly. What shall I do!"
-
-"Resort to strategy!" I advised. "Lock up your powder hereafter and
-fill an empty bottle with powdered alum or something worse and leave
-it around handy."
-
-"Lucien!" exclaimed my wife, who could not seem to recover from this
-latest annoyance, "I don't see how you can be so fond of children. I
-did hope--for your sake and--on account of Uncle Issachar's offer that
-I'd like to have one--but I'd rather go to the poorhouse! I'd almost
-lose your affection rather than have a child."
-
-"But, Silvia!" I remonstrated in dismay, "you shouldn't judge all by
-these. They're not fair samples. They're not children--not home-grown
-children."
-
-"I should say not!" agreed Huldah, who had come into the room. "They
-are imps--imps of the devil."
-
-I believe she was right. They had a generally demoralizing effect on
-our household. I was growing irritable, Silvia careworn. Even Huldah
-showed their influence by acquiring the very latest in slang from
-them. Once in a while to my amusement I heard Silvia unconsciously
-adopting the Polydore argot.
-
-As the result of their better nourishment at our table, the imps of
-the devil daily grew more obstreperous and life became so burdensome
-to Silvia that I proposed moving away to a childless neighborhood.
-
-"They'd find us out," said Silvia wearily, "wherever we went. Distance
-would be no obstacle to them."
-
-"Then we might move out of town, as a last resort," I suggested. "Rob
-says he thinks there is a good legal field in----"
-
-"No, Lucien," vetoed Silvia. "You've a fine practice here, and then
-there's that attorneyship for the Bartwell Manufacturing Company."
-
-My hope of securing this appointment meant a good deal to us. We were
-now living up to every cent of my income and though we had the
-necessities, it was the luxuries of life I craved--for Silvia's sake.
-She was a lover of music and we had no piano. She yearned to ride and
-she had no horse. We both had longings for a touring-car and we wanted
-to travel.
-
-"I've thought of a scheme for a little respite from the sight and
-sound of the Polydores," I remarked one day. "We'll enter them in the
-public school. There are four more weeks yet before the long summer
-vacation."
-
-"That would be too good to be true," declared Silvia. "Five or six
-hours each day, and then, too, their deportment will be so dreadful
-that they will have to stay after school hours."
-
-I thought more likely their deportment would lead to suspension, but
-forbore to wet-blanket Silvia's hopes.
-
-I made my second call upon the male head of the House of Polydore to
-recommend and urge that its young scions be sent to the public school.
-I had misgivings as to the outcome of my proposition, as the Polydore
-parents believed themselves to be the only fount of learning in the
-town. To my surprise and intense gratification, my suggestion met with
-no objections whatever. Felix Polydore referred me to his wife and
-said he would abide by her decision. I found her, of course, buried in
-books, but remembering Ptolemy's mode of gaining attention, I
-peremptorily closed the volume she was studying.
-
-My audacity attained its object and I proferred my request, laying
-great stress on the quietude she would gain thereby. She replied that
-attendance at school would doubtless do them no harm, although she
-expressed her belief that the most thorough educations were those
-obtained outside of schools.
-
-Silvia was wafted into the eighth heaven of bliss and then some, as
-the result of my diplomatic mission. Of course the task of preparing
-pupils out of the pestiferous Polydores devolved upon her, but she was
-actively aided by the eager and willing Huldah and between them they
-pushed the project that promised such an elysium with all speed. The
-prospective pupils themselves were not wildly enthusiastic over this
-curtailment of their liberty, but Huldah won the day by proposing that
-they carry their luncheon with them, promising an abundant supply of
-sugared doughnuts and small pies.
-
-Pythagoras foresaw recreation ahead in the opportunity to "lick all
-the kids," and I assumed that Ptolemy had deep laid schemes for the
-outmaneuvering of teachers, but as his left hand never made confidant
-of his right, I could not expect to fathom the workings of his mind.
-
-Early on a Monday morning, therefore, our household arose to lick our
-Polydore proteges into a shape presentable for admission to school.
-It took two hours to pull up stockings and make them stay pulled,
-tie shoestrings, comb out tangles, adjust collars and neckties, to
-say nothing of vigorous scrubbings to five grimy faces and ten
-dirt-stained hands.
-
-At last with an air of achievement Silvia corralled her round-up and
-unloaded the four eldest upon the public school and then proceeded to
-install the protesting Diogenes in a nursery kindergarten. Huldah
-stood in the doorway as they marched off and sped the parting guests
-with a muttered "Good riddance to bad rubbish."
-
-Silvia returned radiant, but her rejoicing was shortlived. She had
-scarcely taken off her hat and gloves when the four oldest came
-trooping and whooping into the house.
-
-"What's the matter?" gasped Silvia.
-
-"Got to be vaccinated," explained Ptolemy with an appreciative
-grin. Of all the Polydores he was the one who had least objected
-to scholastic pursuits, but he seemed quite jubilant at our
-discomfiture.
-
-We were somewhat reluctant to undertake the responsibility of their
-inoculation, especially after Ptolemy told us that his mother didn't
-believe in vaccination.
-
-"I'll take 'em down and get 'em vaccinated right," declared Huldah.
-"Their ma won't never notice the scars, and if one of you young uns
-blabs about it," she added, turning upon them ferociously, "I'll cut
-your tongue out."
-
-"Suppose there should be some ill result from it," said Silvia
-apprehensively.
-
-"Don't you worry!" exclaimed Huldah. "Most likely it won't amount to
-anything. It'll take some new kind of scabs to work in these brats.
-They're too tough to take anything. Come on now with me," she
-commanded, "and after it's done, I'll get you each an ice cream
-sody."
-
-Through Huldah's efficiency the vaccination was quickly accomplished
-and the children of our neighbor were reluctantly accepted by the
-school authorities.
-
-The Polydores were not parted by reason of dissimilarity of age or
-learning, as they were put into the ungraded room. To keep them there
-enrolled taxed to the utmost our ingenuity in the way of framing
-excuses for their repeated cases of tardiness and suspension.
-
-Silvia felt a little remorseful when she listened to the tale of woe
-recited to her by their teacher at a card party one Saturday
-afternoon.
-
-"She said," my wife repeated, "that yesterday Pythagoras brought two
-mice to school in his marble-bag and let them loose. She doesn't
-believe in corporal punishment, but she determined to experiment with
-its effect on Pythagoras, so she kept him and Emerald, who was
-slightly implicated, after school and sent the latter out to get a
-whip. When he came back he said: 'I couldn't find any stick, but
-here's some rocks you can throw at him,' and handed her a hat full of
-stones. This made her too hysterical to try her experiment, so she
-took away his recess for a week."
-
-"We ought to make her a present," I observed.
-
-"She said," continued Silvia, "that they had given her nervous
-prostration, but she had no time to prostrate, and if she didn't
-succeed in getting them graded by the coming fall term, she should
-accept an offer of marriage she had received from a cross-eyed man,
-and you know how unlucky that would be, Lucien!"
-
-"We may be driven to worse things than that by fall," I replied
-ruefully.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-_In Which We Take Boarders_
-
-
-Four weeks of unalloyed bliss and then the summer vacation times
-arrived, bringing joy to the heart of the Polydores and the teacher of
-the ungraded room, but deep gloom to the hearthside of the Wades.
-
-One misfortune always brings another. A rival applicant received
-the coveted attorneyship and we bade a sad farewell to piano,
-saddle-horse, automobile and journey, the furnishings to our Little
-House of Dreams.
-
-"I did want you to have a car, Lucien," sighed Silvia, regretfully,
-"and you worked so hard this last year, you need a trip. Won't you go
-somewhere with Rob--without me?"
-
-I assured her it would be no vacation without her.
-
-"Do you know, Lucien," she proposed diffidently, "I think it would be
-an excellent plan to invite Uncle Issachar to visit us. He knows no
-more about children than I do--than I did, I mean, and if he should
-see the Polydores he'd give us five thousand each for the children we
-didn't have."
-
-I wouldn't consent to this plan. I had met Uncle Issachar once. He was
-a crusty old bachelor with a morbid suspicion that everyone was
-working him for his money. I don't wonder he thought so. He had no
-other attractions.
-
-Perceiving the strength of my opposition Silvia sweetly and
-sagaciously refrained from further pressure.
-
-"We should not repine," she said. "We have health and happiness and
-love. What are pianos and cars and trips compared to such assets?"
-
-What, indeed! I admitted that things might be worse.
-
-Alas! All too soon was my statement substantiated. That night after we
-had gone to bed, I heard a taxicab sputtering away at the house next
-door.
-
-"The Polydores must have unexpected guests," I remarked.
-
-"I trust they brought no children with them," murmured Silvia
-drowsily.
-
-The next morning while we were at breakfast, the odor of June roses
-wafting in through the open window, the delicious flavor of red-ripe
-strawberries tickling our palate, and the anticipation of rice
-griddle-cakes exhilarating us, the millennium came.
-
-For the five young Polydores bore down upon us _en masse_.
-
-"Father and mother have gone away," proclaimed Ptolemy, who was always
-spokesman for the quintette.
-
-This intelligence was of no particular interest to us--not then, at
-least. We rarely saw father and mother Polydore, and they were
-apparently of no need to their offspring.
-
-Ptolemy's next announcement, however, was startling and effective in
-its dramatic intensity.
-
-"We've come over to stay with you while they are away."
-
-I laughed; jocosely, I thought.
-
-Silvia paid no heed to my forced hilarity, but ejaculated gaspingly:
-
-"Why, what do you mean!"
-
-"They have gone away somewhere," enlightened our oracle. "They went to
-the train last night in a taxi. They have gone somewhere to find out
-something about some kind of aborigines."
-
-"Which reminds me," I remarked reminiscently, "of the man who traveled
-far and vainly in search of a certain plant which, on his return, he
-found growing beside his own doorstep."
-
-Silvia paid no heed to my misplaced pleasantry. She was right--as
-usual. It was no time for levity.
-
-"I don't see," spoke my unappreciative wife, addressing Ptolemy, "why
-their absence should make any difference in your remaining at home.
-Gladys can cook your meals and put Diogenes to bed as usual."
-
-"Gladys has gone," piped Demetrius. "She left yesterday afternoon. She
-was only staying till she could get her pay."
-
-"Father forgot to get another girl in her place," informed Ptolemy,
-"and he forgot to tell mother he had forgotten until just before they
-went to the train. She said it didn't matter--that we could just as
-well come over here and stay with you."
-
-"She said," added Pythagoras, "that you were so crazy over children,
-that probably you'd be glad to have us stay with you all the time."
-
-My last strawberry remained poised in mid-air. It was quite apparent
-to me now that there was nothing funny about this situation.
-
-"Milk, milk!" whimpered Diogenes, pulling at Silvia's dress and making
-frantic efforts to reach the cream pitcher.
-
-Huldah had come in with the griddle-cakes during this avalanche of
-news.
-
-"Here, all you kids!" commanded our field marshal, as she picked up
-Diogenes, "beat it to the kitchen, and I'll give you some breakfast.
-Hustle up!"
-
-The Polydores, whose eyes were bulging with expectancy and
-semi-starvation, tumbled over each other in their eagerness to "hustle
-up and beat it to the kitchen." Our oiler of troubled waters followed,
-and there was assurance of a brief lull.
-
-"What shall we do!" I exclaimed helplessly when the door had closed on
-the last Polydore. I felt too limp and impotent to cope with the
-situation. Not so Silvia.
-
-"Do!" she echoed with an intensity of tone and feeling I had never
-known her to display. "Do! We'll do something, I am sure! I will not
-for a moment submit to such an imposition. Who ever heard of such
-colossal nerve! That father and mother should be brought back and
-prosecuted. I shall report them to the Society for the Prevention of
-Cruelty to Children. But we won't wait for such procedure. We'll
-express each and every Polydore to them at once."
-
-"I should certainly do that P.D.Q. and C.O.D.," I acquiesced, "if the
-Polydore parents could be located, but you know the abodes of
-aborigines are many and scattered."
-
-My remarks seemed to fall as flat as the flapjacks I was siruping.
-
-Silvia arose, determination in every lineament and muscle, and crossed
-the room. She opened the door leading into the kitchen.
-
-"Ptolemy," she demanded, "where have your father and mother gone?"
-
-He came forward and replied in a voice somewhat smothered by cakes and
-sirup.
-
-"I don't know. They didn't say."
-
-"We can find out from the ticket-agent," I optimistically assured
-her.
-
-"They never bother to buy tickets. Pay on the train," Ptolemy
-explained.
-
-My legal habit of counter-argument asserted itself.
-
-"We can easily ascertain to what point their baggage was checked," I
-remarked, again essaying to maintain a role of good cheer.
-
-But the pessimistic Ptolemy was right there with another of his
-gloom-casting retaliations.
-
-"They only took suit-cases and they always keep them in the car.
-Here's a check father said to give you to pay for our board. He said
-you could write in any amount you wanted to."
-
-"He got a lot of dough yesterday," informed Pythagoras, "and he put
-half of it in the bank here."
-
-Ptolemy handed over a check which was blank except for Felix
-Polydore's signature.
-
-"I don't see," I weakly exclaimed when my wife had closed the kitchen
-door, "why she put them off on _us_. Why didn't she trade her brats
-off for antiques?"
-
-Silvia eyed the check wistfully. I could read the unspoken thought
-that here, perhaps, was the opportunity for our much-desired trip.
-
-"No, Silvia," I answered quickly, "not for any number of blank checks
-or vacation trips shall you have the care and annoyance of those wild
-Comanches."
-
-"I know what I'll do!" she exclaimed suddenly. "I'll go right down to
-the intelligence office and get anything in the shape of a maid and
-put her in charge of the Polydore caravansary with double wages and
-every night out and any other privileges she requests."
-
-This seemed a sane and sensible arrangement, and I wended my way to
-my office feeling that we were out of the woods.
-
-When I returned home at noon, I found that we had only exchanged the
-woods for water--and deep water at that.
-
-I beheld a strange sight. Silvia sat by our bedroom window twittering
-soft, cooing nonsensical nothings to Diogenes, who was clasped in her
-arms, his flushed little face pressed close to her shoulder.
-
-"He's been quite ill, Lucien. I was frightened and called the doctor.
-He said it was only the slight fever that children are subject to. He
-thought with good care that he'd be all right in a few days."
-
-"Did you succeed in getting a cook to go to the Polydores?" I asked
-anxiously. "You'll need a nurse to go there, too, to take care of
-Diogenes."
-
-She looked at me reproachfully and rebukingly.
-
-"Why, Lucien! You don't suppose I could send this sick baby back to
-that uninviting house with only hired help in charge! Besides, I don't
-believe he'd stay with a stranger. He seems to have taken a fancy to
-me."
-
-Diogenes confirmed this belief by a languid lifting of his eyelids, as
-he feelingly patted her cheek with his baby fingers.
-
-I forebore to suggest that the fancy seemed to be mutual. Diogenes,
-sick, was no longer an "imp of the devil", but a normal, appealing
-little child. It occurred to me that possibly the care of a sick
-Polydore might develop Silvia's tiny germ of child-ken.
-
-"Keep him here of course," I agreed, "but--the other children must
-return home."
-
-"Diogenes would miss them," she said quickly, "and the doctor says his
-whims must be humored while he is sick. He is almost asleep now. I
-think he will let me put him down in his own little bed. Ptolemy
-brought it over here. Pull back the covers for me, Lucien. There!"
-
-Diogenes half opened his eyes, as she laid him in the bed and smiled
-wanly.
-
-"Mudder!" he cooed.
-
-Silvia flushed and looked as if she dreaded some expression of mirth
-from me. Relieved by my silence and a suggestion of moisture in the
-region of my eyes--the day was quite warm--she confessed:
-
-"He has called me that all the morning."
-
-"It would be a wise Polydore that knows its own parents," I observed.
-
-The slight illness of Diogenes lasted three or four days. I still
-shudder to recall the memory of that hideous period. Silvia's time and
-attention were devoted to the sick child. Huldah was putting in all
-her leisure moments at the dentist's, where she was acquiring her
-third set of teeth, and joy rode unconfined and unrestrained with our
-"boarders."
-
-Polydore proclivities made the Reign of Terror formerly known as the
-French Revolution seem like an ice cream festival. I don't regard
-myself as a particularly nervous man, but there's a limit! Their war
-whoops and screeches got on my nerves and temper to the extent of
-sending me into their midst one evening brandishing a whip and
-commanding immediate silence. I got it. Not through fear of
-chastisement, for fear was an emotion unknown to a Polydore, but from
-astonishment at so unexpected a procedure from so unexpected a source.
-Heretofore I had either ignored them or frolicked with them. Before
-they had recovered from their shock, Silvia appeared on the scene.
-
-"Diogenes," she informed them, "was not used to such unwonted quiet,
-and was fretting at the unaccustomed stillness. Would the boys please
-play Indian or some of their games again?"
-
-The boys would. I backed from the room, the whip behind me, carefully
-kept without Silvia's angle of vision. Before Ptolemy resumed his role
-of chief, he bestowed a knowing and maddening wink upon me.
-
-I wished that we had remained neighbor-less. I wished that the
-aborigines would scalp Felix Polydore and the writer of Modern
-Antiquities. Then we could land their brats on the Probate Court. I
-wished that this were the reign of Herod. I vowed I would backslide
-from the Presbyterian faith since it no longer included in its
-articles of belief the eternal damnation of infants. How long, O
-Catiline, would--
-
-A paralyzing suspicion flashed into the maelstrom of my vituperative
-maledictions. I rushed wildly upstairs to our combination bedroom,
-sickroom, and nursery, where Silvia sat like a guardian angel beside
-the Polydore patient.
-
-"Silvia," I shouted excitedly, "do you suppose those diabolical
-Polydore parents purposely played this trick on us? Was it a
-premeditated Polydore plan to abandon their young? And can you blame
-them for playing us for easy marks? Could any parents, Polydore, or
-otherwise, ever come back to such fiends as these?"
-
-"Hush!" she cautioned, without so much as a glance in my direction.
-"You'll wake Diogenes!"
-
-Wake Diogenes! Ye Gods! And she had also implored the brothers of
-Diogenes to continue their anvil chorus! This took the last stitch of
-starch from my manly bosom. Spiritless and spineless I bore all
-things, believed all things--but hoped for nothing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-_In Which We Take a Vacation_
-
-
-Diogenes finally convalesced to his former state of ruggedness and
-obstreperousness. He continued, however, to cling to Silvia and to
-call her "mudder." To my amusement the other children followed suit
-and she was now "muddered" by all the Polydores.
-
-"I am glad," I remarked, "that they scorn to include me in their
-adoption. I wouldn't fancy being 'faddered' by the Polydores."
-
-"You won't be," Ptolemy, appearing seemingly from nowhere, assured me.
-"We've named you stepdaddy."
-
-"If it be possible, Silvia," I implored, "let this cup pass from me."
-
-"I am going down to the intelligence office today," replied Silvia
-soothingly. "Diogenes is well enough to go home now, and I can run
-over there every evening and see that he is properly put to bed."
-
-I went down town feeling like a mule relieved of his pack.
-
-When I came home that afternoon, I found Silvia sitting on the shaded
-porch serenely sewing. A Sabbath-like stillness pervaded. Not a
-Polydore in sight or sound.
-
-"Oh!" I cried buoyantly. "The Polydores have been returned to their
-home station!"
-
-"No," she replied calmly. "They told me at the intelligence office
-that it would be absolutely impossible to persuade, bribe, or hire a
-servant to assume the charge of the Polydore place."
-
-"I suppose," I said glumly, "that Gladys gave the job a double cross.
-But will you please account for the phenomenon of the utter absence of
-Polydores at the present period? Has Huldah at last carried out her
-oft-repeated threat of exterminating the Polydore race?"
-
-"Pythagoras," explained Silvia dejectedly, "has gone to the doctor's.
-He broke his wrist this morning. Diogenes is lost and Emerald has gone
-to look for him--"
-
-"Oh, why hunt him up?" I remonstrated. "Maybe Emerald, too, will get
-lost or strayed or stolen."
