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VII OLD TIMES AGAIN

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don't let me look--oh! don't let me look," cried polly in the old gig, and twisting around, she hid

her face against the faded green cloth side. "i ought not to see the little brown house before

mamsie and the others do."

"i'll turn down the lane," said the little doctor, "so"; and suiting the action to the word, polly could

feel that they were winding down the narrow little road over toward grandma bascom's. she

could almost smell the violets and anemones under the carpet of snow, and could scarcely restrain

herself from jumping out for a riotous run.

"don't go too far away," she cried in sudden alarm. "we must be there by the time the stage does."

and she applied her eye to the little circular glass in the back of the gig. "will it never come--oh!

here it is, here it is, dear dr. fisher." and with a quick flourish around of the old horse, they were

soon before the little brown house, and helping out the inmates of the stage, who with more speed

than grace were hurrying over the steps.

joel was down before mr. tisbett had fairly drawn up in front of the gate. "hold on," roared the

stage driver, "i don't want you to break your neck with me."

"it's really here!" cried phronsie with wide eyes, standing quite still on a hummock of frozen

snow, with her eyes riveted on the house. "it really is!" polly had raced up the winding path, and

over the flat stone to drop a kiss on the little old door.

"oh! oh! mamsie, do come!" she cried to mrs. pepper on the path.

"hum! i think, jasper, you and i will let them alone for a few moments," said mr. king, who was

still within the stage. "here, my good fellow," to mr. tisbett, "you say it's all comfortable in there

for them?"

"yes, yes, sir," said mr. tisbett heartily. "good land! mis' henderson had her boys come down

airly this mornin' and make the fires; and there's a mighty sight of things to eat." the stage-driver

put one foot on the hind wheel to facilitate conversation, and smacked his lips.

"all very well. now you may drive us down the road a bit," said mr. king, withdrawing his head

to the depths of the lumbering old vehicle again.

"ain't goin' in?" cried mr. tisbett, opening his round eyes at him in astonishment.

"get up and drive us on, i say," commanded the old gentleman, "and cease your talking," which

had the effect to send honest mr. tisbett clambering expeditiously up to the box, where he

presently revenged himself by driving furiously over all the hard frozen ruts he could quickly

select, determined not to stop till he was obliged to.

"goodness!" exclaimed mr. king within, holding to the strap at the side, as well as to the leather

band of the swinging seat in front. "what an abominable road!"

"the road is well enough," said jasper, who couldn't bear to have a word uttered against

badgertown, "it's the fellow's driving that makes it rough. here, can't you be a little more careful

to keep the road?" he called, thrusting his head out of the window. but he only narrowly escaped

losing his brown traveling cap for his pains, as the stage gave a worse lurch than before, to

introduce a series of creakings and joltings hitherto unparalleled.

"i cannot endure this much longer," said old mr. king, growing white around the mouth, and

wishing he had strength for one-half the exclamations he felt inwardly capable of. outside, honest

mr. tisbett was taking solid comfort in the reflection that he was teaching a rich city man that he

could not approach with anything less than respect a citizen of badgertown.

"ain't i as good as he?" cried mr. tisbett to himself, with an extra cut to the off horse, as he spied

a sharp ragged edge of ice along the cart track in front of him. "now that's good; that'll shake

him," he added cheerfully. "land! but i hain't been spoke to so since i was sassed at school by jim

bently, and then i licked him enough to pay twice over. g'lang there--easy!"

the first thing he knew, one of the glass windows was shivered to fragments; the bits flying off

along the quiet road, to fall a gleaming shower upon the snow.

"whoa!" called mr. tisbett, to his smoking horses, and leaning over, he cried, "what's the matter

in there?"

"the matter is," said jasper, putting his face out, "that as i could not possibly make you hear my

calls, i chose to break the window. have the goodness to let my father and me at once out of this

vehicle."

mr. tisbett got down slowly over the wheel. "beg your pardon," he said awkwardly, pulling open

the door, "ain't you goin' to ride back?"

"heavens!" cried mr. king. he was glad to find he could ejaculate so much as he tremblingly

worked his way out to terra firma. "nothing on earth would tempt me to step foot inside there

again."

"here is the money for your window," said jasper, putting a bill into the fur mitten, covering mr.

tisbett's brawny right hand. "kindly bring our traps to the little brown house; here, father, take my

arm," and he ran after the tall figure, picking its way along the frozen road.

"hey--what's this?" exclaimed mr. tisbett, looking into the center of his fur mitten, "five dollars!

gee--thumps! i ain't a-goin' to take it, after shaking that old party almost to pieces."

he stood staring at the bill in stupid perplexity till the uneasy movements of his horses warned

him that his position was not exactly the proper one for a stage-driver who was on his box from

morning till night, so he clambered over the wheel, full of vexed thoughts, and carefully tucked

the bill under the old cushion before he took his seat.

