The other two walked slowly on. They had always been cronies, as a man and even a small boy can be; and now Magnus found his old friend full of the keenest interest in all the new life and varying work of which the young cadet had so much to tell. Slowly down the pretty hill they went; Mr. Erskine taking from Magnus what help he could for his lame side, and the cadet trying to make the regulation step know its place. And it was so pleasant to see, so like the dear old times, that the four at the cottage dropped everything to watch them as they came. Then Mrs. Kindred hurried out to welcome her guest, the two sisters got hold of Magnus, and Cherry went quietly back to finish setting the table. I doubt she was not minding her business too closely, smiling to herself over the words and laughter that came past the half-open door of the closet where she was sorting out spoons; for she never heard what stealthy steps drew near, and her first warning of danger was the sudden darkening of the closet by the shutting of the door. Cherry sprang towards it just in time to hear the bolt shot and the key withdrawn. Then came a struggle outside. "Oh, Magnus, stop! Cherry is in there!" "Safe as possible." "Give me the key! She wants to be out here." "Then why did she go in?" "She went for the spoons, you intolerable boy," said Violet. "Do to talk of," said Magnus coolly. "No, my dear; she went because this intolerable boy was around. So you perceive it is very kind of me to keep her where she cannot see him. Come, chicks; let's get the old banjo, and I'll sing you the 'Song of the Summer Girl.'" "If you sing one single note when Cherry is not by to hear, we will stop our ears," said Rose. "Then you will not be able to tell her about it afterwards," said Magnus. "Come along." "Well, you cannot have your dinner till we get the spoons," said Violet. "At West Point we eat with forks—when we have them," said Magnus. "When we do not, we take our fingers. Where is that banjo?" The girls followed him, talking and scolding and threatening to tell Mr. Erskine, but Cherry had no idea of waiting for outside help. She was a girl of resources, and the case in hand was not very hard. For this was an outside lock, simply screwed on; an old knife made a fair screwdriver; and, when Magnus had just reached the next room, a soft chink made him look round, and there was Cherry, calmly putting the spoons in place. "Where did you come from?" he said, turning back. "The spoon drawer. Do I understand that West Point cadets scorn both spoons and forks?" "I'll teach you something about West Point cadets, before I go," Magnus asserted, stepping towards her. "How good of you!" said Cherry mockingly, as she slipped round the table. "We're such an ignorant set out here. Magnus, if you would announce a lecture on warped surfaces, I really think it would draw." What Magnus would have said or done, and how Cherry "Why, Violet, how careless," the mother said, as he made known the fact. "No, mamma, not I." "Mrs. Kindred," said Cherry, "Magnus said that West Point cadets could eat with their fingers, so I thought if he enjoyed it, we should like to see how it was done. And it would be one less to wash. And the chickens are cut up," she added gravely. Mrs. Kindred laughed. "If you two are having a fight, I'll keep out," she said. "Go and help yourself, Magnus." And this he would have done from Cherry's plate, if that young damsel had not laid fast hold of her property; so he took Violet's instead. But it was a delightful dinner: what though the courses were few and simple, and the trained waiters only the three girls. Then the two elders carried Magnus off to the porch for another talk while the girls cleared the table, and then they also came out, bringing the banjo. "Now for the summer girl!" they cried, and Magnus left his place for one on the steps at Cherry's feet. "She has been called 'a summer girl,'" he said, "and I want to see how she likes her portrait. This lay is named: 'The Idle of the Summer Girl.'" "Your writing?" said Rose. "If you admire it, yes." "Dear me, child," said Mrs. Kindred, "do they waste your time out there writing poetry?" "They don't waste any of my time they get hold of, you'd better believe," said Magnus. "I should forget what Magnus twanged the banjo lugubriously, and began his song, changing voice for the supposed two singers, and giving the words of comment in his own:
At least four voices cried: "Go on! Go on!" "Can't," said Magnus; "it exhausts my feelings. Too spoony." "Is that the way you talk to each other?" said Violet. "Very much the way." "And does nobody take up the cudgels for the poor summer girl?" inquired Mr. Erskine. "Oh, I'll take them up, if you wish," said Magnus. "My Idle does her justice," and he dashed off into a tune crazy enough for a patchwork quilt: "I sing the song of the Summer Girl; She feels for the lonely cadet. Her chocolate creams, in my very dreams I seem to taste them yet." ("N. B.—The last ones weren't fresh. Bought at the station probably.") "The peaches she threw at my head at drill, The apples she dropped at my feet; The little pound cake that she made me take, First biting, to make it sweet." "Magnus—she didn't!" "Rose—she did!" "And you eat it?" "Tossed it over my shoulder while she bestowed one on Chappy. Robins aren't fetched up particular, as I was. Why, that's nothing!" "Nothing?" "No," said Magnus. "When a girl puts a lump of sugar between her teeth and comes round offering everybody a bite, that is rather steep." "And yet, long life to the Summer Girl! Far be it from me to flout her. She's made in the shop, and she's not tip-top, But what could we do without her? There were two spoons and a single dish, Two hearts that beat as one; When we sat by the wall before recall, Eating ice cream in the sun." A general shout of derision greeted this, except from Cherry, who had grown rather quiet over these extraordinary "idles." "Well, you must have been homesick, I should say," remarked Rose. "Why, Magnus, I did not know you had it in you to flirt," said his mother. "Don't think I have, mammy, to any dangerous extent. What's the row? Can't a man sing a song o' sixpence without being immediately spotted for one of the blackbirds?" "But eating out of the same dish!" said Violet. "If you had been a year at West Point, you'd eat ice cream out of anything," said Magnus, "and almost with anybody. I am generally careful to keep far away on my own side, and to grow more modest as the partition wall grows thin." "Summer girl stands treat. When you see a group of fainting cadets gathered round Delmonico's, you may take your affidavit there's a summer girl inside. Why, the amount of boodle that fair creature smuggles into camp and throws around generally would set a country store up in business." "Boodle?" queried Mr. Erskine. "Contraband sweets of life, sir." "But Magnus, you said 'smuggled,'" said his mother. "Had to be smuggled, mammy, or it could never get in. Tacs would confiscate and eat it up. And it might disagree with some of 'em. Better let any number of cadets suffer from indigestion and go to the hospital than have Towser off duty for a single day." "My dear," said Mrs. Kindred, trying hard to keep a grave face, "I do not like to have you breaking rules." "Don't like it myself," said Magnus virtuously. "They should not make 'em so fragile." "If they are fragile, keep off." "Just can't, mammy. Here we've had breakfast at half past six. Then we go head over heels into math. and heels over head into tan bark; and not another regulation mouthful to be had till one o'clock. Flesh and blood can't stand it, you know. We just have to have a barrel of apples handy, and a box of crackers; and any other trifles we can pick up." "A barrel of apples!" said Rose. "And 'smuggled' in! Wherever in the world do you keep them?" "You are going to be such a favourite with the Tacs next summer, I think I will not tell," said Magnus. "Poor starved boy!" said Rose. "And he has been home two whole days, and not even half a dish of ice cream, yet." "You shall freeze it yourself," said Violet. "Agreed—with her to help me." And laughing up at her with mischievous eyes, Magnus finished his song: "But never you trust the Summer Girl,— Or you will find to your sorrow, That just as she smiled on Tubs to-day, She'll smile on Daddy to-morrow." |