<h2 id="CHAPTER_9">CHAPTER 9</h2>
<p class="h3">Changes and Plans</p>
<p>When the little dining-room was finished it was
quite the prettiest room in the house, for the friendly
Blossoms had painted the battered woodwork a delicate
green to match the leaves in the paper; and by
mixing what was left of the green paint with the remaining
color left from the sideboard, clever Miss
Blossom obtained a shade that was exactly right for<span class="pagenum">[84]</span>
as much of the floor as the rug did not cover. Of
course all the neighbors and all the girls' relatives had
to come in afterwards to see what Bettie called "the
very dandelioniest room in Dandelion Cottage."</p>
<p>It seemed to the girls that the time fairly galloped
from Monday to Thursday. They were heartily sorry
when the moment came for them to lose their pleasant
lodger. They went to the train to see the last of her
and to assure her for the thousandth time that they
should never forget her. Mabel sobbed audibly at the
moment of parting, and large tears were rolling down
silent Bettie's cheeks. Even the seven dollars and fifty
cents that the girls had handled with such delight
that morning paled into insignificance beside the fact
that the train was actually whisking their beloved
Miss Blossom away from them. When she had paid
for her lodging she advised her four landladies to
deposit the money in the bank until time for the dinner
party, and the girls did so, but even the importance
of owning a bank account failed to console
them for their loss. The train out of sight, the sober
little procession wended its way to Dandelion Cottage
but the cozy little house seemed strangely silent
and deserted when Bettie unlocked the door. Mabel,
who had wept stormily all the way home, sat down
heavily on the doorstep and wept afresh.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[85]</span></p>
<p>Pinned to a pillow on the parlor couch, Jean discovered
a little folded square of paper addressed to
Bettie, who was drumming a sad little tune on the
window pane.</p>
<p>"Why, Bettie," cried Jean, "this looks like a note
for you from Miss Blossom! Do read it and tell us
what she says."</p>
<p>"It says," read Bettie: "'My dearest of Betties:
Thank you for being so nice to me. There's a telephone
message for you.'"</p>
<p>"I wonder what it means," said Marjory.</p>
<p>Bettie ran to the talkless telephone, slipped her hand
inside the little door at the top, and found a small
square parcel wrapped in tissue paper, tied with a
pink ribbon, and addressed to Miss Bettie Tucker,
Dandelion Cottage. Bettie hastily undid the wrappings
and squealed with delight when she saw the
lovely little handkerchief, bordered delicately with
lace, that Miss Blossom herself had made for her.
There was a daintily embroidered "B" in the corner
to make it Bettie's very own.</p>
<p>Marjory happened upon Jean's note peeping out
from under a book on the parlor table. It said: "Dear
Jean: Don't you think it's time for you to look at the
kitchen clock?"</p>
<p>Of course everybody rushed to the kitchen to see
Jean take from inside the case of the tickless clock a<span class="pagenum">[86]</span>
lovely handkerchief just like Bettie's except that it
was marked with "J."</p>
<p>Marjory's note, which she presently found growing
on the crimson petunia, sent her flying to the grindless
coffee-mill, where she too found a similar gift.</p>
<p>"Well," said Mabel, who was now fairly cheerful,
"I wonder if she forgot all about <i>me</i>."</p>
<p>For several anxious moments the girls searched
eagerly in Mabel's behalf but no note was visible.</p>
<p>"I can't think where it could be," said housewifely
Jean, stooping to pick up a bit of string from the
dining-room rug, and winding it into a little ball.
