Bambi - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Good. Suits me."
"What shall I take the Professor? I've thought and thought. He's so hard to shop for."
"Get him an adding machine!"
Bambi withered him.
"He would disinherit me on the spot. That's like sending Paderewski a pianola."
"We must get something for Ardelia, too."
"I got her a red dress, a red hat, a salmon-pink waist, and handkerchiefs with a coloured border."
Once their thoughts turned toward the little house, and the arithmetical garden, they were anxious to get back. Their shopping tour was a gay affair, because it was their last outing.
"Don't you feel differently about New York?" she asked him as they walked back. "It seems to me like a fascinating new friend I have made.
I am sorry to leave it."
"I'm not. I'm not made for cities. People interest me for a while, then I forget them, and they are always under foot, in places like this. I trip over them, and they interrupt my thoughts."
"I'm so glad you are true to type," she smiled up at him.
"I'm deeply grateful and appreciative of your bringing me here," he added awkwardly.
"That was out of character, Jarvis. A month ago you would have taken it as your right."
"I'm beginning to realize that others may have rights, that even you may have some, Miss Mite."
"Never fear. I'll protect mine," she boasted.
On the morrow they turned their faces toward home and the Professor.
XI
"It looks very out-of-the-worldly, doesn't it?" Bambi said as they came in sight of home.
"It looks like Paradise to me," sighed Jarvis, holding open the gate for her.
"Enter Eve, dragging the serpent," she laughed as she pa.s.sed in. "Eve never played in an arithmetical garden," she added. "If she had, there would probably have been no immortal fall."
"The number eights look tired," Jarvis commented, ignoring her witticism.
She spied the Professor afar sitting at work on the piazza. She flew along the path and burst in upon him.
"Daddy!" she cried, and enveloped him. His astonishment was poignant.
"My dear," he said, "my dear. Why, I must have forgotten that you were coming. I would have been at the station."
"I knew you'd forget, so I didn't bother you with it. How are you? Have you been lonesome? Did you miss us? Where's Ardelia?" all in a breath.
The Professor smiled.
"Question one, I am well. Two, I cannot say that I have been lonesome.
Three, I did not miss you. Four, Ardelia is in the kitchen. How are you, Jarvis?" he added as his son-in-law appeared.
"I am well, sir. I trust you are the same."
"Thank you. I enjoy good health."
"Stop it! Sounds like the first aid to manners. Here's Ardelia. Well, how do you do?"
Ardelia's face was decorated with a most expansive grin.
"Howdy, Miss Bambi? Howdy, Ma.s.sa Jarvis? I sho'r am glad to see you folks home again." She shook hands with both of them.
"How's everything, Ardelia?"
"All right, Miss. Eberything is all right. We got 'long fine together, the Perfessor and me. We des went about forgettin' eberyting and habin'
a mighty comfortable time. Did you all have a good time on your honeymoon?"
"Fine," said Bambi. "We brought you some presents, that will make your eyes ache, and, 'Delia, we're famished."
"Dog's foot! Heah I stan' a-ga.s.sin' and a-talkin' and you all hungry as wolfses." She hurried off, muttering.
Jarvis and Bambi sat down.
"Isn't there something you want to tell me? I can't just remember what you went to New York for?"
"We went to sell my play," Jarvis prompted.
"To be sure. It had escaped me for a moment. Were you successful?"
"We were not."
"Oh, Jarvis, how can you say that? We don't know yet. Belasco is considering it."
"What is this Belasco?"
Bambi looked at Jarvis, and they both laughed.
"Isn't he refres.h.i.+ng?" she remarked. "I've thought for two weeks in terms of managers. They fill the universe. They are the G.o.ds. Their nod is life or death, and now my nearest relative says, 'What is Belasco?'"
"It's a sort of meat sauce, isn't it?"
Consternation on both their faces, then an outburst from Bambi.
"No, no! That's tabasco, you dear, blessed innocent."