Jerry would, of course, never know
how very hard Mr. John had had to work to make her
“wish” come true. Ever afterwards
she preferred to think that it was just standing on
the Wishing-rock and wishing and wishing!
She had noticed, however, and had
been a little curious, that every time Mr. John had
come to Sunnyside he and her mother had talked and
talked together in low tones so that, even when she
was near them, she could not hear one word of what
they were saying, and that, after these talks, her
mother had been very pale and had, again and again,
for no particular reason, hugged her very close and
kissed her with what Jerry called a “sad”
kiss.
Then one afternoon Mrs. Allan had
come with John Westley, and her mother, to her disgust,
had sent her down to the Notch with a message for
old Mrs. Teed that had not seemed a bit important.
After her return John Westley had invited her to take
him and Bigboy and Pepperpot to the Witches’
Glade because, he said, he “had something to
tell her!”
It was a glorious afternoon.
August was painting with her vivid coloring the mountain
slopes and valleys; over everything was a soft glow.
It was reflected on Jerry’s eager face.
John Westley pointed down into the
valley where Jerry’s “shining” road
ran off out of sight. They could see an automobile,
like a speck, moving swiftly along it.
“Your road, down there, goes
off the other side of the mountain and on and on and
after a very long way takes me back home.
I’m going on Thursday.”
Jerry turned a disappointed face.
Each day of John Westley’s two weeks near Miller’s
Notch had brought immeasurable pleasure and excitement
into her life.
“Mrs. Allan is going to drive
back with me she lived in my town, you
know. She hasn’t been home for months and
I shall enjoy her company.”
Jerry was staring at the distant road.
After awhile the specks that were automobiles and
that she liked to watch would become fewer and fewer;
the days would grow colder, school would begin, the
snow would come and choke the trails and she and Sweetheart
and Little-Dad would be shut in at Sunnyside for weeks
and weeks. Her face clouded.
“And now listen very carefully,
Jerry, and hold on to my arm so that you won’t
fall off from the mountain! You are going with
us!”
Jerry did hold on to his arm
with a grip that hurt. She stared, with round,
wondering eyes.
He laughed at her unbelief. “Your
wish is coming true! You’re going to ride
along that road yonder, in my automobile, which ought
to get here to-morrow, straight around to the other
side of the mountain, and on and on then
you’re going to stay all winter with my own nieces
and go to school with them
Jerry’s breath came in an excited gasp.
“Oh, it can’t be true!
Mother’d never let me.”
“It is true! Mothers
are always willing to do the things that are going
to be best for their girls. Mrs. Allan and I have
persuaded her
But Jerry, with a “whoop,”
was racing down the trail, Bigboy and Pepperpot at
her heels. She vaulted the little gate leading
into the garden and swept like a small whirlwind upon
her mother, sitting in the willow rocker on the porch.
With a violent hug she tried to express the madness
of her joy and so completely was her face hidden on
her mother’s shoulder that she did not see the
quick tears that blinded her mother’s eyes.
That was on Monday there
were only three days to get her small wardrobe ready
and packed and to ask the thousand questions concerning
the Westley girls (Graham was utterly forgotten) and
the school. Then there were wonderful, long talks
with mother, sitting close by her side, one hand tight
in hers solemn talks that were to linger
in Jerry’s heart all her life.
“I don’t ever want to
do anything, Mumsey Sweetheart, that’d make you
the least little, little bit unhappy!”
Jerry had said after one of these talks, suddenly
pressing her mother’s hand close to her cheek.
On Wednesday afternoon she declared
to Mr. John, when he drove over from Cobble, that
she was “ready.” She said it a little
breathlessly no Crusader of old, starting
forth upon his holy way, felt any more exaltation
of spirit than did Jerry!
“I’ve packed and I’ve
mended my coat and I’ve finished mother’s
comfy jacket that I began winter before last and I’ve
said good-by to Rose and poor old Jimmy Chubb, who’s
awfully envious, ’cause he wanted to go to Troy
to work in his uncle’s store and he says it makes
him mad to have a girl see the world ’fore he
does, but I told him he ought to keep on at school,
even if it was only Miller’s Notch. And
I’ve cleaned Little-Dad’s pipes.