"I've looked in every room and—Why! what a long
string! I wonder where it's all coming from."</p>
<p>"Under the rug," said Marjory, making a dive for
the bit of paper that dangled from the end of the
string. "Here's your note, Mabel."</p>
<p>"I think," Miss Blossom had written, "that there
must be a mouse in the pantry mousetrap by this
time."</p>
<p>"Yes!" shouted Mabel, a moment later. "A lovely
lace-edged mouse with an 'M' on it—no, it's 'M B'—a
really truly monogram, the very first monogram I
ever had."</p>
<p>"Why, so it is," said Marjory. "I suppose she did
that so we could tell them apart, because if she'd put<span class="pagenum">[87]</span>
M on both of them we wouldn't have known which
was which."</p>
<p>"Why," cried Jean, "it's nearly an hour since the
train left. Wasn't it sweet of her to think of keeping
us interested so we shouldn't be quite so lonesome?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Bettie, "it was even nicer than our
lovely presents, but it was just like her."</p>
<p>"Oh, dear," said Mabel, again on the verge of tears,
"I wish she might have stayed forever. What's the
use of getting lovely new friends if you have to go
and lose them the very next minute? She was just
the nicest grown-up little girl there ever was, and
I'll never see—see her any—"</p>
<p>"Look out, Mabel," warned Marjory, "if you cry on
that handkerchief you'll spoil that monogram. Miss
Blossom didn't intend these for crying-handkerchiefs—one
good-sized tear would soak them."</p>
<p>Miss Blossom was not the only friend the girls were
fated to lose that week. Grandma Pike, as everybody
called the pleasant little old lady, was their next-door
neighbor on the west side, and the cottagers were
very fond of her. No one dreamed that Mrs. Pike
would ever think of going to another town to live;
but about ten days before Miss Blossom departed, the
cheery old lady had quite taken everybody's breath
away by announcing that she was going west, just as<span class="pagenum">[88]</span>
soon as she could get her things packed, to live with
her married daughter.</p>
<p>When the girls heard that Grandma Pike was going
away they were very much surprised and not at all
pleased at the idea of losing one of their most delightful
neighbors. At Miss Blossom's suggestion, they
had spent several evenings working on a parting gift
for their elderly friend. The gift, a wonderful linen
traveling case with places in it to carry everything a
traveler would be likely to need, was finished at last—with
so many persons working on it, it was hard to
keep all the pieces together—and the girls carried it
to Grandma Pike, who seemed very much pleased.</p>
<p>"Well, well," said the delighted old lady, unrolling
the parcel, "if you haven't gone and made me a grand
slipper-bag! I'll think of you, now, every time I put
on my slippers."</p>
<p>"No, no," protested Jean. "It's a traveling case with
places in it for 'most everything <i>but</i> slippers."</p>
<p>"We all sewed on it," explained Mabel. "Those
little bits of stitches that you can't see at all are Bettie's.
Jean did all this feather-stitching, and Marjory
hemmed all the binding. Miss Blossom basted it together
so it wouldn't be crooked."</p>
<p>"What did <i>you</i> do, Mabel?" asked Grandma Pike,
smiling over her spectacles.<span class="pagenum">[89]</span></p>
<p>"I took out the basting threads and embroidered
these letters on the pockets."</p>
<p>"What does this 'P' stand for?"</p>
<p>"Pins," said Mabel. "You see it was sort of an accident.
I started to embroider the word soap on this
little pocket, but when I got the S O A done, there
wasn't any room left for the P, so I just put it on the
<i>next</i> pocket. I knew that if I explained that it was the
end of 'Soap' and the beginning of 'Pins' you'd remember
not to get your pins and soap mixed up."</p>
<p>During the lonely days immediately following Miss
Blossom's departure, Mrs. Bartholomew Crane proved
a great solace. The girls had somewhat neglected her
during the preceding busy weeks; but with Miss
Blossom gone, the cottagers became conscious of an
aching void that new wall paper and lace handkerchiefs
and a bank account could not quite fill; so
presently they resumed their former habit of trotting
across the street many times a day to visit good-natured
Mrs. Crane.</p>
<p>Mrs. Crane's house was very small and looked rather
gloomy from the outside because the paint had long
ago peeled off and the weatherbeaten boards had
grown black with age; but inside it was cheerfulness
personified. First, there was Mrs. Crane herself, fairly
radiating comfort. Then there was a bright rag carpet
on the floor, a glowing red cloth on the little table,<span class="pagenum">[90]</span>
a lively yellow canary named Dicksy in one window,
and a gorgeous red-and-crimson but very bad-tempered
parrot in the other. There were only three
rooms downstairs and two bed-chambers upstairs.
