It occurred to Gwendolyn that it would be a very good idea to stop turning
stones. The first one set bottom-side up had resulted in the arrival of Jane.
And whereas the Policeman had appeared when the second was dislodged, here,
following the accidental stub of a toe, were these two—the Piper and Thomas.
The Man-Who-Makes-Faces hurried across to her, his expression dubious.
"Bitter pill!" he exclaimed, with a sidewise jerk of the ragged hat. "Gall and
wormwood!"
"Oh, yes!" For—sure enough!—there was an ill-flavored taste on her
lips—a taste that made her regret having lost the candy.
Next, the Policeman came tick-tocking up. "The scheme was to kidnap
you," he declared wrathfully.
"And keep me from finding my fath-er and moth-er," added Gwendolyn. Now she
understood why Jane was so pleased with the choice of the automobile road! And
she realized that all along there was never any danger of her being kidnaped by
strangers, but by the two who, their past ill-feeling evidently
forgotten, were at this very moment chuckling and chattering together, ugly
heads touching—the eary head and the head with the double face!
Seeing the Policeman and the little old gentleman in conversation with
Gwendolyn, the Piper slouched over. "Look a-here!" he began roughly, addressing
all three; "you're goin' to make a great big mistake if you antagonize a man
that belongs to a Labor Union." (Just so had he spoken the day he fixed the
broken hot-water pipe.)
"Bosh!" cried the Policeman. "What do we care about him! Why, he'll
never even get through the Gate!"
Gwendolyn was puzzled. What Gate? And why would Thomas not get
through it? Then looking round to where he was conspiring with Jane, she saw
what she believed was a very good explanation: He would never even get through
the Gate because (a simple reason!) the nurse would not be able to get
through.
For by now Jane was not only as round as a barrel, but she was fully
as large—what with so much happy giggling over Thomas's arrival.
Moreover, having toppled sidewise, she looked like a barrel—a barrel
upholstered in black sateen, with a neat touch of white at collar and cuffs!
"He's been in trouble before," continued the Policeman, stormily. "But
this time—!" And letting himself down flat upon his head, he shook both
neatly shod feet in the Piper's face.
It was now that Gwendolyn chanced, for the first time, to examine the
latter's bundle. And was surprised to discover that it was nothing less than a
large poke-bonnet—of the fluffy, lacy, ribbony sort. And she was admiring
it, for it was of black silk, and handsome, when something within it
stirred!
She retreated—until the night-stick and the kidnaper knife were between her
and the poke. "Hadn't we better be st-starting?" she faltered nervously.
The Piper marked her manner, and showed instant resentment of it. "This here
thing was handed me once in part-payment," he explained. "And I ain't been able
to get rid of it since. Every single day it's harder to lug around. Because, you
see, he's growin'."
At that, the Policeman and the Man-Who-Makes-Faces exchanged a glance full of
significance. And both shrugged—the Policeman with such an emphatic upside-down
shrug that his shoulders brushed the ground.
Gwendolyn's curiosity emboldened her. "He?" she questioned.
"The pig."
The pig! Gwendolyn's pink mouth opened in amazement. Here was the very
pig that she heard belonged in a poke!
The Piper was glowering at Jane, who was rocking gently from side to side,
displaying first one face, then the other. "Well, I call that dancing,"
he declared. And pulling out a small, well-thumbed account-book, jotted down
some figures.
Gwendolyn tried to think of something to say—while feeling mistrust toward
the Piper, and abhorrence toward the poke and its contents. At last she took
refuge in polite inquiry. "When did you come out from town?" she asked.
The Piper grunted rather ill-humoredly (or was it the pig?—she could not be
certain), and colored up a little. "I didn't come out," he answered in
his surly fashion. Whereupon he fell to fitting a coupling upon the ends of two
pipes.
"No?"—inquisitively.
"I—er—got run out."
"Oh!"
Again the Policeman and the Man-Who-Makes-Faces exchanged a significant
glance.
"You see," went on the Piper, "in the City everybody's in debt. Well, I have
to have my money, don't I? So I dunned 'em all good. But maybe—er—a speck
too much. So—"
"Oh, dear!" breathed Gwendolyn
"Of course, I've never been what you might call popular. Who would
be—if everybody owed him money."
"Huh!" snorted the Policeman.
"You overcharge," asserted the little old gentleman.
