in this house who fits the same clothes for six months in a row."
And on and on it went. Meanwhile, to Arthur Stuart's amusement, they were unloading each other's bags almost as fast as they were loading their own. The children seemed to be used to seeing this sort of thing and most of the bags were in another room, where the children were carefully loading them with food they were carrying out of the kitchen. Apparently they were voting with Mama Squirrel.
"Don't like none of our clothes nohow," said one of the children to Arthur Stuart. "Druther travel nekkid."
At that moment a cry from the kitchen sent them all running to see.
Papa Moose lay on the floor, doubled up, holding his crippled foot and crying out with great groans of pain.
"What happened?" said Arthur, amid the clamor of the children.
"I don't know, I don't know," said Mama Squirrel.
Arthur Stuart knelt down by Papa Moose, moving some of the children out of the way as he did. He took the man's ankle and foot in his hands and began unwinding and unfastening the straps that bound it in place and held on the pad at the heel. Almost at once the groaning stopped-but not because the pain had eased, Arthur Stuart soon realized. Papa Moose had fainted.
No one even heard the knock at the door-if there was one. The first they knew that they had a visitor was when he spoke.
"This is what comes of having a kitchen built right onto the house."
Arthur Stuart looked up. It was Alvin's younger brother Calvin.
Calvin shook his head. "Burn himself on the stove?"
"Don't know," said Arthur Stuart.
"Hasn't Alvin taught you anything?"
Arthur Stuart seethed, but stuck to the subject. "It's something with his foot."
Calvin knelt down across from Arthur and began to examine Papa Moose. "This looks like a club foot," said Calvin.
Arthur Stuart looked up at Mama Squirrel, raising his eyebrows to say, Isn't it wonderful to have a real doctor here to tell us what we already knew.
Mama Squirrel was not, however, in the mood for sarcasm. "Who are you, sir? And get your hands off my husband's foot."
Calvin looked up at her and grinned. "I'm Calvin Maker, the brother of a certain journeyman blacksmith who's been living in your house, I think."
Now that really did make Arthur Stuart mad. Calling himself a maker, as if that was his profession, when Alvin didn't make no such claim, and him ten times the maker Calvin would ever be!
But Arthur held his tongue, since there'd be nothing gained by going to war with Calvin.
"I'm getting the lie of the bones in his foot. The muscles have grown up all wrong around the bones." Calvin palpated the foot some more, then pulled off the thick stockings.
"What are you doing?" demanded Mama Squirrel.
"I can't believe Alvin's been in this house so long and didn't do a blamed thing about your husband's foot."
"My husband gets along just fine on his foot the way it is."
"Well, he'll get along better now," said Calvin. "Got everything back in place." He stood up and offered his hand to her. "It'll take him some getting used to, but in a few weeks he'll be walking better than he ever has in his whole life."
"A few weeks?" said Mama Squirrel, ignoring his hand. "Maybe you're all proud of your miracle working, but you might have thought to ask if this was a convenient day to go fixing up his foot. We've got miles to walk tonight! And for weeks to come."
"And he was going to do that with a club foot?" said Calvin.
Arthur Stuart knew, from the slight snideness now creeping into Calvin's tone, that he was irked by Mama Squirrel's lack of gratitude.
"Some folks," said Mama Squirrel, "is so proud of their knacks that it just don't occur to them that other folks might not want them to do their public demonstrations on them."
"Well, then," said Calvin, "I'm pretty sure I remember how the club foot was. I think I can put it back."
"No you can't," said Arthur Stuart.
Calvin looked at him with cool, amused hostility. "Oh?"
"Because his foot had already been changed before you got here," said Arthur Stuart. "That's what made him cry out with pain and fall down. Something moved all the bones around while the foot was still all strapped up. And that was a good five minutes ago."
"How interesting," said Calvin.
"So you see," said Arthur Stuart, "the bones the way you found them when you knelt