<h2 id="CHAPTER_16">CHAPTER 16</h2>
<p class="h3">Mabel Plans a Surprise</p>
<p>The girls were indignant later when they discovered
Mabel's apparent desertion. It was precisely like Mabel,
they said, to shirk when there was anything unpleasant
to be done. For once, however, they were
wronging Mabel—poor, self-sacrificing Mabel, who
with fifty-five cents at her disposal was planning a
beautiful surprise for her unappreciative cottage-mates.
The girls might have known that nothing short of an<span class="pagenum">[171]</span>
ambitious project for saving the cottage from the Milligans
would have kept the child away when so much
was going on. For Mabel was at that very moment
doing what was for her the hardest kind of work; all
alone in her own room at home she was laboriously
composing a telegram.</p>
<p>She had never sent a telegram, nor had she even
read one. She could not consult her mother because
Mrs. Bennett had inconsiderately gone down town to
do her marketing. Dr. Bennett, however, was a very
busy man and sometimes received a number of important
messages in one day. Mabel felt that the occasion
justified her studying several late specimens which
she resurrected from the waste-paper basket under her
father's desk. These, however, proved rather unsatisfactory
models since none of them seemed to exactly
fit the existing emergency. Most of them, indeed, were
in cipher.</p>
<p>"I suppose," said Mabel, nibbling her penholder
thoughtfully, "they make 'em short so they'll fit these
little sheets of yellow paper, but there's lots more
space they <i>might</i> use if they didn't leave such wide
margins. I'll write small so I can say all I want to,
but, dear me, I can't think of a thing to say."</p>
<p>It took a long time, but the message was finished at
last. With a deep sigh of satisfaction, Mabel folded it
neatly and put it into an envelope which she carefully<span class="pagenum">[172]</span>
sealed. Then, putting on her hat, and taking the telegram
with her, she ran to Bettie's home and opened
the door—none of the four girls were required to ring
each other's doorbells. There, sure enough, was the
letter waiting to be mailed to Mr. Black. Mabel, who
had thought to bring a pencil, copied the address in
her big, vertical handwriting, and without further ado
ran with it to her friend, the telegraph operator, whose
office was just around the corner. All the distances in
the little town were short, and Mabel had frequently
been sent to the place with messages written by her
father, so she did not feel the need of asking permission.</p>
<p>The clerk opened the envelope—Mabel considered
this decidedly rude of him—and proceeded to read the
message. It took him a long time. Then he looked
from Mabel's flushed cheeks and eager eyes to the little
collection of nickels and dimes she had placed on the
counter. Mabel wondered why the young man chewed
the ends of his sandy mustache so vigorously. Perhaps
he was amused at something; she looked about the
little office to see what it could be that pleased him so
greatly, but there seemed to be nothing to excite mirth.
She decided that he was either a very cheerful young
man naturally, or else he was feeling joyful because
the clock said that it was nearly time for luncheon.</p>
<p>"It'll be all right, Miss Mabel," said he at last. "It's<span class="pagenum">[173]</span>
a pretty good fifty-five cents' worth; but I guess Mr.
Black won't object to that. I hope you'll always come
to me when you have messages to send."</p>
<p>"I won't if you go and read them all," said Mabel,
at which her friend looked even more cheerful than
he had before.</p>
<p>Ten minutes later Mabel, mumbling something
about having had an errand to attend to, presented
herself at the cottage. Beyond a few meekly received
reproaches from Marjory, no one said anything about
the unexplained absence. Indeed, they were all too
busy and too preoccupied to care, the greater grief of
losing the cottage having swallowed up all lesser
concerns.</p>
<p>At a less trying time the girls would have discovered
within ten minutes that Mabel was suffering from a
suppressed secret; but everything was changed now.
Although Mabel fairly bristled with importance and
gave out sundry very broad hints, no one paid the
slightest attention. Gradually, in the stress of packing,
the matter of the telegram faded from Mabel's short
memory, for preparing to move proved a most exciting
operation, and also a harrowing one. Every few moments
somebody would say: "Our last day," and then
the other three would fall to weeping on anything
that happened to come handy. Of course the packing
had stirred up considerable dust; this, mingled with<span class="pagenum">[174]</span>
tears, added much to the forlornness of the cottagers'
appearance when they went home at noon with their
news.</p>
<p>The parents and Aunty Jane said it was a shame,
but all agreed that there was nothing to be done. All
were sorry to have the girls deprived of the cottage,
for the mothers had certainly found it a relief to have
their little daughters' leisure hours so safely and happily
occupied. Mabel's mother was especially sorry.</p>
<p>Never was moving more melancholy nor house
more forlorn when the moving, done after dark with
great caution, and mostly through the dining-room
window on the side of the house farthest from the
Milligans, was finally accomplished. The Tucker boys
had been only too delighted to help. By bedtime the
cottage was empty of everything but the curtains on
the Milligan side of the house. An hour later the tired
girls were asleep; but under each pillow there was a
handkerchief rolled in a tight, grimy little ball and
soaked with tears.</p>
<p>In the morning, the girls returned for a last look,
and for the remaining curtains. Dandelion Cottage,
stripped of its furniture and without its pictures,
showed its age and all its infirmities. Great patches of
plaster and wall paper were missing, for the gay posters
had covered a multitude of defects. The indignant
Tucker boys had disobeyed Bettie and had removed<span class="pagenum">[175]</span>
not only the tin they had put on the leaking roof, but
the steps they had built at the back door, the drain
they had found it necessary to place under the kitchen
sink, and the bricks with which they had propped the
tottering chimneys.</p>
<p>Before the day was over, the tenants whom the Milligans
had found for their own house were clamoring
to move in, so the Milligans took possession of the
cottage late that afternoon, getting the key from Mr.
Downing, into whose keeping the girls had silently
delivered it that morning. To do Mr. Downing justice,
nothing had ever hurt him quite as much as did
the dignified silence of the three pale girls who waited
for a moment in the doorway, while equally pallid
Jean went quietly forward to lay the key on his desk.
He realized suddenly that not one of them could have
spoken a word without bursting into tears; and for
the rest of that day he hated himself most heartily.</p>
<hr class="chapter" />
<span class="pagenum">[176]</span>
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