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Come on. It's done."
Hardly done; but that was d.i.c.k's way, and when a soul may be timid and discouraged, that confident, self-a.s.sured style in another is very strengthening.
"Let's see. There is no other way than to go right round and ask our friends. I know they will give something, d.i.c.k."
"Hold on, hold on, Dave. That is a slow way, Let's make a dash and capture the enemy at once. I will pick out some millionaire--"
Here d.i.c.k turned round as if to see which "millionaire" he would select from all of s.h.i.+pton's wealthy residents.
"Yes," he continued; "I will look after that. Don't you give yourself a moment of uneasiness on that score. I will pick out some rich fellow, tell him what he ought to do, and bag the game on the spot. There!"
Dave laughed. He knew d.i.c.k's style thoroughly. At the same time it did give one like Dave, who shrank from begging, new courage to have d.i.c.k talk so boldly.
"Let's see, d.i.c.k. It is now Monday. We might meet on Wednesday at your cousin's store, and find out how we stand, and send our things to the Traftons on Wednesday afternoon; and Christmas is on Thursday, you know."
"Dave, don't worry about the wherewithal." Here d.i.c.k, with a very solemn air of a.s.surance, looked Dave steadily in the eye. "I purpose to bag a millionaire and make him do his duty, Dave Fletcher."
The two friends laughed, shook hands, and separated. Dave listened as he was about turning a corner of the street, for he heard somebody whistling. It was d.i.c.k whistling, in a loud, bold, cheery way.
"Well," thought Dave, "I'll make a beginning now. I will speak to Aunt Nancy soon as I get home."
Aunt Nancy was stoning raisins in preparation for a Christmas baking.
"Will I give something to the Traftons? Oh, certainly. I expect a good warm blanket would be just the thing for gran'sir, and I'll give that as my share. _My_ share, remember. Your uncle must give his mite. I tell ye, David," said Aunt Nancy in a whisper, "your uncle has some first-cla.s.s Baldwins down in the cellar. Just touch him upon those."
"I will, aunt, thank you."
And next, would the home of James Tolman give anything?
"Pies and potatoes; you can count on us for some of both kinds," said Mrs. Tolman.
The next place was the home of the light-keeper, Toby Tolman, when ash.o.r.e. His wife was dead, and a widowed daughter and her only child, May, lived in his house. He preferred to keep up the home, although personally there but a very little of the time.
"Should we like to give anything? Of course," said the keeper's daughter; "that is what Christmas is for. Only last week I heard father say we could give some wood off our pile, for he calculated we had more than enough to carry us through the winter."
"Don't you let young folks help?" asked a silvery voice, sending at Dave an arch look out of two penetrating black eyes. "You must not think I am an invalid and past helping, if I was so sick last summer. Now I can just go round in the neighbourhood and get together some eatables, I know, and perhaps clothing that might do for Bart."
"That would be splendid," said Dave, stirred deeply by those black eyes, and wis.h.i.+ng that in every house visited he was the individual of whom May Tolman would solicit.
When Dave brought these donations into one collection, he found not only the blanket for gran'sir but a shawl for granny. There also were clothes for Bart, and any amount of things for the Christmas dinner.
The next point was how to get them taken up to the Traftons. For the clothing and eatables Dave borrowed Uncle Ferguson's cart, but for the wood only James Tolman's waggon would answer. That procession of two teams, the waggon and the cart, had a Christmas look that would have been recognized anywhere.
"Whoa-a-a!" shouted Dave, as the procession neared the boot and shoe shop kept by d.i.c.k's cousin Sam. d.i.c.k was behind the counter waiting on a customer. As he saw Dave entering he ran his hand through his hair in a nervous, despairing style, but said nothing until the customer had left.
"There, Dave, it is too bad, but--but--whose are those teams out in the street?"
"Just things I picked up."
"And the wood?"
"Going to the same place."
"That's good. Then I don't feel so bad."
"Well, anything you find, good, you know, for Christmas, why, send it along."
"I shouldn't wonder, though, if--if--it might be too late now; but--you have got something--if--I should be too late--and I do believe I am too late. Sorry. Glad, though, I put you up to it. I knew you would attend to it."
With a triumphant wave of his hand, as if he were permitting Dave to drive off with a donation that d.i.c.k Pray had gathered, he accompanied Dave to the door and then retreated to the counter.
"If that isn't d.i.c.k Pray all over!" said Dave.
It would be difficult to tell the feelings of joy occasioned in the Trafton home by those gifts.
"Davie," said Bart, "I had a dream last night, and I guess it is a-comin' true. I thought I saw that ladder that Jacob had a look at, you know, when the angels were a-goin' up and down, and comin' down they had bundles in their arms."
Dave entered the house, bringing in bundle after bundle. Bart thought the angels looked somewhat like that.
"Hadn't you better try this shawl?" said Dave to granny, who looked cold and purple. And would gran'sir be willing to be wrapped in the blanket?
The thin, worn consumptive responded with a glad smile, and said in a whisper that he hadn't been so comfortable since he was sick. And the wood--how it set that old stove to shaking and laughing and glowing till its front seemed like a jolly face full of sparkling eyes! That is one good result coming from a stove cracked everywhere in front.
Granny told the minister, Mr. Potter, two days after, how all this generosity affected gran'sir.
"Why, sir, it made him just heavenly! He cried and laughed--it was so good to be warm, you know. And he's softened so, sir. I think it begun when Bartie begun to read the Bible to him, and it has been a-keepin'
on, sir, a-softenin', sir--don't scold, you know, or be harsh-like.
I--I--I--" Here granny buried her face in her ap.r.o.n and cried. "I'm afraid--sir--may be--he won't live--long--he's--softened so--sir--he has."
It was nothing wonderful. Like the warm breath of the spring on the chilled and torpid flowers, arousing them into the activity of bud and blossom time, the thoughtful kindness of G.o.d's creatures brought G.o.d nigh to gran'sir; brought the breath of his benediction to gran'sir's soul, and gave him a new life.
"G.o.d has been so good--he draws me," gran'sir said to granny an early day in January. "It is--like he's callin' me--and--I guess I'll go."
His going was so peaceful that to say when it was would be like marking the spot where the current crosses the line between the river and the ocean; and yet his soul did cross from time, so short and river-like, into the broad and boundless ocean of eternity. People said it would be as well for the comfort of granny and Little Mew, and even better, for gran'sir they declared to be exacting. They did not know how it was.
Granny and Little Mew felt that they were the exacting ones, for they wanted gran'sir to stay. Little Mew's soul was clouded by the shadow of a thought that by the death of gran'sir his mission in this world was very much abridged. He was tempted to wonder again for what G.o.d had sent a little fellow like him into this world.
XI.
_AT s.h.i.+PTON AGAIN._
"Nothing for me?"
"Nothing."
"Sure?"