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CHAPTER XII
 LIKE the ill wind that nevertheless blows some good, the , although spoiling the coasting, opened the way for two weeks of the finest skating that Beaufort had ever known. The snow had become water, but the water now became ice.  
For in the north Winter heard how his sovereignty was thus being upon by an o’er-anxious Spring, and in haste dispatched to the scene General Bitter-Cold. With his force General Bitter-Cold arrived, amid a flourish of , late one night. So well did he work that by morning Beaufort and the country round-about was Winter’s again.
 
He sealed each pond and stream with the seal of empire, and then proceeded to anew the river.
 
Beaufort had a system of weather flags; and when, for some hours preceding General Bitter-Cold’s arrival, the cold-wave signal was flown from the staff upon the town hall cupola, it was received by Ned and his cronies, save Bob, with much delight. Bob, being rather thin-skinned, much preferred spring, no matter how early it might come.
 
 
But with no snow left, and with the streets mud and water, Ned that almost anything would be welcome.
 
“The paper says that the temperature will fall forty degrees by morning,” announced Mr. , at supper.
 
“Won’t that be fine, though!” asserted Ned.
 
“It won’t be very fine for the poor people, however,” suggested Mrs. Miller.
 
Ned tried to look solemn, but the picture of the skating quite out that of the poor.
 
That night, as he sunk his cheek into his pillow, about to go to sleep, he heard old Boreas sound a down the flue; and he and blissfully cuddled into a ball.
 
In the barn Bob, at the end of his amid the hay, raised his head for a moment, inquiringly; then, with a shiver instead of a , he, also, cuddled closer.
 
The next morning Ned was to sprinkle ashes and sawdust upon the various walks and paths belonging to the , so that the other members of the household might venture out with safety. For himself he left a narrow strip, leading from back stoop to barn, unsprinkled; it was his private slide, and was a constant to other back-yard visitors, Maggie and Bob.
 
There was now excellent skating on the flats, where several large ponds had been formed and had readily frozen over. But the river yielded more slowly. However, the zero weather was genuine, and had come to stay a while. Grimly General Bitter-Cold did his work, day by day and night by night building from either bank out toward midstream, until finally a had been made and over the channel itself had been spread a crust of crystal.
 
So quickly this crust deepened and toughened, that soon an ice bridge had been staked out, and teams were crossing from shore to shore.
 
The work of freezing had been done very quietly. On this account the Mississippi was now like glass. All Beaufort went skating. The field was , save as in the swiftest parts of the current the water continue............
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