-
-"Huldah," continued Silvia, "has locked Demetrius in the cellar. I am
-unable to report on Ptolemy. Huldah is half sick, but she won't go to
-bed. She said no beds in Bedlamite for her. But I have a wonderful
-plan to suggest. There is relief in sight if you will consent."
-
-"I will consent to any committable crime on the calendar," I assured
-her, "that will lead to the parting of the Polydore path from ours.
-Divulge."
-
-"We both need a change and rest. Today I heard of a most alluring,
-inexpensive, unfrequented resort called Hope Haven. Unfashionable,
-fine fishing, beautiful scenery, twelve miles from a railroad, and a
-stage stops there but once a day."
-
-"If there is such a place, we'll go there at once, though why such an
-enticing spot should be unfrequented is beyond me. Do we leave the
-Polydores to their fate, or as a town charge?"
-
-"We'll leave them to Huldah. She offered to keep them here if we'd
-take the outing. She said she'd either give them free rein or beat
-their brains out."
-
-"Then I see where the Polydores land in a juvenile jail, or else I
-return to defend Huldah for a charge of murder. We'll take our
-departure by night--tomorrow night--and like the Arabs, or the
-Polydore parents, silently steal away."
-
-"Lucien," said Silvia constrainedly, when we had arranged the details
-of our plan, "if you wouldn't object too much, I should like to take
-Diogenes with us. He hasn't missed his mother, but I really believe
-he'd be homesick without me."
-
-"Take him, of course," I said. "He's manageable away from the others.
-I plainly see you've formed the Polydore habit, and maybe a partial
-parting from the Polydores would be wiser, but we'll take Diogenes as
-an antidote against too perfect a time. But I forgot to tell you that
-I had a letter from Rob today. He plans to come and make his visit
-now and will arrive next Monday. I'll write him to join us at Hope
-Haven. You must write down again for me the route we take to get
-there."
-
-Silvia laughed hopelessly.
-
-"It never rains but it pours. I had a letter from Beth this afternoon,
-and she says she would like to come to us now. She arrives Monday.
-Here is her letter."
-
-"Great minds! It is quite a coincidence," I declared.
-
-"I thought it would be so nice to have Beth go with us to this
-resort."
-
-"It can't be done," I said. "That is, they can't both go. I am not
-going to let even Rob Rossiter slight my sister."
-
-"Still it would be a triumph to have her change his mind--or his
-heart. You know a woman-hater always succumbs to the right girl."
-
-"In books, yes!"
-
-I had been scanning Beth's letter and I laughed derisively as I read
-aloud: "'I am so curious to see those next-door children. When you
-first wrote of the "Polydores" I never once thought of them as
-children.'"
-
-"She thought exactly right," I told Silvia, and then continued
-reading: "'I supposed them to be something like tadpoles or polliwogs.
-I really think I shall enjoy them.'"
-
-"It would serve her right," I said, "to let her come and stay with
-them here in our absence. She'd get the cure for enjoyment all right.
-Rob wrote of them in the same strain and says he, too, is curious to
-meet the missing links."
-
-"Does she know," asked Silvia, "how Rob regards women?"
-
-"No; I've always made some excuse to her for not having them meet. I
-didn't want to hear her make disparaging remarks about him, and she
-is such a flirt, she'd try to draw him out and he would shut up like a
-clam."
-
-"Well, I think," decided Silvia, "that the best way out of it is to
-write Rob to postpone his visit and I will write Beth to come direct
-to Hope Haven."
-
-"Yes," I agreed, "that will be fine. She shall have charge of dear
-little Di and study the evolutions of the Polydores later."
-
-I approved this plan. So we wrote our letters and stealthily, but
-joyously, prepared for our getaway, leaving the house like thieves in
-the night and bearing the sleeping cherub, Diogenes.
-
-Silvia sighed in relief when we were aboard the train.
-
-"I feel quite chesty," she declared, "at being smart enough to outwit
-Ptolemy, the wizard."
-
-"I have the feeling," I observed forebodingly, "that they may be on
-the train or underneath it."
-
-The next morning we reached Windy Creek, the station nearest our
-destination, and continued our journey by stage.
-
-"People will think you have consoled yourself very speedily for the
-death of your first husband," I observed, as we were en route.
-
-"Why, what do you mean, Lucien?"
-
-"You know Diogenes addresses me as stepdaddy. It is the only word he
-speaks plainly."
-
-"Oh!" she exclaimed in perturbation, "I never thought of that! Well,
-we can explain to everyone, or I'll teach them to leave off the
-'step.'"
-
-"Not on your life!" I demurred.
-
-"He had better call you Lucien, then. Emerald calls his father
-'Felix.'"
-
-She at once began her tutelage of the bewildered Diogenes. After
-several stabs at pronouncing Lucien he managed to evolve "Ocean" to
-which he sometimes affixed "step" so that people to whom he was not
-explained doubtless thought me the latest thing in dances.
-
-Hope Haven was like most resorts--a place safe to shun. There was a
-low, flat stretch of woods in which a clearing had been made for a
-barn-like structure called a hotel, with rooms rough and not always
-ready. The beautiful recreation grounds mentioned in the advertising
-matter consisted of a plowed field worked over into a space designated
-as a tennis court and a grass-grown croquet ground.
-
-"Anyway," claimed Silvia hopefully, "it's a treat to see woods, water,
-and sky unconfined."
-
-She devoted the remainder of the morning to unpacking and after
-luncheon set off to explore the woods, borrowing from the landlady a
-little cart for Diogenes to ride in. My plan to go in swimming was
-delayed by my garrulous landlord.
-
-I was just starting for the lake when I heard sounds from the woods
-that alarmed the landlord but which I instantly recognized as the
-Polydore yell. A moment later I saw Silvia emerging at full speed into
-the open, drawing the cart in which Diogenes was doubled up like a
-jackknife. I hastened to meet them.
-
-"Oh, Lucien," exclaimed my wife tearfully, "we are bitten to bits!
-Just look at poor little Di!"
-
-I lifted the howling child from the cart. His face, neck, and hands
-were stringy and purplish--a cross between an eggplant and a round
-steak.
-
-"Mosquitoes!" explained Silvia. "They came in flocks and they
-advertised particularly 'no mosquitoes.'"
-
-A dour-faced guest paused in passing.
-
-"There aren't--many," she declared. "Very few, in fact, compared to
-the number of black flies, sand fleas, and jiggers. However, you'll
-find more discomfort from the poison ivy, I imagine."
-
-"Lucien," began Silvia in lament.
-
-"Never mind!" I hastened to console, "you are out of the woods now,
-and you won't have to go in again. I presume they have an antidote up
-at the house. I'll give you and Diogenes first aid and then we will
-all go down to the lake shore. You can both sit on the dock and watch
-me swim."
-
-They both brightened up, and when we reached the hotel the landlady
-provided a soothing lotion for the bites and stings.
-
-By the time we had started for the lake, the afflicted two were in
-holiday spirit again.
-
-I sought cover in a small shed called a bath-house and got into my
-swimming outfit and shot out from the dipping end of the diving-board
-into the water. When I came to the surface, Silvia, sitting beside
-Diogenes on the dock, shrieked wildly.
-
-"Oh, Lucien, there are snakes all around you! Come out, quick!"
-
-"They are only water snakes," I assured her.
-
-"I don't care what kind they are. They are snakes just the same."
-
-Diogenes instantly began to bellow for me to hand him a snake to play
-with.
-
-"He recognizes his own," I told Silvia, who, however, saw nothing
-amusing in my implication.
-
-When I came out of the water, the temperature had climbed several
-degrees and we were glad to seek the hotel parlor, which was cool and
-damp.
-
-After dinner Silvia put Diogenes to bed and we sat out on the veranda.
-I was enjoying my evening smoke and the feel of the night wind in my
-face. Silvia had just finished telling me that merely to be away from
-the Polydores was Paradise enough for her, and that she didn't care
-very much about the woods, anyway--the lake was sufficient, when her
-optimism was rudely jolted by the shrill, shudder-sending song of the
-festive mosquito.
-
-She fled into the parlor. The landlady, who seemed to have a panacea
-for all ills, suggested that she might tack mosquito netting around
-the little balcony extending from our bedroom, and then she could sit
-there in comfort when the mosquitoes bothered.
-
-"That's what the last lady that had that room did," she said, "but
-when she left, she took the netting with her. We keep a supply in our
-little store."
-
-Silvia immediately sought the hotel store and bought a quantity of the
-netting and a goodly stock of the mosquito lotion.
-
-That night as I was drifting into slumber, Silvia remarked: "Only one
-of the things I heard and read about this place is true."
-
-"Which one?" I asked between winks.
-
-"That it was unfrequented. I have seen only three guests besides us so
-far. How do they make it pay?"
-
-"The hotel is evidently only a side issue," I replied.
-
-"To what?"
-
-"To the store. Think of the quantities of lotion and netting they must
-sell in the season, which, you must know, is in the fall. The hunting,
-the landlord tells me, is very good, and his hotel is quite popular
-in October and November."
-
-"I think we had better stay, Lucien. Mosquitoes don't poison you."
-
-"Even if they did," I declared, "as a choice between them and the
-Polydores I would say, 'Oh, Mosquito, where is thy sting?'"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-_A Flirt and a Woman-Hater_
-
-
-The next morning I arose early and screened in the little birdhouse
-balcony. There was a large piece of netting left and Silvia converted
-it into a robe and headgear for the swaddling of Diogenes.
-
-"He looks like the Bride of Lammermoor," I declared, as he went forth
-in this regalia.
-
-"Well, that's preferable to looking like a pest-house patient, as he
-did yesterday."
-
-His first-aid costume didn't find favor with the landlady, as it would
-seem indicative to the newly arrived of the features of the place.
-However, before another stage-coming was due, Di had rent his garment
-sufficiently to make it useless is a "skeeter skirt."
-
-During the morning I enjoyed my solitary swim with the snakes.
-Diogenes played football with the croquet balls and bruised one of his
-toes, besides hitting the landlady's child in the eye. Silvia went for
-a walk which had been pictured in the advertisements. She speedily
-returned, her ardor dampened.
-
-"There are so many sticks and stones and rocks," she said in a
-discouraged tone, "that there was no pleasure in walking. I nearly
-sprained my ankle."
-
-"Well, the real sport we haven't tried yet," I said. "We'll get a boat
-and take Diogenes and go for a row on the lake."
-
-This proposition met with instant favor. I put Silvia and Diogenes in
-the stern of the boat and pulled for the opposite shore. My endeavors
-to gain this point were balked by Silvia's remarkable conceptions of
-the art of steering craft. She was so serenely satisfied, however,
-with the way she performed her duties and the aid she thought she was
-giving me, that I forbore to criticize.
-
-In order to achieve a few strokes in the right direction, I asked her
-to get me a cigar from an inside pocket of my coat, which was on the
-seat in front of her. Then came the blight to our bliss. She looked in
-the wrong pocket and instead of producing a cigar, she extracted two
-letters with seals unbroken.
-
-[Illustration: "Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to Beth
-and Rob."]
-
-"Lucien Wade!" she gasped. "Here are our letters to Beth and Rob.
-Well, it is my fault. I should have known better than to give them to
-you."
-
-"The plot thickens," I replied thoughtfully.
-
-"This is Monday. They must both be at the house now. What will they
-think!"
-
-"They will think we didn't receive their letters."
-
-"Isn't it unfortunate--" she began.
-
-"No," I replied. "I am not sure but what it is a good thing. It will
-give Rob a jolt to see that girls can be as nice as Beth is, and as
-for her, she is quite able to take care of the situation where a man
-is concerned."
-
-"But we must have Beth here. Maybe you'd better telegraph her."
-
-"Huldah understands conditions. She will send Beth on here."
-
-The next morning we took Diogenes and went down the road to meet the
-stage. As it came around the curve, we saw there were three
-passengers.
-
-"Tolly!" cried Diogenes with an ecstatic whoop.
-
-"Beth!" recognized Silvia.
-
-"Rob!" I ejaculated.
-
-The stage stopped to allow us to get in.
-
-Mutual explanations followed. Ours were brief and substantiated by the
-documents in evidence.
-
-"Now," I said turning threateningly to Ptolemy, "what did you come
-here for?"
-
-"To show them," indicating Beth and Rob, "how to get here and to look
-after Di so you and mudder could enjoy your vacation," he replied
-glibly.
-
-Beth laughed mirthfully.
-
-"Check! Lucien."
-
-"Didn't Huldah warn you," I asked her, "that our whereabouts were to
-remain unknown?"
-
-"Ptolemy," she replied, "is evidently a mind reader, for he told me
-where you were before I saw Huldah."
-
-"Why, Ptolemy, how did you know where we were?" asked Silvia.
-
-"I was on top of the porch when you told stepdaddy about coming. I
-didn't tell the others. I won't bother you any. And I know how to look
-after Di. You won't send me back, mudder," he pleaded, looking
-wistfully at the foam-crested water of the little lake.
-
-I wondered mutely if Silvia could resist the appeal in the eyes of the
-neglected boy when he turned his imploring gaze to hers, and the
-delight depicted in Diogenes' eyes at "Tolly's" arrival. She could
-not.
-
-"You may stay as long as we do," she said slowly, "if you are a good
-boy and will not play too rough with Diogenes."
-
-We had reached the hotel by this time, and with a wild "ki yi"
-Ptolemy dashed for the shore, dragging the delighted Diogenes with
-him.
-
-"It's only fair to Huldah to take one more off her hands," Silvia said
-apologetically.
-
-"Them Three is what bothers me," I complained. "If they, too, follow
-after, Heaven help them! I won't."
-
-"It's a good arrangement all around," declared Rob. "I judge it takes
-a Polydore to understand his ilk, so the kids can pair off together.
-Miss Wade will be company for you, while Lucien and I go fishing."
-
-He looked keenly at Beth as he spoke, but Beth was looking demurely
-down and made no sign of having heard him.
-
-Silvia and I went with Beth to her room, and then she told her story.
-
-"Knowing Lucien's failing, I was not surprised at receiving no
-response to my letter. When I got out of the cab in front of your
-house, a wild-looking boy, very bas-relief as to eyes, and who I felt
-sure must be Ptolemy of the Polydores, appeared. As soon as he saw me
-he gave utterance to a blood-curdling yell of--'Here she is!'
-
-"In response to his call three of his understudies came on with
-headlong greeting.
-
-"'You are Beth, aren't you?' Ptolemy asked me. Then he drew me aside
-and in mysterious whispers told me where you were and that you had
-written me to join you here. He added that stepdaddy never remembered
-to mail letters. I went within and interviewed Huldah who confirmed
-his information.
-
-"Presently I saw a taxi stop before the house.
-
-"'That's him!' exclaimed Ptolemy.
-
-"'Him who?' I asked.
-
-"'Rob somebody--stepdaddy's college chum. He wrote he was coming, and
-they thought they had postponed him.'
-
-"With a sprint of speed the four Polydores surrounded your Mr.
-Rossiter, all talking at once. I came to the rescue, of course, and
-explained the situation, and we decided to follow you.
-
-"Ptolemy was promoter for the trip and suggested the advisability of
-his accompanying us as courier and future nursemaid to Diogenes. He
-was intending to come anyway, but thought he'd wait for us. He had all
-his belongings packed."
-
-"He hasn't many except those he had on," said Silvia thoughtfully.
-
-"He has some swimming trunks, two collars, two shirts, some mismated
-socks, homemade fishing tackle and a battered baseball bat. We came
-away surreptitiously to escape detection by the trio left behind. I
-knew you wouldn't welcome his presence--but he said he was coming
-anyway, so we thought we might as well bring him and express him
-back."
-
-After visiting with Beth for a few moments, Silvia and I withdrew to
-talk matters over confidentially.
-
-"All's well that ends well," I quoth.
-
-"It hasn't ended yet," reminded Silvia. "I trust Ptolemy didn't reveal
-what you said about Rob's being a woman-hater and Beth a flirt."
-
-Ptolemy conveniently appeared just then, as he generally did in the
-midst of private interviews. Silvia asked him if he had repeated those
-remarks to Beth or Rob.
-
-"Why, no," he said. "I knew you didn't want her to know, because
-stepdaddy said so, and I thought he wouldn't like to be called that,
-and I wasn't going to give Beth away to him."
-
-"You're all right, Ptolemy!" I exclaimed, for the first time awarding
-him approbation.
-
-Out on the veranda we met Rob.
-
-"Say, those Polydores certainly have the punch and pep," he declared.
-"I'd like to have fetched the whole bunch along with me."
-
-"If you had," I replied dryly, "our life's friendship would have died
-on the spot."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-_In Which Nothing Much Happens_
-
-
-"Why Hope Haven?" asked Rob reflectively, when he had taken inventory
-of the possibilities of the resort.
-
-"Because," sighed Silvia, "so many hopes--vacation hopes--must have
-been buried here."
-
-Rob was of an investigating turn of mind, however, and he had heard
-from a native of H. H., as he had abbreviated the place, that there
-was a smaller lake, abounding in fish, farther on through the forest.
-It was so strongly fortified, however, by the formidable battalions of
-sharp-shooting insects that but few fishermen had ever been able to
-lay siege to it.
-
-Rob and I being poison proof decided to try our luck and pitch camp
-for a few days on the shores of this hidden treasure. As we had to
-send to town by the stage driver for the necessary supplies, we
-remained in H. H. the remainder of the day.
-
-We at once paired off in Noah's most approved style as Rob had
-outlined. Beth and Ptolemy went up shore, sticks and stones and rocks
-being no obstacles to their feet. Rob and I sought the society of the
-snakes, while Silvia and Diogenes, mosquito-netted, watched a game of
-croquet.
-
-We dined without the pleasure of the society of Ptolemy and Diogenes,
-who had been invited to sit at the table with the landlady's
-children. I might state, incidentally, that the invitation was never
-repeated.
-
-Beth was quite excited over her walk.
-
-"Ptolemy and I," she boasted, "made more of a discovery than Mr.
-Rossiter did. We found a haunted house, a perfectly haunted house."
-
-"I am not surprised," declared Silvia. "You couldn't expect any other
-kind of a house in such a region."
-
-"Where is it?" I asked, "and what is it haunted by?"
-
-"Insects," suggested Silvia.
-
-"You go around shore about two miles, only it's farther, as you have
-to make so many ups and downs over the rocks. Then you leave the shore
-and go through a low marshy stretch, sort of a Dismal Swamp, and then
-up a hill. After Ptolemy and I climbed to the top, we looked down and
-saw, hidden in a clump of lonely looking poplars, a small, rudely
-built house. We went down to explore and had hard work making our way
-through a thick growth of--everything. We crawled under some tangled
-vines and came up on the steps. The house was vacant, although there
-were a few old pieces of furniture--a couple of cots, a cook-stove,
-table, and chairs.
-
-"On our way home we met a woman who gave us a history of the house. An
-old miser lived there long ago. One night he was robbed and murdered,
-and his ghost still haunts the place. No one ventures in its vicinity,
-and she said most likely we were the first people who had gone there
-since the tragedy. She told us of a nearer way to reach it. You take
-the road to Windy Creek, and about two miles below here, turn into a
-lane and then go through a grove and over a hill."
-
-"You don't really believe the story, that is, the ghost part of it?"
-asked Rossiter.
-
-"N--o," allowed Beth. "Still, I'd like to. It makes it interesting.
-Ptolemy and I are going down there some night to see if we can find
-the ghost."
-
-"You won't see one," I assured her. "Ptolemy's presence would be
-sufficient to keep even a ghost in the background."
-
-"Ptolemy's a peach," declared Beth emphatically.
-
-"If he were older, you wouldn't think so," said Rob.
-
-"Why not?" asked Beth in surprise, or seeming surprise.
-
-He smiled enigmatically, and irrelevantly asked her if she wouldn't
-really be afraid to go to the haunted house at night with only Ptolemy
-for protection.
