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At last she stopped short and surveyed him with smart displeasure.
"You haven't heard a word I've said," she declared sharply.
"No'm," said Joel, promptly; and, coming to himself with an awful consciousness that here was something dreadful to add to the matter of the key that now began to quite weigh him down, he stopped swinging his feet and sat stiffly on the chair.
"Well, do you come straight here," she demanded; and somehow Joel found himself off from his chair, and over by the old lady's side.
"No, not there; I want you in front where I can look at you," and she summarily arranged him to her liking. "There you are! Now, Joel,"--she surveyed him as long as it suited her, Joel not taking his black eyes from her face,--"do you know what I want this talk with you for?"
"No'm," said Joel.
"Well, I'll tell you; listen, now."
"Yes'm," said Joel, gripping his key tighter than ever.
"You'd much better give me that key," said Madam Van Ruypen, with a sudden sharp look down at his clenched hand; "you are not attending at all to what I am saying, Joel."
"Oh, no, no," cried Joel, quite alarmed, and thrusting his fistful back of him. "O dear! Let me go, ma'am, _please do_!"
Instead of this request being complied with, Madam Van Ruypen leaned over and calmly laid a black glove on his hot little fist. "Give it to me at once," she commanded; "I'll keep it for you until I've said my say."
"I can't," screamed Joel; "'tisn't mine. O dear me, I can't." Clapping his other hand on his fist to hold it tighter yet, he wriggled away in distress to stand in the middle of the floor, the old lady viewing him with fast-rising choler; at last she arrived at the height of her displeasure.
"Go away at once," she said coldly, "and send your brother David here.
He's a boy of sense, and the best one, after all, to deal with, seeing Ben isn't home."
Joel, nearly blinded by the tears that now ran freely down his cheeks, stumbled out to do as he was bidden, forgetting in his misery the key still doubled up in his fist. But search high and low as he might, David could not be found. And at last Joel, quite gone in distress, rushed into Mother Fisher's room. There was no one in it, and Joel flung himself down on the wide old sofa, and cried as if his heart would break.
Meantime Madam Van Ruypen, despairing of Mrs. Whitney's return, and despite her summons to servants, unable to find a trace of Joel or David, swept out of the back drawing-room, got into her carriage, and was driven off home in a very bad frame of mind.
And Joel sobbed on until he could scarcely see out of his eyes, and still Mother Fisher didn't come. And the butler crossly set the other Christmas gifts that kept arriving, in a closet under the hall stairs, much too small a place for them, and everything was about as bad as it could be.
A smart clap on the back brought Joel up, but he hid his face behind his hands.
"Phoh! What are you crying for?" It was Van; and he was so delighted to catch Joel in this plight that he chortled over and over, "Joe Pepper's been crying!" and he began to dance around the room.
"I haven't," cried Joel, too wild to think of anything but Van's taunts, and das.h.i.+ng his hands aside.
"Oh, what an _awful_ whopper!" exclaimed Van, coming quite close to peer up into Joel's face, "and you don't know how you look,--just like that baboon at the Zoo, with the little squinched-up eyes!" he added pleasantly.
"I don't care--go 'way!" said Joel, crossly, and flapping out his hands, regardless of anything but the wild desire to keep Van from a close inspection. Something jingled as it fell to the floor.
"What's that?" cried Van, dancing away from Joel, and peering with bright eyes on the carpet.
"It's nothing," screamed Joel, flying down in front of the sofa, and pawing wildly along the carpet. "I tell you 'tisn't," he kept on screaming. "Go 'way this minute."
"Oh, now I know you've got something that doesn't belong to you, and you're keeping it secret from the rest of us." Van threw himself flat on the floor and tried to crowd in between Joel and the old sofa.
"I haven't; it's mine, it's--it's--Go right away!"
But struggle and push as he might, Van somehow seemed to wedge himself in; and Joel's poor eyes not allowing him to see much, it was just one minute, when--"O goody!" The key was in Van's hand, and he was dancing again in the middle of the room.
