“Where are you going Mother?”
asked Brother, when he saw the rubbers.
“I’m not going out,”
smiled Mother. “You are going for me, dear.
These are your rubbers and coat hop into
them and run across the street to Grandma’s
with this apron pattern.”
“Will you bake my dough-man,
Molly?” begged Brother, struggling into his
coat and taking the small parcel Mother gave him.
“Is Betty coming?”
“Not this time,” answered
his mother. “It is raining too hard.
Yes, Molly will bake your dough-man and you may eat
him for lunch. Run along now.”
Grandmother Hastings lived almost
directly across the street from the Morrison house
and she was putting her beautiful Boston fern out to
get the rain when Brother tramped sturdily up her
side garden path.
“Bless his heart, he’s
a regular little duck!” cried Grandma, giving
him a tremendous hug.
That is the way grandmothers are,
you know, whether they live across the street from
you and see you every day, or whether they live miles
away and come to visit you Christmas and summer times.
A grandmother is always glad to see you.
Grandmother Hastings was short and
plumpy and her white hair was curly and her eyes were
blue. She had pink cheeks and wore a blue dress
and a white apron with a frilly bib, and altogether,
Brother thought privately, she looked very nice indeed.
“I’m very glad to get
that pattern,” she told him, patting the long
leaves of the fern and spreading them out to catch
the rain. “I’ve a magazine you can
take back to Mother, dearie, and an old fashion book
Sister will like for paper dolls. Come into the
sitting-room while I find them for you. Take
off your rubbers, child.”
Brother followed her into the house
and there Aunt Kate swooped upon him and tickled him
as she always did. Aunt Kate was a school teacher.
In summer she tutored backward pupils. She was
on her way to give a lesson now and in a few minutes
she went away merrily into the driving rain.
That left Grandmother and Brother to entertain each
other.
“Do you know what Ralph is going
to give me for a birthday present, Grandmother?”
Brother asked, dropping flat on his stomach to play
jungle with the tigerskin that lay before the fireplace.
“He says if I’m not tall enough I can’t
have it. But he’s bought it all ready he
said so.”
Brother, you see, would be six years
old in a few days. He couldn’t help thinking
a great deal about his birthday.
Grandmother and Brother had no secrets
from each other, though sometimes they planned surprises
for the other members of the family.
“No, I don’t know what
Ralph plans to give you,” admitted Grandmother.
“Don’t try to find out, dearie. It
is much nicer to be surprised. Why, you know
you wouldn’t have a bit of fun next Wednesday
if you knew what your presents were to be.”
Brother was willing to be surprised,
because Wednesday wasn’t so long to wait.
Still he thought he would like to know what Ralph’s
present was. Ralph was his dearest brother, and
he had a happy knack of always giving Brother and
Sister exactly what they wanted. Louise and Grace
were apt to make them presents which were useful, like
pretty socks and hair-ribbons for Sister, and gloves
and handkerchiefs for Brother, but Ralph never did
anything like that.
“I’ve dropped a stitch
in my knitting,” said Grandmother suddenly.
“Brother, I wonder if you could run upstairs
and bring me my glasses? I think they are on
the bureau in my room.”
Brother ran upstairs and went into
Grandmother’s pretty bedroom. There were
white and silver things on her bureau and a little
gold jewel box and several bottles of different colors.
But, though Brother looked carefully, he could not
find the glasses.
He went out into the hall.
“Oh, Grandma!” he called. “Your
glasses aren’t on the bureau.”
“Dear, dear,” sighed Grandmother.
“’Let me see, where can they be? Do
you know, Brother, I’m afraid I have left them
in my black silk bag on the closet shelf. Can
you get it, or shall I come up?”
“I can get it,” answered Brother confidently.
“You wait, Grandma.”
The closet shelf was pretty high,
but Brother carried a chair to the closet door and
by standing on it he was able to reach the shelf.
Goodness, what was more, he could see the things on
the shelf.
And they were bundles!
One two three Brother
counted three mysterious paper bundles, tied with
brown string.
Now you know if you had a birthday
due most any minute and your head was full of the
presents you hoped to receive, and you saw three bundles
on the shelf in your grandma’s closet, you know
you would probably do just what Brother did; poke
your finger into the top bundle. Brother poked.
Then he prodded. The top bundle slipped and carried
the other two with it. Brother was brushed off
the chair and three bundles and one boy landed in
a heap on the floor.
“Brother!” cried Grandma,
who had come up to see what kept him so long.
“Are you hurt?”
“No’m,” answered
Brother, rather foolishly. “I was just feeling
these bundles, Grandma, to see to see ”
“Whether they were birthday
presents?” smiled Grandma. “Well,
dearie, they are nothing but blankets tied up to send
to the cleaners. I’m glad, for your sake,
they were, for you might have hurt yourself, otherwise,
as it is, they were soft and thick for you to fall
on.”
“I’ll get the glasses now,” murmured
Brother hastily.
He climbed up on the chair again and
this time found without any trouble the black bag
which held Grandma’s glasses.
“Mother is waving a handkerchief that
means she wants you,” said Grandmother, glancing
from the window. “Scoot along, dear, and
don’t think too much about the birthday till
it comes. Here are the magazines. And here’s
a drop-cake for you.”
Brother paddled down the steps, went
halfway to the front hedge, and then turned.
“Oh, Grandma!” he shouted.
“Do you know what I think Ralph is going to
give me? I think it’s a tool-chest!”