-
-She assured him she shouldn't be afraid of a ghost if she saw one, and
-that she shouldn't be afraid to go alone.
-
-Throughout the evening, which we spent in rowing, walking, and later
-at a little impromptu supper, I was interested in observing the
-puzzling behavior of Beth and my chum. I had expected that he would
-avoid her as much as possible and speak to her only when common
-politeness made conversation obligatory, and that she, a born
-coquette, would seek to add his scalp to her collection. Instead, to
-my surprise, their roles were reversed. He appeared interested in her
-every remark and looked at her often and intently. He was quite
-assiduous in his attentions which, strange to say, she discouraged,
-not with the deep design of a flirt to increase his ardor, but with a
-calm firmness that admitted of no doubt as to her feelings.
-
-"Your sister," he remarked to me as we were walking down to the lake
-for a swim just before going to bed, "is a very unusual type."
-
-"Not at all!" I assured him. "Beth is the true feminine type which you
-have never taken the trouble to know."
-
-"Oh, come, Lucien! Not feminine, you know. Though she is inconsistent."
-
-I resented the imputation hotly, but he only laughed and said that he
-guessed it was true that a man didn't understand the women in his
-family as well as an outsider did.
-
-"You think," I said, "just because she says she isn't afraid of
-ghosts--"
-
-"Not at all," he denied. "That wasn't the reason, but--I like her
-type, though I always supposed I wouldn't. It is a new one to
-me--anyway. I didn't think so young a girl as she--"
-
-Our discussion was cut short by the inevitable, ever-present Ptolemy,
-who came running up to us, clad in about four inches of swimming
-trunks.
-
-"Why aren't you in bed?" I demanded.
-
-"I was in bed, but it was so warm I couldn't sleep, and I went to the
-window and saw you coming down here, so I thought I'd come, too."
-
-I repeated Rob's remarks to Silvia when I returned to our room, and
-she betrayed Beth's confidences in regard to Rob.
-
-"She says she would like him if it were not for one trait that she
-dislikes more than any other in a man and that it was sufficient in
-her estimation to counterbalance all his good qualities."
-
-"What can she mean?" I asked bewildered. "I don't see a flaw in Rob,
-except for his being a woman-hater, and he surely hasn't betrayed that
-fact to her, judging from his manner toward her. I think he is making
-an effort to be nice to her on my account, and she doesn't appreciate
-it."
-
-"I asked her what the flaw was, and she flushed and said she couldn't
-tell me."
-
-"Well, I guess all around it is a good thing we are going off on our
-fishing expedition. I don't want my friend turned down by my sister,
-and I don't want my friend calling my sister a new type and
-unfeminine."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-_Ptolemy Disappears and I Visit a Haunted House_
-
-
-When Rob and I, with our camping outfit, drove off through the woods,
-Ptolemy's eyes followed us so enviously and he pleaded so eloquently
-to be taken with us that Rob was actually on the point of considering
-it.
-
-"See here, Rob Rossiter!" I exclaimed, "This is my vacation and all I
-came to this God-forsaken place for was to escape the Polydores. If he
-goes, I stay. You know I've always tried to meet issues, but this
-antique family has got me going."
-
-"All right," he yielded.
-
-After a drive of a few miles we came to the lake and pitched our tent.
-Two days of ideal camp life followed. The weather was fine, Rob was a
-first-class cook, and the sport was beyond our most optimistic
-expectation. We landed enough of the Friday food to satisfy the most
-fastidious fishing fiend, and the mosquitoes, finding we were
-impervious to their stings, finally let us alone.
-
-I forgot all business cares and disappointments, yes, even the
-Polydores; but on the morning of the third day Rob began to show signs
-of restlessness and spoke of the likelihood of my wife's being
-lonely.
-
-"Not with Beth and Ptolemy in calling distance," I told him.
-
-"But they will be off together," he replied, "and your wife will be
-alone with that _enfant terrible_. I fancy, too, that your sister
-isn't exactly a companion for your wife."
-
-"Well, that shows how little you know her. She and Silvia are great
-friends."
-
-"Oh, yes, of course they are friendly, but I mean their tastes are so
-different, and they are so unlike. Your sister doesn't care for
-domesticity."
-
-"Sure she does. You have turned the wrong searchlight on Beth. If you
-knew her, you'd like her."
-
-"I do like her," he declared. "It's too bad she--"
-
-He stopped abruptly and quickly changed the conversation. In spite of
-my efforts to renew the controversy about Beth, he refused to return
-to the subject.
-
-[Illustration: He pleaded eloquently to be taken with us.]
-
-In the afternoon, when I was doing a little scale work preparatory to
-cooking, a messenger from the hotel drove up with a note from Silvia
-which I read aloud:
-
-"Ptolemy has been missing for twenty-four hours. We are in hopes he
-has joined you. If not, what shall I do?"
-
-"We'll go back with you," said Rob to the man. "Just lend a hand here
-and help us pull up these tent stakes."
-
-"What's Ptolemy to me or I to him?" I asked with a groan, "can't we
-give him absent treatment?"
-
-"You're positively inhuman, Lucien," protested Rob. "The boy may be at
-the bottom of the lake."
-
-"Not he! He was born to be hung."
-
-All this time, however, I had been active in making preparations for
-departure, as I knew that Silvia would feel that we were responsible
-for Ptolemy's safety, and her anxiety was reason enough for me to
-hasten to her.
-
-Rob was quite jubilant on our return trip and declared that the fish
-came too easily and too plentifully to make it real sport, but I felt
-that I had another grudge to be charged up to the fateful family.
-
-We found Silvia pale from anxiety, Beth in tears, and Diogenes loudly
-clamoring for "Tolly." We learned that the afternoon before, Silvia
-and Beth had gone with the landlady for a ride, leaving Diogenes in
-Ptolemy's care, but on their return at dinner time, Diogenes was
-playing alone in the sandpile.
-
-Nothing was thought of Ptolemy's absence until bedtime, and they had
-then sent out searching parties to the woods and the lake shores.
-Finally it occurred to Beth that he might have gone to join Rob and
-me, so they sent the messenger to investigate.
-
-"He must be lost in the woods somewhere," said Beth tearfully, "and
-he will starve to death."
-
-Rob actually touched her hand in his distress at her grief.
-
-"Ptolemy is too smart to get lost anywhere," I declared. "He knows
-fully as much about woodcraft as he does about every other kind of
-craft. He's one of his mother's antiquities personified. But haven't
-you been able to find anyone who saw him after you went for your
-ride?"
-
-"No; even the hotel help were all out on the lake."
-
-"And he left Diogenes here, absolutely unguarded?"
-
-"Well!" admitted Silvia, "he tied Diogenes to a tree near the
-sandpile."
-
-"Then he must have gone away with malice aforethought," I said,
-"and Diogenes is the only one who knows anything about his last
-movements."
-
-I lifted the child to my knee, and speaking more gently to him than I
-had ever done, I asked:
-
-"Di, did you and Tolly play in the sandpile yesterday?"
-
-He was quite emphatic in his affirmative.
-
-"Well, tell Ocean: Did Tolly go away and leave you?"
-
-"Tolly goed away," he confirmed.
-
-"Oh, Lucien!" protested Beth, laughing. "He's too little to know what
-you are talking about or to remember."
-
-"Lucien's ruling passion strong in death," murmured Rob. "He can't
-help cross-examining the cradle even!"
-
-"Which way," I resumed, ignoring these interruptions, "did Tolly
-go--that way?" pointing towards the woods.
-
-"No! Tolly goed--" and he trailed off into his baby jargon which no
-one could understand, but he pointed to the lake.
-
-"What did he say when he went away; when he tied the rope around
-you?"
-
-"Bye-bye."
-
-"What else?"
-
-Diogenes' intentions to be communicative were certainly all right, but
-not a word was intelligible. As he kept picking at his dress and
-pointing to it, I finally prompted:
-
-"Did Tolly pin a paper to Di's dress?"
-
-"'m--h'--m."
-
-"Bravo, Lucien!" applauded Rob. "They say you can induce a witness to
-admit anything."
-
-"What did Di do with the paper?" I continued.
-
-The word he wanted evidently being beyond his vocabulary and speech,
-he made a rotary motion with his fist. The gesture conveyed nothing to
-our minds, but was instantly recognized and interpreted by the
-landlady's little girl, who said he meant a windmill such as she had
-sometimes made for him.
-
-"What did Di do with the windmill?" I asked.
-
-He pointed to the sandpile, which I investigated and found a stick
-planted therein. I pulled it up and saw a pin sticking in the end of
-it. Further excavation revealed a crumpled piece of paper on which was
-written in Ptolemy's round hand:
-
- "Want to see kids. Am going home. Tell Beth I bet she dasent go to
- the haunted house alone at night. Ptolemy."
-
-"Poor Huldah!" sighed Silvia.
-
-"I thought he was having the time of his life here," said Rob.
-
-"He was sore," declared Beth, "because you and Lucien wouldn't take
-him with you on the fishing trip. He was moping by himself all the
-morning."
-
-"Trying to think up some new deviltry," I theorized, "to make us feel
-bad."
-
-"No," asserted Silvia, "I think he really misses the boys. The
-Polydores, for all their scrappings, are very clannish. But how do you
-suppose he got down to Windy Creek?"
-
-"He could catch plenty of rides along the way, but what is puzzling me
-is how he got the money to pay his fare."
-
-"He seemed very well provided with cash," informed Rob. "I tried to
-pay for his ticket down here, but he insisted on buying it himself."
-
-Silvia worried so much about what might happen to him en route that
-after dinner I motored to Windy Creek with some tourists who had
-stopped at the hotel in passing.
-
-I called up long distance and after some delay got in communication
-with our house. Ptolemy himself answered and assured me he had arrived
-all "hunky doory", that Huldah, who was out on an errand, was "hunky
-doory", and that the kids were all "hunky doory." In fact, his
-cheerful tone indicated that the whole universe was in the beatific
-state described by his expressive adjective.
-
-I was really ripping mad at his taking French leave and so giving
-Silvia cause for her anxiety, but I forbore to reprimand him by word
-or tone, lest he get even by "coming back" literally. I did tell him
-how the loss of the note for twenty-four hours had caused a general
-excitement, but he felt no remorse for his share in the situation,
-blaming Diogenes entirely and bidding me "punch the kid's face" for
-unpinning the note.
-
-On my return from Windy Creek I was fortunate enough to fall in with a
-farmer who lived near the hotel. He was driving some sort of a machine
-he called an _autoo_. He was an old-timer in the vicinity and related
-the past, present, and pluperfect of all the residents on the route. I
-had a detailed and vivid account of the midnight visitor of the
-haunted house.
-
-"I'd jest naturally like to see what there is to it," he said. "Not
-that I am afeerd at all, only it's sort of spooky to go to a lonesome
-place like that all alone. If I could git some one to go with me, I'd
-tackle the job, but I vum if every time I perpose it to anyone they
-don't make some excuse."
-
-"I'm on," I declared. "I don't dread ghosts near as much as I do some
-living folks I know."
-
-"Right you air," chuckled the old man. "If you say so we'll go right
-off now jest as sure as shootin'. We may be ghosts ourselves
-tomorrow."
-
-I assured him I was quite ready to encounter the ghost, so he
-jubilantly turned the machine from the road into a grass-grown lane.
-We zigzagged for some distance and then got out and went on foot
-through a grove. The moon and the stars were half veiled by some
-light, misty clouds, so that the little house didn't show up very
-clearly, but as we came to the top of the hill, we saw something that
-shook even my well-behaved nerves.
-
-From a window in the roof-room extended a white arm and hand, with
-index finger pointing threateningly and directly toward us.
-
-My farmer friend turned quickly and fled toward the grove. I followed
-fleetly. "What's your rush?" I asked, when I had overtaken him.
-
-"I just happened to remember," he explained gaspingly, "that there's a
-pesky autoo thief in these 'ere parts. Bukins had his stole jest last
-night."
-
-The lights on his machine must have reassured him as to its safety
-when we emerged from the woods into the open, but he didn't lessen his
-speed. We got in the "autoo" and soon said good-by to the lane. At one
-time I believed it was good-by to everything, but at last we gained
-the highway, right side up.
-
-"Well!" I said, when we were running normally again on terra firma,
-"that was some little old ghost,--beckoned to us to come right in,
-too!"
-
-"You seen it then!" he exclaimed excitedly. "I'm mighty glad I had an
-eyewitness. Folks wouldn't believe me."
-
-"They probably won't believe me, either," I assured him. "I am a
-lawyer."
-
-"You don't tell me! Well, it did jest give me a start for a minute.
-I'd like to hev gone in and seen it nigh to, if I hadn't happened to
-think of this 'ere autoo. You see I ain't got it all paid for yet. I'm
-jest clean beat. You don't mind my takin' a leetle pull at a stone
-fence, do you?"
-
-"I guess not," I assented somewhat dubiously, however. "That was a
-rail fence we took a pull at back in the lane, wasn't it? Of course,
-if we shouldn't happen to clear the stone fence as well as we did the
-rail fence, it might be more disastrous."
-
-"Oh, land!" he said with a cackling laugh, "I ain't meanin' that kind
-of a fence. I mean the kind you--Say! You ain't one of them
-teetotalers, be you?"
-
-"Only in theory," I replied, "but this stone fence drink is a new one
-on me. What's it like?"
-
-He stopped the "autoo" and pulled a bottle from an inner pocket.
-
-"You kin taste it better than I kin tell it," he declared. "Take a
-pull--a condumned good one."
-
-I rarely imbibed, confining my indulgences to the demands of
-necessity, but I thought that the flight of Ptolemy, the ghostly
-encounter, and my Mazeppa--wild ride all combined to constitute an
-occasion adequate to call for a bracer in the shape of a stone fence,
-or anything he might produce.
-
-I took what I considered a "condumned good one" from the bottle and it
-nearly strangled me, but I followed the aged stranger's advice to take
-another to "cure the chokes" caused by the first one. On general
-principles I took a third and then reluctantly returned him the
-bottle.
-
-"Here's over the moon," he jovially exclaimed as he proceeded to make
-my attempt at a "condumned good one" appear most niggardly.
-
-"May I ask," I inquired when my feeling of nerve-tense strain had
-vanished, and I felt as if I were treading thin air, "just what is in
-a stone fence?"
-
-"Well, what do you think?" he asked slyly.
-
-"I think the very devil is in it," I replied.
-
-"Well, mebby," he admitted. "It's two-thirds hard cider and one-third
-whisky. It's a healthy, hearting drink and yet it has a leetle come
-back to it--a sort o' kick, you know. But this is where I live,"
-pointing to a farmhouse well back from the road, "but I am goin' to
-run you on to your tavern though."
-
-The hotel was dark, save for a light in my room. I invited him in, but
-he was anxious to "git hum and tell the folks", so I gave him some
-cigars and went in to "tell my folks."
-
-I found them in the room waiting for me. That is, Beth was in the
-room, sitting by the table and pretending to read. Silvia and Rob were
-out in the little balcony. They came inside as soon as they heard my
-voice.
-
-"Oh, was he there?" asked Silvia anxiously.
-
-"Yes," I replied. "He answered the telephone himself."
-
-I was feeling quite exhilarated by this time. My wife looked a perfect
-vision to me. Beth, I thought, was some sister, and Rob the best
-fellow in the world. Even the Polydores at long range, and under the
-ameliorating influence of stone fences, seemed like fine little
-fellows--rather active and strenuous, to be sure, but only as all
-wholesome children should be.
-
-Silvia was relieved at the announcement of Ptolemy's safety, but very
-much disappointed that I did not succeed in interviewing Huldah and
-finding out something about domestic affairs.
-
-I assured her that everything was "hunky doory" at home, praised the
-telephone service, my expedition to town, and painted my return ride
-with "the honest farmer" in glowing terms. I was suddenly halted in my
-eulogy by becoming aware of an amazed expression on my wife's
-countenance, a most suspicious glance in Beth's wide-open eyes, and a
-very knowing wink from Rob.
-
-"Lucien," said Silvia severely, "I believe you've been drinking. I
-certainly smell spirits."
-
-"Maybe you do," I replied jocosely. "I certainly saw spirits. I went
-to the haunted house on my way back."
-
-"I thought Windy Creek was a dry town," remarked Rob innocently.
-
-"It is," I assured him, "but I rode home with an old man--a farmer."
-
-"Does he run a blind pig?" asked Rob.
-
-"It was more like a pig in a poke," I replied.
-
-"Lucien," exclaimed Silvia reproachfully, "you told me two years ago,
-after that banquet to the Bar, that you were never going to touch wine
-or whisky again. What did that horrid old man give you?"
-
-"A stone fence. That's what he said it was anyway."
-
-"It's a new one on me," commented Rob.
-
-"There was a new toast went with it. He drank to 'over the moon.'"
-
-"You must have gone there all right and taken all the shine from the
-moon-man," said Rob.
-
-"Lucien," asked Beth, "did you really go to that haunted house?"
-
-Again I was moved to eloquence, and I told of the farmer's yearning,
-the fulfillment, the beckoning hand and the beating of the retreat at
-length.
-
-"Are you sure," asked Rob, "that you didn't take that stone fence
-before you visited the haunted house?"
-
-"I know," I replied, loftily, "that a lawyer's word is worthless, but
-seeing is believing. We will all visit the haunted house tomorrow
-night and I'll make good on ghosts."
-
-This plan was unanimously approved, and then Silvia suggested that she
-thought I had better go to bed. I had no particular objection to doing
-so.
-
-"Lucien," she said solemnly, when we were alone, "I want you to
-promise me something. I want you to give me your word that you will
-never take another stone wall."
-
-I did this most readily.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-_In Which We See Ghosts_
-
-
-The next morning Rob tried earnestly and vainly to drive a wedge in
-Beth's good graces, but she treated him with a casual tolerance that
-finally put him in an ill humor which he took out on me with many a
-gibe at my "stone fence spirit."
-
-Men of my profession who have to deal with facts rather than fancy are
-not believers in the supernatural. I was sure that the extending arm
-and the beckoning finger were there, but belonged to no ghost. It
-might have been a curtain blowing out the window or a fake of some
-kind. But I knew that unless there was some kind of a showing in a
-ghostly way that night, I should never hear the last of my stone fence
-indulgence, so I resolved to make a preliminary visit alone by
-daylight and rig up something white to substantiate my spectral
-narrative.
-
-I didn't find an opportunity to escape unseen until late in the
-afternoon, when I went, ostensibly, for a solitary row on the lake.
-
-I landed and came by a circuitous route to the haunted house. The calm
-security of sunshine, of course, prevented any shivers of anticipation
-such as I had experienced the night before. On passing one of the
-windows on my way to the front entrance, I glanced in, stopped in
-sheer fright, stooped and backed to the next window, which was
-screened by a labyrinth of vines through which I peered. I am sure I
-lost my Bloom of Youth complexion for a few moments. I babbled
-aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull together and beat it to
-the lake with as much speed as my farmer friend had shown in his
-retreat. I made the boat and the hotel in double quick time.
-
-[Illustration: I babbled aimlessly to myself and then managed to pull
-together and beat it to the lake]
-
-I felt no misgivings now as to the promise of a sensation that night,
-and that sustaining thought was all that propped my flagging spirits
-throughout the day, but I resolved to keep my little party at safe
-distance from the house.
-
-"Say we keep our nocturnal noctambulation under our hats," proposed
-Rob.
-
-When this proposition was translated to Silvia, she entirely approved,
-so, committing Diogenes to the Polydores' Providence, we left the
-hotel at half past eleven for a row on the lake by moonlight.
-
-When we descended the slope leading to the House of Mystery, I
-cautioned silence and a "safety-first" distance.
-
-"Ghosts are easily vanished," I informed them. "They don't seek
-limelight, and I want you to be sure to see this one."
-
-As we came to the untrodden undergrowth we heard a weird, wailing
-sound that would have curdled my blood had I not glanced in the window
-that afternoon and so, in a measure, been prepared for this--or
-anything.