Joel sprang to his feet and tossed his stubby black hair off from his forehead, "You give that right straight back here, Van Whitney!" he shouted.
"Catch me!" cried Van. Then he swung the key tauntingly over toward Joel. "Hoh, don't you wish you may get it, Joe Pepper, don't you, now?"
For answer Joel made a blind rush at him, and there they were, flying around and around in Mother Fisher's room, Van now having all he could do to look out for himself and keep away from Joel's st.u.r.dy fists, without the care of keys. So he flung his captured prize as far as he could over into the opposite corner. And hearing it land somewhere, Joel released him, and ran blindly over where it appeared to strike. And as Van followed quickly, there really didn't seem to be any chance of recovering it, at least in peace, with another on its trail who had a sharp pair of eyes in his head.
Joel turned suddenly, and before Van had the least idea what he was about, he was seized and hustled off to Mother Fisher's closet, bundled in, the door slammed to, the key turned in the lock, and there he was.
"Now," said Joel, drawing the first long breath, "I'll get that key easy enough," and he rushed over to begin operations.
"_Let me out!_" screamed Van, in m.u.f.fled accents, and banging on the closet door.
"Don't you wish you may?" Joel, pawing and prowling frantically along the floor, found time to hurl him this over his shoulder. Then he rubbed his smarting eyes and set to work with fresh vigor, not paying any further attention to Van's entreaties. At last, when it really seemed as if that key had been possessed of little fairy legs and run off, Joel pushed aside Mother Fisher's big workstand, a thing he had done at least three times before, and there it was s.h.i.+ning up at him where it had hidden behind one of the legs!
"I've got you now," cried Joel, jubilantly pouncing on it. And this time, not daring to trust it in his hands, he thrust it deep within his pocket, and with never a thought of Van, who had stopped his cries to listen to Joel, he tore out of the room, and down the stairs, three at a time.
"Has any one seen Mamsie?" he cried of the first person he met, one of the under servants pa.s.sing through the back hall.
"Why, she's gone out with Mrs. Whitney," said the maid.
"Bother!" exploded Joel, dancing impatiently from one foot to the other.
"Yes, they've gone out making calls, I s'pose," said the maid, delighted to think she had any news to impart.
Joel made a grimace at that, not having at any time a reason for liking calls, and this afternoon with a positive aversion to them. And that brought back Madam Van Ruypen unpleasantly to his mind.
"Has she gone?" he asked in a dreadful whisper; and clutching the maid's arm, "has she, Hannah?"
"Ow!" exclaimed Hannah, edging off quickly. "Yes, I told you she had; she and Mrs. Whitney, too. You don't need to pinch me to death, Master Joel, to find out."
"Oh, I don't mean Mamsie," cried Joel, impatiently. "I mean _she_,--has _she_ gone?" and pointing off toward the back drawing-room, "Say, Hannah, has she?"
"Whoever do you mean?" demanded Hannah, glancing over her shoulder in the direction indicated.
"Why, _she_," repeated Joel, stamping impatiently to enforce his words, "Madam Van Ruypen, of course."
"I didn't know she was there," said Hannah, "I'll go and see," and she started for the back drawing-room door.
"Oh, no, no," cried Joel, in a lively terror, and running after her, he laid hold of her ap.r.o.n string; "I don't want to know, Hannah; I don't, really."
"Why, you asked me," snapped Hannah, twitching away the ap.r.o.n string; "there, now, you've mussed it all up," she added in vexation, and now quite determined, if for no other reason than to spite Joel, to explore the back drawing-room, she opened the door and went in.
Joel, seeing she had escaped him, fled precipitately and, not waiting to restore the key to Hobson, a thing he had intended to do if he couldn't find Mamsie, now considered out of doors to be the only safe place for him. For of course Hannah would come for him to go back to Madam Van Ruypen sitting in dreadful state to receive him. It sent cold chills down his spine just to think of it! And he rushed madly along down by a cross cut to the green wicket gate on his way over to Larry Keep's.
"Hullo! Well, you needn't knock a chap down," as some one b.u.mped into him.