The Blossoms all went back to the
garage and found Sam bending over the sick dog.
“He’s a cute little fellow,
Mr. Blossom,” said Sam. “Just a pup,
too. Shouldn’t wonder if he turned out
to be a good ratter when his leg gets well.”
That was the highest praise Sam could
give a dog, and Meg and Bobby were delighted.
“May we keep him, Mother?”
they urged. “He can live in the garage.
Please, Mother.”
Mother Blossom looked at Father.
“Well, Ralph?” she said.
“Why, keep him, of course,”
counseled Father Blossom, laughter-twinkles in his
kind eyes. “Norah is the sole objector in
the family, and if you can pacify her there’s
no reason why we shouldn’t have as many dogs
as we want. Named him yet, Meg?”
“I want to think about a name
for him,” replied Meg. “You can’t
change names, you know, and I wouldn’t want
him to have a silly name.”
“That’s my cautious daughter,”
said Father Blossom. “And now it seems
to me that some one said we were going to have supper
early to-night.”
“We are,” declared Mother
Blossom. “Children, you have several things
to do before you are ready for the table. Your
faces and hands are a sight. Bobby, didn’t
you go to the post-office? Was there any mail?”
“I forgot, Mother there
was one letter for you,” answered Bobby, pulling
a crumpled envelope from his pocket. “The
dog kind of took my attention,” he added.
Mother Blossom went into the house
to read her letter, and the four children scampered
upstairs to wash their faces and hands. Meg and
Dot shared the same room, and Bobby and Twaddles slept
in the room adjoining. Each child had a little
white bed and a separate bureau.
“I s’pose I’d better
put on another dress,” said Dot doubtfully.
“Mother didn’t say to, though. Shall
I, Meg?”
“Well, I would,” advised
Meg. “Not a spandy clean one, ’cause
you mussed up two yesterday. Put on the green
one again, can’t you?”
“I tore that,” objected
Dot, who certainly had bad luck with her clothes.
“Oh, dear, I don’t see why I wasn’t
a bird with a dress all glued on.”
“’Most ready?” asked
Mother Blossom, who had come upstairs while the little
girls were talking. “Let Mother tie your
ribbon, Meg. What’s the matter with Dot?”
Meg bubbled into a gay little laugh.
“She was wishing she was a bird
with a dress glued on,” she said. “Wouldn’t
that be funny?”
“Yes, it would,” agreed
Mother Blossom. “But bring me the white
pique, dear, and let me help you into it. Daddy
is waiting for us.”
Dot was buttoned into a clean dress
in a minute, and then Mother Blossom had to call Twaddles
away from the basin in the bathroom where he was playing
in the water instead of washing his hands, and she
had to find a clean handkerchief for Bobby, and then,
at last, they could all go downstairs.
Father Blossom was playing the mechanical
piano, but he stopped as soon as he saw them.
“Everybody here to-night?”
he asked. “Well, that is fine! Come
on, Dottie-mine, and Daddy will tie your bib for you.”
The twins did not always have supper
with Mother and Father Blossom. Sometimes they
had their bread and milk at five o’clock and
went to bed at half-past six. It was a treat
for them to eat supper with their father.
Mother Blossom smiled at the eager faces.
“We’ve company coming,”
she announced. “Some one you love to have
visit us.”
“When are they coming?” asked Meg.
“To-morrow,” answered
Mother Blossom. “If I hadn’t asked
Bobby for the mail, we might have been in a great
pickle. She’s coming on the nine-fifty-six
to-morrow morning.”
“Aunt Polly!” shouted the four little
Blossoms.
“Is it Aunt Polly, Mother?”
“How long will she stay?”
“Can we go to meet her?”
“Will she bring a trunk?”
Mother Blossom put her hands over her ears.
“Don’t all talk at once,”
she begged. “Yes, Aunt Polly is coming.
She can’t stay long, not even a week ”
“But what do you think?”
interrupted Father Blossom. “She wants the
four Blossoms to go home with her!”
“Ralph, you’re not a bit
better than Bobby,” scolded Mother Blossom.
“I didn’t want to tell them to-night.
However, there’s no use trying to keep a secret
in this family. Aunt Polly has invited you all
to spend the summer at Brookside Farm.”
Well, of course, the children could
talk of nothing else after that. Aunt Polly Hayward
was Mother Blossom’s eldest sister. She
was a widow and lived on a fine farm many miles distant
from the town of Oak Hill. She came often to
visit Mother Blossom, and the children thought there
was no one like her. To go to see Aunt Polly was
a wonderful treat, and even Bobby, who, as the oldest
of the four little Blossoms, had had more experiences
than the others, had never been away from home in
his life to stay.
They were all up early the next morning,
and Sam and the car took Father Blossom to the foundry
immediately after breakfast so as to be back in time
to meet Aunt Polly.
“Aunt Polly’s coming,
Norah,” said Meg, happily, as Norah was clearing
the table.
“Sure, and I’ve heard
nothing else since last night,” rejoined Norah.
“How is the dog, your poor patient, this bright
morning?”
Bobby and Twaddles and Dot looked at each other.
“The dog?” repeated Bobby. “My
goodness, we forgot him!”
“I didn’t forget him,”
Meg said. “At least, I remembered him after
I was in bed. I came down to feed him, and Daddy
heard me and wouldn’t let me go out in my nightgown.
He took him some bread and milk. And this morning
I fed him before breakfast.”
“How’s he feel?” asked Twaddles
sympathetically.
“He’s ever so much better,”
Meg informed him. “He can wag his leg some.”
“His tail, you mean,” corrected Bobby.
“Dogs don’t wag their legs.”
“They do, too,” argued
Meg. “Anyway this one does, so that shows
he is better. And I’ve thought up a name
for him. I’m going to call him Philip.”
Bobby stared.
“What do you want to call him that for?”
he said curiously.
“I read it in a book,”
answered Meg. “He looks as if he ought to
be named Philip.”
Bobby was too surprised to argue,
and just then Mother Blossom called to them that Sam
was coming back with the car and they hurried out to
see who could go to the station.
“Aunt Polly will like to see
us,” declared Dot confidently. “And
this dress is just as clean, Mother. There’s
only a tiny speck of egg on a tuck it doesn’t
show a bit.”
Mother Blossom sat down on the top
step and pulled Dot into her lap.
“It’s a duck of a clean
frock,” she assured her small daughter, kissing
her. “And do you know there’s just
one way to avoid disappointment, and we’ll take
it; we’ll all go to meet Aunt Polly. If
she has any bundles, she’ll just have to leave
them, or Sam can tie them on behind.”
Sam grinned.
When they reached the station Mother
Blossom announced that the children were to stay quietly
in the car while she went around to the front platform
to meet Aunt Polly.
“Do you suppose she’ll
bring us anything?” asked Twaddles hopefully,
as Mother Blossom disappeared around the corner of
the ticket window.
“That isn’t polite,”
reproved Meg quickly. “You must be glad
to see company whether they bring you things or not.”
“There she is!” Dot stood
up in the car and pointed. “Aunt Polly!”
“Aunt Polly!” shouted
the three other little Blossoms loudly.