-
-"Look!" whispered Beth. "The arm!"
-
-Silvia looked at the roof window and with a stifled shriek of terror
-turned and fled up the hill, Rob chivalrously pursuing her.
-
-Beth was pale, but game.
-
-"What can it be, Lucien?" she whispered. "Do we dare go in to see?"
-
-"I wouldn't, Beth," I vetoed quickly. "Maybe some lunatic or
-half-witted person has taken up abode here."
-
-"Lucien!" called Rob peremptorily.
-
-I turned quickly. He was at the top of the hill, half supporting
-Silvia. I ran toward them, followed by Beth.
-
-"It isn't a ghost, of course, Silvia," I said soothingly, and then
-repeated my supposition about the lunatic.
-
-"Of course I don't believe in ghosts," said Silvia shudderingly, "but
-it's an awful place and those sounds are like those I have heard in
-nightmares."
-
-"We'll hurry back to the hotel and forget all about it," I urged.
-
-I rowed the boat and Silvia sat opposite me. Beth and Rob were in the
-stern and I had to listen to their conversation.
-
-"Of course I felt a little creepy," she admitted, "but then I like to
-feel that way, and I wasn't afraid."
-
-"No, of course, you wouldn't be," he replied somewhat ironically.
-"You're the new woman type."
-
-"No, I am not," she denied. "I wish I were. Silvia's really the
-strong-minded type."
-
-"She didn't act the part when she saw the ghost," he retorted.
-
-"It's very unusual for her nerves to give way. Silvia's quite a
-surprise to me this summer, but I think those funny Polydores have
-upset her more than Lucien realizes."
-
-I wondered if she were right, and once again murderous wishes toward
-the Polydores entered my brain, and I made renewed vows about
-disposing of them on our return home.
-
-One thing, however, had been accomplished by our expedition. Silvia
-was more lenient in her judgment on my indulgences of the preceding
-night.
-
-By the time we pulled in at the landing, Silvia had recovered her
-equilibrium.
-
-"Lucien, what the devil do you suppose was in that house?" asked Rob,
-when we were putting up the boat.
-
-"Loons and things," I allowed.
-
-"But what was that white arm?"
-
-"Some fake thing the village wag has put up to scare the natives."
-
-Next morning's stage brought some new arrivals, and among them were
-two college students who at once were claimed by Beth. She played
-tennis with one and later went rowing with the other. Rob smoked and
-sulked, apart.
-
-My farmer friend had been garrulous and rumors of the ghost and the
-haunted house had come to the ears of the hotel inmates, thereby
-causing a pleasurable stir of excitement. A number of them announced
-their intention of visiting the place. They asked me to be their
-guide, but I refused.
-
-"It was interesting," I said, "but I think it would be a bore to see
-the same ghost twice."
-
-"I am sure I don't care to go again," was Silvia's emphatic reply
-when asked to be one of the party.
-
-"Ghosts are scientifically admitted and explained," growled Rob, "so I
-don't see anything to be excited about."
-
-Beth accepted the offer of escort of one of the students, so Silvia,
-Rob, and I remained at home. The night was quite cool, and we played
-cards in our room. When the party returned, Beth joined us. She looked
-rather out of sorts.
-
-"Oh, yes," she replied in answer to Silvia's eager inquiry. "We saw
-the ghost. I don't know whether it was the same little old last
-night's ghost or a new one. He showed more of himself this time
-though. He had two arms and a veiled head out of the window. As soon
-as our crowd glimpsed it, they all fled quicker than we did last
-night. Those two students fell all over each other and left me in the
-lurch."
-
-"What could you expect," asked Rob, "from such ladylike things? They
-ought to be kept in the confines of the croquet ground. If they are a
-fair specimen of the kind you have met, no wonder you--"
-
-[Illustration: The landlady intears waylaid me]
-
-He stopped abruptly.
-
-"No wonder what?" she asked quickly.
-
-"Nothing," he replied glumly.
-
-When I came down to breakfast the next morning, the landlady in tears
-waylaid me.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Wade," she began in trouble-telling tone, "this affair about
-the ghost is going to hurt my business. Some of those folks say they
-are going home, and they will tell others and--"
-
-"I'll fix the ghost story. Just leave it to me!" I assured her
-optimistically, as we went into the dining-room.
-
-There were only enough guests to fill one long table, and every one
-was excitedly dissecting the ghost.
-
-I took my seat and also the floor.
-
-"I hate to dispel your illusions," I said cheerfully, "but the fact
-is, I made a daylight investigation of the haunted house. First I
-looked in the window and I saw--"
-
-"Oh, what did you see?" chorused a dozen or more expectant voices.
-
-"A lot of--mice."
-
-"Oh!" came in disappointed and skeptical tones.
-
-"But, the ghost, Mr. Wade?"
-
-"Yes! The arms and the head?"
-
-"A fake figure put up by some practical joker for the purpose of
-frightening timid people and encouraging the credulous. I didn't want
-to spoil your little picnic, so I kept still."
-
-"Those sounds, Lucien!" reminded Silvia.
-
-"Were from a cat chorus. They were prowling about the house."
-
-"You're sure some lawyer, Mr. Wade," doubtfully complimented my
-grateful landlady, as we went out of the room after breakfast.
-
-"Lucien," asked Rob _sotto voce_, joining me on the veranda, "why
-don't the cats you speak of catch that lot of mice?"
-
-Fortunately Beth came up to us, and I didn't have to explain.
-
-"Oh!" she said with a shudder. "I'll never go near that awful place!
-I'd rather see a perfectly good ghost, or a loon, or a lunatic any day
-than a mouse."
-
-"You're surely not afraid of a mouse!" exclaimed Rob.
-
-"Why not?" she asked coolly as she walked on.
-
-"I told you she was feminine," I reminded him.
-
-He shook his head.
-
-"I can't understand," he remarked, "why a girl who is afraid of mice
-should be--"
-
-"You don't understand anything about women," I interrupted.
-
-"You're right, Lucien. I don't, but your sister is surely the greatest
-enigma of them all."
-
-I rented the stone fence farmer's "autoo" and took Silvia and
-Diogenes to a neighboring town that afternoon. We didn't get back to
-the hotel until dinner time.
-
-"What have you been up to all day, Rob?" I asked.
-
-"Numerous things. For one, I strolled down to the haunted house."
-
-"What did you see?" cried the women.
-
-"I saw four--"
-
-"Ghosts?" asked Beth.
-
-I shot him a warning glance.
-
-"Young tomcats playing tag with the mice."
-
-I corralled Rob outside after dinner.
-
-"For Heaven's sake!" I implored. "Don't disturb Silvia's peace of
-mind. Did you go inside?"
-
-"No; I was sorely tempted to, but refrained out of deference to the
-evident wishes of my host, but really, Lucien, we should--"
-
-"I have only ten more days off, Rob. Don't make any unpleasant
-suggestions."
-
-"I won't," he said promptly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-_In Which We Make Some Discoveries_
-
-
-Diogenes, who, for a Polydore, had been quite placid since Ptolemy's
-departure, caused a commotion by disappearing the next morning. As he
-was possessed of a deep desire to go in the lake and get a little
-snake, he had been, when not under strict surveillance, tied to a tree
-with enough leeway in the length of rope to allow him to play
-comfortably.
-
-By some means he had managed to work himself loose from the rope and
-had evidently followed Ptolemy's example. I suggested calling up
-Huldah and asking if he had arrived yet, but I met with such chilling
-glances from Silvia and Beth that I got busy and organized searching
-parties, who reluctantly and lukewarmly engaged in the pursuit. Rob
-and I took the shore. After we had walked some little distance, we met
-a woman and stopped for inquiry. She said she had seen a child of
-about two years, clad in a blue and white striped dress and a big hat,
-going over the hill in company with a boy of about eight.
-
-"Are you going on to the hotel?" I asked.
-
-On her replying that she was, I told her to inform them that she had
-met me and that the lost child was located.
-
-Rob and I then kept on over the hill, and when we neared the haunted
-house, we heard hair-raising sounds.
-
-"If I hadn't been here before," remarked Rob, "I should think that
-Sitting Bull had been reincarnated and was reviving the warrior war
-whoops."
-
-We paused on the threshold. A human windmill of whirling legs and
-arms--Polydore legs and arms--flashed before our eyes.
-
-"Stop!" I thundered.
-
-The flying wheel of arms and legs slacked, ran a few times, then
-slowly stopped, and the Polydore quintette assumed normal positions.
-
-"Halloa, stepdaddy!"
-
-A landslide composed of Emerald, Pythagoras, and Demetrius started
-toward me. I side-stepped and let Rob receive the charge.
-
-"Line them up now, for attention," I directed Ptolemy. "I have
-something to say to you all."
-
-Ptolemy knocked the three terrors up against the wall, and I picked up
-Diogenes, who had a bump as big as an egg on his head.
-
-"I told you," said Ptolemy to Pythagoras, "that if you brought Di down
-here they'd get on our trail. He wanted to see Di," he explained, "so
-he sneaked over there and got him."
-
-"We were wise before today," I informed him. "I saw you all day before
-yesterday."
-
-"And I discovered you yesterday," added Rob.
-
-Ptolemy looked rather crestfallen, and then, seeming to consider that
-my discovery had been succeeded by inaction, which must mean
-non-interference, he heartened up.
-
-"Now," I demanded, "I want you to begin at the time you left the hotel
-and tell me everything and why you did it."
-
-"I wasn't having any fun after you two went off camping," he began
-lugubriously. "I couldn't hang around women folks all the time. I
-wanted boys to play with."
-
-I saw a gleam of sympathy and understanding come into Rob's eyes.
-
-"A harem of hens," he muttered.
-
-"I knew we could all have a grand time here and not be a bother to
-mudder, or Huldah or anyone, and it seemed too bad for this nice house
-to be empty, and no one anywhere else wanting us."
-
-I felt my first gleam of pity for a Polydore and wiped Diogenes'
-dirty, moist face carefully with my handkerchief.
-
-"So I went home and told Huldah I had come after the boys to take them
-back with me."
-
-"And told her we had sent for them?" I asked sharply.
-
-He flushed slightly at my tone.
-
-"No; I didn't tell her so. She got that idea herself, and I didn't
-tell her different."
-
-"When did you come?"
-
-"I came the same night that you telephoned, and took the train you and
-mudder came on. We got to Windy Creek in the morning. We fetched all
-our stuff here from home. I bought it."
-
-"Right here," I said, "tell me where you got the money to buy your
-stuff and to pay your fare here."
-
-"I cashed father's check."
-
-"I didn't know he left you one."
-
-"He didn't, except the one he gave me to give you for our board. You
-told mudder you wouldn't touch it, and it seemed a pity not to have it
-working."
-
-Visions of a future Polydore doing the chain and ball step flashed
-before my vision.
-
-"And they cashed it for you at the bank?"
-
-"Sure. Father always has me cash his checks for him."
-
-"What amount did you fill in?" I asked enviously.
-
-"One hundred dollars. There's a lot more in the bank, too."
-
-"How did you get your truck here from Windy Creek?" asked Rob.
-
-"We divided it up and each took a bunch and started on foot, and some
-people in an automobile, going to the town past here, took us in and
-brought us as far as the lane. We've been having a fine time."
-
-"What doing?" asked Rob interestedly.
-
-"Fishing, sailing on a raft, playing in the woods all day and--"
-
-"Playing ghost at night," said Pythagoras with a grin.
-
-"Who made that ghost in the window?" I demanded.
-
-"I did. I rigged up an arm and put it out the window the afternoon I
-left, hoping Beth would come down and see it, but we've got a jim
-dandy one now."
-
-"That was quite a shapely arm," said Rob. "Where did you learn
-sculpturing?"
-
-"Oh, I rigged it up," he said casually.
-
-"What did you bring in the way of supplies?"
-
-"Bacon, crackers, beans, candy, popcorn, gum, peanuts, pickles,
-candles, matches, and butter," was the glib inventory.
-
-"You may stay here," I said, "until we go home, but you are not to
-stir away from the woods about here and not on any account to come
-near the hotel, or let it be known that you are here. And you are to
-end this ghost business right off. Now, Di, we'll go home to mudder."
-
-"No!" bawled Di. "Stay with boys. Mudder come here."
-
-At least this was Ptolemy's interpretation of his protest.
-
-I threatened, Rob coaxed, and Ptolemy cuffed, but every time I started
-to leave and jerk him after me, he uttered such demoniac yells I was
-forced to stop.
-
-"Wish it was night," said Emerald regretfully. "Wouldn't he scare
-folks though! How does he get his voice up so high?"
-
-"Poor little Di!" said a voice commiseratingly from the doorway. "Was
-Ocean plaguing him?"
-
-Beth gathered the child in her arms, and his howls changed to sobs.
-Rob stood petrified with amazement at her appearance.
-
-"Don't want to go," said Diogenes between gulps.
-
-"Needn't go!" promised Beth. "Stay here with me, and we'll have dinner
-with the boys and then we'll go home and get some ice cream."
-
-"All yite," agreed the appeased Polydore.
-
-"May Lucien and I stay to dinner, too?" asked Rob humbly.
-
-"No," she replied icily.
-
-"But, Beth," I remonstrated. "Silvia will be worrying about Di. How
-can we explain?"
-
-"Silvia has gone to Windy Creek for the day. You see, I met that woman
-you sent to the hotel, and she told me she saw Di going over the hill
-with a boy, and I suddenly seemed to smell one of your mice, so I sent
-the woman on her way, and told Silvia you and Rob had found Diogenes.
-Just then some people she knew came along in a car and asked her to go
-to Windy Creek. I made her go and told her I'd look after Di."
-
-"You're a brick, Beth!" applauded Ptolemy.
-
-"If you boys will be very careful and not let anyone besides us know
-you are here, so mudder will not hear of it, for though she'd like to
-see you"--this without a flicker or flinch--"we want her to have a
-nice rest. I'll come over every day except tomorrow and bring things
-from the hotel store, and bake up cookies and cake for you."
-
-A yell of approval went up.
-
-"Why can't you come tomorrow?" asked the greedy Demetrius.
-
-"Because I've promised to go to the other end of the lake on a picnic.
-All the people at the hotel are going."
-
-"I'll come tomorrow and spend the whole day with you," promised Rob.
-"We'll have a ride in the sailboat and do all sorts of things."
-
-"Why, aren't you going on that infernal picnic?" I asked.
-
-"No; I'll have all the picnic I want over here. Like Ptolemy I feel
-that I want to play with some of my own kind."
-
-Beth looked at him approvingly; then she said a little sarcastically:
-
-"Maybe you'll change your mind--about going on the picnic, I
-mean--when you see the new girl who just came to the hotel on the
-morning stage. She's a blonde, and not peroxided, either."
-
-"That would certainly drive him down here, or anywhere," I laughed.
-
-"Oh, don't you like blondes?" she asked innocently.
-
-"He doesn't like--" I began, but Ptolemy rudely interrupted with an
-elaborate description of a new kind of fishing tackle he had bought.
-
-Then Beth bade Pythagoras build a fire in the cook-stove while she
-set the room to rights.
-
-"We'll eat out of doors," she said, "I think it would be more
-appetizing."
-
-"How did you get here?" Rob asked her as we were leaving.
-
-"I rowed over."
-
-"May I come over and row you back?" he asked pleadingly.
-
-She hesitated, and then, realizing that she could scarcely manage a
-boat and Diogenes at the same time, assented, bidding him not come,
-however, until five o'clock.
-
-"She'll have enough of the Polydores by that time," I said to Rob on
-our way home.
-
-"Do you know," he said reflectively, "I like Ptolemy. There's the
-making of a man in him, if he has only half a chance. I didn't suppose
-your sister understood children so well or was so fond of them. She
-looked quite the little housewife, too."
-
-"You'd discover a lot of things you don't know, if you'd cultivate the
-society of women," I informed him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-_A Bad Means to a Good End_
-
-
-When we were setting out on the proposed picnic the next day, Rob made
-himself extremely unpopular by announcing his intention to spend the
-day otherwise. The new blonde girl gave him fetching glances of
-entreaty which he never even saw. He made another sensation by
-proposing to keep Diogenes with him. To Silvia's surprise, Diogenes
-voiced his delight and chattered away, I suppose, about playing with
-the boys, but fortunately no one understood him.
-
-"Won't you change your mind and come, too?" he asked Beth.
-
-She seemed on the point of accepting and then firmly declined.
-
-When we returned at six o'clock, Rob and Diogenes were awaiting us.
-There was something in Rob's eyes I had not seen there before. He had
-the look of one in love with life.
-
-"Did you have a nice time playing solitaire?" asked Silvia.
-
-"I had a very nice time," he replied with a subtle smile, "but I
-didn't play solitaire. You know I had Diogenes."
-
-"Diogenes apparently had a good time, too," said Silvia, looking at
-the child, who was certainly a wreck in the way of garments. "What did
-you do all day, Rob?"
-
-"We went out on the water, played games, and had a picnic dinner
-outdoors."
-
-"You had huckleberry pie for one thing," she observed, with a glance
-at Diogenes' dress, "and jelly for another, and--"
-
-"Chicken, baked potatoes, milk, cake, and ice cream," he finished.
-
-"Where did you get ice cream?" she asked.
-
-"I went down to a dairy farm and got a gallon."
-
-"A gallon!" she exclaimed. "For you and Diogenes?"
-
-"We didn't eat it all," he said guardedly. "I gave what we didn't eat
-to some stray boys."
-
-"I hope Di won't be ill."
-
-"He won't," asserted Rob. "I am sure he is made of cast iron."
-
-Throughout dinner Rob remained in high spirits. He kept eyeing Beth in
-a way that disconcerted her, and then suddenly he would smile with the
-expression of one who knows something funny, but intends to keep it a
-secret.
-
-Presently Silvia left us and went upstairs to give Diogenes a bath
-before she put him to bed.
-
-"You've had two days' freedom from the last of the Polydores," I
-called after her. "Doesn't it seem delightful?"
-
-"Lucien," she answered slowly, "I've really missed the care of him. I
-was lonesome for him all day."
-
-"He isn't such a bad little kid when he is out from Polydore
-environment," I admitted, regretting that he had been restored to it.
-
-"Now tell us all about your day with the boys," Beth asked Rob, when
-we were left alone. "It really does seem too bad to keep a secret from
-Silvia, and yet it is a case of where ignorance is bliss--"
-
-"It would be folly to be otherwise," finished Rob. "Well, Diogenes and
-I left here with a boat load of supplies in the way of provender and
-things for the boys. I had to tie Diogenes in the boat, of course, so
-he would not try some aquatic feat. He objected and yelled like a
-fiend all the way. I was glad there was no one at the hotel to come
-out and arrest me for cruelty to children. Of course before we landed,
-his cries were heard by his brothers and they were all at the water's
-edge. They made mulepacks of themselves and transferred the commissary
-supplies. The ice cream and bats and balls which I found at the store
-made quite a hit.
-
-"We played baseball, fished, and had a spread on the shore. Then
-Ptolemy and I rowed out to where the sailboat was. I explained the
-mysteries of the jib and he caught on instantly. We took in the other
-Polydores and sailed for a couple of hours. Then we all went in
-swimming."
-
-"Not Diogenes!"
-
-"Certainly. I tucked him under my arm and he seemed perfectly at home,
-although greatly disappointed because we didn't succeed in catching a
-snake.
-
-"I finally landed them all safely under the roof of the Haunted House,
-and Ptolemy assured me it was the best day of his young life. In
-appreciation of the diversions I had afforded him, he made a
-confession which proved such good news to me that I was a lenient
-listener and exacted no penalty."
-
-"What was it?" I asked.
-
-"He told me that on the day of Miss Wade's and my arrival at your
-house, he had made a misstatement to each of us and had not repeated
-to us accurately what he had overheard you telling Silvia when he was
-on the porch roof. Miss Wade, what did he tell you about me?"
-
-"He said that Lucien said that your only failing was that you were
-daffy over women and made love to every one you saw."
