“Let’s make a bay window
for the front,” suggested Bobby, dragging up
a rocking-chair and tumbling his younger brother, Twaddles,
out of the way.
“How do you make a bay window?”
demanded Twaddles, whom no amount of pushing out of
the way could subdue for long; he simply came in again.
“This way,” said Bobby.
He tipped the rocking-chair over on
its side and turned the curved back so that it fenced
in a space between two straight chairs. Looking
through the carved rounds, if you had a very good imagination,
it really did seem something like a bay window.
“Now, see?” said Bobby, proud as an architect
should be.
“But every house has a chimney,”
protested Twaddles. “Where’s the
chimney?”
Before Bobby could possibly invent
a chimney, Meg and Dot, the two boys’ sisters,
came into the room, each carrying a doll.
“Wait till Norah sees you!”
announced Meg severely. “My goodness, piling
up the furniture like this! Mother will scold
if you scratch that rocking-chair.”
“What you making?” asked
Dot, her dark eyes beginning to dance. “Let
me help, Bobby?”
Bobby sat down gloomily on the edge
of the rocking-chair.
“I was building a house,”
he answered. “Mother said we could ’muse
ourselves quietly in the house. This is quiet,
isn’t it? What’s the use of having
furniture if a fellow can’t make something with
it?”
“Well, I s’pose if you
put it all back before supper, it’s all right,”
admitted Meg, rather dubiously. “Only you
know sometimes you do scratch things, Bobby.”
Bobby waived this aside. He had
other, more important thoughts.
“I was just going to fix the
chimney,” he explained. “See, this
is the door, Meg, an’ over here’s the
bay window. But we have to have people.
People always live in houses. Don’t you
want to put Geraldine and what’s-her-name in
’fore I put the chimney on?”
Dot, who was the doll Geraldine’s
mother, clutched her closely, while Meg quickly picked
up her doll from the couch where she had laid her.
“There won’t anything
hurt ’em,” protested Bobby earnestly.
“Go on, put ’em in please,
Meg.”
Meg seldom could resist anything Bobby
asked of her, and Dot was always ready to follow her
older sister’s lead. So Geraldine and Mary
Maud were placed inside the tower of chairs and stools
and rugs that Bobby and Twaddles called their house,
and the architect set himself to work to construct
the chimney.
The children who were so busily employed
in the pleasant living-room this rainy September afternoon
were known to all their friends as “the four
little Blossoms.”
There was a Father Blossom and a Mother
Blossom, of course, and when you were introduced to
the children separately though the four
were usually to be found, as Norah, the good-natured
maid, said, “right in a bunch” you
met Robert Hayward Blossom, always known as Bobby,
seven years old and as devoted a brother to six-year-old
Margaret Alice as you would ever find. Margaret
was much better known as Meg.
Then came the twins, Dot and Twaddles.
And a pair they were, into everything and remarkable
for the ease with which they managed to get out of
scrapes for which they were generally responsible.
The twins were four years old, dark-haired and dark-eyed,
while Bobby and Meg had blue eyes and yellow hair.
The Blossoms lived in the pretty town
of Oak Hill, and they knew nearly every one.
Indeed the children had never been away from Oak Hill
till the visit they had made to their Aunt Polly, about
which you may have read in the book called “Four
Little Blossoms at Brookside Farm.” They
had spent the summer with Aunt Polly, and had made
many new friends and learned a great deal about animals.
Meg, especially, loved all dumb creatures. And
now that you are acquainted with the four little Blossoms,
we must get back to that chimney.
“The umbrella rack will do,”
suggested Twaddles suddenly.
He ran out into the hall and dragged the rack in.
“That’s fine,” said
Bobby enthusiastically. “Come on, Twaddles,
help me lift it up.”
Strangers always thought that Twaddles
was such an odd name. Perhaps it was; and certainly
no one knew how the small boy had acquired it.
“Twaddles” he was though, and he himself
almost forgot that he had a “real” name,
which was Arthur Gifford. His twin was never called
Dorothy, either, but always “Dot.”
Dorothy Anna Blossom was the whole of Dot’s
name.
Twaddles now heaved and tugged, trying
to help Bobby lift the heavy umbrella rack. He
was elated that he had thought of it, and not for
worlds would he have admitted that it was exceedingly
heavy to lift.
