<h2 id="CHAPTER_15">CHAPTER 15</h2>
<p class="h3">An Obdurate Landlord</p>
<p>Twenty minutes later when Mr. Downing roared
"<i>Come in</i>" in the terrifying voice he usually reserved
for agents and other unexpected or unwelcome visitors,
he was plainly very much surprised to see four pale
girls with shocked, reproachful eyes file in and come to
an embarrassed standstill just inside the office door,
which closed of its own accord and left them imprisoned<span class="pagenum">[159]</span>
with the enemy. They waited quietly.</p>
<p>"Oh, good morning," said he, in a much milder
tone, as he swung about in his revolving chair. "What
can I do for you? Have you brought the key so
soon?"</p>
<p>"We came," said Jean, propelled suddenly forward
by a vigorous push from the rear, "to see you about
Dandelion Cottage. We think you've made a mistake."</p>
<p>"Indeed!" said Mr. Downing, who did not at any
time like to be considered mistaken. "Suppose you
explain."</p>
<p>So sweet-voiced Jean explained all about digging
the dandelions to pay the rent, about Mr. Black's giving
them the key at the end of the week, and about
all the lovely times they had had and were still hoping
to have in their precious cottage before giving it
up for the winter.</p>
<p>Mr. Downing, personally, did not like Mr. Black.
He had a poor opinion of the older man's business
ability, and perhaps a somewhat exalted opinion of
his own. He considered Mr. Black old-fashioned and
far too easy-going. He felt that parish affairs were
more likely to flourish in the hands of a younger,
shrewder, and more modern person, and he had an
idea that he was that person. At any rate, now that
Mr. Black was out of town, Mr. Downing was glad
of an opportunity to display his own superior shrewdness.<span class="pagenum">[160]</span>
He would show the vestry a thing or two, and
incidentally increase the parish income, which as
everybody knew stood greatly in need of increasing.
He had no patience with slipshod methods. He was
truly sorry when business matters compelled him to
appear hard-hearted; but to him it seemed little short
of absurd for a man of Mr. Black's years to waste on
four small girls a cottage that might be bringing in a
comfortable sum every month in the year.</p>
<p>"Now that's a very pretty little story," said Mr.
Downing, when Jean had finished. "But, you see,
you've already had the cottage more than long enough
to pay you for pulling those few weeds."</p>
<p>"<i>Few!</i>" exclaimed Mabel, in indignant protest and
forgetting her promise of silence. "<i>Few!</i> Why, there
were <i>billions</i> of 'em. If we'd been paid two cents a
hundred for them, we'd all be <i>rich</i>. Mr. Black promised
us we could have that cottage for all summer and
our rent hasn't half perspired yet."</p>
<p>"She means <i>ex</i>pired," explained Marjory, "but she's
right for once. Mr. Black did say we could stay there
all summer, and it isn't quite August yet, you know."</p>
<p>"Hum," said Mr. Downing. "Nobody said anything
to <i>me</i> about any such arrangement, and I'm keeping
the books. I don't know what Mr. Black could have
been thinking of if he made any such foolish promise
as that. Of course it's not binding. Why, that cottage<span class="pagenum">[161]</span>
ought to be renting for ten or twelve dollars a month!"</p>
<p>"But the plaster's very bad," pleaded Bettie, eagerly,
"and the roof leaks in every room in the house but
one, and something's the matter underneath so it's
too cold for folks to live in during the winter. It was
vacant for a long time before <i>we</i> had it."</p>
<p>"It looked very comfortable to <i>me</i>," said Mr. Downing,
who had lived in the town for only a few months
and neither knew nor suspected the real condition of
the house. "I'm afraid your arrangement with Mr.
Black doesn't hold good. Mr. Morgan and I think it
best to have the house vacated at once. You see, we're
in danger of losing the rent from the next house, because
the Milligans have threatened to move out if
you don't."</p>
<p>"If—if seven dollars and a half would do you any
good," said Mabel, "and if you're mean enough to take
all the money we've got in this world—"</p>
<p>"I'm not," said Mr. Downing. "I'm only reasonable,
and I want you to be reasonable too. You must look
at this thing from a business standpoint. You see, the
rent from those two houses should bring in twenty-five
dollars a month, which isn't more than a sufficient
return for the money invested. The taxes—"</p>
<p>"A note for you, Mr. Downing," said a boy, who
had quietly opened the office door.</p>
<p>"Why," said Mr. Downing, when he had read the<span class="pagenum">[162]</span>
note, "this is really quite a remarkable coincidence.