-
-"Oh, Beth!" I cried, light bursting in, "and you believed that little
-wretch?"
-
-"I did."
-
-"Then that is why you have been so--"
-
-"Yes--so--" repeated Rob grimly.
-
-"Well, I never did have any use for a man-flirt, and I was awfully
-disappointed, for I had thought from what Rob said that you were a
-man's man."
-
-"And then, of course, when for the first time in my life I began being
-interested in a woman--in you--I played right into that little scamp's
-hands."
-
-"He is a man's man, Beth," I said warmly. "What Ptolemy heard me say
-was that Rob was a woman-hater."
-
-"I am not!" declared Rob indignantly--"just a woman-shyer, but I
-haven't finished with Ptolemy's confession. I wonder, now, if either
-of you can guess what he told me was Miss Wade's characteristic."
-
-"I don't dare guess," laughed Beth.
-
-"What I did say about Beth was that she was a born flirt."
-
-"I am not!" protested my sister, in resentment.
-
-"I should prefer that appellation to the one he gave you. He said you
-were strong-minded and a man-hater."
-
-Even Beth saw the irony of this.
-
-"I asked him," continued Rob, "what his motive was, and he said
-'Stepdaddy didn't want Beth to know about the man-hater business,' so
-he took that means of throwing you off the track.
-
-"I took the occasion to talk to him like a Dutch uncle, though I don't
-know exactly what that is. I think it was the first time anything but
-brute force had been tried on him. I must have touched some little
-flicker of the right thing in him, for he was really contrite and
-seemed to sense a different angle of vision when I explained to him
-what havoc could be worked by the misinformation of meddlers. He
-promised me he'd try to overcome his tendency to start things going
-wrong."
-
-I made no comment, but it occurred to me that Ptolemy was a shrewd
-little fellow, and that there had been wisdom back of his strategic
-speeches to Beth and Rob, for he had taken the one sure course to make
-them both "take notice."
-
-"So, Beth," said Rob, and her name seemed to come quite handily to
-him, "can't we cut out the past ten days and begin our acquaintance
-right?"
-
-"I think we can," she answered.
-
-"I had better go upstairs," I suggested, "and tell Silvia that
-Diogenes doesn't need a bath, seeing he has been in swimming."
-
-Neither of them urged me to remain, so I went up to our room and found
-Silvia tucking Diogenes under cover.
-
-"What did you come up for?" she asked. "I was just coming down to join
-you."
-
-"Beth is treating Rob so--differently, that I thought it well to
-retreat."
-
-"I am so glad! Whatever came over the spirit of her dreams?"
-
-"They've just discovered in the course of conversation that Ptolemy as
-usual crossed the wires and told Beth Rob was a flirt, and then
-informed Rob that Beth was strong-minded and a man-hater."
-
-"Oh, the little imp!" she exclaimed indignantly.
-
-"I don't know. It worked, anyway, so Ptolemy was the bad means to a
-good end."
-
-"How did they ever happen to discover what he had done?"
-
-"They caught on from something Rob said," I told her, feeling again
-guilty at keeping my first secret from her.
-
-"It will be a fine match for Beth," said Silvia. "Rob is such a
-splendid man, and then he has plenty of money. He can give her
-anything she wants."
-
-I winced. I think Silvia must have been conscious of it, even though
-the room was dark, for she came to me quickly.
-
-"I wish I could give you--everything--anything--you want, Silvia."
-
-"You have, Lucien. The things that no money could buy--love and
-protection."
-
-Well, maybe I had. I had surely given her protection from the
-Polydores, though she didn't know to what extent.
-
-"I am going to give you more material things, though, Silvia. When we
-go home, I shall start to work in earnest and see if I can't get
-enough ahead to make a good investment I know of."
-
-"I'd rather do without the necessities even, Lucien, than to have you
-work any harder than you have been doing. We must let well enough
-alone."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-"_Too Much Polydores_"
-
-
-The next morning at breakfast, Beth announced that she and Rob were
-going to spend the day camping in the woods.
-
-Silvia and I tried not to look significantly at each other, but Beth
-was very keen.
-
-"We will take Diogenes with us," she instantly added.
-
-"Oh, no!" protested Silvia. "He'll be such a bother. And then he can't
-walk very far, you know."
-
-"He'll be no bother," persisted Beth. "And we'll borrow the little
-cart to draw him in."
-
-"Yes," acquiesced Rob. "We sure want Diogenes with us."
-
-"I'll have them put up a lunch for you," proposed Silvia.
-
-"No," Rob objected. "We are going to forage and cook over a fire in
-the woods."
-
-"Then," I proposed to Silvia with alacrity, "we'll have our first day
-alone together--the first we have had since the Polydores came into
-our lives. I'll rent the 'autoo' again, and we will go through the
-country and dine at some little wayside inn."
-
-"Get the 'autoo', now, Lucien," advised Beth privately, "and make an
-early start, so Rob and I can take supplies from the store without
-arousing Silvia's suspicions."
-
-"I don't believe," said Silvia disappointedly, when we were "autooing"
-on our way, "that they are in love after all, or that he has
-proposed, or that he is going to."
-
-"Where did you draw all those pessimistic inferences from?" I asked.
-
-"From their both being so keen to take Diogenes with them."
-
-"Diogenes would be no barrier to their love-making," I told her. "He
-couldn't repeat what they said; at least, not so anyone could
-understand him."
-
-Many miles away we came upon a picturesque little old-time tavern
-where we had an appetizing dinner, and then continued on our aimless
-way. It was nearly ten o'clock when we returned to the hotel, where
-the owner of the "autoo" was waiting.
-
-Rob came down the roadway.
-
-"Where's Beth?" asked Silvia.
-
-"She has gone to bed. The day in the open made her sleepy."
-
-When Silvia had left us, the old farmer said with a chuckle: "I can't
-offer you another swig of stone fence."
-
-"It's probably just as well you can't," I replied.
-
-"I'd like to be introduced to one," said Rob, who appeared to be
-somewhat downcast. "I sure need a bracer."
-
-"What's the matter, Rob?" I asked when we were lighting our pipes. "A
-strenuous day? Two in rapid 'concussion' with the Polydores must be
-nerve-racking."
-
-"Yes; I admit there seemed to be 'too much Polydores.' We all had a
-happy reunion, and I devoted the forenoon to the entertainment of the
-famous family so I could be entitled to the afternoon off to spend
-with Beth. At noon we built a fire and cooked a sumptuous dinner. Beth
-baked up some things to keep them supplied a couple of days longer.
-After dinner I asked her to go for a row. She insisted on taking
-Diogenes along, and the others all followed us on a raft. So I decided
-to cut the water sports short, and Beth and I started for a walk in
-the woods. Three or more were constantly right on our trail. I begged
-and bribed, but to no avail. They were sticktights all right, and," he
-added morosely, "she seemed covertly to aid and abet them. When we
-started for home, I found that the young fiends had broken the cart,
-so I had to carry Diogenes most of the way, and of course he bellowed
-as usual at being parted from the whelps."
-
-[Illustration: I had to carry Diogenes most of the way]
-
-"They aren't such 'fine little chaps' after all," I couldn't resist
-commenting. "Familiarity breeds contempt, you see. I am sorry Diogenes
-had so much of their society. He'll be unendurable tomorrow. Well, you
-had some day!"
-
-"So did the Polydores. Demetrius and Diogenes fell in the fire twice.
-Emerald threw a finger out of joint, but Ptolemy quickly jerked it
-into place. Pythagoras was kicked off the raft twice, following a
-mutiny. Demetrius threw a lighted match into the vines and set fire to
-the house. They said it was a 'beaut of a day', though, and urged us
-to come tomorrow and repeat the program. By the way, they went across
-the lake on their raft yesterday and bought a tent of some campers.
-They have pitched it in the woods beyond the house."
-
-When I went upstairs Silvia met me disconsolately.
-
-"He didn't propose," she said disappointedly. "She wouldn't let him."
-
-"Did you wake her up to find out?" I asked.
-
-"She hadn't gone to bed and she wasn't sleepy. She was trimming a
-hat."
-
-"Why wouldn't she let him propose, if she cares for him?" I asked
-perplexedly.
-
-"Well, you see," explained Silvia, "that when a girl--a coquette girl
-like Beth--is as sure of a man as she is of Rob, she gets a touch of
-contrariness or offishness or something. She said it would have been
-too prosaic and cut and dried if they had gone away for a day in the
-woods and come back engaged. She wants the unexpected."
-
-"Do you think she loves him?" I asked interestedly.
-
-"She doesn't say so. You can't tell from what she says anyway. Still,
-I think she is hovering around the danger point."
-
-"She'd better watch out. Rob isn't the kind of a man who will stand
-for too much thwarting," I replied.
-
-"If he'd only play up a little bit to some one else, it would bring
-things to a climax," said my wife sagely.
-
-"There's no one else to play up to. The blonde left today because it
-was so slow here."
-
-"Maybe some new girl will come tomorrow," said Silvia, "or there's
-that trim little waitress who is waiting her way through college. He
-gave her a good big tip yesterday. I think I will give him a hint."
-
-"It wouldn't help any. He wouldn't know how to play such a game if you
-could persuade him to try. He'd probably tell the girl his motive in
-being attentive to her and then she'd back out. Maybe, after all, Beth
-doesn't love him."
-
-"I think she does," replied my wife, "because she is getting
-absent-minded. She let Diogenes go too near the fire. His shoes are
-burned, his hair singed, and his dress scorched. He woke up when I
-came in and he was so cross. He acted just the way he does when he is
-with his brothers."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-_Rob's Friend the Reporter_
-
-
-Silvia's vague prophecy was fulfilled. When the event of the day, the
-arrival of the stage, occurred, a solitary passenger alighted, a slim,
-alert, city-cut young woman.
-
-She looked us all over--not boldly, but with a business-like
-directness as if she were taking inventory of stock, or acting as
-judge at a competition. When her blue eyes lighted on Rob, they
-darkened with pleasure.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Rossiter!" she exclaimed, "this is better than I hoped for."
-
-They shook hands with the air of being old acquaintances, and he
-introduced her to us as "Miss Frayne, from my home town."
-
-She went into the office, registered, and sent her bag to her room.
-Then she asked Rob if she might have a talk with him.
-
-They walked away together down to the shore and she was talking to him
-quite excitedly. Rob suddenly stopped, threw back his head and laughed
-in the way that it is good to hear a man laugh.
-
-"Miss Frayne must be a wit," observed Beth dryly.
-
-I looked at her keenly. Something in her eyes as she gazed after the
-retreating couple told me that Silvia's surmise was right, and that
-Miss Frayne might be just the little punch needed to send Beth over
-the danger point.
-
-"I rather incline to the belief that Ptolemy told the truth in the
-first place," she continued, and then looked disappointed because I
-did not contradict her.
-
-I decided not to reveal, for the present anyway, what I knew of Miss
-Frayne, of whom I had often heard Rob speak.
-
-"She can't be going to stay long," said Silvia hopefully. "She didn't
-bring a trunk."
-
-"She doesn't need one," replied Beth. "She is probably one of those
-mannish girls who believe in a skirt and a few waists for a
-wardrobe."
-
-When Rob and the newcomer returned, he seemed to be monopolizing the
-conversation in a very emphatic and earnest manner. As they came up
-the steps to the veranda, we heard her say:
-
-"Very well, Mr. Rossiter, I will do just as you say. I have perfect
-confidence in your judgment."
-
-They passed on into the hotel and Beth jumped up and went down toward
-the lake.
-
-"Did you ever hear Rob speak of this Miss Frayne?" asked Silvia.
-
-"Often. She is engaged to his cousin, and is a reporter on a big
-newspaper."
-
-"Why didn't you say so? Oh, Lucien," she continued before I could
-speak, "were you really shrewd enough to see which way the wind was
-blowing?"
-
-"Sure. After you set my sails for me last night."
-
-Just then Rob came out of the hotel.
-
-"Say, Lucien, I want to see you a minute. Come on down the road."
-
-"We've got some work ahead," he said when we were out of Silvia's
-hearing.
-
-"What's up?" I asked.
-
-"Miss Frayne is up--and doing. What do you suppose her paper sent her
-here for?"
-
-"For a rest, or to write up the mosquitoes of H. H."
-
-"H. H. is all right, only it happens they stand for Haunted House."
-
-"Not really?"
-
-"Yes, really. The rumors of the house and the ghost, greatly
-elaborated, of course, reached the Sunday editor of the paper Miss
-Frayne is on, and he sent her up here to revive the story of the
-murder, translate the ghost, and get snapshots of the house. She was
-quite keen to have me take her there at once, so she could commence
-her article, but I headed her off, so she wouldn't discover the summer
-boarders at the hotel annex. I assured her that daytime was not the
-time to gather material and the only way she could get a proper focus
-on the ghost and acquire the thrills necessary for an inspiration was
-to see the place first by night."
-
-"If she would view Fair Melrose aright," I quoted, "she must visit it
-in the pale moonlight, but you were very clever to delay her visit
-long enough for us to get over there and warn the enemy. If she had
-gone down there and caught the Polydores unawares, she would have come
-back here and revealed our secret, and there would be the end of
-Silvia's vacation."
-
-"To tell the truth, Lucien, I wasn't thinking so much of that as I was
-of Miss Frayne's interests. You see she has come a long ways for a
-story and if it collapsed from her ghostly expectations to a showdown
-of four healthy boys, the blow might mean a good deal to her in a
-business way. I think we had better let Ptolemy plant a ghost just
-once more for her. You know you made him take a reef in the flapping
-of ghostly garments. Can't we resurrect the specter and restore the
-wails just for tonight, and bring her over here at the witching
-hour?"
-
-"Sure we will," I agreed heartily. "She shall have her ghost and all
-the trappings. It will give the Polydores the time of their lives."
-
-"Let's go over there now and put Ptolemy next so he can get busy on
-his spirits." We went down to the shore and pulled off. Midway across
-the lake, Rob suddenly rested on his oars and asked:
-
-"Where did Beth go?"
-
-"Back to first principles," I replied. "She thinks, judging from your
-excited, earnest manner in addressing Miss Frayne and your rushing
-frantically away for a walk with her before she had removed the travel
-dust, that Ptolemy was quite correct, after all, in declaring you to
-be a 'ladies' man.'"
-
-"Didn't you explain to her who Miss Frayne was?" he asked.
-
-"No," I replied. "I am on my vacation and I am not doing any
-explaining, professionally or otherwise."
-
-He swung the boat around.
-
-"Starboard!" I cried. "Don't you know a trump card when you see it?"
-
-Again he rested on his oars and stared at me.
-
-"What do you mean, Lucien? If you have a grain of hope for me, please
-let me in."
-
-I repeated Silvia's theories.
-
-"I am not going to win her that way," he said slowly, "not by playing
-a part."
-
-"Well," I declared, "if you go back to the hotel now, you can't
-explain Miss Frayne to Beth, because she went for a walk with old
-Professor Treadtop."
-
-He turned the boat again.
-
-"Silvia won't come to the Haunted House, will she?" he asked.
-
-"No, indeed. Nothing would induce her to."
-
-"Then you bring Miss Frayne here tonight and I'll bring Beth. And I'll
-be sure that there are no double boats lying around loose. I'll have
-two at the dock, see?"
-
-"I see your system," I replied, "but I am not sure how I can explain
-Miss Frayne to Silvia. Silvia is not in the least narrow-minded, but
-still to leave the hotel at midnight with a perfectly strange young
-woman--"
-
-"You can tell her I want a clear field for Beth. She will see it is in
-a good cause."
-
-The Polydores greeted us rapturously and roughly. When I had restored
-order, and they were once more right side up, I addressed the chief of
-the bandits.
-
-"Ptolemy," I began, "a young lady, who is a reporter for a big
-newspaper, has come from many miles away to write up the haunted house
-and the ghost, and they will be pictured out in the Sunday edition."
-
-Ptolemy's eyes glistened, and "Them Three" were instantly "at
-attention."
-
-"Oh, say, stepdaddy," begged the young chief, "let me play ghost right
-for her, just once, will you?"
-
-"You may for tonight," I said, "but you will have to be very careful
-and not overdo the matter, for she isn't the kind that is easily
-fooled. She's had to keep her eyes and wits sharpened, else she
-wouldn't be on a newspaper, so I want you to be very careful and not
-bungle. Make a neat job of it."
-
-"I'll do it up brown, you bet!" he cried gleefully.
-
-"Naw, do it up white," drawled Pythagoras.
-
-"Show me your ghost stuff by daylight," I demanded, "and let me see
-how you are going to rig him up."
-
-He brought forth a head and shoulders and arms that were ghastly even
-in sunlight, and proceeded to explain them.
-
-"I got this skull out of father's study, and the arms came off a
-skeleton mother had in her antiquities. I dressed them up in a pillow
-case and the white cotton gloves are Huldah's. I can get some
-phosphorus in the woods and put it in the eyes. And Demetrius bought
-two electric flashlights yesterday, and Pythagoras can snap them once
-in a while from the lower windows."
-
-"You are some little property man," said Rob in admiration. "But tell
-me who produces those heart-rending shrieks?"
-
-"That was Pythagoras who did the high ones. And Em came in with low
-groans. Show 'em, boys."
-
-Pythagoras uttered high-trebled, thin-toned whines and ever and anon
-Emerald added a _basso profundo_ accompaniment, making a combination
-that was most trying to the ears at close range.
-
-"I don't know," said Rob, "as I want Beth subjected to such a
-realistic performance. We will loiter in the distance."
-
-"Your rehearsal," I assured Ptolemy, "is very good, but you must
-remember that Miss Frayne is used to encountering things far more
-terrible than ghosts. She may insist on coming right in here to
-investigate. Of course, if she does, I can't refuse or she'll think I
-am afraid, or else that I put up a fake ghost here, myself."
-
-"We'll lock the door with a chair," suggested Emerald.
-
-"She'll be quite capable of breaking into a little house like this,
-but I'll keep her back until you have time to haul in your ghost and
-make a quick and quiet getaway by a back window. Then another thing,
-she'll be over here tomorrow morning to take some pictures of the
-house, so by sunrise I want you all to take up your abode in the tent
-you have in the woods and stay there until I come and tell you the
-coast is clear."
-
-"We're dead on," assured Ptolemy. "I'm glad there's going to be
-something doing. We're getting tired of being here alone. I had to tie
-Demetrius up this morning. He was bound to go over to the hotel and
-see mudder."
-
-"Don't one of you dare to make such an attempt," I said peremptorily.
-"You keep right on here for a few days. Some of us, either Rob, or
-Beth and I will drop over every day. If you play your ghost just as I
-tell you and keep out of sight, I'll bring you over some ice cream
-tomorrow."
-
-"Bring me a bigger bat."
-
-"Bring me a mitt."
-
-"Bring me a boat," came in chorus from Ptolemy, Emerald, and
-Demetrius.
-
-"What'll you give me to stay here?" asked Pythagoras, who was a born
-bargain-driver.
-
-"I'll give you a licking if you don't stay," was the only offer he
-gleaned from me.
-
-"Be good boys," adjured the softhearted Rob, "and I'll bring you
-everything I can find at the hotel."
-
-It was long past the luncheon hour when we returned. We found Miss
-Frayne wondering at Rob's sudden disappearance and Beth was
-accordingly mystified.
-
-I planted myself directly in front of Miss Frayne.
-
-"May I take you to the haunted house tonight at the yawning
-churchyard hour?" I asked. "I am most eminently fitted to be your
-guide, for I was the first one of this assembly to see the ghost _in
-toto_."
-
-"He saw it over a stone fence," remarked Rob.
-
-"Indeed you may, thank you very much," she said enthusiastically.
-
-Silvia's face was a study.
-
-"And will you come with me, Beth?" asked Rob. "Of course, the ghost is
-an old story to us, but we really should hover in Lucien's wake out of
-regard to the conventions."
-
-"Is Miss Frayne interested in ghosts?" asked Beth.
-
-Miss Frayne turned and answered the question.