“There!” said Bobby, when
they had it finally in place. “How’s
that for a house?”
“It’s perfectly ”
Meg began.
She meant to say “perfectly
wonderful,” but just then Twaddles jumped down
to the floor from the pile. In doing this he jarred
the wonderful structure, and with a crash that could
be heard all over the house, umbrella rack, stools,
chairs and rugs slithered together in a complete wreck.
“Geraldine!” shrieked
Dot. “She’ll be smashed and killed!”
“For the love of mercy, what
are ye doing now?” The long-suffering but not
always patient Norah stood in the doorway. “Bobby,
what are ye up to the minute your mother turns her
back? Is Dot hurt? What’s she crying
for?”
Norah always asked a great many questions,
and it was of no use, as the children had learned
from experience, to try to answer her till she had
had her say.
“What are ye trying to do?”
asked Norah again. “’Tis fine and peaceful
the summer has been with ye all at Brookside.
And now the minute you’re home again, the house
must be torn down about our ears.”
“We were building a house, Norah,”
explained Bobby. “We’re going to
put everything back when we’re through.
Oh, hush, Dot, Geraldine isn’t hurt.”
To prove it, Bobby crawled in under
the wreckage and dragged out the smiling Geraldine
apparently uninjured. But as Dot took the doll
in her arms a dreadful thing happened.
Geraldine’s head tumbled off!
The four little Blossoms gasped with
horror, and even Norah was startled. Then, as
Dot’s mouth opened for a loud wail, Meg came
to the relief of every one.
“Daddy can mend it, Dot,”
she urged earnestly. “See, it is cracked
right across and there aren’t any chips out.
’Member how he mended Mother’s china cup
and she can wash it in hot water and everything?
Can’t she, Norah?”
“Sure then, she can,”
said Norah heartily. “Don’t go crying
now, Dot; the doll can be mended as fine as ever.
Put up the furniture like good children, do.
Your mother will be coming home any minute.”
Poor little Dot tried to stop crying,
and the four youngsters rather solemnly set about
the task of leaving things as they had found them,
which, as you know yourself, isn’t half as much
fun as getting them out to play with. However,
everything was in its place before Mother Blossom
came home, and after supper that night Father Blossom
put some of his wonderful cement on Geraldine’s
neck, and over night her head, as Dot said, “grew
on beautifully and tight.”
“I wish we had a cat,”
said Meg the next morning, as she and Bobby went out
to the garage to carry their dog’s breakfast
to him.
Meg had made the same wish nearly
every morning for the last year.
“Well, we have a dog,”
Bobby pointed out reasonably. “And you know
Norah can’t bear cats.”
Philip, the dog, came leaping to meet
them, and he was followed by Sam Layton, the man who
ran the automobile for the Blossoms and cut the lawn
and did all the hundred and one useful jobs that are
always waiting to be done.
“Why, Sam!” Meg’s
voice rose in a surprised cry. “Why, Sam,
what a perfectly lovely cat! Whose is it, and
where did it come from? Let me hold her.”
Sam put the soft bundle of gray fur
into Meg’s arms, and Philip sat down on the
grass and tried to look patient. He foresaw that
he would have to wait for his breakfast.
“She’s your cat,”
Sam announced. “Leastways, I told Norah
when you got home you were to have her. Her name
is Annabel Lee.”
“Annabel Lee!” repeated
the astonished Meg. “Did you name her, Sam?”
“I certainly did,” answered
Sam proudly. “Your father read me one of
your letters where you said your Aunt Polly’s
cat was named ‘Poots’; and I said then
and there our cat was going to have a poetry name.
And she’s got it.”
“It’s a very nice name,”
said Bobby. “But does Norah know we have
a cat?”
Whenever the four little Blossoms
had teased for a cat, Norah had always flatly declared
she wouldn’t have one within a mile of her kitchen;
and the children knew that a cat that was never allowed
in a kitchen could not expect to be happy. So
they had managed to get along without such a pet.
“This cat,” announced
Sam mysteriously, “was sent for by Norah.
She wants it. In fact, she as much as said she
wouldn’t stay if your father didn’t get
a cat.”