<h2><SPAN name="C12" id="C12">12</SPAN></h2>
<h3><i>The Plan</i></h3>
<p>It was a beautiful summer. There was just enough rain to keep the land
green and the farmers contented, but most of the days were warm and
fair.</p>
<p>The children swam, roamed, rode their bicycles up hill and down dale,
picnicked, conducted meetings in the club, and paid visits almost daily
to their Gone-Away friends. In the long, light evenings they played
Prisoner's Base and Any Over and Allee, Allee, In-Free.</p>
<p>In addition, they had their private projects. Foster and Davey, though
they had their own little house on Craneycrow, decided to build
themselves another in the boughs of an oak tree on "The Property." They
went to work with hammers and nails, inflicting so many minor injuries
upon themselves that Julian said the tree house should be named Palazzo
Band-Aid. Between hammerings, the little boys could be heard arguing
and conversing, shrill as the sparrows that clustered in the Boston ivy.</p>
<p>Portia and Lucy practiced ballet (Lucy took lessons in Albany).
They had scratched out a garden for themselves containing only the
vegetables they preferred: tomatoes, lettuce, onions, and carrots.</p>
<p>"No beets!" Portia said firmly.</p>
<p>"No spinach!" said Lucy.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, never! And absolutely no cucumbers and no broccoli and no
cabbages!"</p>
<p>Another project was the rehabilitation of the six sad little rooms in
the attic. Mr. Ormond Horton donated the paint, but the girls proposed
to do the work themselves.</p>
<p>"Let's have each one a different color," said Portia. "One blue, one
green, one red—or, no, pink—"</p>
<p>"And one yellow, and one orange, and—what other colors are there?"</p>
<p>"Purple?" suggested Portia.</p>
<p>"Yes, why not! I never did see a purple room."</p>
<p>Fortunately for them, the rooms were tiny. Even so, the work was harder
than they had supposed, and nobody would help them. The little boys
offered to hopefully, but were refused.</p>
<p>"You know what <i>that</i> would mean," Portia said darkly.</p>
<p>"Paint <i>everywhere</i> but on the walls," said Lucy, sounding like her own
grandmother. She had a green streak in her hair that wouldn't wash out,
and Portia's fingernails were purple. But it was all in a good cause;
the rooms were beginning to look cheerful, to say the least.</p>
<p>Julian had started a paper route that took him half the morning, and
the other boys, too, had part-time jobs.</p>
<p>Mr. Blake's vacation was over; he had had to return to his work in the
city and only came out for weekends, but his weekend projects were so
numerous that, as he said, he had "to get back to the office to relax."</p>
<p>As for Mrs. Blake, she was seldom seen without something in her hands:
hammer and nails, or paint and paintbrush, or lengths of fabric. "You
really never get finished with a house," she said contentedly. But
sometimes she just wandered quietly from room to room, gloating.</p>
<p>The Villa Caprice continued to offer surprises: certain tall spikey
plants near the house turned out to be lilies: great freckled fragrant
ones. A drawer in the library desk was discovered to be full of jigsaw
puzzles, dominoes, playing cards, and a chess set. Some surprises
were not so pleasant: the leak that appeared in the dining room; the
peculiar temperament of the bathroom plumbing; the fact that the
drawing-room fireplace smoked in rainy weather.</p>
<p>Gradually they became familiar with the sounds peculiar to the house:
the stairtread in the hall stairs that chirped like a cricket when
anyone stepped on it; the swing door into the dining room that whooshed
and sighed; the way the chimneys rumbled when the wind was high. All
these were nice because they were the sounds of home.</p>
<p>"This place <i>is</i> home, now," Portia said. "And the apartment in New
York is just the place we stay in in wintertime."</p>
<p>"Winter. Ugh," said Foster. "I wish it wouldn't get here for eleven
years."</p>
<p>But the summer, as summers are apt to do, was spinning itself out
fast, too fast. Already it was August.</p>
<p>"It's funny," Portia observed. "I never really believe in school in
summertime. I know it exists, and all, but it just doesn't seem really
<i>real</i>."</p>
<p>"Mine does," Lucy said. "I can smell it if I think about it. I can
smell the blackboard and the varnish on my desk and the wet floor in
the hall when they've scrubbed it."</p>
<p>"I move we change the subject," suggested Tom Parks. "Is there another
stuffed egg on the premises?"</p>
<p>They had met, all of them, for a picnic at Gone-Away—both the official
groups, of course: the members of the Fang Club, all two of them; the
members of the Philosophers' Club, all five.</p>
<p>It was exactly the sort of day for watermelon, so that was what they
had for dessert. Foster luxuriated, sinking two thirds of his face into
the icy pink slice.</p>
<p>"Hey, you know what, Dave?"</p>
<p>"No, what?"</p>
<p>"My new front teeth are getting to be more than just edges. I can sort
of bite with them now."</p>
<p>"I've been biting with mine for months," Davey said wearily.</p>
<p>Except for a watery crunching and slurping, there was silence; then
Foster said: "But you know what, Dave?"</p>
<p>"No, what?"</p>
<p>"When we've got our real full-grown front teeth, we won't be able to
call it the Fang Club any more, because we won't have any fangs."</p>
<p>"What will we call it then?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. We'll think of something."</p>
<p>"What about the Dental Maturity Club?" suggested Julian; but of course
they didn't pay any attention to <i>him</i>.</p>
<p>After the watermelon had been eaten right down to the rind, the little
boys repaired to Craneycrow and the girls went off to visit Mrs.