-
-"Not personally," she admitted frankly, "but the newspaper I am on is,
-and they sent me up here to get a story."
-
-"Oh, you are a reporter?"
-
-"Yes; on the _Times_."
-
-"She won't be one long, though," asserted Rob cheerfully, "because she
-is going to marry my cousin in the fall."
-
-Beth's expression remained neutral at the announcement, but I noticed
-throughout the afternoon that she was extremely affable toward Miss
-Frayne, and that she had the whiphand again with Rob, and meanwhile he
-seemed to be gathering a grim determination to do or die.
-
-"Lucien, how did you come to ask Miss Frayne to go to that awful place
-tonight?" asked Silvia when we had gone to our room for a siesta,
-which seemed impossible by reason of the bellowing of Diogenes, who
-balked at being required to lie down.
-
-"Rob asked me to," I informed her, when I had cowed Diogenes, "so he
-could have a free field for Beth. I believe he planned this
-expedition so he could storm the citadel."
-
-She reflected.
-
-"Well, maybe he is wise. Girls like Beth have to be taken by storm
-sometimes. I shouldn't wonder if Rob could be a bit of a bully, too,
-but--"
-
-She ended her speculations in a shriek.
-
-"Oh, Lucien! Diogenes has jumped out the window."
-
-We rushed down stairs, Silvia informing the guests in transit of the
-awful catastrophe.
-
-Silvia paused at the door opening on to the veranda.
-
-"I can't see him," she said faintly, closing her eyes. "You'll have to
-tend to it alone, Lucien."
-
-Beth was already at the telephone, which connected with the country
-doctor's. Rob joined me. We located our window, and began hunting
-underneath for the pieces.
-
-"Where in the world do you suppose he landed?" asked Rob.
-
-Just then the missing one came around the house clasping a bologna
-sausage in his fist.
-
-"Ye Gods and little Polydores!" exclaimed Rob.
-
-I caught Diogenes by the arm and rushed him in to Silvia.
-
-I found her in company with an old colored mammy, who was laundress
-for the hotel.
-
-"Sho'," she was saying, "I done gwine by de windah with ma baby cab
-full o' cloes, an' dis yer white chile done come tumblin' down an'
-fall right in ma cab. Now, what do you think o' dat? I reckon I was
-nevah so done clean skeert afoah in ma life. An' ef de chile didn't
-grab one of ma bolognas and done git out de cab an' run around de
-house."
-
-"Oh," cried Silvia, "poor little baby! Come to mudder. Lucien, where
-are you going with him?"
-
-I had picked up the acrobatic Polydore and was going up the stairs two
-at a time. I gained our room, locked the door and proceeded to give
-the "poor little baby" all that was coming to him. Now and then above
-his howls, I heard Silvia's plaintive protests outside the door, but I
-finished my job completely and satisfactorily, and laid the penitent
-Polydore in his little bed. Then I went out into the hall, feeling
-better than I had in months.
-
-Silvia essayed to pass me, but I took her arm and led her to a recess
-in the hall.
-
-"I am convinced," I told her, "that we have Diogenes as a permanent
-pensioner on our hands, so it was up to me to show him where to get
-off. You can't go to him for a quarter of an hour."
-
-We went down stairs and I was sure I read suppressed regret in the
-faces of most of the guests at learning of the soft place in which
-Diogenes' lot had been cast. Silvia tearfully told Rob and Beth of my
-cruelty.
-
-[Illustration: Now and then above his howls, I heard Silvia's plaintive
-protests outside the door]
-
-"Do him good!" approved Rob heartily.
-
-"How mean men are!" declared Beth indignantly. "I am going up and
-comfort the poor little thing."
-
-I held up the key to the room with a grin, and she had to content
-herself by making unkind remarks about me.
-
-At the expiration of the allotted time, I handed Silvia the key. She
-took it from me without a word or a look. It was quite evident I was
-in wrong.
-
-In half an hour my wife came down, carrying Diogenes, who, dressed in
-fresh white clothes, was a good picture of an angel child. She passed
-me and went to a remote corner of the veranda and sat down. When he
-spied me, he leaped from her arms and ran to me.
-
-"Ocean," he said propitiatingly, "me love oo."
-
-I took him up. His arms clasped about my neck, and over his curly
-head, I winked at Silvia and Beth.
-
-Rob roared.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-_A Midnight Excursion_
-
-
-The night was Satan's own: dark, wind-shrieking, and Polydorish. No
-one saw us leave the hotel when, at a late hour, we started on our
-little excursion. On account of the darkness and the poor landing near
-the haunted house, we decided to go by the overland route. I managed
-to purloin a lantern from the kitchen to light our path.
-
-Rob and Beth kept behind Miss Frayne and myself, and in spite of the
-wildness of the weather, he was evidently pleading his suit, for now
-and then above the roar of the wind, I heard his ardent voice.
-Apparently Beth had not yet given him any encouragement.
-
-Going down the lane my lantern underwent a total eclipse, so we had a
-Jordan-like road to travel. Miss Frayne was quite impervious to
-unfavorable conditions, as it was a matter of bread and butter to her,
-she said, and she was accustomed to braving worse storms than this,
-and anyway she hadn't come here for a summer picnic.
-
-When we came into the grove it was so dark, I lost my bearings.
-
-"Why didn't we bring a flashlight?" asked Beth.
-
-"There were none at the hotel," I told her.
-
-"I know some boys," said Rob with a little laugh, "who would have lent
-us one--maybe."
-
-Fortunately we were well provided with safety matches and after
-striking a box or so, we gained the open. A rise of ground hid the
-house, but when we climbed to the top, the ghost loomed up ghastlier
-than ever.
-
-I felt the business-like Miss Frayne start and shiver as a little
-scream escaped her. I didn't wonder. Even I, knowing that it was an
-illusion and a snare, felt my flesh creeping as I looked at the
-ghastly thing in the window.
-
-Every now and then according to schedule a light flashed from the
-windows below. And then came the blood-curdling sounds--whimpers and
-groans that were rivaling the whistling of the wind.
-
-"This is awful!" said Miss Frayne in a hoarse whisper.
-
-"Do you want to go inside the house?" I asked.
-
-"No--o! I couldn't. Not tonight."
-
-We were some little in advance of Rob and Beth. When one spectral
-sound came like a tense whisper, Miss Frayne turned and fled, and of
-course I followed her. We could not see our two companions, but
-suddenly in an interim of wind and ghost whispers, we heard Beth say:
-
-"Yes, Rob. I think we should really be cosier in a story-and-a-half
-cottage than we should in a bungalow."
-
-"Ye Gods!" muttered Miss Frayne, "did he propose in the face of that
-awful Thing?"
-
-"Ship ahoy!" I called.
-
-"Oh, didn't you go inside?" asked Rob.
-
-"Go in! I wouldn't go inside that place; not if I lose my job on the
-paper. What can it be? You don't seem to mind it, Miss Wade."
-
-"Well, you know," said Beth apologetically, "this is my third
-performance."
-
-We were now down the hill out of sight of the gruesome, ghastly window
-display, and Miss Frayne gained courage as we retreated.
-
-"Of course I don't believe in ghosts," she said, "but what do you
-suppose that is?"
-
-"I had a theory," I said, "that it is the work of a lunatic, but I've
-since concluded it is due to practical jokers. I'll tell you what I'll
-do. If you wait here, I'll investigate and see what I can find out for
-you."
-
-"Oh, would you really dare, Mr. Wade? I don't believe men ever have
-creepy nerves," she exclaimed.
-
-I began to feel ashamed of my deception.
-
-"I wouldn't go, Lucien," warned Rob, coming to my rescue. "There may
-be a gang of desperadoes in there, or counterfeit money-makers, or
-something of that kind. Besides, I have a far more interesting piece
-of news than anything the ghost could give you."
-
-"Rob!" protested Beth.
-
-"We know it already," I laughed. "It's to be a story-and-a-half
-high."
-
-"I think I am getting material for quite a story," declared Miss
-Frayne.
-
-I knew Beth's dislike of scenes and display of emotions--mock
-heroics--she called them, so I made no congratulatory speeches of the
-bless-you-my-children order, but presently under the cover of
-darkness, I felt a little hand slipped in mine, and my clasp was
-eloquent of what I felt.
-
-"I hope," said Miss Frayne, "that daylight will make me so ashamed of
-my cowardice that I can come down here and take some pictures and go
-inside the house."
-
-"We'll all come with you," promised Beth. "There's safety in
-numbers."
-
-When we were back at the hotel I managed to have a few words with Rob
-before we went upstairs.
-
-"Bless the ghost!" he said cheerily. "When Beth first glimpsed it, she
-just turned and fell into my arms. She was really frightened for the
-first time. I shall feel under obligations to Ptolemy for a
-lifetime."
-
-"Thank goodness!" I ejaculated fervently, "that I am under no
-obligations to a Polydore. Ptolemy certainly did put up the most
-ghastly thing in the way of ghosts. The lights in the eyes of the
-skeleton were frightful."
-
-"Did you see the ghost?" asked Silvia sleepily, when I came in.
-
-"Yes; same old ghost, only more of him," I assured her.
-
-She was asleep before I had uttered this reply.
-
-"Silvia," I said, "I have a more startling piece of news for you than
-that."
-
-She sat bolt upright.
-
-"Are they engaged, Lucien?"
-
-"They are. They are building their castle--I mean their story-and-a-half
-cottage already."
-
-Alas for my own desire to sleep! I had so effectually awakened Silvia
-that she planned Beth's trousseau, the wedding, honeymoon, and the
-furnishing of their house before she subsided.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-_What Miss Frayne Found Out_
-
-
-We had planned to go to the haunted house at nine o'clock the next
-morning, but owing to my dissipation of the night before, it was long
-after the appointed hour when Silvia awoke me.
-
-I hurried down stairs and ate my breakfast in solitude. I inquired for
-Beth and Rob, but the waitress told me they had left the dining-room
-at seven o'clock and gone for a walk in the woods. She said it with a
-knowing smile that told me she, too, must be a "sister of the Golden
-Circle."
-
-"And Miss Frayne?" I asked.
-
-"She went down the road over an hour ago."
-
-Evidently her courage had come up with the sun. I was greatly
-disturbed at the chance of her stumbling over one or more Polydores,
-and Rob didn't want to let the cat out of the bag until her article
-was written, as he believed that if the ghostly spell were broken, she
-would lose her "punch."
-
-I was unable to think of any plausible explanation to offer Silvia as
-to why I should start in pursuit, and I wished all sorts of dire
-calamities on Rob's blond head. Lovers were surely blind and selfish.
-
-About ten o'clock they came strolling in.
-
-"We didn't know it was so late," said Beth cheerfully, "but the boys
-will keep in the woods all right."
-
-"With her nose for news, there is no telling how far into the woods
-Miss Frayne's investigation will take her."
-
-"Say we go down by the lane and meet her," proposed Beth, "so that if
-she has run across the boys we can explain to her why we desire
-secrecy from Silvia."
-
-"You and Rob go," I advised. "It would seem odd to Silvia if we didn't
-ask her to go with us."
-
-So the newly engaged couple started down the road, but in their
-self-absorption they didn't notice the turn to the lane, and they got
-half way to Windy Creek before they came back to earth and the hotel.
-Miss Frayne still had not shown up, and I began to have misgivings
-lest the Polydores had locked her up in the house, but finally just as
-we were having a happy family gathering and discussing the new event
-under the shade of the one resort tree, she came excitedly up to us.
-
-"Such an interesting morning as I have had!" she exclaimed
-enthusiastically. "I made some corking pictures of the place, and I've
-found out about not only that ghost, but all ghosts--the whole race of
-ghosts."
-
-I hurriedly interrupted her and made elaborate and jumbled apologies
-for not keeping our engagement, which evidently bored her and
-mystified Silvia.
-
-"I am glad I went alone," she finally replied. "Otherwise I might not
-have got such an interesting interview."
-
-Beth, Rob, and I made frantic and appealing gestures to her behind
-Silvia's back, but she didn't seem to notice them.
-
-"Whom did you interview, the ghost?" asked Silvia.
-
-"No, indeed. Some very interesting and unusual people who are staying
-there."
-
-I threw her a wildly beseeching glance and Beth and Rob began at the
-same time to ply her with distracting questions. I think she seemed to
-divine that there was something in the situation that was not to be
-explained, but Silvia interrupted them.
-
-"Do let Miss Frayne tell us about her interview," she said. "We all
-seem to be very talkative today."
-
-I saw there was no way to dodge the denouement, so I awaited the
-finale in dread desperation. It proved to be more of a stunner than I
-had expected.
-
-"I went down the lane," she said, "and through the grove, up the
-little hill, and laughed at myself for the hallucinations of the night
-before. There were no ghosts visible and the door to the haunted
-house was hospitably open. I stood on the hill long enough to make
-some pictures and then went on. I walked up the steps fearlessly and
-looked within. A woman, an untidy, disheveled-looking woman, sat at a
-table writing furiously in just the same breathless way I write when I
-have a scoop, and the presses are waiting open-mouthed for my copy.
-
-"She looked up and scowled at my intrusion.
-
-"'Don't bother me,' she said, and continued writing.
-
-"I went through the house and came outside again where I met an
-absent-minded, spectacled man. I told him who I was and of my object
-in coming to the house. Then he showed signs of coming to.
-
-"'Oh, the ghost!' he said. 'That is what brought me here. My wife is
-interested in more tangible, more material things. We have just
-returned from a long journey, and when we were nearly to our
-destination, our place of residence, I happened to read in a paper
-about this haunted house and its apparition, so we came right up here
-this morning to remain overnight and see if the article were true.'
-
-"I told him how successful I had been and he became quite alert and
-enthusiastic. He showed me why I should not have been alarmed, because
-ghosts, he said, were scientific facts. He then explained to me at
-length how the gases from the dead arise and form a nebulous vapor or
-a vaporous nebula. It sounded very simple and plausible when he told
-me, but I can't seem to remember it. Fortunately I have it all down in
-writing."
-
-Silvia's eyes and mine had met in speechless horror since she had
-mentioned the "writing woman."
-
-"Lucien!" Silvia now said in a tragic, hoarse whisper--"the
-Polydores!"
-
-"Oh, do you know them?" asked Miss Frayne. "Dr. Felix Polydore, the
-eminent LL.D. or something like that."
-
-"The whole family are D's," I said.
-
-"His wife is the highest of high-brows, and they are averse to
-interviews. They moved to a small city sometime ago to be secluded.
-Just think of my opportunity! I have them headlined! 'The Haunted
-House of Hope Haven. Ghost that appears at midnight scientifically
-explained by the distinguished Dr. Felix Polydore.'"
-
-"I think we are in luck," I said to Silvia, on second thoughts. "We
-will take them home by the nape of the neck and deliver their children
-into their keeping to have and to hold."
-
-"I can't turn Diogenes over to them," she said plaintively.
-
-"Diogenes!" repeated Miss Frayne in astonishment.
-
-I then narrated to her the history of our next-door neighbors, and how
-they planted their five children upon us.
-
-"We had better go down at once and see them," said Silvia, "before
-they escape. No telling where they might take it in their heads to
-go."
-
-"We will," I said, "we'll go soon after luncheon."
-
-"Thrice blessed haunted house," quoted Rob. "It gave me Beth, and it
-has restored the parents of the wise Ptolemy and 'Them Three.'"
-
-"And gave me a ripping story," said Miss Frayne.
-
-Just then the gong sounded, and after luncheon while I was comfortably
-tipped back in a chair, my feet on the veranda rail, seeing in the
-smoke from my pipe dream visions of Polydoreless days, a faint cry
-from Silvia brought me back to earth.
-
-"Lucien, look!"
-
-I looked.
-
-My chair came down to all fours and my feet slipped from the rail.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-_Ptolemy's Tale_
-
-
-Four defiant, determined-looking Polydores came up the steps and bore
-down upon us. Then Silvia as usual thought she saw land ahead.
-
-"Oh, boys," she asked hopefully, "did your father send for you to meet
-him here? And when is he going to take you home?"
-
-"Didn't I tell you," I thundered at Ptolemy, "that you were not to
-leave that house--"
-
-"It left us," interrupted Emerald with a grin.
-
-"Went up in smoke," added Pythagoras blithely, "ghost and all."
-
-"Four minutes quicker," said Demetrius, "and it would have took father
-and mother, too."
-
-"Oh, is it the haunted house they are talking about?" asked Miss
-Frayne joyfully. "What a story I'll have!"
-
-Life to Miss Frayne seemed to be one story after another. Well, it was
-certainly becoming the same way to us.
-
-"Did the ghost set fire to the house?" asked Beth.
-
-"What are you all talking about," demanded Silvia, "and how did you
-know these boys were there? How long have you been here?" she asked,
-turning to Ptolemy.
-
-"I told you," I repeated angrily to the subdued boy, "not to leave.
-Those were plain orders. If the house did burn up, you could have
-stayed in your tent in the woods."
-
-Ptolemy's lips twitched faintly.
-
-"The house burned up and all our clothes and our stuff to eat, and our
-bats and things, and father and mother went away and I didn't know
-what to do, so--I came here. But we'll go back to our own house. We
-have learned to cook. Come on, boys."
-
-"You'll stay right here with me, son," and Rob's hand came down
-intimately on Ptolemy's shoulder.
-
-"It isn't likely we'll turn them out into the woods, when they haven't
-a roof over their heads," declared Silvia, drawing Emerald to her
-side.
-
-"I think you are absolutely inhuman, Lucien," cried Beth. "I don't see
-what has changed you so," and she proceeded to make room for
-Pythagoras in the porch swing.
-
-"Did the fire scare you?" asked Miss Frayne gently, as she put her
-arms about Demetrius.
-
-"Et tu, Brute? Well, I plainly see this is no place for an inhuman,
-childless, married man," I said with a laugh, walking down the
-veranda.
-
-In the doorway I met Diogenes, who raised his chubby arms invitingly.
-
-"Up, up, Ocean!" he begged sweetly.
-
-I lifted him to my shoulder, and then turned and walked triumphantly
-back to the family group.
-
-"Now," I said, "here is the whole d-dashed family. And I propose that
-each keep unto his charge the child he has now under his wing."
-
-Miss Frayne quickly relinquished the dirty Demetrius. Beth shrank away
-from Pythagoras.
-
-As I seated myself still holding Diogenes, his brothers sprang toward
-him in greeting, but he spat at one, kicked at another, and pulled the
-hair of a third, although he patted Ptolemy's cheek gently.
-
-"Now, we'll have this affair thrashed out," I declared in my most
-authoritative, professional manner, and I then proceeded to explain to
-Silvia the housing of the Polydores, and our strategies to keep their
-arrival a secret simply on her account.
-
-"Because you know," interpolated Beth, with a consideration for the
-feelings of the young Polydores--a consideration they had never before
-encountered--"we wanted you to have a nice rest."
-
-Silvia looked quite penitent and remorseful for her seeming lack of
-appreciation of our combined efforts. When I had answered all her
-inquiries satisfactorily, Miss Frayne's curiosity regarding the
-progeny of the eminent Polydores had to be fully relieved.
-
-"And do you mean that the scribbling lady I saw at the table is really
-the mother of these five boys?" she asked, unable to grasp the fact.
-
-"Yes; and the father hereof is the man who explained the ghosts to you
-so scientifically that you cannot remember what he said. Now, Ptolemy,
-we'll hear your story of the fire and the whereabouts of your parents.
-Take your time and tell it accurately."
-
-"Well, you see we did just as you said to, and took the ghost out of
-the window and went out to the woods early this morning so as not to
-let the paper lady see us."
-
-"Oh!" cried Miss Frayne, "am I the paper lady? I begin to see
-daylight. Are these boys the ghost perpetrators, and were you in on
-the put-up job?"
-
-"You're a good guesser," I replied.
-
-"And why wasn't I taken into your confidence?"