Gwendolyn hastened to forestall any heated reply from the Piper. "You don't
think your pig had anything to do with it?" she suggested considerately. "'Cause
do—do nice people like pigs?"
"The pig was never in sight," asserted the Piper. "Guess that's one reason
why I can't sell him. What people don't see they don't want to buy—even when
it's covered up stylish." (Here he regarded the poke with an expression of
entire satisfaction.)
The little company was well on its way by now—though Gwendolyn could not
recall the moment of starting. The Piper had not waited to be invited, but
strolled along with the others, his birch-stemmed tobacco-pipe in a corner of
his mouth, his hands in his pockets, and the pig-poke a-swing at his elbow.
Thomas, left to get Jane along as best he could, had managed most
ingeniously. The nurse was cylindrical. All he had to do, therefore, was to give
her momentum over the smooth windings of the road by an occasional smart shove
with both hands.
Which made it clear that the likelihood of losing Jane, of leaving her
behind, was lessening with each moment! For now the more the nurse laughed
the easier it would be to get her along.
"Oh, dear!" sighed Gwendolyn, with a sad shake of her yellow head as Jane
came trundling up, both fat arms folded to keep them out of the way.
"If she stopped dancin' where would I come in?" demanded the Piper,
resentfully. The pig moved in the poke. He trounced the poor thing
irritably.
The Man-Who-Makes-Faces now began to speak—in a curious, chanting fashion.
"The mode of locomotion adapted by this woman," said he, "rather adds to, then
detracts from, her value as a nurse. Think what facilities she has for amusing a
child!—on, say, an extensive slope of lawn. And her ability to, see two
ways—practically at once—gives her further value. Would she ever let a
young charge fall over a cliff?"
The barrel was whopping over and over—noiselessly, except for the faint
chatter of Jane's tortoise-shell teeth. Behind it was Thomas, limp-eared by now,
and perspiring, but faithful to his task.
"The best thing," whispered Gwendolyn, reaching to touch a ragged
sleeve, "would be to get rid of Thomas. Then she—"
The Policeman heard. "Get rid of Thomas?" he repeated. "Easy enough. Look
on the ground."
She looked.
"See the h's?"
Sure enough, the road was fairly strewn with the sixth consonant!—both in
small letters and capitals.
"Been dropped," went on the Officer.
She had heard the expression "dropping his h's." Now she understood it. "Oh,
but how'll these help?"
"Show 'em to Thomas!"
She approached the barrel—and pointed down.
Thomas followed her pointing. Instantly his expression became furious. And
one by one his ears stood up alertly. "It's him!" he shouted. "Oh, wait till I
get my hands on him!" Then heaving hard at the barrel, he raced off along the
alphabetical trail.
Gwendolyn was compelled to run to keep up with him. "What's the trouble?" she
asked the Man-Who-Makes-Faces.
"A Dictionarial difference," he answered, his dark-skinned face very
grave.
"Oh!" (She resolved to hunt Dictionarial up the moment she was back in the
school-room.)
Thomas was shouting once more from where he labored in the lead. "I'll murder
him!" he threatened. "This time I'll mur-r-der him!"
Murder? That made matters clear! There was only one person against whom
Thomas bore such hot ill-will. "It's the King's English," she panted.
"It's the King's English," agreed the Policeman, tick-tocking in rapid
tempo.
She reached again to tug gently at a ragged sleeve. "Do you know him?"
she asked.
The round black eyes of the little old gentleman shone proudly down at her.
"All nice people are well acquainted with the King's English," he declared—which
statement she had often heard in the nursery. Now, however, it embarrassed her,
for she was compelled to admit to herself that she was not acquainted
with the King's English—and he a personage of such consequence!
The Piper hurried alongside, all his pipes rattling. "Just where are we
goin', anyhow?" he asked petulantly.
"We're going to the Bear's Den," informed the Man-Who-Makes-Faces.
"And here's the Zoo now," announced the Policeman.
It was unmistakably the Zoo. Gwendolyn recognized the main entrance. For
above it, in monster letters formed by electric lights, was a sign, bulbous and
blinding—
Villa Sites Borax Starch Shirts.
"So this is the Gate you meant!" she called to the Policeman.
The Gate was flung invitingly wide Thomas rushed toward it, his fourteen ears
flopping horribly.
"And here he is!" cried the Policeman. "On guard."