This communication is from Mr. Milligan, who has
found a desirable tenant for the cottage he is now in,
and wishes, himself, to occupy the cottage you are
going to vacate. Very clever idea on Mr. Milligan's
part. This will save him five dollars a month and is
a most convenient arrangement all around. He wishes
to move in at once."</p>
<p>"Mr. Milligan!" gasped three of the astonished
girls.</p>
<p>"Those Milligans in <i>our</i> house!" cried Mabel. "Well,
<i>isn't</i> that the worst!"</p>
<p>"You see," said Mr. Downing, "it is really necessary
for you to move at once. I think you had better begin
without further loss of time. Good morning, good
morning, all of you, and please believe me, I'm sorry
about this, but it can't be helped."</p>
<p>"I hope," said Mabel, summoning all her dignity
for a parting shot, "that you'll never live long enough
to regret this—this outrage. There are seven rolls of
paper on the walls of that cottage that belong to us,
and we expect to be paid for every one of them."</p>
<p>"How much?" asked Mr. Downing, suppressing a
smile, for Mabel was never more amusing than when
she was very angry.</p>
<p>"Five cents a roll—thirty-five cents altogether."</p>
<p>Mr. Downing gravely reached into his trousers<span class="pagenum">[163]</span>
pocket, fished up a handful of loose change, scrupulously
counted out three dimes and a nickel, and
handed them to Mabel, who, with averted eyes and
chin held unnecessarily high, accepted the price of
the Blossom wall paper haughtily, and, following the
others, stalked from the office.</p>
<p>The unhappy girls could not trust themselves to
talk as they hastened homeward. They held hands
tightly, walking four abreast along the quiet street,
and barely managed to keep the tears back and the
rapidly swelling lumps in their little throats successfully
swallowed until Jean's trembling fingers had
unlocked the cottage door.</p>
<p>Then, with one accord, they rushed pell-mell for the
blue-room bed, hurled themselves upon its excelsior
pillows, and burst into tears. Jean and Bettie cried
silently but bitterly; Marjory wept audibly, with long,
shuddering sobs; but Mabel simply bawled. Mabel
always did her crying on the excellent principle that,
if a thing were worth doing at all, it was worth doing
well. She was doing it so well on this occasion that
Jean, who seldom cried and whose puffed, scarlet eyelids
contrasted oddly and rather pathetically with her
colorless cheeks, presently sat up to remonstrate.</p>
<p>"Mabel!" she said, slipping an arm about the chief
mourner, "do you want the Milligans to hear you?
We're on their side of the house, you know."<span class="pagenum">[164]</span></p>
<p>Jean couldn't have used a better argument. Mabel
stopped short in the middle of one of her very best
howls, sat up, and shook her head vigorously.</p>
<p>"Well, I just guess I don't," said she. "I'd die first!"</p>
<p>"I thought so," said Jean, with just a faint glimmer
of a smile. "We mustn't let those people guess how
awfully we care. Go bathe your eyes, Mabel—there
must be a little warm water in the tea kettle."</p>
<p>Then the comforter turned to Bettie, and made the
appeal that was most likely to reach that always-ready-to-help
young person.</p>
<p>"Come, Bettie dear, you've cried long enough. We
must get to work, for we've a tremendous lot to do.
Don't you suppose that, if we had all the things
packed in baskets or bundles, we could get a few of
your brothers to help us move out after dark? I just
<i>can't</i> let those Milligans gloat over us while we go
back and forth with things."</p>
<p>Bettie's only response was a sob.</p>
<p>"Where in the world can we put the things?" asked
Marjory, sitting up suddenly and displaying a blotched
and swollen countenance very unlike her usual fair,
rose-tinted face. "Of course we can each take our dolls
and books home, but our furniture—"</p>
<p>"I'm going to ask Mother if we can't store it upstairs
in our barn. I'm sure she'll let us."</p>
<p>"Oh, I <i>wish</i> Mr. Black were here. It doesn't seem<span class="pagenum">[165]</span>
possible we've really got to move. There <i>must</i> be some
way out of it. Oh, Bettie, <i>couldn't</i> we write to Mr.
Black?"</p>
<p>"It would take too-oo-oo long," sobbed Bettie, sitting
up and mopping her eyes with the muslin window
curtain, which she could easily reach from the
foot of the bed. "He's way off in Washington. Oh,
dear—oh, dear—oh, dear!"</p>
<p>"Why couldn't we telegraph?" demanded Marjory,
with whom hope died hard. "Telegrams go pretty
fast, don't they?"</p>
<p>"They cost terribly," said Bettie. "They're almost as
expensive as express packages. Still, we might find
out what it costs."</p>
<p>"I dow the telegraph-mad," wheezed Mabel from
the wash-basin. "I'll go hobe ad telephode hib ad
ask what it costs—I've heard by father give hib bessages
lots of tibes. Oh, by, by dose is all stuffed up."</p>
<p>"Try a handkerchief," suggested Jean. "Go ask, if
you want to; it won't do any harm, nor probably any
good."</p>
<p>Mabel ran home, taking care to keep her back turned
toward the Milligan house. During her brief absence,
the girls bathed their eyes and made sundry other futile
attempts to do away with all outward signs of
grief.</p>
<p>"He says," cried Mabel, bursting in excitedly, "that<span class="pagenum">[166]</span>
sixty cents is the regular price in the daytime, but it's
forty cents for a night message. It seems kind of mean
to wake folks up in the middle of the night just to
save twenty cents, doesn't it?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Bettie. "I couldn't be impolite enough to
do that to anybody I like as well as I like Mr. Black.