-
-"For two reasons. First, because your friend Rob said you'd get better
-results for copy--more inspirations and thrills, if you weren't behind
-the scenes on the ghost business,--and then we didn't want to tell you
-about the presence of the Polydores lest inadvertently you betray the
-fact to my wife. Now, proceed, Ptolemy."
-
-"After we were in the woods, I heard an automobile coming down the
-lane, and I went up near the edge of the woods and peeked out behind a
-tree, and pretty soon I saw father and mother come over the hill and
-go in our haunted house, so I came up there and hid under the window
-and heard mother say: 'What an ideal place to write this is. It looks
-as if I might really get a chance to write unmo--'
-
-"'--lested,'" I finished for him.
-
-"I guess so," he allowed. "Well, she began writing, so I didn't go in,
-but when father came outside I went up to him and told him you and
-mudder were at the hotel and that we were all with you. He told me
-they came up here to write an article for some big magazine about the
-ghost. He hired an automobile down at Windy Creek to bring them up to
-the house and the man was going to come back for them tomorrow
-morning. I didn't let on the ghost was a fake, because I thought he'd
-be so disappointed to have all his trouble for nothing, and he'd be
-mad at me for swiping his skull. I told him a paper lady was coming
-and then I went back to the woods. He went down with me to see the
-boys, and he said he would come back and have lunch with us. Mother
-doesn't ever stop to eat at noon when she is writing.
-
-"He went back and talked to the paper lady and pretty soon he came
-down and ate with us. I told him all about how we couldn't get any
-girl to do the work for us and so we had been living with you, and how
-Di got sick and mudder was all worn out taking care of him and came
-down here to rest, and that you wouldn't cash the check, so I did and
-was spending it and he said that was all right." Here Ptolemy flashed
-me a most triumphant glance.
-
-"He said you must be paid for all your expense and trouble, so he made
-out a check and gave it to me and told me to make mudder a nice
-present. He ain't so bad when he ain't thinking about dead stuff. When
-he felt in his pocket for his check book, he found a letter he had got
-yesterday and forgotten to open, so he read it then and found it was
-from some magazine, and the man said he'd pay his and mother's
-expenses to go to Chili and write up some stuff about--something. So
-father said they must go at once."
-
-"Not to Chili!" I exclaimed.
-
-"Yes; we all went up to the house with him and I took mother's pencil
-and paper away so she would have to listen. She was wild for Chili,
-and I had to go and hunt up a farmer who had a machine to take them
-down to Windy Creek. Father signed another blank check for you and
-said you could board us with it or do anything you thought best.
-
-"Then mother took a lot of papers out of her bag, some stuff she had
-written and didn't get suited with, and she stuffed them in the stove
-and set fire to them. Then we all went down to the lane to see father
-and mother off and when we got back the house was on fire. The chimney
-burned out."
-
-"Guess mother must have written some hot stuff," said Emerald.
-
-"It was burning so fast," continued Ptolemy, "that we didn't dast go
-in to save anything and all our food and clothes and balls and bats
-and fishing tackle are gone, and we didn't know what to do, or what to
-eat, and so--we came here."
-
-"You did just right, Ptolemy," I admitted. "I shouldn't have called
-you down--not until I heard your story, anyway."
-
-I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an injured air.
-
-"Do you mean to tell me," asked Miss Frayne, "that your father and
-mother went away without seeing the baby?"
-
-Ptolemy flushed a little.
-
-"You see," he explained apologetically, "mother gets woolly when she
-writes and she's forgotten there's Di. She thinks Demetrius is the
-youngest. She's mad about writing. If she sees a blank paper
-anywhere, she ain't happy until she has written something on it, and
-the sight of a pencil makes her fingers itch."
-
-[Illustration: I held out my hand, which he shook solemnly, but with an
-injured air]
-
-"Take warning, Miss Frayne," I said, "and don't get too literary."
-
-"Some day," resumed Ptolemy, "mother'll get the antiques all out of
-her system and then she'll remember us."
-
-I liked the boy's defense of his mother, and I began to see that Rob
-was right in thinking there were possibilities in the lad, but it was
-Silvia's influence that had developed them, for in the days when he
-borrowed soup plates of us, there had been no redeeming trait that I
-could discern.
-
-And while I was recalling this, I heard Silvia saying to him kindly:
-"And in the meantime, I'll be 'mudder' to you."
-
-"So will I," chimed in Beth.
-
-"I'll be a big brother," offered Rob.
-
-"I'll be next friend, Ptolemy," I contributed.
-
-Strange to say, my offer seemed to make the most impression on him. He
-came to me and gazed into my eyes earnestly.
-
-"I'll do just as you say," he promised.
-
-"Where do we'uns come in?" asked Pythagoras, with one of his satanic
-grins.
-
-Miss Frayne saved the day.
-
-"You all come in with me," she said, "and have lunch. I haven't eaten
-since breakfast, and I understand there is warm ginger cake and
-huckleberry pie. Aren't you hungry?"
-
-"You bet," spoke up Pythagoras. "We only had coffee, peanuts, and
-beans down in the woods, and father ate the beans and drank all the
-coffee."
-
-"We're out of the frying pan into the fire," said Silvia woefully,
-when we were alone.
-
-"I wish the Polydore parents had gone up in smoke," I declared.
-
-"Then your last hope of getting rid of the children would have gone up
-in smoke, too," argued Beth.
-
-"No; in case of the demise of their parents, we could have turned them
-over body and soul to the probate court," I informed her.
-
-"We will fill out this blank check for any amount, Lucien," declared
-Silvia, "that will induce a housekeeper to take charge of their house.
-I shall keep Diogenes, though, until he is older."
-
-"I wouldn't mind Ptolemy, either," I admitted. "I shall be interested
-in seeing what I can make of him, and he hasn't a bad influence over
-Diogenes, but I'll be hanged if anything would induce me to have 'Them
-Three' Chessy cats running wild over us. They can live in their house
-alone, or be put in a reformatory. We won't have them. We're under no
-obligations, pecuniary or moral, to look after them."
-
-"I think, Lucien, we might as well go home now. We've had a good rest
-and a good time, and I am anxious to be back and see how Huldah is
-getting on."
-
-As Huldah had never mastered two of the three R's, we had not been
-able to receive any reports from her.
-
-"I'll tell you what we'll do," proposed Beth. "Rob and I will take all
-the Polydores save Diogenes, and go home tomorrow and prepare the
-house and Huldah for the overflow. Then you two can come on with
-Diogenes the next day."
-
-"Good idea, Beth!" I approved. "I'd hate to face Huldah, unprepared,
-with the return of the Polydores _en masse_."
-
-"I am glad," said Silvia, "that Huldah has been having a rest from
-them for a few days."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-_All About Uncle Issachar's Visit_
-
-
-The next morning's stage carried seven passengers to Windy Creek, as
-Miss Frayne with a big roll of "copy" also took her departure.
-
-Diogenes had been quite docile and amenable to my rule since the
-licking I gave him, so we had a pleasant and comfortable return
-journey on the following day.
-
-"I hope, Lucien," said Silvia, "you won't refuse to cash this check
-for a good amount. The Polydore parents may never show up, and it's
-only right we should be reimbursed for their keep."
-
-"I will cash it," I assured her, "and use it for a housekeeper or else
-send the boys off to a school. I should like very much to have it out
-with Felix Polydore, but, as you suggest, I may never have the
-opportunity to see him at close range."
-
-Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy met us at the station.
-
-"Where are 'Them Three'?" I asked hopefully.
-
-"Huldah is feeding them little pies hot from the kettle--the kind she
-cooks like doughnuts, you know."
-
-"Huldah cooking for 'Them Three'!" I exclaimed. "She must have passed
-into her second childhood. She grudged them even an apple to piece
-on."
-
-"She has pampered them ever since our return," said Rob.
-
-"Poor Huldah! She must indeed be afflicted with softening of the
-brain," I decided.
-
-"She has probably been so lonely, shut in here by herself," said
-Silvia, "that even 'Them Three' looked good to her."
-
-In the hallway Huldah met us. She was beaming with pleasure, but
-except in her bearing toward the children, she was quite normal.
-
-"We've all had a real good rest," she observed, "and you do look so
-well, Mrs. Wade. My! but this place has been lonesome. I'm glad we're
-all together again."
-
-"Now, Silvia, shut your eyes," directed Beth, "and come into the
-library. Ptolemy has bought you a present with the check his father
-gave him."
-
-"Beth helped me pick it out," said Ptolemy.
-
-Beth led the way into the library, and we followed.
-
-"Open your eyes."
-
-Silvia gave a little cry of pleasure, and looking over her shoulder, I
-beheld a baby grand piano.
-
-"Oh, Ptolemy!" she cried, giving him a fervent kiss and fond hug, "I
-can never let you do so much."
-
-"Oh, yes," he said, flushing a little under the endearments which were
-doubtless the first ever bestowed upon him. "Father's got a whole lot
-of money grandpa left him and it's fixed so he can't draw out only so
-much each year. He said the board and bother of us was worth more than
-this and we'll all enjoy the music. But Thag and Em and Dem ain't to
-touch it. I'll knock tar out of the first one that comes near it."
-
-I was disconsolate. I didn't see how we could return it and I didn't
-want the Polydore web woven any tighter. To think of Silvia's
-receiving from them what it had been my longing to give her! But as I
-was to learn later, she was to acquire much more than a piano from the
-eminent family.
-
-After dinner Silvia asked Huldah to come in and hear the music, and
-when Silvia's repertoire was exhausted, we gave our faithful servant
-all the little details of our trip which Beth had not supplied.
-
-"Now tell us, Huldah, how things went along here," said Silvia.
-
-"Well, you think some wonderful things happened to you all on your
-trip mebby--ghosts and proposals," looking at Beth and Rob, "and fires
-and Polydores, but back here in this quiet house something happened
-that has your ghosts and things skinned by a mile."
-
-"Oh, dear!" cried Silvia apprehensively, "what is it?"
-
-"Break it very gently, Huldah," I cautioned. "You know we've borne a
-good deal."
-
-"Your uncle Issachar was here for a couple of days."
-
-She certainly had made a sensation.
-
-"Not Uncle Issachar! Not here?" exclaimed Silvia incredulously.
-
-"Yes, ma'am. He came the next day after Beth and Mr. Rossiter and
-Polly left. I told him you'd gone away for a little vacation and rest.
-I didn't let on that I knew where you had gone, because I didn't want
-him straggling up there, too, or sending for you to come back. He said
-your absence would make no difference to his plans; that he never let
-nothing do that. He come to pay a visit and he should pay one."
-
-"Yes," said Silvia feebly. "That sounds like Uncle Issachar."
-
-"I told him to make himself perfectly at home; that every one did that
-to this place, and he said he would. I'd just slicked up the big front
-room upstairs and I seen to it that he had everything all right. I
-cooked the best dinner I knew how, and he said it was the first white
-man's meal he had eat since his ma died, so I found out what she used
-to cook and fed him on it. Them three kids and him eat like they was
-holler. I guess if Polly hadn't took them away your grocery bill would
-'a looked like Barb'ry Allen's grave.
-
-"Well, as I was saying, your uncle he eat till he got over his
-grouches, and like enough he'd be here eating yet, if he hadn't got a
-telegraph to hit the line for home, some big business deal, he said,
-and I guess it was a great deal, for he licked his chops and smacked
-his lips over it, and he give me a ten dollar bill to get a new dress
-and each of Them Three one dollar fer candy."
-
-"The old tightwad!" I exclaimed. "It was your cooking, sure, that made
-him loosen up that way."
-
-"Tightwad nothing!" she declared indignantly. "You won't think he was
-tight-wadded when you read this here letter he left for you. He told
-me what was in it, and I've just been busting to tell it to Beth, but
-I waited for you to know it first."
-
-With great excitement Silvia opened the letter, read it, gasped,
-re-read it, and then in consternation handed it to me.
-
-"Read it aloud, Lucien," she bade. "Maybe I can believe it then."
-
-This was the letter.
-
- "My dear Niece:
-
- "I was sorry not to see you, but glad to learn that, as every wise
- and good woman should do, you are raising a fine family--a family
- of _sons_, which is what our country most needs. Your son
- Pythagoras informed me that you had taken your oldest child,
- Ptolemy, and your youngest, Diogenes, with you, I am glad you left
- three such promising samples for me to see.
-
- "As you have five sons, I have, agreeable to my promise, placed in
- your name in the First National Bank of your city the sum of
- twenty-five thousand dollars.
-
- "Your affectionate uncle,
- "Issachar Innes."
-
-"Huldah," I asked, "did you tell him the Polydores were our
-children?"
-
-"Me?" she repeated indignantly. "Me tell a lie like that! No; I didn't
-get no chance to tell him anything about them. 'Them Three' done the
-telling. The first thing that one"--pointing to Pythagoras--"said was,
-'Mudder went away and took the baby, Diogenes, with her.' And then
-that next one"--indicating Emerald--"said: 'Yes, and our oldest
-brother, Ptolemy, went on with Beth to see them.'
-
-"The old gent asked them all their names and ages and he was so
-pleased and said he thought it was just fine for you to raise five
-sons, so I didn't have no heart to tell him no different. 'Twan't none
-of my business anyhow. Then 'Them Three' kept talking about stepdaddy,
-and your Uncle Issachar asks 'Who the devil is he? Did my niece marry
-again?' And I told him as how Mr. Wade was all the husband you ever
-had, and that stepdaddy was nothing but a sort of pet-name the kids
-had give Mr. Wade."
-
-"I told him," said Demetrius, "that stepdaddy was cross to us
-sometimes and not as nice as mudder, and he said--"
-
-"You shut up," commanded Huldah quickly, "and let me talk."
-
-"No," I intercepted, "I'd really be interested in hearing what he told
-Uncle Issachar. What was it, Demetrius, that your great-uncle said to
-you?"
-
-"He said," stated the imp, darting his tongue out in triumph at his
-victory over Huldah, "that he always thought you was a stiff."
-
-"He didn't say nothing of the kind!" declared Huldah. "He said you was
-stiff-necked, and that he presumed you would act more like a
-stepfather than the real thing. Well, as I was saying, he asked their
-names, and he liked them fine. Said they were so classy."
-
-"Didn't he say classic, Huldah?" inquired Rob.
-
-"Mebby. What's the difference?" snapped Huldah.
-
-"None," I assured her quickly, dodging a definition.
-
-"She told him--" began Emerald.
-
-"You shut up," again adjured Huldah, "or I'll never bake you one of
-those small pies no more."
-
-"Oh, please, Huldah," I coaxed. "Let us hear everything. I've always
-told you my life's secrets, and I don't mind what you or the boys told
-him."
-
-"Well, I suppose what he was going to tattle was that I thought the
-old gent might feel hurt, 'cause none of them was named after him, so
-I told him Polly's middle name was Issachar."
-
-"Why, Huldah," remonstrated Silvia.
-
-"Well, he's always wanted a middle name, and he's never been baptized,
-so you can stick it in and have him ducked next Sunday and then that
-will square that. 'Them Three' stuck to him like a hive of bees, and I
-was scairt for fear they'd let the cat out of the bag, and so long as
-they had put it in, I thought it might just as well stay in, but they
-were just as slick as grease in all they said. They'll hang in that
-rogues' gallery yet."
-
-"I suppose they were pretty--strenuous," said Silvia with a sigh.
-
-"They was more than that. The first afternoon right after dinner when
-he was sitting on the front porch, sleeping peaceful and snoring, that
-there one--" pointing to Pythagoras--
-
-"Tattle-tale!" he began, but I administered a cuff and he subsided
-into surprised silence.
-
-[Illustration: "He went to the front window and dropped a young kitten
-down on the old gent's head."]
-
-"He," said Huldah, looking pleased at this little attention to the
-boy, "went to the front window and dropped a young kitten down on the
-old gent's head. It clawed something fierce. We had just got things
-going smooth again when Emmy got one of his earaches. I roasted an
-onion and put in his ear, and what did he do but take it out of his
-ear and slip it down your poor uncle's back."
-
-"Why didn't you beat them?" I asked indignantly.
-
-"Because the old gent did that. He put 'em across his knee, and
-believe me, it was some licking they caught. They didn't let out a
-whimper and that pleased him."
-
-"Huh!" said Emerald. "Thag don't know how to cry. He hasn't got any
-tears, and old Uncle Iz didn't hurt me, because, you see, when I heard
-Thag getting his, I went and stuffed the Declaration of Independence,
-that book of stepdaddy's that Demetrius tore the pictures out of, in
-my pants."
-
-"Go on!" urged Rob delightedly. "What else did you all do? Uncle must
-have had some time. It would make a fine scenario. 'The first visit of
-the rich uncle.'"
-
-"Well," resumed Huldah. "One of 'em put red pepper in the old man's
-bed, and he like to sneeze his head off, but he said as how sneezing
-was healthy, and showed you'd got rid of a cold."
-
-"He never got on to the pepper," said Demetrius gleefully.
-
-"In the morning, that second one put a toad in his new uncle's pocket,
-and Emmy broke his specs. Then Meetie he dropped his watch. They used
-his razor to cut the lawn with. And then they took him down to the
-creek to go fishing, and they put the fish in Uncle's silk hat, and
-and----"
-
-"Stop!" implored Silvia, who was now in tears. "Uncle Issachar
-believes them mine! Ours! And that I brought them up! Oh, why did we
-ever go away?"
-
-"Oh, pshaw," exclaimed Huldah comfortingly, "he said you had brung
-them up fine; that they were no mollycoddles or Lizzie boys, and he
-didn't suppose you had so much sense as to leave them natural."
-
-"A left-handed one for mudder," laughed Beth.
-
-"He must be a very peculiar man--ready for the asylum, I should say,"
-commented Rob.
-
-"He would have been if he'd stayed any longer, or else I would have
-been," declared Huldah.
-
-"Couldn't you make them behave, someway?" asked Silvia.
-
-"Well, at first I tried to, and every time I pinched one of 'em when
-the old gent wasn't looking, or knocked 'em down when I got 'em alone,
-they would threaten to tell who they was, and then when I seen how
-your uncle liked the way they acted, I just let 'em go it, head on.
-And seeing as how they each brung you five thousand, I've treated 'em
-best I know how. They're worth it, now. They done one thing more that
-was awful. Could you stand it to hear?" turning to Silvia.
-
-"Please, Silvia," implored Rob.
-
-"Well," argued Silvia faintly. "I suppose we might as well know the
-worst."
-
-"You see the old gent didn't always get up to breakfast with the kids
-and one morning when I brought in the cakes Emmy looked up and
-grinned. I nearly dropped the plate. He had both sets of the old man's
-false teeth in his mouth. I got 'em back in his room without his
-waking, but I'd have liked a picture of Emmy."
-
-"Pythagoras," I demanded, when we had recovered from this recital,
-"why didn't you tell him who you were, and how you all came to be
-here with us?"
-
-"Because she is our mudder, and we are going to stay with her, always.
-We've got a snap. So has father and mother. And Ptolemy told us that
-if you ever got any kids, you'd get five thousand each for them, and I
-thought we'd just make that much for you. So we played Uncle Iz for
-it. Easy money, all right, all right."
-
-"Talk about fine financiering," quoth Rob. "'Them Three' will surely
-land on Wall Street."
-
-But poor Silvia had no heart for humor and was weeping silently.
-
-"Why, look here, my dear," I said in consolation, "this is a very
-simple matter to adjust. In the morning when you feel better, just
-write a full explanation of the affair and inclose your check for
-twenty-five thousand."
-
-Silvia quickly wiped away her tears.
-
-"I'll do it tonight, Lucien. I feel better now. I never thought of
-writing."
-
-Huldah and "Them Three" looked most lugubrious.
-
-"The old skinflint won't miss it as much as I would a penny," declared
-our faithful handmaiden. "And I'm sure you've earnt that twenty-five
-thousand if anyone ever did. You've had as much care and worry about
-them brats as you would if they'd been your own."
-
-"Huldah," I said severely, "there is a pretty stiff penalty for
-obtaining money under false pretences."
-
-"After all the pains we took to make things lively for him, so he
-wouldn't get bored and think he was having a poor time!" regretted
-Pythagoras.
