Children's Book Classics - Kate Douglas Wiggin Edition: 11 Novels & 120+ Short Stories for Children. Kate Douglas Wiggin

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Children's Book Classics - Kate Douglas Wiggin Edition: 11 Novels & 120+ Short Stories for Children - Kate Douglas Wiggin

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Here, mamacita, is the rocker for you on one side; here, Edgar, is our one ‘man’s chair’ for you on the other. Stretch out your feet as lazily as you like on my new goatskin rug. You are our only home-friend in San Francisco; and oh, how mamma will spoil you whenever she has the chance! Now talk to each other cosily while the ‘angel of the house’ cooks dinner.”

      It may be mentioned here that as Mrs. Chadwick’s monthly remittances varied from sixty to seventy-five dollars, but never reached the promised eighty-five, Polly had dismissed little Yung Lee for a month, two weeks of which would be the Christmas vacation, and hoped in this way to make up deficiencies. The sugar-bowl and ginger-jar were stuffed copiously with notes of hand signed “Cigar-box,” but held a painfully small amount of cash.

      “Can’t I go out and help Polly?” asked Edgar, a little later. “I should never have agreed to stay and dine if I had known that she was the cook.”

      “Go out, by all means; but you need n’t be anxious. Ours is a sort of doll-house-keeping. We buy everything cooked, as far as possible, and Polly makes play of the rest. It all seems so simple and interesting to plan for two when we have been used to twelve and fourteen.”

      “May I come in?” called Edgar from the tiny dining-room to Polly, who had laid aside her Sunday finery and was clad in brown Scotch gingham mostly covered with ruffled apron.

      “Yes, if you like; but you won’t be spoiled here, so don’t hope it. Mamma and I are two very different persons. Tie that apron round your waist; I ‘ve just begun the salad-dressing; is your intelligence equal to stirring it round and round and pouring in oil drop by drop, while I take up the dinner?”

      “Fully. Just try me. I ‘ll make it stand on its head in three minutes!”

      Meanwhile Polly set on the table a platter of lamb-chops, some delicate potato chips which had come out of a pasteboard box, a dish of canned French peas, and a mound of currant-jelly.

      “That is good,” she remarked critically, coming back to her apprentice, who was toiling with most unnecessary vigor, so that the veins stood out boldly on his forehead. “You’re really not stupid, for a boy; and you have n’t ‘made a mess,’ which is more than I hoped. Now, please pour the dressing over those sliced tomatoes; set them on the side-table in the banquet-hall; put the plate in the sink (don’t stare at me!); open a bottle of Apollinaris for mamma,—dig out the cork with a hairpin, I ‘ve lost the corkscrew; move three chairs up to the dining-table (oh, it’s so charming to have three!); light the silver candlesticks in the centre of the table; go in and bring mamma out in style; see if the fire needs coal; and I’ll be ready by that time.”

      “I can never remember, but I fly! Oh, what an excellent slave-driver was spoiled in you!” said Edgar.

      The simple dinner was delicious, and such a welcome change from the long boarding-house table at which Edgar had eaten for over a year. The candles gave a soft light; there was a bowl of yellow flowers underneath them. Mrs. Oliver looked like an elderly Dresden-china shepherdess in her pale blue wrapper, and Polly did n’t suffer from the brown gingham, with its wide collar and cuffs of buff embroidery, and its quaint full sleeves. She had burned two small blisters on her wrist: they were scarcely visible to the naked eye, but she succeeded in obtaining as much sympathy for them as if they had been mortal wounds. Her mother murmured ‘Poor darling wrist’ and ‘kissed the place to make it well.’ Edgar found a bit of thin cambric and bound up the injured member with cooling flour, Mistress Polly looking demurely on, thinking meanwhile how much safer he was with them than with the objectionable Tony. After the lamb-chops and peas had been discussed, Edgar insisted on changing the plates and putting on the tomato salad; then Polly officiated at the next course, bringing in coffee, sliced oranges, and delicious cake from the neighboring confectioner’s.

      “Can’t I wash the dishes?” asked Edgar, when the feast was ended.

      “They are not going to be washed, at least by us. This is a great occasion, and the little girl downstairs is coming up to clear away the dinner things.”

      Then there was the pleasant parlor again, and when the candles were lighted in the old-fashioned mirror over the fireplace, everything wore a festive appearance. The guitar was brought out, and Edgar sang college songs till Mrs. Oliver grew so bright that she even hummed a faint second from her cosy place on the sofa.

      And then Polly must show Edgar how she had made Austin Dobson’s “Milkmaid Song” fit “Nelly Ely,” and she must teach him the pretty words.

      “Across the grass,

       I saw her pass,

       She comes with tripping pace;

       A maid I know,

       March winds blow

       Her hair across her face.

       Hey! Dolly! Ho! Dolly!

       Dolly shall be mine,

       Before the spray is white with May

       Or blooms the eglantine.”

      By this time the bandage had come off the burned wrist, and Edgar must bind it on again, and Polly shrieked and started when he pinned the end over, and Edgar turned pale at the thought of his brutal awkwardness, and Polly burst into a ringing peal of laughter and confessed that the pin had n’t touched her, and Edgar called her a deceitful little wretch. This naturally occupied some time, and then there was the second verse:—

      “The March winds blow,

       I watch her go,

       Her eye is blue and clear;

       Her cheek is brown

       And soft as down

       To those who see it near.

       Hey! Dolly! Ho! Dolly!

       Dolly shall be mine,

       Before the spray is white with May

       Or blooms the eglantine.”

      After this singing-lesson was over it was nearly eleven o’clock, but up to this time Edgar had shown no realizing sense of his engagements.

      “The dinner is over, and the theatre party is safe,” thought Polly. “Now comes the ‘tug of war,’ that mysterious game of billiards.”

      But Mrs. Oliver was equal to the occasion. When Edgar looked at his watch, she said: “Polly, run and get Mrs. Noble’s last letter, dear;” and then, when she was alone with Edgar, “My dear boy, I have a favor to ask of you, and you must be quite frank if it is not convenient for you to grant it. As to-morrow will be Saturday, perhaps you have no recitations, and if not, would it trouble you too much to stay here all night and attend to something for me in the morning? I will explain the matter, and then you can answer me more decidedly. I have received a letter from a Washington friend who seems to think it possible that a pension may be granted to me. He sends a letter of introduction to General M––, at the Presidio, who, he says, knew Colonel Oliver, and will be able to advise me in the matter. I am not well enough to go there for some days, and of course I do not like to send Polly alone. If you could go out with her, give him the letter of introduction, and ask him kindly to call upon us at his leisure, and find out also if there is any danger in a little delay just now while I am ill, it would be a very great favor.”

      “Of

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