Little Sky-High | Page 3

Hezekiah Butterworth
is something to tell," she
added, smiling.

II.
BEFORE THE MANDARIN!
As Mr. Van Buren was a prudent, wise, and good-natured man, he left
all the affairs of housekeeping to his wife. He had so seldom been
"below stairs" that he never had even made the acquaintance of Polly,
the lively bird of the kitchen. The kitten sometimes came up to visit
him; on which occasions she simply purred, and sank down to rest on
his knee.
After supper was over, Mr. Van Buren caught Lucy up.
"And now what amusing thing is it that my little girl has to tell
me--something new that Nora has told you of the Fairy Shoemaker?"
"There's really a wonderful thing down in the kitchen, father," said
Lucy; "wonderfuller than anything in the Fairy Shoemaker tales."
"And where did it come from?"

"Down from the sun, father, and Nora says it came in a coach!"
Mr. Van Buren turned to his wife.
"It came from the Consul's," she said--"from Consul Bradley's."
"Has Consul Bradley been here?" he asked, thinking some Chinese
curio had been shipped over. Consul Bradley was a Chinese consular
agent, a man of considerable wealth, with a large knowledge of the
world, and a friend of the Van Buren family.
"No," said Mrs. Van Buren, "but his coach-man has brought me a
kitchen-boy."
"Well, that is rather wonderful! Is that what you have down-stairs,
Lucy?"
"That doesn't half tell it, father," cried Charlie. "He's a little
Chineseman!"
"I was in the Consul's office this morning," went on Mrs. Van Buren,
smiling at her husband's astonishment; "and the Consul said to me,
'Wouldn't you like to have a neat, trim, tidy, honest, faithful,
tender-hearted, polite boy to learn general work?' I said to the Consul,
'Yes, that is the person that I have been needing for years.' He said,
'Would you have any prejudice against a little Chinese servant, if he
were trusty, after the general principles I have described?' I said to him,
'None whatever.' He continued: 'A Chinese lad from Manchuria has
been sent to me by a friend in the hong, and I am asked to find him a
place to learn American home-making ideas in one of the best families.
Your family is that place--shall I send him?' So he came in the Consul's
coach, as Lucy said, and with him an immense trunk covered with
Chinese brush-marks. He seems to be a little gentleman; and when I
asked him his name he said, 'The Consul told me to tell you to call me
Sky-High.' He doesn't speak except to make replies, but these are in
very good English."
"May I give my opinion?" asked little Lucy.

"Well, Lucy," said her mother, smiling, "what is your opinion?"
"He looks like an emperor's son, or a mandarin," said Lucy.
"And what put such a thought into your head?" asked her mother.
"The pictures on my Chinese fans," said Lucy promptly.
"Well," said Mrs. Van Buren, "if he does well, you shall treat him
exactly as though he were the son of an emperor or a wang--he says
that kings are called wangs in his land."
"Then he would be a little wang," said Lucy. "I will make believe he is
a little wang while he stays."
So Sky-High became a little wang to Lucy; and a wonderful little wang
he promised to be.
At Mr. Van Buren's wish, little Sky-High was sent for. The Chinese
boy asked Charlie, who went down for him, that he might have time to
change his dress so that he might suitably appear before "the mandarin
in the parlor." (A "mandarin" in China is a kind of mayor or magistrate
of rank more or less exalted.)
Charlie came back with the kitchen-boy's message. "He says that he
wants a little time to change his clothes so that he may suitably appear
before the mandarin in the parlor."
"The mandarin in the parlor!" exclaimed Mr. Van Buren, in a burst of
laughter. "My father used to speak of mandarins--he traded ginseng for
silks and teas at Canton in the days of the hongs--the open market or
trading-places. That was a generation ago. There are no longer any
store-houses for ginseng on the wharves of Boston. Yet my father made
all his money in this way. 'The mandarin in the parlor.' Sky-High has a
proper respect for superiors; I like the boy for that."
By and by the sound of soft feet were heard at the folding-doors.
"Come in, Sky-High," said Mrs. Van Buren.

The little kitchen-boy appeared, and all eyes lighted up in wonder. He
wore a silk tunic fringed with what looked like gold. His stockings
were white, and his shoes were spangled with silver. The broad sleeves
of his tunic were richly embroidered--he seemed to
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