CHAPTER XVI

  A MOUTH FOR PIE

  A surgeon was called in and passed favorably on Breck's handiwork.Tim's fracture was doing as well as could be expected, but he was tobe put to bed for three weeks or more and then, of course, must walkon crutches for many days to come.

  "Isn't that the limit?" grumbled Tim. "And the 'Boojum' will besailing away before I know it and I'll be left here with nothing todo."

  "You can be knitting," suggested Frances, "at least your bones canbe."

  "That's right! Laugh--you don't care if my hip is broken." Tim wascross and miserable and didn't care who knew it. It was hard right inthe middle of his well-earned summer vacation to be laid up in bedjust when he had made the acquaintance of such a jolly crowd too. Hedid not confess to himself that it was Frances and not the whole crowdthat he was going to miss.

  Mrs. Reynolds had given her boy the room opening into the living roomfor his sick chamber. It had been a sewing room through all thegenerations and it was something of a wrench for her to change it, buta live son weighed more in the balance than all the dead traditions,even though they were Coffin traditions, and it was nice to have Timdownstairs where his friends could see him and where, when he once gotup and around on his crutches, he would not have to contend withstairs. Cousin Esther grumbled, but Cousin Esther was opposed tochange of any sort.

  "It is out of reason to take a sewing room for a bed room," sheobjected. "I'd as soon think of making a pumpkin pie with a top crustor a mince pie without one. A sewing room is meant for a sewing roomand a bedroom for a bedroom. I like things left as our Maker intendedthem to be."

  With which bit of theology she let the matter drop, but Tim alwaysfelt out of place in the sewing room. When Frances made the abovesuggestion about his bones knitting, he felt a grim satisfaction thatthe process was to go on in the sewing room.

  "You don't care a bit," he repeated, keeping Frances' hand in his amoment after the rest of the Boojummers had left his room, having bidhim good-bye before going on a jaunt to 'Sconset.

  "Nonsense! I do care! As for you, you are most uncomplimentary,"declared Frances. "You should be eternally grateful to yourmuch-abused hip for getting itself broken. How otherwise would youever have known the inmates of the 'Boojum'?"

  "Oh, I'd have found you somehow. What is to be is to be."

  "What has been was, you mean."

  "Well then, I'm going to grin and bear it as best I might. But pleasecome see me when you get back from 'Sconset. Gee I'd like to go overthere with you. It's a peach of a place. It's not quite so formal asNantucket Town, more rough and ready. When all the summer folk go, Irun over there and visit Cousin Esther sometimes. She loves to haveme, although she is cleaning house most of the time getting rid of theleavings of the actress who rents her place for the summer. I am sureit is clean as clean, but she is never content until she has scrubbedevery board three times at least. I'll get Cousin Esther to ask you tocome too. Will you?"

  "But I'll be gone--out West--home--somewhere by that time." Francestried to draw her hand away but Tim held on to it.

  "But sometime would you go if Cousin Esther asked you?"

  "Would she make three kinds of pies?"

  "Sure! Ten kinds!"

  "All right then!" Frances was laughing and blushing but she gave Tim'shand a little answering pressure and left the boy happy and not soindignant with the fractured hip as that member no doubt deserved.After all, he reflected, there is generally a reason for everything.

  "Cousin Esther!" he called after the Boojummers were out of the house,"please come here a minute."

  "Well, what is it?" and Esther came and stood by his bed, looking downon the red-haired man that seemed to her still the little boy who hadbeen the plague and joy of her summers since he was able to crawl. Shetried to look stern, but her eyes were soft in spite of her.

  "What do you think of the one called Frances?"

  "The one who found you lying up behind the boulder?"

  "That's the one."

  "Well, she ate a piece of every kind of pie. That's doing pretty wellfor a girl born out of New England. She looks as though she came ofgood stock not to be seafaring."

  "Her ancestors went West in a prairie schooner and I fancy they had asmuch to contend with and more than ours did on the bounding billows,"laughed Tim. "Will you ask her to come visit you over at 'Sconset?"

  "Are you serious, boy?"

  "As serious as I ever was in my life. Her last name is Bliss and ifshe will have me that will be my middle name for the rest of my life.Don't tell Mother. I want to wait and see if she will have me. I don'tsee how she can."

  "I don't see how she can help it if she has any sense," declaredEsther with some indignation. "Not have you indeed!"

  "Well, if she does, will you teach her how to make pies?" teased Tim.

  "Of course, if her mother has neglected to do so."

  "All right Cousin Esther. I'm glad you like her. Please hand me thatscrap book over on the table before you go. It is the deuce and all tobe laid up and not able to wait on myself."

  After Esther went out Tim lay idly fingering the scrap book. Hechuckled to himself as he thought of the way his cousin had praisedthe girl he hoped to persuade to love him at some future date.

  "A mouth for pie! That's the way she lauded her," he laughed. "Nothingbut a mouth for pie! Well a slice from three kinds was going some. Ifancy they must be almost at 'Sconset now. I do wish I could have beenthe first one to show her 'Sconset," he mused. "Where is that littlepoem I want?" and he rapidly turned the leaves of the scrap book.

  "Here it is! I am going to read it to her some day. It fills the billexactly I think."

  'SCONSET BY-THE-SEA

  By JEAN WRIGHT

  A queer old fisher village by the sea, With long low-lying sand, where great waves boom And break the whole year through. Wide moors Rich with gold gorse and purple heather bloom.

  The grass-grown, straggling streets run in and out Past houses weather stained and strange to see; Built in the fashion of a sailor's heart Like to a ship as what's on land can be.

  And all in front, each housewife's care and pride, A tiny garden. Rows of poppies red, Gay flaming hollyhocks and mignonette, And good old-fashioned "jump-ups" rear their head.

  Quaint folk, with many a tale of bygone days, When men sailed off and sometimes came no more; When women stayed at home to work and wait, And wear their hearts out on that smiling shore.

  The romance of those other braver days Hangs like a halo 'round the queer old town; Shouts in the wind that comes across the sea; Sighs in the wind that comes across the down.

  Look out across the tumbling surf toward Spain On some clear, lazy, golden, summer day, A vague mirage of towers and battlements-- It is the place to dream one's life away.