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"If she's kind enough to plan a party for us children, we ought to let her have it just as she wishes it to be."
Gyp sat upon the wall, listening to all that was being said. He was full of mischief, and often he had annoyed Aunt Judith with his pranks.
"She's agoin' ter make a party fer 'em!" he said to himself.
He still sat on the wall, swinging his skinny legs when those who had stood talking of the event had walked together down the street. Polly and Sprite had lagged behind to talk with Rose until a maid had called to Polly that Mrs. Sherwood wished them to come in.
Rose turned toward home, and was humming as she walked along, when she heard her name called softly.
She looked up and down the street. Then she saw Gyp.
"Do you know who called me?" she asked.
"Yep!" he answered, pertly.
"Well, who did?" queried Rose.
"I did," he said, watching her closely. "I axed yer is she going ter have a _big_ party?"
"She can't. It would be too costly, and the cottage is too small, but she is generous and kind to give us any party at all, and oh, Gyp!"
she cried, moving nearer to him, "I _do_ wish you wouldn't tease her."
Gyp wriggled.
"She said she hated me!" he said.
"Well, she _might_ have been angry, but she likes boys. I've heard her say so," Rose replied.
"I ain't just a boy. I'm a _Gypsy_ boy. That's _different_."
"Princess Polly is always kind to her, and I _know_ it would please her if you stopped teasing Aunt Judith," Rose said.
That was just the thing to have said!
Gyp was determined to win Polly's approval at all costs. He sprang from the low wall, and rushed off to the old shanty that his family called "home."
There he found an old basket, and rus.h.i.+ng off into the heart of the woods, he returned with a quant.i.ty of fine sh.e.l.lbarks that he had gathered and h.o.a.rded. Two days before the party was to occur he obtained a flour bag, no one knew how, emptied the basket of nuts into it, filling it about three-quarters full.
Long and hard he labored over the note that he tied to the bag. Sneaking to the back door of the cottage, he dropped the bag on the upper step, gave a tremendous knock, and then raced off to the woods.
Aunt Judith was more than half afraid to open the big bag, but finally, gathering courage, she cut the string, and then peeped in.
The laboriously written note fell to the floor. She picked it up, and for a moment, stared at it in great surprise.
"Ter Missis Ant Joodith Im sory ive evir plagd yer an them nutts is 4 yor party coss I want yer ter no I meen whut i say. Arftur this I wil tri hard ter be yor frend,
"Gyp."
"Well, of all things!" she cried, when at last she had made sense out of the fearfully spelled note.
"Poor, wild Gyp! Who ever dreamed that he had a heart or a conscience!
Indeed he shall be my friend if that will keep him from annoying me, and perhaps I can find a way to befriend him.
"Everyone is ready to lift a hand against him, so that there is nothing to tempt him to be really good, nor to encourage him to try.
"Strange little Arab! I wonder what prompted him to give his store of nuts to me, and really that fearfully spelled note has a bit of sincerity in it. I must tell John Atherton about it. I'll keep the note, and show it to him."
Often she paused to take the note from its retreat behind the clock, read it, and replace it. She looked from the window whenever she pa.s.sed it, but not a glimpse of Gyp did she obtain.
She could not imagine what had caused the little imp to leave his gift of nuts at her door, or yet more wonderful, what had prompted him to write his friendly little note. Its outrageous spelling was droll, but its kindly spirit was evident. He had attended school because he was compelled to, but he had paid but little attention to his books.
The note had kept him busy for fully a half hour, and he considered it a fine specimen of letter writing when it was completed.
He thought that few boys could have done better, and he felt that in writing it, he had literally "covered himself with glory."
CHAPTER VII
AUNT JUDITH'S PARTY
The flowered chintz draperies hung at the windows, the pink roses, and green leaves on its s.h.i.+ny surface looked fairly gaudy. The candles danced and flickered in the candelabra, evergreen framed every picture on the walls.
Aunt Judith's quaint sofa and chairs had always been covered with crimson repp, and the color seemed brighter in the evening light.
The old hand-made rugs looked quaint upon the floor, and the logs in the grate burned gaily, as if antic.i.p.ating the arrival of the little guests.
Of all the fine, quaint things in the room, Aunt Judith was surely the finest, and the quaintest. Her gown was of old-time print, a white ground upon which bouquets of pansies, purple and yellow, had been finely printed. Her black eyes were bright with excitement, and in her glossy black hair, she had placed an old silver comb.
Her sleeves were elbow length, and she wore long black silk mitts. She had made her toilette with great care, and she now stood on the hearth rug, nervously opening and shutting a small folding fan.
The little maid peeped in.
"Please ma'am, I hear 'em comin'," she said.
"Wait 'til they ring, and then answer the bell," said Aunt Judith.
The little maid looked very pretty, and she was delighted to be "in costume," for the occasion. Her skirt, of heavy cotton, was white, with wide pink stripes. Her waist was blue with a large white kerchief, and on her flaxen head was a white cap with a frill that made her rosy little face quite pleasing.
Greta liked her new place. She liked her new mistress, too, and the work at the little cottage was light.
Aunt Judith was a worker, and together they kept the pretty rooms in perfect order.
The bell rang sharply, Greta opened the door, and the quaintest little figures that ever were seen came tripping into the hall.
It was not to be a ceremonious affair, so Greta took their wraps at the door, and they entered the little parlor to greet Aunt Judith.