<h2 id='chIX'>CHAPTER IX</h2>
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<div>A VISION OF SPLENDOR</div>
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<p class='c007'>The next morning Pee-wee made a great discovery in the loft of the
carriage house. This was a large sign at least six feet long and more
than a foot wide, containing in glaring paint the words:</p>
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<div>GOODALE MANOR FARM.</div>
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<p>It was evidently a souvenir of the hopeful days when the partition
between the sitting rooms had been taken down. Pee-wee dragged it to
the kitchen door and consulted Mr. Goodale, who was drying his hands
there.</p>
<p>“Waal, now, that’ll jes’ suit you, won’t it?” said Mr. Goodale. “I
never know’d abaout it bein’ poked away till you pulled it out. That
was goin’ ter be nailed up between the gate-posts out yonder, ony it
never was,” he said wistfully. “’Member that sign, mother?” Mrs.
Goodale paused in her cake making to look reminiscently at the
dust-covered memorial of shattered hopes. “Carl Jellif painted that
sign; I give ’m ten dollars. He was a city painter he was, slick ez a
school marm on spellin’ and fancy stuff. He wuz out here ter paint the
station up ter Snailsdale n’ he boarded daown here while he done th’
County Fair work. He died uv th’ flu, he did.” Mr. Goodale paused, his
face half dry, to indulge in these memories. “You take it and use it,
sonny,” he concluded.</p>
<p>It nevers rains but it pours and that same morning Hope Stillmore came
gingerly across the mud of the barnyard with an armful of old, faded
bunting and a couple of good-sized American flags, the spoils of an
extended exploration of the attic.</p>
<p>“We found a <i>gold mine</i> in the attic,” she chirped. “Just look at all
this <i>lovely</i> stuff; it was used in the County Fair when Mr. Goodale
was on the committee, and Mrs. Goodale says we can use it, and I’m
going to help you decorate if you’ll let me. I’m going to do it because
of what you did for me—because you saved my life.”</p>
<p>“Are you going to be partners with me?” Pee-wee asked delightedly.</p>
<p>“Yes, I’m going to be partners with you and we’re going to decorate it
together, so there.” She did not tell him that her mother had shamed
her into this. Her interest, once aroused, seemed genuine, at all
events.</p>
<p>“And are you going to ride on the float with me?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I am, I don’t care what. So now.”</p>
<p>“After the parade’s over I’m going to treat you to ice cream in
Snailsdale,” Pee-wee said.</p>
<p>“Won’t that be lovely!”</p>
<p>“Fifteen-cent plates.”</p>
<p>“Oh, <i>scrumptious</i>!”</p>
<p>“And when lots of people come here it will be your good turn as well as
mine, hey? Because, gee whiz, Mr. Goodale, he’s a peach of a man. And,
besides, maybe there’ll be a lot of big fellers come, too, and then I
bet you’ll be glad, hey? Gee whiz, that’ll be doing more for you than
saving you from a rattlesnake, hey?” Indeed, it would have been
somewhat in the nature of saving her life.</p>
<p>“We’re not going to think about <i>anything</i> except just the float,” Hope
said. “So let’s start right in.”</p>
<p>“And we’re sure going to be partners for keeps?”</p>
<p>“Honest and true, just like in a story.”</p>
<p>“Gee, I’ve met a lot of girls, but I like you better than any of them,
that’s one sure thing.”</p>
<p>“Well, I know a lot of boys—”</p>
<p>“I bet you know as many as a hundred.”</p>
<p>“And you’re <i>braver</i> than <i>any</i> of them. <i>That’s</i> one sure thing. And
you know all about the woods.”</p>
<p>“I know all about getting lost in them,” Pee-wee said. “Anyway you’re
prettier than Roy Blakeley’s sister. Just because I didn’t keep asking
you that doesn’t mean I don’t like you better than anybody else. Lots
of people would be partners with me only they’re too busy. But I’d
rather have you for a partner than anybody. I’m going to get you some
candy on the day of the parade. I bet fellers take you to the movies,
don’t they?”</p>
<p>“I said we weren’t going to think of <i>anything</i> but the float,” Hope
reproved him.</p>
<p>“But I can say I like you, can’t I?”</p>
<p>“Yes, but let’s get to work.”</p>
<p>The work began auspiciously enough, Hope dealing her finger a blow with
the hammer. Everything went along swimmingly and the wheels of the hay
wagon began to look quite gay and festive with the spokes wrapped in
bunting and with bunting rosettes surmounting the old hubs. It was
surprising how the girl knew just where to begin and how her nimble
fingers made graceful loops and knots here and there.</p>
<p>Pee-wee was delighted as the morning passed in this pleasant
comradeship and cooperation. They went in when the dinner bell rang,
full of artistic and striking conceptions for the afternoon’s work, and
at the table talked of their plans. It seemed likely that the afternoon
would see the work well on its way toward completion. Hope seemed quite
under the spell of Pee-wee’s enthusiasm (which was potent), and so for
Pee-wee, he could not do justice to his dinner by reason of talking,
and he could not do justice to his enthusiastic talk by reason of his
dinner. He wrestled with both valiantly.</p>
<p>But the joyous progress was too good to last. By mid-afternoon the
ramshackle old combination of house and wagon was resplendent in its
particolored holiday array. The old hay wagon, which creaked as if it
had rheumatism in its aged joints, appeared to have renewed its youth,
its dried and shrunken boards concealed like wrinkles under the
all-pervading makeup of gaudy bunting.</p>
<p>Pee-wee was straddling the roof, ready to throw the end of a rainbow
streamer down to his partner when suddenly he beheld a Ford car
standing in the road, its single occupant craning his neck in the
direction of the barnyard. Even at the distance of some thirty yards or
so, Pee-wee recognized the aggressive, cock-sure pose and demeanor of
the staring driver.</p>
<p>It was Straw-hat Braggen.</p>
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