Maida's Little Shop by Inez Haynes Gillmore
page 25 of 229 (10%)
page 25 of 229 (10%)
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âNow can we look at the things downstairs?â she pleaded.
âYes,â Billy assented. âTo-day is a very important day. Behind locked doors and sealed windows, weâre going to take account of stock.â Granny Flynn remained in the bedrooms to make all kinds of mysterious measurements, to open and shut doors, to examine closets, to try window-sashes, even to poke her head up the chimney. Downstairs, Billy and Maida opened boxes and boxes and boxes and drawers and drawers and drawers. Every one of these had been carefully gone over by the conscientious Mrs. Murdock. Two boxes bulged with toys, too broken or soiled to be of any use. These they threw into the ash-barrel at once. What was left they dumped on the floor. Maida and Billy sat down beside the heap and examined the things, one by one. Maida had never seen such toys in her lifeâso cheap and yet so amusing. It was hard work to keep to business with such enchanting temptation to play all about them. Billy insisted on spinning every topâhe got five going at onceâon blowing every balloonâhe produced such dreadful wails of agony that Granny came running downstairs in great alarmâon jumping with every jump-ropeâthe short ones tripped him up and once he sprawled headlongâon playing jackstonesâMaida beat him easily at thisâon playing marblesâwith a piece of crayon he drew a ring on the floorâon looking through all the booksâhe declared that he was going to buy some little penny-pamphlet fairy-tales as soon as he could save the money. But in spite of all this fooling, they really accomplished a great deal. |
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