could get Uncle Ben to build a clockwork one, and I took this chart up to him a few days ago, and heâs started to work on it already. What do you think of it?â
âWell,â said Jinx, âIâm like Hank: I donât know much about machinery. He looks terrible complicated. What can he do?â
âRun, walk, dance, wrestle, throw a ballâoh, lots of things. And Uncle Ben is thinking up some more improvements.â
âHe wonât be able to talk, will he? What goodâs a playmate that canât talk?â
âNo, but weâre going to put a yell in him. Most boys yell more than they talk, specially when theyâre playing.â
âHâm,â said Jinx, âwhat happens when he runs down?â
âHe goes to sleep until you wind him up again.â
âHâm,â said Jinx again; âIâd hate to have a playmate I had to wind up all the time.â
âSay, look, Jinx,â said Freddy a little crossly, âI didnât tell you about this so you could think up a lot of criticisms. You leave all those things to Uncle Ben. What I wanted you to do was paint the face. Youâre good with paints, got a real artistic touch. Weâve got the head all cut out of wood and ready, and I thought it would be a good time when all the other animals are stuffing themselves with wedding cake and wonât be snooping around, to get it done.â
âLead me to it,â said Jinx enthusiastically. Like all cats, and many people, he wasnât much interested in any kind of work or game that he wasnât good at. But he was really good at painting, and so he became all at once very much excited about the clockwork boy.
Late that night, when all the guests had gone and lights were out, one small candle still burned up in the barn loft, where Jinx was putting the finishing touches to the wooden face with a small brush. At last he threw down the brush and stood back, purring with satisfaction. âThere,â he said, âwhen better faces are painted, Jinxâll paint âem.â And indeed he had done a splendid job. The face was as lifelike as paint could make it, and it looked exactly like Adoniram, even to the three large freckles on the bridge of the nose.
âWonderful!â said Jinx. âOh boy, are you a clever cat!â Then he turned and poked Freddy, who had agreed to sit up with him while he worked, but had gone to sleep.
âEh? What? Who is it?â exclaimed Freddy, struggling to a sitting position. âOh, itâs you, Jinx. Yes. Was just taking forty winks while you finished.â
âForty snorts is more like it,â said the cat. âWell, look. How do you like it?â
âGosh,â said Freddy, âthatâs swell, Jinx. Itâs so much like Adoniram thatâwell, I donât believe weâll be able to tell âem apart.â
âI wish Iâd had somebody besides Adoniram to paint from,â said Jinx. âIt may be a bother, having them look alike. But there wasnât any other boy around.â
âI donât see what difference it makes,â Freddy said.
So then they both stood silently admiring the face for a while. But Freddy was pretty sleepy, and at last he said: âWell, letâs go to bed.â
âYou go along,â said Jinx. âI want toâwell, thereâs one or two little thingsââ
Freddy grinned. He knew that Jinx just wanted to admire his own work a little longer. âAll right,â he said, and stumbled off drowsily down the stairs.
VI
An Engineer for Bertram
Freddyâs invention of pockets for animals had not really been a success. On his trip he had interested a good many animals in them, partly because he was a high-class salesman and partly because they were such a new idea. But once the novelty wore off, the animals forgot about them and stopped wearing them.
âTrouble is,â said Freddy,
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