Cheever.</p>
<p>Tom Parks sighed and let his belt out a notch. Then he and Julian and
Joe, for no particular reason and not really thinking about it, climbed
up in the Vogelhart willow tree. Sun and food had made them lazy, and
each of them found a perching place and sat there like a sleepy baboon
high among the wind-sifting, sun-sifting leaves.</p>
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<p>Swallows looped and dipped around Judge Chater's tipsy cupola.</p>
<p>"You know something, Jule?" Joe Felder said. "I bet you'd never dare
spend a night in one of these old dumps. Judge Chater's house, for
instance."</p>
<p>"I bet I would."</p>
<p>"I bet you wouldn't."</p>
<p>"I bet I would," but then Julian, who was a fairly honest boy, felt
compelled to add: "Not alone, though. <i>With</i> somebody. You, maybe. How
about it? I dare you!"</p>
<p>It was a bright, lively afternoon. Foster and Davey could be heard
sparrow-chirping on their island, and Mr. Payton, distantly, could
be heard whistling in his garden. To the left, there was the
scatterbrained conversation of hens and a sound of feminine voices as
Mrs. Cheever and the girls came out of her house to go berrying.</p>
<p>The world was a safe place. Anyone could see that it was safe.</p>
<p>"O.K.," Joe said. "You say when."</p>
<p>"You too, Tom?"</p>
<p>"Well, I guess so." Tom agreed, but not with alacrity.</p>
<p>"We'll do it on the night of the full moon," Julian said. "That's only
three nights off, Thursday. We'll be able to find our way around better
by moonlight, and another thing is—another rule is—that we can't
bring any flashlights."</p>
<p>"Heck, why not?"</p>
<p>"That would make it too easy," Julian said happily. His very eyeglasses
sparkled with excitement. "We don't just want this to be an <i>easy</i>
sort of thing, do we? Because it has to be in the nature of a—of a
test."</p>
<p>"Why?" Tom wanted to know.</p>
<p>"For discipline," Julian replied. He had a noble feeling in his
forehead as he said it. "Self-discipline," he added.</p>
<p>"I don't know if I need it," Tom said. "I <i>get</i> discipline. I get it
everywhere. I get it at home, I get it at school, I get it in the
mornings working at Bilmeyer's store."</p>
<p>"Oh, everybody needs it," Julian assured him. "And listen, you guys,
this whole operation has to be kept secret. Absolutely secret. From
everyone."</p>
<p>"Our families, even?"</p>
<p>"Especially our families. They might say no."</p>
<p>"From the girls, too?" asked Joe.</p>
<p>Julian just ignored him. That went without saying.</p>
<p>"We'll slip out after dark, see, when everything's quiet. We'll meet
here under the tree. I'll be spending the night at the Blakes so I can
get here fast, and you guys will have your bikes...."</p>
<p>Busily and happily he laid his plans, and soon his companions were
infected with his enthusiasm; even Tom.</p>
<p>"We'll bring some blankets in case we get sleepy," Julian said.</p>
<p>"And some food in case we get hungry," Tom added.</p>
<p>"And an alarm clock to wake us up in time to go home before they miss
us. I'll bring it," Joe volunteered.</p>
<p>Thursday came: fine and clear and very warm. Julian smuggled three
blankets into Judge Chater's house. He had also brought a bottle of
Mrs. Cheever's A.P. Decoction because at night the mosquitoes were apt
to be bad. He crawled cautiously up the rickety stairs that swayed and
swagged beneath his feet. Reconnoitering, the day before, he had found
that there was a fairly sound room on the second floor not quite so
littered and ruined as the rest. Besides, though he scarcely admitted
it to himself, to be upstairs seemed somehow—safer.</p>
<p>Now in the broad light of day even the hint of such a thought appeared
ridiculous. Sunshine blazed beyond the broken windows; flies buzzed in
and out. Everything looked perfectly ordinary and cheerful, however
shabby.</p>
<p>"Nothing to it," Julian remarked aloud, sweeping fallen plaster aside
with his foot and clearing a space to spread the blankets on.</p>
<p>"Hey, Jule," called Tom's voice below stairs. "Where are you anyway?"</p>
<p>"Up here; come on up! Take it easy on the stairs, though."</p>
<p>Tom came, carrying a tin box under his arm. He lifted the lid of it and
peered in lovingly.</p>
<p>"Three chocolate-almond bars," he recited. "Three bags of potato chips.
Three bags of salted peanuts. And Joe's bringing cold root-beer tonight
along with the alarm clock."</p>
<p>"Great," Julian said. "And I know where I can get some salami and a
bottle of dill pickles."</p>
<p>"M-m," murmured Tom wordlessly. The thought of dill pickles made his
mouth water; then he said: "You know, Jule, this doesn't seem like a
test, or discipline, or anything. It just seems like a neat thing to
do. It just seems like fun."</p>
<p>"I know," said Julian. "Let's hope we feel the same tomorrow morning."</p>
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