Then he told Mother about the toys the other children had brought to school and that he was sure they would like to see his lead soldiers.
“But I don’t believe Miss Davis will be pleased,” said Mrs. Horton. “She must find it hard to teach her class when they are thinking about their toys. Do you think you ought to take the lead soldiers, dear?”
“Oh, yes, Mother, please,” Sunny Boy said. “We put them under the sand table and we don’t play with them till recess. Lead soldiers don’t make a noise, Mother, and Miss Davis will like them. She said she likes quiet toys.”
So Mrs. Horton said he might take the lead soldiers if he would promise not to play with them during school hours and if he would put them away the moment recess was over and not make Miss Davis speak to him twice.
“What you got, Sunny Boy?” asked Carleton, when Sunny Boy came into Miss Davis’ room the next morning, a box under his arm.
Sunny Boy, though he would not have said so, rather wished he had not decided to bring his lead soldiers. They were heavy to carry and it was a very cold morning, so cold that although he kept his hands in his pockets, his fingers were red and stiff when he pulled off his mittens. He had had to stop all along the way to poke the box further up under his arm, and once he had dropped it. But, never mind, now he had something to show the boys.
“I brought my lead soldiers,” he said to Carleton. “Want to see them?”
Carleton did, and he helped Sunny Boy take them out of the box and stand them up on his desk. The boys and girls came crowding around to look and the other toys were forgotten for a moment. When Miss Davis came in she found the train rushing around on the floor and the doll walking and the toy piano playing, as usual, but half a dozen boys around Sunny Boy’s desk were playing “battle” with wads of paper for bullets and pencils for guns.
“The assembly bell will ring in five minutes, children,” said Miss Davis warningly. “Put the toys away under the sand table at once. Are these your lead soldiers, Sunny Boy?”
Miss Davis looked at the soldiers and admired them and then told Sunny Boy to put them back in the box and put the box under the table.
“You may get them out again at recess,” she said, smiling.
“Could I keep the general, Miss Davis?” begged Sunny Boy. “Could I let him stand on my desk? I won’t play with him the tiniest bit; I’d just like to have him to look at.”
“Well, are you sure you won’t forget and play with him?” urged Miss Davis. “He is a beautiful general, isn’t he? All right, if you promise me not to play with him during school time, you may let him stand on your desk.”
So Sunny Boy put all the soldiers away except the general who rode a horse and was very handsome indeed. He stood him up on his desk and left him there while the class went into Miss May’s room for assembly. When they came back, Miss Davis sent Sunny Boy to the board to color a picture she had drawn. Sunny Boy loved to use the colored chalk, and he forgot all about the lead soldier general while he worked away at the board.