Mrs. Crane's own room opened off the little parlor,
and visitors could see the high feather bed always as
smooth and rounded on top as one of Mrs. Crane's
big loaves of light bread. The privileged girls were
never tired of examining the good woman's patchwork
quilts, made many years ago of minute, quaint,
old-fashioned scraps of calico.</p>
<p>Even the garden seemed to differ from other gardens,
for every inch of it except the patch of green
grass under the solitary cherry tree was given over to
flowers, many of them as quaint and old-fashioned as
the bits of calico in the quilts, and to vegetables that
ripened a week earlier for Mrs. Crane than similar
varieties did for anyone else. Yet the garden was so
little, and the variety so great, that Mrs. Crane never
had enough of any one thing to sell. She owned her
little home, but very little else. The two upstairs
rooms were rented to lodgers, and she knitted stockings
and mittens to sell because she could knit without
using her eyes, which, like so many soft, bright,
black eyes, were far from strong; but the little income
so gained was barely enough to keep stout, warm-hearted,
overgenerous Mrs. Crane supplied with food<span class="pagenum">[91]</span>
and fuel. The neighbors often wondered what would
become of the good, lonely woman if she lost her
lodgers, if her eyes failed completely, or if she should
fall ill. Everybody agreed that Mrs. Crane should
have been a wealthy woman instead of a poor one,
because she would undoubtedly have done so much
good with her money. Mabel had heard her father
say that there was a good-sized mortgage on the
place, and Dr. Bennett had instantly added: "Now,
don't you say anything about that, Mabel." But ever
after that, Mabel had kept her eyes open during her
visits to Mrs. Crane, hoping to get a glimpse of the
dreadful large-sized thing that was not to be mentioned.</p>
<p>On one occasion she thought she saw light. Mrs.
Crane had expressed a fear that a wandering polecat
had made a home under her woodshed.</p>
<p>"Is mortgage another name for polecat?" Mabel
had asked a little later.</p>
<p>"No," imaginative Jean had replied. "A mortgage
is more like a great, lean, hungry, gray wolf waiting
just around the corner to eat you up. Don't ever use
the word before Mrs. Crane; she has one."</p>
<p>"Where does she keep it?" demanded Mabel, agog
with interest.</p>
<p>"I promised not to talk about it," said Jean, "and
I won't."<span class="pagenum">[92]</span></p>
<p>Miss Blossom had been gone only two days when
something happened to Mrs. Crane. It was none of
the things that the neighbors had expected to happen,
but for a little while it looked almost as serious.
Bettie, running across the street right after breakfast
one morning, with a bunch of fresh chickweed for
the yellow canary and a cracker for cross Polly, found
Mrs. Crane, usually the most cheerful person imaginable,
sitting in her kitchen with a swollen, crimson
foot in a pail of lukewarm water, and groaning dismally.</p>
<p>"Oh, Mrs. Crane!" cried surprised Bettie. "What in
the world is the matter? Are—are you coming down
with anything?"</p>
<p>"I've already come," moaned Mrs. Crane, grimly.
"I was out in my back yard in my thin old slippers
early this morning putting hellebore on my currant
bushes, and I stepped down hard on the teeth of the
rake that I'd dropped on the grass. There's two great
holes in my foot. How I'm ever going to do things I
don't know, for 'twas all I could do to crawl into the
house on my hands and knees."</p>
<p>"Isn't there something I can do for you?" asked
Bettie, sympathetically.</p>
<p>"Could you get a stick of wood from the shed and
make me a cup of tea? Maybe I'd feel braver if I
wasn't so empty."<span class="pagenum">[93]</span></p>
<p>"Of course I could," said Bettie, cheerily.</p>
<p>"I tell you what it is," confided Mrs. Crane. "It's
real nice and independent living all alone as long as
you're strong and well, but just the minute anything
happens, there you are like a Robinson Crusoe, cast
away on a desert isle. I began to think nobody would
<i>ever</i> come."</p>
<p>"Can't I do something more for you?" asked Bettie,
poking scraps of paper under the kettle to bring it to
a boil. "Don't you want Dr. Bennett to look at your
foot? Hadn't I better get him?"</p>
<p>"Yes, do," said Mrs. Crane, "and then come back.
