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"But how was it you never did it before?" asked the Tailor doubtfully. "We were idle, we were idle," said Tommy. The Tailor's voice rose to a pitch of desperation-- "But if you did the work," he shouted, "_where is the Brownie?_" "Here!" cried the boys, "and we are very sorry that we were Boggarts so long." With which the father and sons fell into each other's arms and fairly wept. * * * * * It will be believed that to explain all this to the Grandmother was not the work of a moment. She understood it all at last, however, and the Tailor could not restrain a little good-humoured triumph on the subject. Before he went to work he settled her down in the window with her knitting, and kissed her. "What do you think of it all, Mother?" he inquired. "Bairns are a blessing," said the old lady tartly, "_I told you so._" * * * * * "That's not the end, is it?" asked one of the boys in a tone of dismay, for the Doctor had paused here. "Yes, it is," said he. "But couldn't you make a little more end?" asked Deordie, "to tell us what became of them all?" "I don't see what there is to tell," said the Doctor. "Why, there's whether they ever saw the Old Owl again, and whether Tommy and Johnnie went on being Brownies," said the children. The Doctor laughed. "Well, be quiet for five minutes," he said. "We'll be as quiet as mice," said the children. And as quiet as mice they were. Very like mice, indeed. Very like mice behind a wainscot at night, when you have just thrown something to frighten them away. Death-like stillness for a few seconds, and then all the rustling and scuffling you please. So the children sat holding their breath for a moment or two, and then shuffling feet and smothered bursts of laughter testified to their impatience, and to the difficulty of understanding the process of story-making as displayed by the Doctor, who sat pulling his beard, and staring at his boots, as he made up "a little more end." "Well," he said, sitting up suddenly, "the Brownies went on with their work in spite of the bottle-green suit, and Trout's luck returned to the old house once more. Before long Tommy began to work for the farmers, and Baby grew up into a Brownie, and made (as girls are apt to make) the best house-sprite of all. For, in the Brownie's habits of self-denial, thoughtfulness, consideration, and the art of little kindnes
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