The sun rose bright and early on Brother’s
birthday morning. Not any earlier than usual,
perhaps, but it certainly woke Brother a whole half-hour
earlier than he usually opened his eyes.
Almost at the same moment that his
brown eyes opened wide, and he sat up in bed, Sister’s
dark eyes also opened wide and she sat up in her little
white bed.
“Oh!” she said, blinking.
“Oh, it’s your birthday, Roddy!
Many happy returns of the day and I have
a present for you!”
She slipped out of bed and ran over
to the chest of white drawers that held her own possessions.
“You can play with them a little
while and then you can eat ’em,” she explained,
returning with a flat, white box which she put on Brother’s
lap.
The present proved to be a pound of
animal crackers, of which Brother was very fond, and
Sister was telling him how she had carefully picked
out as many horses and elephants as she could for
indulgent Grandma Hastings had bought several pounds
of the crackers, and allowed Sister to select the
two kinds of animals that were Brother’s favorites when
they heard Ralph’s quick step in the hall.
“Here comes Ralph! Don’t
look!” commanded Brother hastily.
Sister promptly dived under the bedclothes,
and when Ralph softly opened the door lest
the children were still asleep he saw Brother
staring eagerly toward him and a little lump in the
middle of Sister’s bed.
“Well, young man, how does it
feel to be six years old?” Ralph asked merrily,
putting down the basket he carried on the floor, and
coming over to Brother, who stood up to hug him.
“Just as nice,” gurgled
Brother, standing still to receive the six “spanks”
without which no birthday could be properly celebrated.
“Can I look yet?” asked a muffled voice
meekly.
“Why, sweetheart, what have
they done to you?” demanded Ralph in amazement,
uncovering a very warm and flushed little girl.
“I thought you were asleep, honey. Don’t
you feel well?”
“Oh, I feel all right,”
Sister assured him cheerfully. “Only I promised
Brother I wouldn’t look at the present before
he did.”
“That’s so, I did bring
a present, didn’t I?” said Ralph, pretending
to have forgotten. “Well, Brother, stand
up while I measure you once more; I must be sure that
you are tall enough and that means that you drank
your milk every time without grumbling.”
“Couldn’t he grumble?”
asked Sister, watching while Ralph stood brother against
the wall and made a tiny mark with a pencil. “You
never said he couldn’t grumble, Ralph.”
“Didn’t I?” Ralph
said. “Well, then, I should, because that
is very important. You will grow, you know, if
you drink your milk and grumble about it, but not
half as fast as you will grow if you drink the milk
and make no fuss. That’s true, Sister I’m
not joking.”
“I didn’t grumble much,
did I, Sister?” interposed Brother. “Haven’t
I grown, Ralph?”
“Yes, I think you have enough
to have what I have brought you,” returned Ralph
cheerfully. “Here, now, tell me what you
think of this.”
He stooped down and lifted the lid
of the basket. Then he tipped it over on one
side and out rolled the fattest brown and white collie
puppy dog you ever saw!
“Oh! Oh! Oh!”
shrieked Brother and Sister together. “What
a perfectly dear little puppy!”
“He’s yours, Brother,”
said Ralph, smiling like the dear big brother he was.
“Yours to take care of and love, and to name.”
“Hasn’t he any name?”
asked Brother, hugging the fat puppy, who seemed to
like it and tried to say so with his little red tongue.
“I don’t know what to name a puppy dog.”
“Call him ‘Brownie,’”
suggested Sister, down on her knees on the floor,
watching the dog with shining eyes. “I think
that is a nice name.”
“So do I,” agreed Brother.
“I do, too,” said Ralph.
“And now you must get dressed if you are not
to be late for breakfast; and I must go down now I
have to take an earlier train in.”
“Won’t you come to the
party?” begged Sister, as Ralph stood up to go.
“Don’t believe I’ll
be home in time,” he answered. “But
you can tell me all about it and that will be almost
as nice.”
Mother Morrison came in to help them
dress and she kissed Brother six times because it
was his birthday. He wore a new blue sailor suit,
and Sister put on her next-to-the-best hair-ribbon
in his honor.
“I like birthdays,” sighed
Brother, slipping into his seat at the breakfast table
and eyeing the little heap of bundles at his plate
with great delight. “Look at my puppy dog,
Dick.”
“Well, that is a nice pup,”
admitted Dick, putting down his paper. “Have
you named him yet?”
“Name’s Brownie Betty
thought of it,” replied Brother. “Can
he have cereal, Mother? And Daddy wrote on this
box, didn’t he?” The little boy picked
up a box wrapped in paper.
“Now just a minute,” said
Mother Morrison firmly. “The dog can’t
eat at the table, dear; put him down until you have
finished breakfast. I don’t want you to
open the parcels, either, until you have had your
milk and cereal. But those two on top you may
open they are from Daddy and Dick and they’re
going to leave in ten minutes.”
Brother opened the two packages eagerly.
That from Daddy Morrison was a little wooden block
and a set of rubber type with an ink-pad, so that
Brother might play at printing. He knew his letters
and, if someone helped him, could spell a number of
words. Dick’s parcel contained a little
silver collar for the new puppy, so made that it could
be made larger for him as he grew.
“Oh, Dick!” Brother flung
himself upon that pleased young man and kissed him
heartily. Somehow Brother seldom kissed Dick,
although he loved him dearly. “It’s
the nicest collar!”
“All right, all right,”
said Dick hastily. “Glad you like it.
Coming, Dad?”
Brother had to thank Daddy Morrison
for his gift and kiss him good-bye, and then the interrupted
breakfast went on. As soon as they had all finished,
they gathered around Brother to watch him open his
birthday gifts.