I jumped up and down and clapped my hands. I just couldn't help it.
"Oh, I know what happens!" I cried. "She sits too heavy! And squashes 'em perfectly flat!-There was a hen," I cried. "Her name was Lizzie! She was a good hen! But childless! The Grocer gave us some day-old chicks to put under her! But when we went out to the nest the next morning to see 'em-they couldn't have been flatter if they'd been pressed in the Bible!-My Brother Carol cried,-I cried,-my Mother--"
"I don't care at all who cried," said the Lady. It was true. She didn't. All she cared was to look at our Uncle Peter. The look was a stern look.
"And are you trying to imply, Mr.-Mr.-?"
"Merredith," said our Uncle Peter. "Percival Merredith.-'Uncle Peter' for short."
"Mr. Merredith," repeated the Lady coldly. "Are you trying to imply that my--step-son looks as though he had been pressed in a-a-Bible?"
I shook in my boots. Carol shook in his boots. You could hear us.
Our Uncle Peter never shook a bit. He just twinkled.
"Well-hardly," he said.
The Lady looked pretty surprised. When she wasn't looking surprised she looked thoughtful.
Her voice sounded little when she got it started again.
"Maybe-Maybe I DO take my responsibilities too heavily," she said. "But it's this-this sleeping business that worries me so."
"I should think it would," said our Uncle Peter.
"No Nurse Maid will stay with me," said the Lady. "They say it gives them the creeps.-It's enough to give anyone the creeps.-A grown person of course expects a certain amount of wakefulness, but a child,-a little care-free-heedless child-? Just when you think you've got him safely to sleep-all cuddled up in your own bed or even in his own bed-and are just drowsing off into the first real sleep you've had for a week-?-Patter-Patter-Patter in the hall! Creak-Creak-Creak on the stairs! A chair bumped over in the Library!-Bumped over on purpose you understand! Just to make a noise! 'Noises are his friends,' he says. Why once-once-" The Lady's mouth smiled a little. "Once when I woke and missed him and hunted everywhere-I found him at last in the Pantry-on the floor-with his ear cuddled close up to a mouse-hole! Mouse-Nibble Noises he says are his special friends in the middle of the night when there isn't anything else.-ANYTHING to break the silence it seems to be!-Why in the world should he be afraid of a Silence? Nobody can account for it!"
"Possibly not," said our Uncle Peter. "Yet the fact remains that either within or just outside the borders of his consciousness the only two people responsible for his Being have disappeared unaccountably into a Silence--from which they have not returned."
"Oh dear," said the Lady. "I never thought of that! You mean-You mean-that perhaps he thinks that a Silence is a Hole that you might fall into if you don't fill it up with a Noise? Why the poor little fellow!-How in the world is one ever to tell?-Oh dear-Oh dear--" She sank back in her chair and floated her hands in her lap. Her eyes looked as though she was going to cry again. But she didn't cry. That is, not much. Mostly she just sighed. "It isn't as though he was an easy child to understand," she sighed. "He catches cold so easily, and mumps and everything.-And he's so irritable.-He kicks,-he bites,-he scratches!"
"So I have seen demonstrated," said our Uncle Peter.
"Oh, it's quite evident," cried the Lady, "that you think I'm harsh with him!-But whatever in the world would YOU do?" She threw out her hands toward the pretty room,-the rugs,-the pictures,-the fire,-the toys. "Perhaps you can tell me what he NEEDS?" she said.
"A good spanking," said our Uncle Peter.
The Lady gave a little gasp.
"Oh, not for punishment," said our Uncle Peter. "But just for exercise.-It's the only exercise that a lot of pampered, sedentary children ever get!"
"P-Pampered?" gasped the Lady. "S-Sed-entary?" As though her head was bursting with the noises all around the room she clapped her hands over her ears.
Our Uncle Peter jumped up from his chair and began to chase the little tin railroad train. It looked funny to see so large a man running after so small a train. When he caught it it was having a railroad accident in the tunnel under the table where a book had fallen on the track. Like a beetle with no paint on its stomach he left it lying on its back with its little wheels kicking in the air.
"If only all the racket was as easily disposed of!" said the Lady.
"It IS!" said our Uncle Peter.
Like turning off faucets of water he turned off the noises one by one,-the window-breeze that made the glass dangles tinkle,-the funny jiggly spring that kept the toy bird screaming "Hi-Hi" in its wicker cake,-the music box that tooted horns and beat drums right in the middle of its best tunes! He looked like a giant stalking through the Noah's Ark animals! His foot was longer than the village store!
"If only I figured as largely in a less miniature world!" he said.
He looked at the Lady very hard when he said it as though he was saying something very important.
The Lady didn't seem to consider it important at all. She looked at her skirts instead and smoothed them very tidily.
"It's a-It's a pleasant day-isn't it?" said our Uncle Peter.
"V-very," said the Lady. Quite suddenly she looked up at him. Her cheeks were pink. She seemed to want to speak but didn't know quite how. She looked more surprised than ever. She bent forward very suddenly and stared and stared at him.
"Why-Why you're the gentleman," she said, "who was in the Fruit Store the day I bought the Alligator pears and dropped my pocket-book down behind the trash-barrel?"
"Also the day you bought the Red Mackintosh Apples," said our Uncle Peter. "The Grocer cheated you outrageously on them.-Also the day you wore the bunch of white violets and pricked your finger so brutally,-also the day on the ferry when there was a slight collision with a tug-boat and I had the privilege of-of--."
The Lady looked very haughty.
"It was the day of the Alligator Pears-that I referred to," she said. "The only day in my recollection!" Very positively she said it,-"the only day in my recollection." But all the time that she said it her cheeks got pinker and pinker. It was when she looked in the glass and saw how mistaken her positiveness looked that her cheeks got so pink. Tap-Tap-Tap her foot stamped on the rug. "Did-Did you know who it was going to be--when you brought the dog?" she said. "That is,-did you know when you first saw the advertisement in the paper." Her white forehead got all black and frowny. "How in the world did you know-my name?" she said.
Our Uncle Peter made an expression on his face. It was the expression that our Mother calls his "Third-Helping-of-Apple-Pie Expression,"-bold and unashamed.
"I asked the Grocer," he said.
"It was a-a great liberty," said the Lady.
"Was it?" said our Uncle Peter. He didn't seem as sorry as you'd have expected.
The Lady looked at Carol. The Lady looked at me.
"How many children have you?" she said.
"None of my own," said our Uncle Peter. "But three of my brother Philip's,-Carol and Ruthy as here observed, and Rosalee aet. eighteen who is at present in Cuba engaging herself to be married."
"O-h," said the Lady.
"I am in short," said our Uncle Peter, "that object of Romance and Pity popularly known as a 'Bachelor Uncle.'"
"O-h," said the Lady. She seemed more relieved than you'd have supposed.
"But in my own case, of course-" said our Uncle Peter.
In the very midst of his own case he stopped right off short to look all around the room again as though he was counting how heavy the toys were and how heavy the money was that had bought the toys. All the twinkle came back to his eyes.
"But in my own case," he said, "I've always known ahead-of course-for a very long time-that I was going to have 'em.-Learned to sit lightly on the idea,-re-balance my prejudices,-re-adjust my-"