<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>THE GIANT SCISSORS</h1>
<h3>By Annie Fellows Johnston</h3>
<br/>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I."></SPAN>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<h3>IN THE PEAR-TREE.</h3>
<br/>
<p>Joyce was crying, up in old Monsieur Gréville's tallest
pear-tree. She had gone down to the farthest corner of the garden,
out of sight of the house, for she did not want any one to know
that she was miserable enough to cry.</p>
<p>She was tired of the garden with the high stone wall around it,
that made her feel like a prisoner; she was tired of French verbs
and foreign faces; she was tired of France, and so homesick for her
mother and Jack and Holland and the baby, that she couldn't help
crying. No wonder, for she was only twelve years old, and she had
never been out of the little Western village where she was born,
until the day she started abroad with her Cousin Kate.</p>
<p>Now she sat perched up on a limb in a dismal bunch, her chin in
her hands and her elbows on her knees. It was a gray afternoon in
November; the air was frosty, although the laurel-bushes in the
garden were all in bloom.</p>
<p>"I s'pect there is snow on the ground at home," thought Joyce,
"and there's a big, cheerful fire in the sitting-room grate.</p>
<p>"Holland and the baby are shelling corn, and Mary is popping it.
Dear me! I can smell it just as plain! Jack will be coming in from
the post-office pretty soon, and maybe he'll have one of my
letters. Mother will read it out loud, and there they'll all be,
thinking that I am having such a fine time; that it is such a grand
thing for me to be abroad studying, and having dinner served at
night in so many courses, and all that sort of thing. They don't
know that I am sitting up here in this pear-tree, lonesome enough
to die. Oh, if I could only go back home and see them for even five
minutes," she sobbed, "but I can't! I can't! There's a whole wide
ocean between us!"</p>
<p>She shut her eyes, and leaned back against the tree as that
desolate feeling of homesickness settled over her like a great
miserable ache. Then she found that shutting her eyes, and thinking
very hard about the little brown house at home, seemed to bring it
into plain sight. It was like opening a book, and seeing picture
after picture as she turned the pages.</p>
<p>There they were in the kitchen, washing dishes, she and Mary;
and Mary was standing on a soap-box to make her tall enough to
handle the dishes easily. How her funny little braid of yellow hair
bobbed up and down as she worked, and how her dear little freckled
face beamed, as they told stories to each other to make the work
seem easier.</p>
<p>Mary's stories all began the same way: "If I had a witch with a
wand, this is what we would do." The witch with a wand had come to
Joyce in the shape of Cousin Kate Ware, and that coming was one of
the pictures that Joyce could see now, as she thought about it with
her eyes closed.</p>
<p>There was Holland swinging on the gate, waiting for her to come
home from school, and trying to tell her by excited gestures, long
before she was within speaking distance, that some one was in the
parlor. The baby had on his best plaid kilt and new tie, and the
tired little mother was sitting talking in the parlor, an unusual
thing for her. Joyce could see herself going up the path, swinging
her sun-bonnet by the strings and taking hurried little bites of a
big June apple in order to finish it before going into the house.
