“Brother,” said Mother
Morrison, “you haven’t touched your glass
of milk. Hurry now, and drink it before we leave
the table.”
Brother’s big brown eyes turned
from his knife, which he had been playing was a bridge
from the salt cellar to the egg cup, toward the tumbler
of milk standing beside his plate.
“I don’t have to drink
milk this morning, Mother,” he assured her confidently.
“Honestly I don’t. It’s raining
so hard that we can’t go outdoors and grow,
anyway.”
Louise, his older sister, said sharply.
“Don’t be silly!” but Ralph, who
was in a hurry to catch his train, stopped long enough
to give a word of advice.
“Look here, Brother,”
he urged seriously, “better not skip a morning.
Your birthday is next week, isn’t it? Well,
if you’re not tall enough by Wednesday morning,
you can’t have the present I bought for you last
night. Too short, no present you think
it over.”
He stooped to kiss his mother, tweaked
Sister’s perky bow of hair-ribbon, and with
a hasty “Good-bye” for the others at the
table, hurried out into the hall. They heard
the front door slam after him.
Spurred by Ralph’s mysterious
hint, Brother drank his milk, and then the Morrison
family scattered for their usual busy day.
Brother and Sister were left to clear
the breakfast table. They always did this, carrying
out the dishes and silver to Molly in the kitchen.
Then they crumbled the cloth neatly. Molly declared
she could not do without them.
“What do you suppose Ralph is
going to give you?” speculated Sister, carefully
folding up the napkin Louise had dropped, and slipping
it into the white pique ring embroidered with an “L.”
“Maybe it’s a train?”
“No, I don’t believe it’s
a train,” said Brother slowly, crumbling a bit
of bread and beginning to build a little farm with
the crumbs. “No, I guess maybe he will
give me a tool-chest.”
“Come on, and bring the bread
tray,” suggested Sister practically. She
never forgot the task in hand for other interests.
“Mother says we mustn’t dawdle, Roddy,
you know she did. It’s my turn to feed the
birds, so I’ll crumb the table. Could I
use your saw if you get a tool-chest?”
Brother answered dreamily that he
supposed she could. He watched Sister and her
crumb-brush sweep away his nice little bread-crumb
fences, while he planned to build a real fence if
Ralph’s present should turn out to be the long-coveted
tool-chest.
When Sister had swept up every tiny
crumb, she and Brother went out to scatter the bits
of bread to the birds who, winter and summer, never
failed to come to the back door and who always seemed
hungry.
This morning there were robins, starlings,
a pair of beautiful big blue jays, and, of course,
the rusty little sparrows. Each bird seemed to
be pretending to the others that he was looking for
worms, and each one slyly watched the Morrison back
door in hopes that two small figures would presently
come out and toss them a breakfast of breadcrumbs.
Sister flung her crumbs as far as
her short arm would send them, and managed to hit
an indignant old starling squarely in the eye.
He glared at her crossly.
“Birds don’t mind getting
wet, do they?” said Brother, as the sparrows
hopped about in the driving rain and pecked gratefully
at the crumbs. “Let’s hop the way
they do, Betty.”
Sister obediently hopped, looking
not unlike a very plump little robin at that, with
her dark eyes and bobbing curls. Only, you see,
she and Brother were much heavier than any birds,
and they made so much noise that Molly came to the
door to see what they were doing.
“Another rainy day and the two
of you bursting with mischief!” she sighed good-naturedly.
“Will you be quiet for an hour if I let you make
a dough-man while I’m mixing my bread?”
Brother and Sister loved to make dough-men,
and so while Molly kneaded her bread, they worked
busily and happily at the other end of the table,
shaping two men from the bit of sponge she gave them
and quite forgetting to scold about the unpleasant
weather which kept them indoors.
Their real names, you must know, were
Rhodes and Elizabeth Morrison. Rhodes was six,
and Elizabeth five, and sometimes they were called
“Roddy” and “Betty,” but most
always Brother and Sister.
This was partly because they were so many Morrisons.
There was Daddy Morrison, who was
a lawyer and who went to town every morning to a busy
office that seemed, to Brother and Sister, when they
visited him, to be all papers and typewriters.
There was dear Mother Morrison, who
was altogether lovely, with brown eyes like Brother’s,
and dark curly hair like Sister.
There were Louise and Grace, the twins;
they were fifteen and went to high school, and were
very pretty and important and busy.
Then there was Dick, the oldest of
them all, and Ralph, who went to law school in the
city, and Jimmie, who was seventeen and the captain
of the high school football team.
Counting Brother and Sister, seven
children, you see, and as Molly truly said, “a
houseful.” Molly had lived with Mother Morrison
since Louise and Grace were babies, and they would
not have known what to do without her. She was
as much a part of the family as any of them.
The Morrison house was a big, shabby,
roomy place with wide, deep porches and many windows.
There was a large lawn in front and an old barn in
back where the older boys had fitted up a gymnasium
with all kinds of fascinating apparatus, most of which
Brother and Sister were forbidden to touch.
The Morrisons lived in Ridgeway, a
thriving suburb of the city, where Daddy Morrison,
Dick and Ralph went every day.
And now that you are introduced, we’ll
go back to Brother and Sister making dough-men in
Molly’s kitchen.
“What makes my dough-man kind
of dark?” inquired Sister, calling Molly’s
attention to the queer-shaped figure she had pieced
together.
Sure enough Sister’s dough-man,
and Brother’s, too, was a rather dark gray,
while the bread Molly was mixing was creamy white.
Mother Morrison, coming into the kitchen
carrying Brother’s rubbers and raincoat, saved
Molly an explanation.