Betty Gordon at Bramble Farm | Page 4

Alice B. Emerson
her understand how mother felt about wearing
mourning."
Betty indicated her rose smock.
"Lots of Pineville folks think I don't care about losing my mother," she
asserted softly, "because I haven't a single black dress. But mother said
mourning was selfish. She wouldn't wear black when daddy died. Black
makes other people feel sorry. But I did love mother! And do yet!"
Uncle Dick's keen blue eyes misted and the brave little figure in the
bright smock was blurred for a moment.
"I suppose the whole town has been giving you reams of advice," he
said irrelevantly. "Well Betty, I can't promise to take you with
me--bless me, what would an old bachelor like me do with a young
lady like you? But I think I know of a place where you can spend a
summer and be neither lonesome nor unhappy. And perhaps in the fall
we can make other arrangements."
Betty was disappointed that he did not promise to take her with him at
once. But she had been trained not to tease, and she accepted the
compromise as pleasantly as it was offered.
"Mrs. Arnold will be disappointed if you don't go round to the front
door," she informed her uncle, as he stretched his long legs preparatory
to rising from the low seat. "Company always comes to the front door,
Uncle Dick."
Mr. Gordon stepped out of the summer house and turned toward the
gate.
"We'll walk around and make a proper entry," he declared obligingly.
"I meant to, and then as I came up the street I remembered how we
used to cut across old Clinton's lot and climb the fence. So I had to
come the back way for old times' sake."

Betty's eyes were round with wonder.
"Did you ever live in Pineville?" she asked in astonishment.
"You don't mean to tell me you didn't know that?" Uncle Dick was as
surprised as his niece. "Why, they shipped me into this town to read
law with old Judge Clay before they found there was no law in me, and
your father first met your mother one Sunday when he drove twenty
miles from the farm to see me."
Betty was still pondering over this when they reached the Arnold front
door and Mrs. Arnold, flustered and delighted, answered Mr. Gordon's
knock.
"Sit right down on the front porch where it's cool," she insisted
cordially. "I've just put on my dinner, and you'll have time for a good
talk. No, Betty, there isn't a thing you can do to help me--you entertain
your uncle."
But Betty, who knew that excitement always affected Mrs. Arnold's
bump of neatness, determined to set the table, partly to help her hostess
and partly, it must be confessed, to make sure that the knives and forks
and napkins were in their proper places.
"I'm sure I don't know where those boys can be," scolded the flushed
but triumphant mother, as she tested the flaky chicken dumplings and
pronounced the dinner "done to a turn." "We'll just sit down without
them, and it'll do 'em good," she decided.
Betty ran through the hall to call her uncle. Just as she reached the door
two forlorn figures toiled up the porch steps.
"Where's ma?" whispered Ted, for the moment not seeing the stranger
and appealing to Betty, who stood in the doorway. "In the kitchen? We
thought maybe we could sneak up the front stairs."
Ted was plastered from head to foot with slimy black mud, and George,
his younger edition, was draped only in a wet bath towel. Both boys

clung to their rough fishing rods, and Ted still carried the dirty tin can
that had once held bait.
"I should say," observed Mr. Gordon in his deep voice, "that we had
been swimming against orders. Things usually happen in such cases."
"Oh, gee!" sighed Ted despairingly. "Who's that? Company?"
Mrs. Arnold had heard the talk, and she came to the door now, pushing
Betty aside gently.
"Well, I must say you're a pretty sight," she told her children. "If your
father were at home you know what would happen to you pretty quick.
Betty's uncle here, too! Aren't you ashamed of yourselves ? I declare,
I've a good mind to whip you good. Where are your clothes, George?"
"They--they floated away," mumbled George. "Ted borrowed this
towel. It's Mrs. Smith's. Say, ma, we're awful hungry."
"You march upstairs and get cleaned up," said their mother sternly.
"We're going to sit down to dinner this minute. Chicken and dumplings.
When you come down looking like Christians I'll see about giving you
something to eat."
Midway in the delicious dinner Ted and George sidled into the room,
very wet and shiny as to hair and conspicuously immaculate as to shirt
and collar. Mrs.
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