Now she was sitting on the sofa beside Cousin Kate, feeling very
awkward and shy with her little brown fingers clasped in this
stranger's soft white hand. She had heard that Cousin Kate was a
very rich old maid, who had spent years abroad, studying music and
languages, and she had expected to see a stout, homely woman with
bushy eyebrows, like Miss Teckla Schaum, who played the church
organ, and taught German in the High School.</p>
<p>But Cousin Kate was altogether unlike Miss Teckla. She was tall
and slender, she was young-looking and pretty, and there was a
stylish air about her, from the waves of her soft golden brown hair
to the bottom of her tailor-made gown, that was not often seen in
this little Western village.</p>
<p>Joyce saw herself glancing admiringly at Cousin Kate, and then
pulling down her dress as far as possible, painfully conscious that
her shoes were untied, and white with dust. The next picture was
several days later. She and Jack were playing mumble-peg outside
under the window by the lilac-bushes, and the little mother was
just inside the door, bending over a pile of photographs that
Cousin Kate had dropped in her lap. Cousin Kate was saying, "This
beautiful old French villa is where I expect to spend the winter,
Aunt Emily. These are views of Tours, the town that lies across the
river Loire from it, and these are some of the châteaux near
by that I intend to visit. They say the purest French in the world
is spoken there. I have prevailed on one of the dearest old ladies
that ever lived to give me rooms with her. She and her husband live
all alone in this big country place, so I shall have to provide
against loneliness by taking my company with me. Will you let me
have Joyce for a year?"</p>
<p>Jack and she stopped playing in sheer astonishment, while Cousin
Kate went on to explain how many advantages she could give the
little girl to whom she had taken such a strong fancy.</p>
<p>Looking through the lilac-bushes, Joyce could see her mother
wipe her eyes and say, "It seems like pure providence, Kate, and I
can't stand in the child's way. She'll have to support herself
soon, and ought to be prepared for it; but she's the oldest of the
five, you know, and she has been like my right hand ever since her
father died. There'll not be a minute while she is gone, that I
shall not miss her and wish her back. She's the life and sunshine
of the whole home."</p>
<p>Then Joyce could see the little brown house turned all
topsy-turvy in the whirl of preparation that followed, and the next
thing, she was standing on the platform at the station, with her
new steamer trunk beside her. Half the town was there to bid her
good-by. In the excitement of finding herself a person of such
importance she forgot how much she was leaving behind her, until
looking up, she saw a tender, wistful smile on her mother's face,
sadder than any tears.</p>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/0011-1.jpg" width-obs="40%" alt=""><br/>
<b>WHERE JOYCE LIVED</b></p>
<p>Luckily the locomotive whistled just then, and the novelty of
getting aboard a train for the first time, helped her to be brave
at the parting. She stood on the rear platform of the last car,
waving her handkerchief to the group at the station as long as it
was in sight, so that the last glimpse her mother should have of
her, was with her bright little face all ashine.</p>
<p>All these pictures passed so rapidly through Joyce's mind, that
she had retraced the experiences of the last three months in as
many minutes. Then, somehow, she felt better. The tears had washed
away the ache in her throat. She wiped her eyes and climbed liked a
squirrel to the highest limb that could bear her weight.</p>
<p>This was not the first time that the old pear-tree had been
shaken by Joyce's grief, and it knew that her spells of
homesickness always ended in this way. There she sat, swinging her
plump legs back and forth, her long light hair blowing over the
shoulders of her blue jacket, and her saucy little mouth puckered
into a soft whistle. She could see over the high wall now. The sun
was going down behind the tall Lombardy poplars that lined the
road, and in a distant field two peasants still at work reminded
her of the picture of "The Angelus." They seemed like acquaintances
on account of the resemblance, for there was a copy of the picture
in her little bedroom at home.</p>
<p>All around her stretched quiet fields, sloping down to the
ancient village of St. Symphorien and the river Loire. Just across
the river, so near that she could hear the ringing of the cathedral
bell, lay the famous old town of Tours. There was something in
these country sights and sounds that soothed her with their homely
cheerfulness. The crowing of a rooster and the barking of a dog
fell on her ear like familiar music.</p>
<p>"It's a comfort to hear something speak English," she sighed,
"even if it's nothing but a chicken. I do wish that Cousin Kate
wouldn't be so particular about my using French all day long. The
one little half-hour at bedtime when she allows me to speak English
isn't a drop in the bucket. It's a mercy that I had studied French
some before I came, or I would have a lonesome time. I wouldn't be
able to ever talk at all."</p>
<p>It was getting cold up in the pear-tree. Joyce shivered and
stepped down to the limb below, but paused in her descent to watch
a peddler going down the road with a pack on his back.</p>
<p class="rgt"><ANTIMG src="images/0015-1.jpg" width-obs="45%" alt=""></p>
<p>"Oh, he is stopping at the gate with the big scissors!" she
cried, so interested that she spoke aloud. "I must wait to see if
it opens."</p>
<p>There was something mysterious about that gate across the road.