And I’ve promised Bigboy and Pepperpot and Dormouse
that they may all sleep on my bed to-night. I’m
afraid Pepperpot he’s so sensitive is
going to miss me dreadfully!” Jerry tried to
frown away the thought; she did not want it to intrude
upon her joy.
That last evening she sat quietly
on the porch with one hand in her mother’s and
the other in Little-Dad’s. Not one of them
seemed to want to talk; Jerry was too excited and
her mother knew that she could not keep a tremble
from her voice. At nine o’clock Jerry declared
that she’d just have to go to bed so
that the morning would come quicker. She kissed
them both, kissed her mother again and again, then
marched off with her pets at her heels.
Far into the night her mother sat
alone on the edge of the porch, staring at the stars
through a mist of tears and praying first
that the Heavenly Father would protect her little
Jerry always and always, and then that He would give
her strength to let the child go on the morrow.
When the parting came everyone tried
to be very busy and very merry, to cover the heartache
that was under it all; John Westley fussed with the
covers and the cushions in the big car and had his
chauffeur pack and repack the bags. Mrs. Allan
and Mrs. Travis discussed the lunch that had been
stowed away in the tonneau, as though the whole thing
was only a day’s picnic. Jerry, a funny
little figure in her coat that was too small and a
fall hat that Mrs. Chubb had made over from one of
her mother’s, was, with careful impartiality,
bestowing final caresses upon Bigboy, Pepperpot, Silverheels,
and her father and mother alike. Then, at the
last moment, she almost strangled her mother with a
sweep of her strong young arms.
“Mumsey Sweetheart, if you want
me dreadfully you’ll send for
me,” she whispered, stricken for a moment by
the realization that the parting was for a very long
time.
Then, though her heart was almost
breaking within her, Mrs. Travis managed to laugh
lightly.
“Need you of course
we won’t need you! Climb in, darling,”
and she almost lifted the girl into the tonneau, where
Mrs. Allan was already comfortably fixed.
But at this moment Bigboy tried to
leap into the car. When Dr. Travis gripped his
collar he let out a long, protesting howl.
“Oh, Bigboy he knows!
Let me say good-by again,” cried Jerry, jumping
out and, to everyone’s amusement, embracing the
dog.
“You must be a good dog and
take very good care of my Sweetheart and Little-Dad,”
she whispered. Then, standing, she looked around.
“Where’s Pepperpot?”
she asked anxiously. The little dog had disappeared.
“He’ll think that I love
Bigboy more than I do him,” she explained, as
she climbed back in.
The car started down the rough road.
Jerry turned to wave; as long as she could see her
mother and father she kept her little white handkerchief
fluttering. Then she faced resolutely forward.
“You know,” she explained
to John Westley, with shining eyes, “when you’ve
been wishing and wishing for something, you must enjoy
it as hard as you can.”
Even the familiar buildings of the
Notch seemed different now to Jerry, as she flew past
them, and she kept finding new things all along the
way. Then, as they turned from the rough country
road into her “shining” road, which was,
of course, the macadam highway, she looked back and
up toward Kettle to see if she could catch a glimpse
of Sunnyside or the Witches’ Glade and the Wishing-rock.
They were lost in a blaze of green and purple and
brown.
“Isn’t it funny?
If I was up there watching I’d see you moving
like a speck! And in a moment you’d disappear
around the corner. And now I’m the
speck and I dont know when we reach the corner. But Im going,
anyway!”
Then upon her happy meditations came
a sudden, startling interruption in the shape of a
small dog that leaped out from the dense undergrowth
at the side of the road and hailed the automobile
with a sharp bark.
“Pepperpot!” cried Jerry, springing
to her feet.
The chauffeur had brought the car
to a sudden stop to avoid hitting the dog. At
the sound of Jerry’s voice the little animal
made a joyous leap into the car.
“He came on ahead through
the Divide! Oh the darling,”
and Jerry hugged her pet proudly.
John Westley looked at Penelope Allan
and she looked at him and the chauffeur looked at
them both all with the same question.
In Jerry’s mind, however, there was no doubt.
“He’ll have to
go with us, Mr. John, because I know he’d just
die of a broken heart if I took him back!”
Then, startled by John Westley’s
hesitation, she added convincingly, “He’s
awfully good and never bothers anyone and keeps as
still as can be when I tell him to and I’ll I’ll
No one could have resisted the appeal in her voice.
“Very well, Jerry Pepperpot shall
go, too.”