I can't bear to think of staying here alone."</p>
<p>For the next four days there was a deep depression
in the middle of Mrs. Crane's puffy feather bed, for
the injured foot was badly swollen and Mrs. Crane
was far too heavy to go hopping about on the other
one. At first, her usually hopeful countenance wore a
strained, anxious expression, quite pathetic to see.</p>
<p>"Now don't you worry one bit," said comforting
little Bettie. "We'll take turns staying with you; we'll
feed Polly and Dicksy, and I believe every friend you
have is going to offer to make broth. Mother's making
some this minute."</p>
<p>"But there's the lodgers," groaned Mrs. Crane,
"both as particular as a pair of old maids in a glass
case. Mr. Barlow wants his bedclothes tucked in all<span class="pagenum">[94]</span>
around so tight that a body'd think he was afraid of
rolling out of bed nights, and Mr. Bailey won't have
his tucked in at all—says he likes 'em 'floating round
loose and airy.' Do you suppose you girls can make
those two beds and not get those two lodgers mixed
up? I declare, I'm so absent-minded myself that I've
had to climb those narrow stairs many a day to make
sure I'd done it right."</p>
<p>"Don't be afraid," said Jean, who had joined Bettie.
"Marjory's Aunty Jane has taught her to make beds
beautifully, and I have a good memory. Between us
we'll manage splendidly."</p>
<p>"But there's my garden," mourned the usually busy
woman, who found it hard to lie still with folded
hands in a world that seemed to be constantly needing
her. "Dear me! I don't see how I'm going to
spare myself for a whole week just when everything
is growing so fast."</p>
<p>"We'll tend to the garden, too," promised Bettie.</p>
<p>"Yes, indeed we will," echoed Mabel. "We'll water
everything and weed—"</p>
<p>"No, you won't," said Mrs. Crane, quickly. "You
can do all the watering you like, but if I catch any
of you weeding, there'll be trouble."</p>
<p>The young cottagers were even better than their
promises, for they took excellent care of Mrs. Crane,
the lodgers, the parrot, the canary, and the garden,<span class="pagenum">[95]</span>
until the injured foot was well again; but while doing
all this they learned something that distressed them
very much, indeed. Of course they had always known
in a general way that their friend was far from being
wealthy, but they had not guessed how touchingly
poor she really was. But now they saw that her cupboard
was very scantily filled, that her clothing was
very much patched and mended, her shoes distressingly
worn out, and that even her dish-towels were
neatly darned.</p>
<p>"But we won't talk about it to people," said fine-minded
Jean. "Perhaps she wouldn't like to have
everybody know."</p>
<p>Even Jean, however, did not guess what a comfort
proud Mrs. Crane had found it to have her warm-hearted
little friends stand between her poverty and
the sometimes-too-prying eyes of a grown-up world.</p>
<p>Unobservant though they had seemed, the girls did
not forget about the Mother-Hubbardlike state of
Mrs. Crane's cupboard. After that one of their finest
castles in Spain always had Mrs. Crane, who would
have made such a delightful mother and who had
never had any children, enthroned as its gracious
mistress. When they had time to think about it at all,
it always grieved them to think of their generous-natured,
no-longer-young friend dreading a poverty-stricken,
loveless, and perhaps homeless old age; for<span class="pagenum">[96]</span>
this, they had discovered, was precisely what Mrs.
Crane was doing.</p>
<p>"If she were a little, thin, active old lady, with bobbing
white curls like Grandma Pike," said Jean, "lots
of people would have a corner for her; but poor
Mrs. Crane takes up so much room and is so heavy
and slow that she's going to be hard to take care of
when she gets old. Oh, <i>why</i> couldn't she have had
just one strong, kind son to take care of her?"</p>
<p>"When I'm married," offered Mabel, generously,
"I'll take her to live with me. I won't <i>have</i> any husband
if he doesn't promise to take Mrs. Crane, too."</p>
<p>"You shan't have her," declared Jean. "I want her
myself."</p>
<p>"She's already promised to me," said Bettie, triumphantly.
"We're going to keep house together
some place, and I'm going to be an old-maid kindergarten
teacher."</p>
<p>"I don't think that's fair, Bettie Tucker," said Marjory,
earnestly. "I don't see how my children are to
have any grandmother if she doesn't live with <i>me</i>.
Imagine the poor little things with Aunty Jane for a
grandmother!"</p>
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<span class="pagenum">[97]</span>
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