Like Monsieur Gréville's, it was plain and solid, reaching
as high as the wall. Only the lime-trees and the second story
windows of the house could be seen above it. On the top it bore an
iron medallion, on which was fastened a huge pair of scissors.
There was a smaller pair on each gable of the house, also.</p>
<p>During the three months that Joyce had been in Monsieur
Gréville's home, she had watched every day to see it open;
but if any one ever entered or left the place, it was certainly by
some other way than this queer gate.</p>
<p>What lay beyond it, no one could tell. She had questioned
Gabriel the coachman, and Berthé the maid, in vain. Madame
Gréville said that she remembered having heard, when a
child, that the man who built it was named <i>Ciseaux</i>, and that
was why the symbol of this name was hung over the gate and on the
gables. He had been regarded as half crazy by his neighbors. The
place was still owned by a descendant of his, who had gone to
Algiers, and left it in charge of two servants.</p>
<p>The peddler rang the bell of the gate several times, but failing
to arouse any one, shouldered his pack and went off grumbling. Then
Joyce climbed down and walked slowly up the gravelled path to the
house. Cousin Kate had just come back from Tours in the pony cart,
and was waiting in the door to see if Gabriel had all the bundles
that she had brought out with her.</p>
<p>Joyce followed her admiringly into the house. She wished that
she could grow up to look exactly like Cousin Kate, and wondered if
she would ever wear such stylish silk-lined skirts, and catch them
up in such an airy, graceful way when she ran up-stairs; and if she
would ever have a Paris hat with long black feathers, and always
wear a bunch of sweet violets on her coat.</p>
<p>She looked at herself in Cousin Kate's mirror as she passed it,
and sighed. "Well, I am better-looking than when I left home," she
thought. "That's one comfort. My face isn't freckled now, and my
hair is more becoming this way than in tight little pigtails, the
way I used to wear it."</p>
<p>Cousin Kate, coming up behind her, looked over her head and
smiled at the attractive reflection of Joyce's rosy cheeks and
straightforward gray eyes. Then she stopped suddenly and put her
arms around her, saying, "What's the matter, dear? You have been
crying."</p>
<p>"Nothing," answered Joyce, but there was a quaver in her voice,
and she turned her head aside. Cousin Kate put her hand under the
resolute little chin, and tilted it until she could look into the
eyes that dropped under her gaze "You have been crying," she said
again, this time in English, "crying because you are homesick. I
wonder if it would not be a good occupation for you to open all the
bundles that I got this afternoon. There is a saucepan in one, and
a big spoon in the other, and all sorts of good things in the
others, so that we can make some molasses candy here in my room,
over the open fire. While it cooks you can curl up in the big
armchair and listen to a fairy tale in the firelight. Would you
like that, little one?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes!" cried Joyce, ecstatically. "That's what they are
doing at home this minute, I am sure. We always make candy every
afternoon in the winter time."</p>
<p>Presently the saucepan was sitting on the coals, and Joyce's
little pug nose was rapturously sniffing the odor of bubbling
molasses. "I know what I'd like the story to be about," she said,
as she stirred the delicious mixture with the new spoon. "Make up
something about the big gate across the road, with the scissors on
it."</p>
<p>Cousin Kate crossed the room, and sat down by the window, where
she could look out and see the top of it.</p>
<p>"Let me think for a few minutes," she said. "I have been very
much interested in that old gate myself."</p>
<p>She thought so long that the candy was done before she was ready
to tell the story; but while it cooled in plates outside on the
window-sill, she drew Joyce to a seat beside her in the
chimney-corner. With her feet on the fender, and the child's head
on her shoulder, she began this story, and the firelight dancing on
the walls, showed a smile on Joyce's contented little face.</p>
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