Little Brother was not stingy, but he saved; he bought his mother petty gifts once in a while when he had enough to pay for something.
Little Sister and Sam were capable in emotional crises of sympathy or hatred to express themselves volubly. Little Brother had no gifts of speech. He made gifts of pebbles or of money awkwardly, shyly, with few words. Mamise, as she tried to extricate herself from Abbie’s lassoing hospitality, paused in the door and studied the children, contrasting them with the Webling grandchildren who had been born with gold spoons in their mouths and somebody to take them out, fill them, and put them in again. But luxury seemed to make small difference in character.
She mused upon the three strange beings that had come into the world as a result of the chance union of Jake and Abbie. Without that they would never have existed and the world would have never known the difference, nor would they.
Sis and Sam were quarreling vigorously. Little Brother was silent upon the hearth. He had collected from the gutter many small stones and sticks. They were treasures to him and he was as important about them as a miser about his shekels. Again and again he counted them, taking a pleasure in their arithmetic. Already he was advanced in mathematics beyond the others and he loved to arrange his wealth for the sheer delight of arrangement; orderliness was an instinct with him already.
For a time Mamise noted how solemnly he kept at work, building a little stone house and painfully making it stand. He was a home-builder already.
Sam had paid no heed to the work. But, wondering what Mamise was looking at, he turned and saw his brother. A 211 grin stretched his mouth. Little Brother grew anxious. He knew that when something he had builded interested Sam its doom was close.
“Whass ’at?” said Sam.
“None yer business,” said Little Brother, as spunky as Belgium before the Kaiser.
“’S’ouse, ain’t it?”
“You lea’ me ’lone, now!”