The next moment—"'Alt!" ordered a harsh voice—a voice with an English
accent.
There was a flash of scarlet before Gwendolyn's face—of scarlet so vivid that
it blinded. She flung up a hand. But she was not frightened. She knew what it
was. And rubbed at her eyes hastily to clear them.
He stood in full view.
As far as outward appearance was concerned, he was exactly the looking person
she had pictured in her own mind—young and tall and lusty, with a florid
countenance and hair as blonde as her own. And he wore the uniform of an English
soldier—short coat of scarlet, all gold braid and brass buttons; dark trousers
with stripes; and a little round cap with a chin strap.
But he carried no cane. Instead, as he stepped forward, nose up, chin up,
eyes very bold, he swung a most amazing weapon. It was as scarlet as his own
coat, as long as he was tall, and polished to a high degree. But it was not
unbending, like a sword: It was limber to whippiness, so that as he twirled it
about his blonde head it snapped and whistled. And Gwendolyn remembered having
seen others exactly like it hanging on the bill-board at the Face-Shop. For it
was a tongue!
"Aw! Mah word!" exclaimed the King's English, surveying the halted group.
Gwendolyn could not imagine what word he had in mind, but she thought him
very fine. With his air of proud self-assurance, and his fine brilliant uniform,
he was strikingly like her own red-coated toy! Anxious to make a favorable
impression upon him, she smoothed the gingham dress hastily, brushed back
straying wisps of yellow, straightened her shoulders, and assumed a cordial
expression of countenance.
"How do you do," she said, curtseying.
He saluted. But blocked the way.
"May we go into the Zoo, please?"
His hand jerked down to his side. "One at a time," he answered; "—all but
Thomas."
Thomas had come short with the others. Now as Gwendolyn looked at him she saw
that he, also, was armed with a tongue—a warped and twisted affair, rough, but
thin along its edges.
"If you try to keep me out," he cried, "I certainly will murder
you!"
At this juncture the Policeman pit-patted forward and took his station at the
left of the Gate. Next, the King's English stepped back until he stood at the
right. Between them, hand in hand once more, passed Gwendolyn and the
Man-Who-Makes-Faces.
The Piper came next. "Call that a' English tongue?" he asked, with an
impudent grin at the soldier's shining weapon.
"Yes, sir."
"Pah!"
Now Thomas gave Jane a quick shove forward—but a shove which sent her only as
far as the Gate.
The King's English stared down at her. "How are you?" he said coldly.
"I'm awful uncomfortable," was the mournful answer.
"Then take off your stays," he advised. Whereat the polished tongue glanced
through the light, caught Jane fairly around the waist, and with a swift recoil
brought her to her feet!
And now Gwendolyn, astonished, saw that too much laughter had again remolded
that sateen bulk. The nurse had grown woefully heavy about the shoulders—which
put a fearful strain on the stitches of her bodice! and gave her the appearance
of a gigantic humming-top! As she swayed a moment on her wide-toed shoes—shoes
now utterly lacking buttons—the King's English again struck out, caught her,
this time, around the neck, and sent her spinning through the Gate!
"Zing-g-g-g!" she laughed dizzily—that laugh the high, persistent note
of a top!
Thomas attempted to follow. "I just will come in," he cried, wielding
his warped weapon with a flourish.
"You shall not!" To bar the way, the King's English thrust out his
polished tongue.
"I will!" Crack! Crack!
"You won't!" Crack! Crack!
The fight was on! For the combatants, tongue's-length from each other, were
prowling to and fro menacingly.
"Oh, there's going to be a tongue-lashing," cried Gwendolyn, frightened.
"I'm the King's Hinglish!"—it was the soldier's slogan.
"This is me!" sang Thomas, saucily flicking at a brass button. His face was
all cunning.
Then how the tongues popped!
"This is I!" corrected the King's English promptly. But his face got a trifle
more florid.
"Steady!" counseled the little old gentleman.
"I'm hall right," the other cried back.
"Oh, Piper!" said Gwendolyn; "which side are you on?"
The Piper shifted his tobacco pipe from one corner of his mouth to the other.
"I'm for the man that's got the cash," he declared.
There was no doubt about Jane's choice. Seeing Thomas's momentary advantage,
she came spinning close to the Gate. "Use h-words, Thomas!" she hummed. "Use
h-words!"
