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"And blue velours curtains for the big room. I always dreamed I'd have a house with blue velours curtains."
"Sure, sure! Anything you want you order."
"And that fireplace in the big room--I burned some trash there this morning, and it simply won't inhale."
"Never did," said Sharon. "We'll run the chimney up higher. Anything else?"
"Oh, lots! I've a long list somewhere."
"I bet you have! But it's a good old house; don't build 'em like this any more; not a nail in it; sound as a nut. Say, miss, did you know there was high old times in this house about seventy-three years ago?
Fact! They thought I wasn't going to pull through. I was over two days old before it looked like I'd come round. Say, I learned to walk out in that side yard. That reminds me--" Sharon hesitated in mild embarra.s.sment--"there's a place between them two wings--make a bully place for a sun room; spoil the architecture, mebbe, but who cares? Sun room--big place to play round in--play room, or anything like that."
Patricia had been searching among a stack of newspapers, but she had caught "sun room."
"Stunning!" she said. "We need another big place right now, or when my things get here."
Sharon coughed.
"Need it more later, I guess."
But Patricia had found her paper.
"Oh, here's something I put aside to ask you about! I want you to understand I'm going to be all the help I can here. This advertis.e.m.e.nt says 'Raise Belgian hares,' because meat is so high. Do you know--do people really make millions at it, and could I do the work?"
Sharon was shaking his head.
"You could if you didn't have something else to do. And I suppose they sell for money, though I never did hear tell of a Belgian-hare millionaire. Heard of all other kinds, but not him. But you look here, young woman, I hope there'll be other things not sold by the pound that'll keep you from rabbit raising. This family's depending a lot on you. Didn't you hear my speech about that fine sun room?"
"Will you please not bother me at a time like this?" scolded Patricia.
"Now out with you--he's outside somewhere! And can't you ever in the world for five minutes get mere Whipples out of your mind?" She actively waved him on from the open door.
Sharon pa.s.sed through a grape arbour, turning beyond it to study the site of the sun room. All in a moment he built and peopled it. How he hoped they would be coming along to play in there; at least three before he was too old to play with them. He saw them now; saw them, moreover, upon the flimsiest of promises, all superbly gifted with the Whipple nose. Then he went hopefully off toward the stables. He came upon Wilbur Cowan inspecting a new reaper under one of the sheds. This time the old man feigned no pounding of the boy's back--made no pretense that he did not hug him.
"I'm so glad, so glad, so almighty glad!" he said as they stood apart.
He did not speak with his wonted exuberance, saying the words very quietly. But Sharon had not to be noisy to sound sincere.
"Thanks," said Wilbur. "Of course I couldn't be sure how her people would----"
"Stuff!" said Sharon. "All tickled to death but one near-Whipple and he's only annoyed. But you've been my boy--in my fool mind I always had you for my boy, when you was little and when you went to war. You could of known that, and that was enough for you to know. Of course I never did think of you and Pat. That was too gosh-all perfect. Of course I called her a rattlepate, but she was my girl as much as you was my boy."
The old eyes shone mistily upon Wilbur, then roved to the site of his dream before he continued.
"Me? I'm getting on--and on. Right fast, too. But you--you and that fine girl--why, you two are a new morning in a new world, so fresh and young and proud of each other, the way you are!" He hesitated, his eyes coming back. "Only thing I hope for now--before I get bedfast or something--say, take a look at the s.p.a.ce between them south wings--stand over this way a mite." Sharon now built there, with the warmest implications, a perfect sun room. "That'll be one grand place," he affirmed of his work when all was done.
"Yes, it sounds good," replied Wilbur.
"Oh, a grand place, big as outdoors, getting any sun there is--great for winter, great for rainy days!" Wistfully he searched the other's face. "You know, Buck, a grand place to--play in, or anything like that."
"Yes, sir," said Wilbur.
THE END