Carrots: Just a Little Boy. Molesworth Mrs.

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if it was ready, for it's to-morrow morning now."

      "If what's ready?" said Floss, for she was rather sleepy still.

      "The plan for getting money."

      "Oh!" said Floss. "Yes," she went on after thinking for a minute, "yes, it's nearly ready; at least I'm almost sure it is. But it's not quite ready for telling you, yet, Carrots."

      Carrots looked terribly disappointed.

      "I think," went on Floss, "I think it will be ready for telling you after breakfast. And if you like, you may listen to something I am going to ask nurse at breakfast, and, perhaps, that will help you to guess what the plan is."

      At breakfast time Carrots was all ears. All ears and no tongue, so that nurse began to wonder if he was ill.

      "I shouldn't like you to be ill the very day after Master Jack has gone," she said anxiously (Jack had gone up to town by the night train with his father), "one trouble at a time is quite enough for your poor mamma."

      "Is Jack's going to the big school a trouble?" asked Floss, opening her eyes very wide, "I thought they were all very glad."

      "My dear," said nurse solemnly, "one may be glad of a thing and sorry too. And changes mostly are good and bad together."

      Floss did not say any more, but she seemed to be thinking about what nurse had said. Carrots was thinking too.

      "When I'm a man," he said at last, "I won't go to a big school if Floss doesn't want me to."

      Nurse smiled. "There's time enough to see about that," she said, "get on with your breakfast, Master Carrots; you'll never grow a big boy if you don't eat plenty."

      "Nurse," said Floss, suddenly, "what's the dearest thing we eat? what costs most?"

      "Meat, now-a-days, Miss Flossie," said nurse.

      "Could we do without it?" asked Floss. Nurse shook her head.

      "What could we do without?" continued the child. "We couldn't do without bread or milk, I suppose. What could we do without that costs money?"

      "Most things do that," said nurse, who began to have a glimmering of what Floss was driving at, "but the money's well spent in good food to make you strong and well."

      "Then isn't there anything we could do without – without it hurting us, I mean?" said Floss, in a tone of disappointment.

      "Oh yes," said nurse, "I daresay there is. Once a little boy and girl I knew went without sugar in their tea for a month, and their grandmother gave them sixpence each instead."

      "Sixpence!" exclaimed Floss, her eyes gleaming.

      "Sixpence each," corrected nurse.

      "Two sixpences, that would be a shilling. Carrots, do you hear?"

      Carrots had been listening with might and main, but was rather puzzled.

      "Would two sixpennies pay for two hoops?" he whispered to Floss, pulling her pinafore till she bent her head down to listen.

      "Of course they would. At least I'm almost sure. I'll ask nurse. Nurse, dear," she went on in a louder voice, "do you think we might do that way – Carrots and I – about sugar, I mean?"

      "I don't see that it would do you any harm," said nurse. "You must ask your mamma."

      But Floss hesitated.

      "I shouldn't much like to ask mamma," she said, and Carrots, who was listening so intently that he had forgotten all about his bread and milk, noticed that Floss's face grew red. "I shouldn't much like to ask mamma, because, nursie, dear, it is only that we want to get money for something for ourselves, and if we told mamma, it would be like asking her to give us the money. It wouldn't be any harm for us not to eat any sugar in our tea for a month, and you could keep the sugar in a packet all together, nurse, and then you might tell mamma that we had saved it, and she would give us a shilling for it. It would be quite worth a shilling, wouldn't it, nurse?"

      "Oh, yes," said nurse, "I am sure your mamma would say it was." Then she considered a little. She was one of those truly trustworthy nurses whose notions are strong on the point of everything being told to "mamma." But she perfectly understood Floss's hesitation, and though she might not have been able to put her feeling into words, she felt that it might do the child harm to thwart her delicate instinct.

      "Well, nurse?" said Floss, at last.

      "Well, Miss Flossie, I don't think for once I shall be doing wrong in letting you have a secret. When will you begin? This is Thursday; on Saturday your mamma will give me the week's sugar – suppose you begin on Sunday? But does Master Carrots quite understand?"

      "Oh, yes," said Floss, confidently, "he understands, don't you dear?"

      "Oh, yes," said Carrots, "we won't eat not any sugar, Floss and me, for a great long time, and nurse will tie it up in a parcel with a string round, and mamma will buy it and give us a great lot of pennies, and then, and then" – he began to jump about with delight – "Floss and me will go to the toy-shop and buy our hoops, won't we Floss? Oh I wish it was time to go now, don't you Floss?"

      "Yes, dear, a month's a good while to wait," said Floss sympathisingly. "May we go out on the shore again by ourselves this afternoon, nurse?"

      "If it doesn't rain," said nurse; and Floss, who had half an hour to wait before it was time for her to join her sisters in the school-room, went to the window to have a look at the weather. She had not stood there for more than a minute when Carrots climbed up on to a chair beside her.

      "It's going to rain, Floss," he said, "there are the little curly clouds in the sky that Matthew says come when it rains."

      Floss looked up at the sky and down at the sea.

      "The sea looks cross to-day," she said.

      There were no pretty ripples this morning; the water looked dull and leaden.

      "Floss," said Carrots, with a sigh, "I do get so tired when you are at lessons all the morning and I have nucken to do. Can't you think of a plan for me to have something to do?" Carrots' head was running on "plans."

      Floss considered.

      "Would you like to tidy my drawer for me?" she said. "This isn't the regular day for tidying it, but it is in a mess, because I turned all the things upside down when I was looking for our race horses' reins yesterday. Will you put it quite tidy, Carrots?"

      "Oh, yes, quite, dear Floss," said Carrots, "I'll put all the dolls neat, and all the pieces, and all the sewing things. Oh, dear Floss, what nice plans you make."

      So when Floss had gone to her lessons, and nurse was busy with her morning duties, in and out of the room, so as not to lose sight of Carrots, but still too busy to amuse him, he, with great delight, set to work at the drawer. It certainly was much in need of "tidying," and after trying several ways, Carrots found that the best plan was to take everything out, and then put the different things back again in order. It took him a good while, and his face got rather red with stooping down to the floor to pick up all the things he had deposited there, for the drawer itself was too heavy for him to lift out bodily, if, indeed, such an idea had occurred to him. It was the middle drawer of the cupboard, the top part of which was divided into shelves where the nursery cups and saucers and those sort of things

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