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"My father!" cried Jasper, in surprise. Then his hands fell away from Ben's shoulders, and he backed slowly off.
"Yes, your father," reiterated Ben. "He can do anything, and you know it."
"But Ben Pepper--you--you don't understand," said Jasper, very much puzzled to think how Ben, usually so level-headed, could fall into such a stupid misapprehension at this time. "Pip belongs to Doctor Presbrey; that is,--why, you know the story. His father and mother are dead, and he's in the care of the Doctor. Put there by a sort of a guardian down in South America, where the forlorn little chap came from, and--"
"Oh, I know that whole story," said Ben, guilty of interrupting.
"Well, then, how can you go on so?" exclaimed Jasper, more than ever bewildered that Ben should propose such a useless plan.
"Yes, but all that makes no difference," said Ben, snapping his fingers.
"Your father can make Doctor Presbrey let Pip off to stay here until you go back." Ben set up his square shoulders and stood as tall as he could, looking up obstinately at Jasper's face.
"Whew!" whistled Jasper. Then he thrust his hands into his pockets and marched up and down the apartment, the same as Ben had done.
"You see, Doctor Presbrey is a sensible man," said Ben, firing one of his reserve shots after the tall boy, "and when he knows how Pip has changed since he's been here,--why, Joel has done wonders with him,--now that man is going to let him stay on a bit."
"Joel hasn't done everything," observed Jasper, wheeling in his corner.
"And your father can make anybody do anything," broke in Ben, hurriedly.
"Father never likes to interfere with people," said Jasper, running nervous fingers through his dark hair, and wrinkling it up into waves.
Then he tossed it back in irritation. "He'll never do it in all this world, Ben Pepper!" and he strode off down the room again.
"Yes, he will," declared Ben, standing still in his tracks. Then he fired another shot. "But of course he won't if you and I don't believe in it."
"What do you mean?" cried Jasper, wheeling to run up and seize Ben's jacket-b.u.t.ton. "Why, I'm in favor of it, this plan of yours, Ben, only it's perfectly useless to begin with;" his gray eyes turned dark with feeling as he fixed them on Ben's face.
"That's no way to favor a thing," said Ben, quite unmoved, "not to believe in it."
"But--but I can't say I believe in it, because I _don't_," declared Jasper, quite as obstinately in his way.
"But you can go at it as if you wanted to believe in it," said Ben, st.u.r.dily.
"Well, I will; I'll promise you that," said Jasper, "for I want it as much as you do."
"I know it," said Ben, bobbing his head.
"All right; now we'll shove ahead on it," said Jasper, with a laugh.
"But Father--" and his face fell.
"If we want it," said Ben, "we've got to make him want it, too."
"Of course. Well, we'll try for it," said Jasper, swallowing hard. "But there's the school; you see it interrupts all Dr. Presbrey's work over Pip."
"I know it," said Ben, and his face fell. "But you know everybody said Pip was so dull at school."
"Well, that's because he was such a forlorn little chap," said Jasper; "poor mite, anybody would be dull where he wasn't wanted."
"That's just it," cried Ben, eagerly. "Well now, he'll study and take hold of things with Joel and David, and Dr. Presbrey will be glad enough to let him stay if it will only wake him up." Ben gave a gasp when he had gotten through, for he wasn't much used to long sentences.
"Well, come on," Jasper picked him by the sleeve, "if we have it to do, to ask Father, we best have it over with;" and he hauled Ben off, never letting go till the two paused to knock on Mr. King's writing-room door.
Then just a breathing s.p.a.ce, when it seemed to Jasper that he must make a bolt and give up the whole thing.
"Come in!" called his father's voice; and the two boys found themselves before the big writing-table, and looking down into his face. It wasn't an auspicious moment, for a letter lay open that had evidently caused the reader a bad quarter of an hour.
"What is it?" Old Mr. King looked sharply up from his fit of musing.
Jasper felt cold chills run all over him. As for Ben, he set his teeth, and his right hand doubled up in his pocket.
"Never mind, Father," said Jasper, beginning to back toward the door, "and beg pardon, Ben and I can come in another time if you will allow us."
"You will be good enough to stay now, Jasper, that you and Ben are here," said his father, decidedly, the irritation still remaining on cheek and brow; and he set his keen eyes to work on both boys. "Now then, what is it? Speak quickly, for I haven't much time to give you."
"Father," said Jasper, and he drew a long breath, "it's about Pip."
Old Mr. King took up the subject abruptly. "Well, what has he been doing?" he demanded.
"He hasn't been doing anything," said Jasper, "that is, nothing bad.
It's about something we want you to do for him, Father."
"What?" It was only one word and it came out like a cannon-ball. Ben's hand clenched together tighter yet, especially as he saw Jasper's cheek turn white. "O dear," groaned Ben, "I ought not to have spoken to-day when he's been so sick."
"Father," Jasper drew another long breath, then he looked steadily into the sharp eyes, "if that poor little chap only needn't go back to school yet. Dr. Presbrey will let him stay here until I go, if you only ask him."
"_What?_" roared the old gentleman, amazed beyond his control.
"You know something of the hard time Pip has at the school," Jasper said persuasively, and though his cheek was white, he still looked steadily into the sharp eyes that now were blazing. "Oh, if you only would, Father, get Dr. Pres--"
"And do you mean to say, Jasper, that you would wish me to prefer such a request to Dr. Presbrey, that stern disciplinarian, that he should let a boy off, especially one who is under his care in such a way as Pip is?
Preposterous!" Old Mr. King whirled around in his chair, then back again, to bring his right hand emphatically on the table, till the disturbing letter and all the nearest papers fluttered in the wind of his indignation.
"Father," said Jasper; then he stopped a second for the right word. But that wasn't allowed him.
"And that you should ask such a thing amazes me, Jasper. When did you ever know your father to interfere in other people's affairs?--When, indeed!" He was now so angry that he didn't seem able to contain himself except by pus.h.i.+ng about the things nearest to him; and, as his eye fell again on the unlucky cause, he blazed forth, "Never ask me such a thing again."
"It was my fault," blurted Ben.
"Then you are also to blame," curtly replied Mr. King.
"Father," began Jasper again, brokenly; then, without another word, he turned and went out of the room. And Ben, getting out, he didn't know how, followed him to the other end of the hall.
"Don't feel so," cried Ben, in a mortal terror for Jasper, Pip's cause now being so much less, and laying his hand on the shaking shoulder.
"Oh, Jasper, don't."
"We've hurt Pip," said Jasper, his head on his arms, as he leaned on the window-seat. "That's the worst of it. O dear me, Ben!"
"Perhaps not," said Ben, with a desperate attempt to be cheerful.