"ill give it back to him, that's cert'in," he said, picking up the reins, "and p'raps they've had enough

walkin' so they'll let me pick 'em up," which raised him out of his depression not a little.

but the stern faces of the old gentleman and the tall boy smote him with a chill, long before he

passed them, and he drove by silently, well knowing it would not do to broach the subject by so

much as a look.

not daring to go near the little brown house without the occupants of the stage who had driven

down the road with him, mr. tisbett drew up miserably to a convenient angle, and waited till the

two came up. then without trusting himself to think, he sprang to the ground, and with shame

written all over his honest face, called out, "see here, you young chap, i want to speak to you,

when you've got him in the house."

"i will see you then," said jasper, as the two hurried on to meet the peppers rushing out from the

little brown house, and down the small path.

"i've made an awful mess for 'em all, and they just come home," groaned mr. tisbett; drawing his

fur mitten across his eyes, and leading his horses, he followed at a funeral pace, careful not to stop

at the gate until the door was closed, when he began furiously to unload.

a footstep crunching the snow, broke into the noise he was making. "hoh! well," he exclaimed,

pausing with a trunk half-off the rack, "it's a mighty awkward thing for a man to say he's sorry, but

you bet i be, as cert'in as my name's john tisbett." his face became so very red that jasper

hastened to put his young shoulder under the trunk, a movement that only added to the stage-

driver's distress.

"it don't pay to get mad, now i tell you," declared mr. tisbett, dumping the trunk down on the

snow, and then drawing himself to his full height; "fust place, your pa sassed me, and"--

"he didn't intend to," cried jasper eagerly, "and i'll apologize for him, if that's what you want." he

laid his strong right hand in the old fur mitten.

"good land! tain't what i want," cried honest john, but he gripped the hand nevertheless, a fact

that the boy never forgot; "i say i'm sorry i shook up your pa."

"his age ought to have protected him," said the boy simply.

"sho! that's a fact," cried mr. tisbett, sinking in deeper distress, "but how is anybody to remember

he's so old, when he steps so almighty high, as if he owned all badgertown--say!"

"i think we shall be good friends, mr. tisbett," said jasper cordially, as he turned to wave his hand

toward the little brown house; simultaneously the door opened, and all the young peppers and

whitneys rushed out to help in the delightful unloading.

it was well along in the afternoon. the dusk of the december twilight shut down speedily, around

the little brown house and its happy occupants, but no one wanted the candles lighted till the last

moment.

"oh, polly!" cried joel, who was prancing as of old over the kitchen floor, "don't you remember

that night when you said you wished you had two hundred candles, and you'd light them all at

once?"

"i said a good many silly things in those days," said polly meditatively, and smoothing phronsie's

yellow hair that was lying across her lap.

"some silly ones, and a good many wise ones," observed mother pepper, over in her little old

rocker in the west window, where she used to sit sewing up coats and sacks for the village

storekeeper. "you kept us together many a time, polly, when nothing else could."

"oh! no, i didn't, mamsie," protested polly, guilty of contradicting, "you and bessie did. i just

washed dishes, and swept up, and"--

"baked and brewed, and fussed and stewed," finished joel, afraid of being too sentimental.

"polly was just lovely in those days," said davie, coming across the room to lay a cool cheek

against her rosy one. "i liked the rainy days best when we all could stay in the house, and hear her

sing and tell stories while she was working."

"she was cross sometimes," cried joel, determined not to let reminiscences become too

comfortable; "she used to scold me just awfully, i know."

polly broke into a merry laugh; yet she exclaimed, "you poor joey, i suppose i was dreadful!"

"you didn't catch one half as bad scoldings as belonged to you," put in ben, thrusting another stick

in the stove. "you were a bad lot, joe, in those days."

"and not over good in these," cried old mr. king, ensconced in the snuggest corner in the seat of

honor, the high-backed rocker that comforted phronsie after her little toe was hurt. "there, now,

my boy, how's that?" with a grim smile.

"do you remember when the old stove used to plague you, polly?" cried joel, suddenly changing

the conversation. "and how ben's putty was everlastingly tumbling out? hoh--hoh!"

"and you two boys were always stuffing up the holes for me, when ben was away," cried polly,

with affectionate glances at davie and joel.

"i didn't so much," said joel honestly, "dave was always giving boot- tops and such things."

"boot-tops!" repeated mr. king in astonishment. "bless me, i didn't know that they had anything

in common with stoves."

"oh! that was before we knew you," said joel, ready in advance of any one else with the

explanation; "it wasn't this stove. dr. fisher gave polly this one after she had the measles; but it

was a lumbering old affair that was full of holes that had to be stopped up with anything we could

get. and leather was the best; and davie saved all the old boot- heels and tops he could find, you

know."