Thomas acted upon her advice. "Hack and hit and hammer!" he charged. "Haggle
and halve and hamper! Halt and hang and harass!"
"'Ack and 'it and 'ammer!" struck back the King's English, beginning to
breath hard. "Aggie and 'alve and 'amper! 'Alt and 'ang and 'arass!"
As the tongues met, Gwendolyn saw small bright splinters fly this way and
that—a shower of them! These splinters darted downward, falling upon the road.
And each, as it lit, was an h!
The Policeman was frightened. "Which is your best foot?" he called.
The King's English indicated his right. "This!"
"Then put it forward!"
"My goodness!" exclaimed Gwendolyn. "Am I seeing this, or is it just
Pretend?"
Thomas now warmed to the fray. "Harm!" he scourged, "Harness! Hash! Hew!
Hoodwink! Hurt and hurk!"
"'Eavens!" breathed the King's English.
"Turn your cold shoulder," advised the little old gentleman.
The King's English thrust out the right. And it helped! "Oh, hayches don't
matter," he panted. "I'm hall right has long has 'is grammar doesn't get too
bad." And off came one of Thomas's ears—a large one—and blew along the ground
like a great leaf.
That was an unfortunate boast. For Thomas, enraged by the loss of an ear,
fought with renewed zeal. "If you see he, just tell I!" he shouted.
The King's English went pallid. "If you see 'im, just tell me," he gasped,
meeting Thomas gallantly—with the loss of only one splinter.
"Oh, I want you to win!" called Gwendolyn to him.
But the contest was unequal. That was now plain. The King's English had
polish and finish. Thomas had more: his tongue, newly sharpened, cut deep at
each blow.
Unequal as was the contest, Jane's interference a second time made it more
so. For as the fighters trampled to and fro, seeking the better of each other,
she twirled near again. "Try your verbs, Thomas!" she counseled. "Try
your verbs!"
Eagerly Thomas grasped this second hint. "By which I could was!" he cried,
with a curling stroke of the warped tongue; "or shall am!"
At that, the King's English showed distressing weakness. He seemed scarcely
to have enough strength for another snap. "By w'ich I could be!" he whipped back
feebly; "or shall 'ave been!" And staggered sidewise.
Now the warped and twisted tongue began to chant past-participially: "I done!
I done!! I done!!!"
"'Elp!" implored the King's English, fairly wan. "Friends, this—this fellow
'as treated me houtrageously for—for yaaws!"
"Oh, worser and worser and worser," pursued Thomas, changing suddenly to
adverbs.
"Rawly now—!" The King's English tottered to his knees.
"I did," prompted Gwendolyn, eager to help him.
"I did," repeated the King's English—but the polished tongue slipped from his
grasp!
"I seen!" followed up Thomas. "I sung!" Crack! Crack!
It was the last fatal onslaught.
The scarlet-coated figure fell forward. Yet bravely he strove again to give
tongue-lash for tongue-lash—by reaching out one palsied hand toward his
weapon.
"I—I—s-a-w!" he muttered; "I s-s-s-ing!"—And expired, with his last breath
gasping good grammar.
Instantly Thomas leaped the prostrate figure and strode to the Gate. He was
breathing hard, but looking about him boldly. "Now I come through," he
boasted.
"O-o-o!" It was Gwendolyn's cry. "Officer, don't let him! Don't!"
In answer to her appeal, the Policeman seized Thomas by a lower ear and
shoved him against a gate-post. "You've committed murder!" he cried. "And I
arrest you!"
"Tongue-tie him!" shouted the little old gentleman, springing to jerk
Thomas's weapon out of his hand, and to snatch up the nicked and splintered
weapon of the vanquished soldier.
Under the great blazing sign of the Zoo entrance the capture was
accomplished. And in a moment, from his feet to his very ears, Thomas was
wrapped, arms tight against sides, in the scarlet toils of the tongues.
"So!" exclaimed the little old gentleman as he tied a last knot. "Thomas'll
never bother my little girl again." And taking Gwendolyn by the hand, he led her
away.
It was not until she had gone some distance that she turned to take a last
look back. And saw, there beside the wide Gate, a rubber-plant, its long leaves
waving gently. It was Thomas, bound securely, and abandoned.
Yet she did not pity him. He had murdered the King's English, and he deserved
his punishment. Furthermore, he looked so green, so cool, so ornamental!