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George Watson, who had been playing tennis before the rain started, was philosophically regarding a pair of "unshrinkable" flannel trousers which, so he declared, had already receded an inch at the bottoms. It was George who suggested that, after changing to dry clothing, they go over to the Widow's and have ice-cream at his expense. Not possessing a rain-coat of his own, Laurie invaded Number 15 and borrowed Kewpie's. It was many sizes too large, but it answered. The Widow's was full when he and George and Lee got there, and the pastry counter looked as though it had been visited by an invading army. There was still ice-cream, though, and the three squeezed into a corner and became absorbedly silent for a s.p.a.ce.
Polly was helping her mother, and Laurie exchanged greetings with her, but she was far too busy for conversation. Lee treated to a second round of ice-cream, and afterward Laurie bought a bag of old-fashioned chocolates. He hoped Polly would wait on him, but it was Polly's mother who did so and asked after his brother as she filled the paper sack.
"I do hope you're looking after him and that he hasn't eaten those raspberry tarts yet," she said pleasantly.
"Yes'm," said Laurie. "I mean, he hasn't." He thought it surprising that the Widow Deane was able to tell them apart. Even Kewpie and George frequently made mistakes.
It was still pouring when they went out again, and they hurried up the street and around the corner into School Park, their progress somewhat delayed by the fact that Laurie had placed the bag of candy in an outside pocket of Kewpie's capacious rain-coat and that all three had difficulty in finding it. Lee had just popped a big chocolate into his mouth and George was fumbling into the moist bag when the clouds opened suddenly and such a deluge fell as made them gasp. In distance they were but a long block from school; but with the rain descending on them as though poured from a million buckets, their thought was of immediate shelter.
"Wow!" yelped Lee. "Let's get out of this! Here's a house. Come on!"
There was an opening in a high hedge, and a short brick walk from which the drops were rebounding knee-high, and, seen dimly through the deluge, a porch at the end of it. They reached it in what Laurie called three leaps and a jump, and, under shelter of the roof, drew breath and looked back into the gray welter. The park was invisible, and even the high lilac hedge was only a blurred shape. Lee had to shout to make himself heard above the rain.
"Wonder who lives here," he said. "I don't remember this house."
"Sure you do!" said George. "This is the Coventry house. We're on the side porch."
"Oh!" Lee gazed doubtfully into the rain. "Well, anyway, it'll do. Gee, my trousers are soaked to the knees! How long do you suppose this will keep up?"
"You said for two days," answered Laurie, cheerfully, trying to dry his neck with a moist handkerchief.
"I mean this shower, you chump!"
"Call this a shower? What's a cloud-burst like in this part of the country, then?"
"We don't have such things," answered George, who was peering through a side-light into the dim interior. "Say, I thought this place was empty,"
he continued. "I can see chairs and a table in there."
"No; some one rented it this fall," said Lee. "I noticed the other day that the front door was open and the gra.s.s had been cut. I wouldn't want to live in the place, though."
"Why?" inquired Laurie.
But, before any answer came, the door was suddenly opened within a few inches of George's nose and a voice said:
"You fellows had better come inside until it's over."
CHAPTER VIII-IN THE MISER'S HOUSE
The invitation came from a boy of about sixteen, a slim, eminently attractive chap, who smiled persuasively through the aperture. Laurie knew that he had seen him somewhere, but it was not until they had followed, somewhat protestingly, into a hallway and from there into a large and shadowy drawing-room that he recognized him as one of the day pupils. Lee, it seemed, knew him slightly and called him by name.
"We oughtn't to come in here," Lee apologized. "We're soaking wet, Starling."
"It doesn't matter," answered their host. "Wait till I find a match and we'll have a fire here."
"Don't bother, please," George protested. "We're going right on in a minute."
"Might as well get dry a bit first. The fire's all laid." The boy held a match at the grate and in a moment the wood was snapping merrily. "Pull up some chairs, fellows. Here, try this. Some rain, isn't it?"
"Rather," agreed Lee. "By the way, do you know Turner? And Watson?" The three boys shook hands. "I didn't know you lived here," Lee continued.
"Saw the house had been taken, but didn't know who had it. Corking big place, isn't it?"
Starling laughed. "It's big all right, but it's not so corking. Let me have that rain-coat, Turner. The rooms are so frightfully huge that you get lost in them! I have the bedroom above this, and the first morning I woke up in it I thought I was in the Sahara Desert! This was the only place we could find, though, that was for rent, and we had to take it.
Dad came here on short notice and we didn't have much time to look around. Pull up closer to the fire, Watson, and get your feet dry. I've got some slippers upstairs if you want to take your shoes off."
"No, thanks. I guess the wet didn't get through. I've seen you over at school, haven't I?"
"Yes, I'm a day boy; one of the 'Hep, heps!'"
Lee grinned. "Sort of a mean trick, that, Starling, but they always do it every year."
"Wish I'd known about it beforehand. I'd have sneaked over a fence and through a window. It was fierce! I was the last fellow to get in this fall. Dad made application in August, and some fellow who had entered in the spring changed his mind; otherwise I'd have had to go to the high school."
"That would have been an awful fate," said George, gravely.
"Oh, I wouldn't have minded. I like Hillman's, though. Do any of you chaps play tennis?"
"I try to," answered George.
"Wish you'd give me a game some day. Tennis is about the only thing I know much about, and I saw some dandy courts over at the field."
"Glad to," George a.s.sured him. "Any day you like, Starling. I'm not much of a player, though, so don't expect a lot."
"Guess you're good enough to handle me," laughed the other. "I like it better than I can play it. How about to-morrow afternoon?"
"Suits me," answered George. "Three-thirty?"
"Fine! I'm going to get Dad to build a court in the yard here, if I can.
There's lots of room, but there's a tumble-down old grape-arbor right in the middle."
"Yes, there's surely room enough," agreed Lee. "We used to come over here last fall and get pears-there's a dandy seckel tree back there.
I'd say there was room for two or three courts if some of the trees were cut down."
"What could he do with three of them?" asked Laurie.
"I suppose we'd have to get the owner's permission to even take that rickety old arbor down," Starling said.
"I thought the owner was dead," Lee observed.
George chuckled. "If he was dead he wouldn't be the owner, you simple!
Old Coventry died three or four years ago, but somebody owns the place, of course. If what they tell of the old chap is true, it must have broken his heart to know he couldn't take the place with him! Maybe he took his money with him, though. Anyway, the story goes that he had slathers of it, and they could only find a couple of thousands when he died."
"What was he, a miser?" asked Starling.
"Yes, one of the sort you read about in the stories. Lived here all alone for years and years with only a negro servant. They say you could never see a light in the place at night, and he never went off the front porch more than a couple of times a year. Then a carriage came for him and he got in and went down to the boat. He didn't use the train because it cost too much. Of course, when he died, folks expected to find that he had left a mint of money; but all any one could discover was about two thousand dollars in one of the banks here-that, and this property.