"oh!" said the old gentleman, wondering if other revelations would come to light about the early

days of the peppers.

"isn't dr. fisher lovely?" cried polly, with sparkling eyes, "just the same as ever. mamsie, i ought

to do something for him.

"he is as good as gold," assented mrs. pepper heartily. "you've done something, i'm sure, polly.

the medical books you bought out of your pocket money, and sent him, pleased him more than

anything you could give him."

"but i want to do something now," said polly. "oh! just think how good he was to us."

"may we never forget it!" exclaimed mrs. pepper, wiping her eyes.

"but he's very unwise," said mr. king a trifle testily, "not to take up with my offer to establish him

in the town. a man like him could easily hold a good practice, because the fellow's got ability."

"oh! dr. fisher wouldn't leave badgertown," cried all the peppers in a bunch. "and what would

the poor people here do without him?" finished polly.

"well, well, never mind, he won't come to town, and that's enough," said the old gentleman

quickly. "aside from that, he's a sensible chap, and one quite to my liking."

"oh, polly!" cried phronsie suddenly, and lifting her head, she fastened her brown eyes on the face

above her, "wasn't mamsie's birthday cake good?"

"the flowers were pretty, but the cake was heavy, don't you remember?" said polly, who hadn't

recovered from that grief even yet.

"i thought it was just beautiful," cried mrs. pepper hastily. "no one could have baked it better in

the old stove you had. i'm sure we ate it all up, every crumb."

"we kept it in the old cupboard," cried joel, rushing over to the corner to swing the door open.

"and we never once peeked, mamsie, so afraid you'd suspect."

"you kept staring at the cupboard door all the evening, joe, you know you did," cried ben; "you

were just within a hair's breadth of letting the whole thing out ever so many times. polly and i had

to drag you away. we were glad enough when you went to bed, i can tell you."

"you were always sending me off to bed in those days," said joel, taking his head out of the

cupboard to throw vindictive glances over to the group around the stove.

"i wish we could do so now," said ben.

"and those two," joel went on, pointing to polly and ben, "used to go whispering around a lot of

old secrets, that they wouldn't tell us. oh! it was perfectly awful, wasn't it, dave?" bestowing a

small pinch on that individual's shoulder.

"i liked the secrets best not to know them till polly and ben got ready to tell us," said david

slowly; "then they were just magnificent."

phronsie had laid her head back in the waiting lap, and was crooning softly to herself.

"i want to go and see dear good mr. beebe," she said presently, "and nice mrs. beebe, can i,

mamsie?" looking over at her.

"to be sure," cried mrs. pepper, "you shall indeed, child."

"beebe-beebe, and who is he, pray?" demanded mr. king.

"oh! he keeps the shoe shop over in the center," explained three or four voices, "and phronsie's

new shoes were bought there, you know."

"and he gave me pink and white candy-sticks," said phronsie, and he was very nice; and i like

him very much."

"and mrs. beebe gave us doughnuts all around," communicated joel; "i don't know but that i

liked those best. there was more to them."

"so you always bought your new shoes of the beebes?" asked the old gentleman, a question that

brought all the five peppers around his chair at once.

"we didn't ever have new shoes that i can remember," said joel quickly, "except phronsie's, and

once ben had a new pair. he had to, because he was the oldest, you know."

"oh!" said mr. king.

"you see," said phronsie, shaking her head gravely, while she laid one hand on his knee, "we were

very poor, grandpapa dear. don't you understand?"

"yes, yes, child," said old mr. king; "there, get up here," and he took her within his arms.

"no, no, you're not going to talk yet," seeing percy and van beginning violent efforts to join in the

conversation. "let the peppers have a chance to talk over old times first. see how good jasper is to

wait."

"i would much prefer to hear the peppers talk forever," said jasper, smiling down on the two

whitneys, "than to have the gates opened for a general flood. go on, do, polly and ben, and the

rest of you."

"oh! there is so much," said polly despairingly, clasping her hands, "we shouldn't get through if

we talked ten years, should we, ben? mamsie," and she rushed over to her, "can we have a baking

time to-morrow, just as we used to in the old days? oh! do say yes."

"yes, do say yes," echoed jasper, also rushing to the side of the little rocking-chair. "you will,

won't you, mrs. pepper?"

"hoh! hoh!" cried the two whitneys derisively, "i thought you could 'hear the peppers talk

forever.' that's great, jasper."

"well, when it comes to hearing a proposal for a baking frolic, my principles are thrown to the

wind," said jasper recklessly. "why, boys, that's the first thing i remember about the little brown

house. do say yes, mrs. pepper!"

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