-
-"And us watching every word we spoke so as not to give it away,"
-wailed Emerald.
-
-"Cake's all dough," muttered Demetrius.
-
-Ptolemy regarded the three disapprovingly. He had the old inscrutable
-look, the look that foreboded mischief, in his eyes.
-
-"You bungled, you fool kids!" he said in disgust, "and Huldah, what
-did you want to let on to mudder for that he thought we was hers? You
-ought to have torn up the note he left and just said he'd put
-twenty-five thousand in the bank for her."
-
-"Huh! you're just jealous because you weren't in the Uncle Izzy deal
-yourself," jeered Pythagoras. "You always think you're the only one
-that can do anything right."
-
-"I wish you had been here, Polly," said Huldah, "I am sure you could
-have worked it through somehow."
-
-"I wish I had stayed and put it across," he answered. "If you and the
-kids would only learn not to blab everything you know. It's the only
-way to work anything. Minute you tell a thing, it's all off."
-
-There was still a great deal of development work to be put on
-Ptolemy's moral standard.
-
-"You'll find, my lad," remonstrated Rob, "that honesty is the best
-policy."
-
-"I'd have been perfectly honest about it," he defended. "I would have
-told him the truth, and how our parents had deserted us, and how
-mudder took us in when we were homeless and was bringing us up like
-her own because she hadn't got any, and how stepdaddy wanted to turn
-us out, and she wouldn't let him, and then he would have decided
-against stepdaddy and given mudder the money so she could keep us."
-
-"Ptolemy," I said warningly, "there is a way of telling the truth, or
-rather of coloring white lies with enough truth to make them deceive,
-that is more dishonorable than an out and out lie."
-
-"Tell me, Ptolemy," asked Silvia, "how did you know about that offer
-of five thousand dollars for each child?"
-
-"I overheard it," he said guardedly; "but I can't remember where."
-
-"He heard me say so," confessed Huldah.
-
-"It was when he first come here and he was making us so much trouble,
-and I told him it was too bad we had to have other folks' brats around
-when, if we only had our own, they'd be bringing in something."
-
-The recital now broke up and Silvia sat down to write a long
-explanatory letter to Uncle Issachar. The next morning I procured her
-a check from the First National Bank and she filled it out.
-
-"Oh!" she said with indrawn breath, when she had asked me how to write
-twenty-five thousand dollars, "I never expected to be able to sign my
-name to a check for such an amount."
-
-"You never will again, I fear," was my sad prophecy.
-
-"It must feel rich," said Beth, "just to have a large check pass
-through your fingers."
-
-"Them Three" came the nearest to tears that they were able to do.
-
-"We worked so hard for it," they sighed.
-
-"So did I!" muttered Huldah.
-
-"I couldn't live a double life," declared Silvia.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-_In Which I Decide on Extreme Measures_
-
-
-Everyone in our house, which was now filled to overflowing--in fact,
-there were Polydores on sofas and in beds on the floor--save Silvia
-and myself, was on the alert for a response to the letter during the
-succeeding few days. Knowing Uncle Issachar, we felt sure he would
-make no response, or notice the matter in any way save to cash the
-check promptly.
-
-The monotony was somewhat relieved by the difficulties under which
-Beth and Rob were pursuing their courtship. On the third evening
-succeeding our return, Silvia and I started upstairs early to give
-them a chance to have the exclusive use of the library, the Polydores
-having all been sent to bed. As we were making some plausible excuse
-for going to our room, Beth remarked with a smile:
-
-"Your motive in retiring so early is commendable, but of no particular
-benefit to Rob and me. The Polydores, like the poor, we always have
-with us."
-
-"I saw that every one of them except Ptolemy was in bed at eight
-o'clock last night and the night before," said Silvia. "You don't mean
-to tell me--"
-
-"Yes, I do mean," laughed Beth. "Not Ptolemy, though. He has become
-too dignified to spy on us, but last night as we sat here on the
-settee, we heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from
-underneath."
-
-"How in the world did he ever squeeze under there?" I asked, gazing at
-the slight space between the floor and settee.
-
-[Illustration: "We heard a suppressed sneeze, and Rob pulled Emerald from
-underneath."]
-
-"He did look a little flattened, as if he had been put in a letter
-press," said Rob. "I gave him a dime to go to bed and stay there. Beth
-and I had just resumed our conversation when a still, small voice
-said: 'I'll go to bed for a dime, too.' I then hauled Demetrius from
-behind the davenport."
-
-"And the night before," said Beth, "when we were sitting on the porch,
-Pythagoras rolled off the roof, where he had been listening to us, and
-came down into the vines."
-
-"Now I'll stop that," I declared. "I'll tie them in their beds and
-lock the doors and windows."
-
-"No," refused Rob. "I'd like to try to circumvent them by their own
-weapons of wits. I have a little plan which I don't dare whisper to
-you lest their long-range ears get in their work. We are just about to
-start for a walk."
-
-"In this pouring rain!" protested Silvia.
-
-"We like the rain," he replied, "and we--are not going far."
-
-Pythagoras entered the room just then and looked astounded and
-disappointed when he saw Beth and Rob departing.
-
-"We are going out to a small party," Rob remarked to me, casually.
-
-It was after eleven when we heard them returning.
-
-"Do you suppose they have been walking all this time?" said Silvia in
-concern. "Beth wore no rubbers."
-
-The next day was Sunday and Huldah put into execution a plan for
-procuring one happy hour each week. This plan was the admission of the
-Polydores, _en masse_, to one of the Sunday schools. She chose the
-church most remote from home so they would be a long time going and
-coming, which she said would "help some."
-
-"Now," said Beth, as she watched them march away, "I can dare to tell
-you where we spent last evening. We were at the Polydore house next
-door. There is a little vine-screened porch on the other side of the
-house. Rob managed to open one of the windows and brought out a couple
-of chairs. It was as snug as could be."
-
-"I'll corral them every night," I said, "until you make your getaway,
-and I'll give you the key so you can go inside when it is cool or
-stormy."
-
-"We'll go around the block by way of precaution," said Rob.
-
-Presently Huldah returned from the Sunday school with triumphant
-mien.
-
-"They made them all into one class and put a redheaded woman with
-spectacles in for their teacher. I gave them street car tickets to
-come home on."
-
-When the Polydores returned, however, they were dragging Diogenes
-along and he looked quite weary.
-
-"Didn't you come home on the street car?" I asked Ptolemy.
-
-"No; we sold our tickets and got ice cream sodas," he explained. "We
-took turns carrying Diogenes on our backs."
-
-"You only had one ticket for yourself, and two half fares for Thag and
-Emmy," said Huldah suspiciously. "I thought Meetie and Di could ride
-free. You couldn't have sold them tickets for enough for sodies."
-
-"Rob gave us three nickels to put in the plate," said Pythagoras. "We
-only put in one of them, seeing we were all in one family and one
-class. That gave us four nickels for ice cream sodas and the clerk
-gave Di half a glass some one had left."
-
-"I gave you a penny for Di to put in," said Huldah. "What did you do
-with that?"
-
-"We wanted him to put it in, and when they took up the collection, he
-wouldn't give it," said Emerald. "I tried to take it away from him
-and he swallowed it. The redhead teacher was awful scared, but I told
-her he was used to swallowing things and that you said he carried a
-whole department store in his insides."
-
-"Poor little Di," said Silvia; "it's the only way he has of keeping
-things away from you all."
-
-That night I saw to it personally that each and every Polydore was in
-his little bed. It should have aroused my suspicions that none of them
-rebelled, or had evinced the slightest degree of interest or curiosity
-when Beth and Rob announced their intention of going out for the
-evening.
-
-At ten-thirty the lovers returned, bringing in Pythagoras, who was
-clad in his pajamas.
-
-"Where did you pick him up?" I asked in astonishment.
-
-"He picked us up," said Beth.
-
-"He was wise, maybe, in discovering where we were," said Rob, "but he
-fell down when he tried to work off the ghost screeches on us. We
-recognized them at once, and ran him down inside, so our party broke
-up."
-
-"Come here, Pythagoras," I commanded.
-
-He obeyed promptly and fearlessly.
-
-"How did you know they were there, and when did you go over there?"
-
-"I was playing over in our house today," he replied, "and I found one
-of Beth's hairpins with the little stones in, in the big chair, so I
-knew that was where they hid last night. As soon as you went down
-stairs tonight, I got out the window and slid down the roof and came
-over to scare them."
-
-"You've missed a lot of sleep the last few nights," I said quietly,
-"so you will have to make it up. You can stay in bed all day
-tomorrow."
-
-"Hold on, Lucien!" exclaimed Rob. "Tomorrow's the big baseball game of
-the season, and I promised to take them all."
-
-"So much the better," I said. "He will learn to mind."
-
-Pythagoras looked as if he had been struck, and quickly put his arms
-across his eyes. In a moment his shoulders were heaving. At last I had
-found a vulnerable spot in the stoic, and I began to relent.
-
-"See here, Pythagoras," I said, "if I let you up in time to go to the
-game, will you promise me something?"
-
-"Anything," came in a muffled voice.
-
-"Will you promise not to spy on Beth and Rob and keep Emerald and
-Demetrius from doing it?"
-
-"Yes," he promised quickly, his arm coming down and his face
-brightening. "Sure I will, but I did want to hear what they said."
-
-"Why?" asked Rob interestedly.
-
-"We're getting up a show, and Em is going to take the part of a girl
-and he spoons with Tolly, and we didn't know what to have them say to
-each other."
-
-"I'll rehearse you on the play, and prompt you," said Beth with a
-little giggle.
-
-"Come on upstairs with me now," I said to Pythagoras.
-
-When I landed him at his door, he leaned up against me, and rubbed his
-cheek against my arm.
-
-"Thank you for letting me go to the game," he said.
-
-I found myself responding to his affectionate advance. This would
-clearly never do. I couldn't let another Polydore squeeze himself into
-my regard.
-
-"Silvia," I said abruptly, as I came into our room, "we must really
-make some immediate plan for disposing of the Polydores, or, at
-least, of 'Them Three.'"
-
-"Huldah is managing them tolerably well," demurred Silvia. "Since they
-depreciated in market value from five thousand per to nothing, she has
-resumed her former harsh treatment of them."
-
-"Well, we are not going to keep them," I replied with finality. "We
-are under no obligations to do so. I am going to put them in a school
-for boys and use the blank check Felix Polydore left to pay for their
-tuition."
-
-"I suppose that is what we will have to do," she admitted with a
-little sigh. "Yet, Lucien, it doesn't seem quite right. If they are in
-a boys' school, they will keep on right along the same lines. They
-need home influence and contact with women. Demetrius is fond of music
-and will sit still and listen when I play. Emerald obeyed me today the
-first time I spoke, and I even thought I saw a glimmer of good in
-Pythagoras."
-
-I didn't tell her that this glimmer was what had decided me to dispose
-of him.
-
-"It would, doubtless, be better for them to stay," I admitted, "but I
-am not going to be a martyr to the cause. They are going."
-
-The next morning I wrote for catalogues and prospectus to the
-different schools, and I felt as if three old men of the sea had been
-lifted from my shoulders.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-_Which Has to Do with Some Letters_
-
-
-One morning when I came down to my office, I found a letter postmarked
-from the city in which Uncle Issachar lived addressed to me. I opened
-it and found inclosed, with seal unbroken, the letter Silvia had
-mailed to her uncle and which she had marked "personal." There was a
-note addressed to me accompanying it:
-
- "Dear Sir:
-
- "I am returning herewith your personal letter to Mr. Innes, as he
- has gone to South America and left no forwarding address. Should
- such be received from him at any future date, you will be duly
- notified thereof.
-
- "Very truly yours,
- "Chester K. Winslow,
- "Secretary."
-
-I read the above to Silvia at luncheon. She was grievously disappointed
-because her uncle had not received her letter of explanation.
-
-"It is most fortunate," she said, "that I sent it in one of your
-office envelopes."
-
-As usual, she had found the bright spot she always looked for and
-generally discovered.
-
-"I wouldn't care," she said, "to have Uncle Issachar's private
-secretary or the dead-letter office know all our private affairs, but
-I shall feel like an impostor until Uncle Issachar is undeceived."
-
-"I feel a hunch," said Rob, "that Uncle Issachar will run across
-Doctor Felix and his wife down there in Chili and find you out."
-
-"He may run across the Polydores," I replied, "but he'll never find
-out from them that they are the parents of Silvia's children. They
-would not mention a subject in which they have so little interest."
-
-"But," argued Beth, "naturally they'd tell him where they lived, and
-then, of course, he'd say he had a niece living in the same town. They
-would inquire her name and inform him that they were her near
-neighbors, and then he'd tell them what fine sons you have, and then,
-of course, the Polydores would claim their own."
-
-"Which theory goes to show," said Silvia, "how little you know Uncle
-Issachar and the Polydore seniors. He would not think of speaking to
-strangers, and if he did, he wouldn't say any of those usual
-conversational things you mentioned. The Polydores wouldn't be
-interested, in the least, in knowing he had a niece unless she
-happened to know something about antiques, and if he should describe
-her children, she wouldn't recognize them."
-
-After luncheon I went out on the porch. While I sat there, the mail
-carrier came along and handed me a letter--a returned letter. It was
-directed in Ptolemy's round hand to Mr. Issachar Innes. He had
-evidently used the envelope to Silvia's letter to her uncle as his
-model, for the address was written in the same way. "Personal" was
-added in the left-hand corner, and his name and our house number was
-in the upper left-hand corner.
-
-I went into the library where my wife, Beth, Rob, and Ptolemy were
-sitting.
-
-"Ptolemy," I said, handing him the letter, "here is your communication
-to Uncle Issachar, returned."
-
-He lost some of his usual _sang froid_ and appeared quite disconcerted.
-
-"Why, Ptolemy," exclaimed Silvia in consternation, "what in the world
-did you write to Uncle Issachar about?"
-
-Ptolemy had recovered and was quite himself again.
-
-"About us," he said innocently. "As the oldest of our family, I
-thought I ought to do a little explaining."
-
-"And I think," I said, looking at him keenly, "that we have the right
-to know what your explanation was."
-
-Ptolemy handed me over the letter.
-
-"Read it aloud," he said, with the air of one who is proud of his
-productions.
-
-Rob's eyes shone in anticipation.
-
-I broke the seal. A note from the secretary fell out. It was an
-apology for not returning the letter sooner, but it had been
-inadvertently mislaid. I then read aloud the letter Ptolemy had
-written:
-
- "Dear Uncle Issachar
-
- "I am sorry Diogenes and I were away when you were here. You
- thought the others were fine, but you should have seen--Diogenes.
- I hope you will send mudder back her check, because there is lots
- of things she needs, and it takes a lot of money to take care of
- all us. You see our own father and mother don't want to be
- bothered with us and they went away and left us, and so we are
- living with mudder the same as if we were really her adopted
- children, and if her own would have been worth five thousand per
- to you, I think her adopted children ought to be worth half as
- much anyway, so it would only be fair to send her a check for
- $12,500 anyway, and if you are a good sport like the kids said you
- were, you'll send back her check.
-
- "Yours truly,
- "P. Issachar Polydore Wade."
-
-Rob's laughter was so free and spontaneous that I had to join in
-against my will. Ptolemy, who had seemed a little apprehensive of the
-verdict, looked accordingly relieved.
-
-"That's a fine letter, young man," approved Rob. "Stepdaddy ought to
-take you into his law firm."
-
-"No," declared Beth. "I think Ptolemy has inherited his mother's gift.
-He should be a writer."
-
-"Not on your life!" cried Ptolemy with feeling. "I want to live
-things instead of writing about them."
-
-A tear or two came into Silvia's eyes.
-
-"It was very sweet in you, Ptolemy, to try to get the money for
-mudder."
-
-I felt that all this commendation was bad for Ptolemy, and that it was
-up to me to take a reef in his sails.
-
-"It was a well-meant letter, Ptolemy," I said, "and I know that your
-motive was unselfish, but it is very poor policy to meddle in other
-people's affairs. Meddlers are mischief makers in spite of their good
-intentions. I am very glad it did not fall into Uncle Issachar's
-hands."
-
-Ptolemy looked sufficiently squelched.
-
-"By the way, Silvia," I said. "I wrote Mr. Winslow and told him not to
-forget to forward Uncle Issachar's address as soon as he possibly
-could do so, as I had matters of importance to communicate to him."
-
-"He may travel about like father and mother," said Ptolemy, again
-regaining confidence, "so why don't you put that check for twenty-five
-thousand in the Savings Department and get the interest on it
-anyway?"
-
-"I think, Ptolemy," said Rob, "that you are too good a financier,
-after all, to become a lawyer. I will go back to my first conviction
-that you should be a promoter."
-
-"We'll give him to Uncle Issachar," I proposed, "for a partner."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-_"The Money We Earnt for You"_
-
-
-Life went on uneventfully save for the dire doings of "Them Three."
-Knowing that they were to be sent to school, they were having their
-last fling at life untrammeled. September came, and Rob set the day
-for his departure, as he was going home to arrange his affairs, so he
-and Beth could leave for an extended honeymoon trip. I planned to go
-with Rob and install the Polydore three in their distant school. They
-were so despondent at leaving, as the time drew near, that a feeling
-of gloom hung over the household, all the members of which, even to
-Huldah, urged me to relent. But I remained adamant until the evening
-before the day set for the dissolution of the Polydore family, when
-something happened that changed all our plans.
-
-We were assembled in the library in a state of forced cheerfulness
-when the doorbell rang. I answered it, and receipted for a telegram
-which I opened and read in the hall. It was from Chester K. Winslow.
-
-"Silvia," I said gravely, as I returned to the library, "your Uncle
-Issachar is dead. Died in South America. Heart disease. Very sudden."
-
-Conflicting emotions were depicted in Silvia's expression.
-
-The thought uppermost in all our minds was expressed simultaneously by
-"Them Three."
-
-"Gee! Then you can keep the money we earnt for you."
-
-"You know," interpolated Rob in soft-pedaled tone, "they are going to
-train school children toward the military--teach the young ideas how
-to shoot, as it were. It won't be long before they are ordered to
-Mexico to protect us."
-
-"If Them Three ever meets that there Viller man," commented Huldah
-confidently, "the fur will fly some."
-
-"Lucien," said Silvia thoughtfully, "we are under obligations to these
-children, you see, after all."
-
-"Yes," I acknowledged with a sigh, "seeing they are now ours, bought
-and paid for, I suppose we'll have to treat them as such."
-
-"You wouldn't send your own kids away to school," said Pythagoras
-significantly.
-
-"No," I reluctantly allowed, answering the protest of Pythagoras, "and
-we won't send you. You will all go to the public school tomorrow."
-
-The deafening Polydore powwow that followed made me hope that Uncle
-Issachar had met with his just deserts.
-
-
-
-
-"By the author of Mildew Manse."
-
-AMARILLY OF CLOTHES-LINE ALLEY
-
-By BELLE K. MANIATES
-
-Illustrated. 12mo. $1.00 net.
-
-A book for the many who are weary of problem novels. How prosperity came
-to the Jenkins family, how Amarilly got an education, how the Boarder
-married Lily Rose and built the Annex, and the adventures of the rector's
-surplice, are told in a wholesome little story, between whose covers await
-many laughs, and a tear or two as well.
-
-Amarilly is blessed with a large family and amiable neighbors, and their
-doings are amusing, but her fancies and devices are captivating.... The
-little heroine is all right.--_New York Sun._
-
-The sort of story which pulls at the heartstrings of all readers who like
-a real and genuine character.... No one can afford to miss the sweet humor
-and helpful cheeriness which the author serves in generous
-measure.--_Boston Globe_.
-
-"Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley" is a dear companion for vacation days
-and comes deservedly under the books of real amusement.... Dear Amarilly!
-she brightens every hour spent with her.--_Buffalo News_.
-
-LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Publishers
-
-34 Beacon Street, Boston
-
-
-
-
-
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