If we haven't money enough to send a daytime message,
we mustn't send any."</p>
<p>"Well, we haven't," said Jean. "We've only thirty-five
cents."</p>
<p>"And we wouldn't have had that," said Mabel, "if
I hadn't remembered that wall paper just in the nick
of time."</p>
<p>Strangely enough, not one of the girls thought of
the money in the bank. Perhaps it did not occur to
them that it would be possible to remove any portion
of their precious seven dollars and a half without
withdrawing it all; they knew little of business matters.
Nor did they think of appealing to their parents
for aid at this crisis. Indeed, they were all too dazed
by the suddenness and tremendousness of the blow to
think very clearly about anything. The sum needed
seemed a large one to the girls, who habitually bought
a cent's worth of candy at a time from the generous
proprietor of the little corner shop. Mabel, the only
one with an allowance, was, to her father's way of
thinking, a hopeless little spendthrift, already deeply<span class="pagenum">[167]</span>
plunged in debt by her unpaid fines for lateness to
meals.</p>
<p>The Tucker income did not go round even for the
grown-ups, so of course there were few pennies for
the Tucker children. Marjory's Aunty Jane had ideas
of her own on the subject of spending-money for little
girls—Marjory did not suspect that the good but
rather austere woman made a weekly pilgrimage to
the bank for the purpose of religiously depositing a
small sum in her niece's name; and, if she had known
it, Marjory would probably have been improvident
enough to prefer spot cash in smaller amounts. Only
that morning tender-hearted Jean had heard patient
Mrs. Mapes lamenting because butter had gone up two
cents a pound and because all the bills had seemed
larger than those of the preceding month—Jean always
took the family bills very much to heart.</p>
<p>The girls sorrowfully concluded that there was nothing
left for them to do but to obey Mr. Downing.
They had looked forward with dread to giving up the
cottage when winter should come, but the idea of
losing it in midsummer was a thousand times worse.</p>
<p>"We'll just have to give it up," said grieved little
Bettie. "There's nothing else we <i>can</i> do, with Mr.
Black away. When I go home tonight I'll write to him
and apologize for not being able to keep our promise<span class="pagenum">[168]</span>
about the dinner party. That's the hardest thing of all
to give up."</p>
<p>"But you don't know his address," objected Jean.</p>
<p>"Yes, I do, because Father wrote to him about some
church business this morning, before going away, and
gave Dick the letter to mail. Of course Dick forgot all
about it and left it on the hall mantelpiece. It's probably
there yet, for I'm the only person that ever remembers
to mail Father's letters—he forgets them
himself most of the time."</p>
<p>"Now let's get to work," said Jean. "Since we have
to move let's pretend we really want to. I've always
thought it must be quite exciting to really truly move.
You see, we <i>must</i> get it over before the Milligans
guess that we've begun, and there isn't any too much
time left. I'll begin to take down the things in the
parlor and tie them up in the bedclothes. We'll leave
all the curtains until the last so that no one will know
what we're doing."</p>
<p>"I'll help you," said Bettie.</p>
<p>"Mabel and I might be packing the dishes," said
Marjory. "It will be easier to do it while we have the
table left to work on. Come along, Mabel."</p>
<p>Mabel followed obediently. When the forlorn pair
reached the kitchen, Marjory announced her intention
of exploring the little shed for empty baskets, leaving
Mabel to stack the cups and plates in compact piles.<span class="pagenum">[169]</span>
Mabel, without knowing just why she did it, picked
up her old friend, the cracked lemonade-pitcher and
gave it a little shake. Something rattled. Mabel, always
an inquisitive young person, thrust her fingers into the
dusty depths to bring up a piece of money—two
pieces—three pieces—four pieces.</p>
<p>"Oh," she gasped, "it's my lemonade money! Oh,
what a lucky omen! Girls!"</p>
<p>The next instant Mabel clapped a plump, dusty
hand over her own lips to keep them from announcing
the discovery, and then, stealthily concealing the
twenty cents in the pocket that still contained the
wall-paper money, she stole quickly through the cottage
and ran to her own home.</p>
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<span class="pagenum">[170]</span>
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