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"Hugh would only punish us again," said Rosemary practically. "Let's tell him about the ring, Sarah. He said he'd help me out of the sc.r.a.pe, no matter what it was, if I'd tell him."
But Sarah set her chin obstinately and refused to go to her brother.
She reminded Rosemary of her promise and s.h.i.+rley, too, began to cry and say that she was afraid of Hugh. So it ended by Rosemary renewing her promise not to tell and then crying herself to sleep because she remembered how patient Hugh had been and she knew she had both hurt and disappointed him.
"And I can't go around and give the money back," she wept, tossing about on her wet pillow, "What will people think? But Hugh will make me, if he goes along to see me do it. Oh, dear, the Willis will makes all the trouble in this family!"
But in the morning the Willis will helped Rosemary to remain unshaken in her determination not to tell any more than she had told. Doctor Hugh called her into the office before breakfast--he had had his early and was ready to leave when the girls came down stairs--and asked her again why she wanted the money, patiently at first and then, as Rosemary stubbornly refused to give a reason, he lost his temper and began to storm. Rosemary finally flew out of the office and banged the door and the morning was unhappily begun.
Winnie, who had heard the story from Aunt Trudy, thought it her duty to lecture Rosemary during breakfast--at which Aunt Trudy did not appear--and Rosemary, whose nerves were already strained to the breaking point, answered snappishly.
"I should think you'd be ashamed to speak to me like that before your little sisters," said Winnie indignantly. "s.h.i.+rley wouldn't talk to Winnie like that, would you dear?"
"Oh, my no," said s.h.i.+rley angelically.
This was too much for Rosemary. She fled from the table to indulge in a good cry up in her mother's room. Doctor Hugh had trusted the key to her, after he had locked the room and Rosemary sometimes went there when she wanted to be quiet and think. The room was in perfect order, sweet and clean and well-aired and the things on the dresser and shelves were exactly as her mother usually kept them. Rosemary had arranged them so because she thought her mother would like to find them ready for her when she came home.
After the tears had stopped, Rosemary sat quietly for a few minutes in the little low white rocker. Something of the peace and stillness of the room stole into her troubled mind. Presently she rose and went out, locking the door carefully behind her.
"Anything the matter, Rosemary--you look a little woozy," said Jack Welles with neighborly frankness, seeing her across the hedge later that morning as she was spreading out handkerchiefs to bleach for Winnie.
In a rush of words, Rosemary told him the "matter."
"Well, you do have a merry time," Jack commented when she had finished. "But the solution is simple after all."
"I can't take back that money," said Rosemary miserably. "But what can I do? Hugh will never give in."
"Do? There's nothing for you to do," answered Jack vigorously.
"Sarah and s.h.i.+rley have the next act on the program and it's up to me to see that they realize it, if you can't show them their duty.
Where's Sarah now?"
"Teaching the cat to sit up," said Rosemary without interest. "It won't do you any good to argue with her, Jack. She's afraid of Hugh and she won't ever tell him. Besides, you know, I only told you if you would promise not to tell."
"Oh, I haven't forgotten that you nailed me firmly before you would say a word," Jack replied grimly. "But I still think I can persuade Sarah to confess her share and if she will, s.h.i.+rley will admit that she also was present. I'll go begin my good work now."
He was gone half an hour and when he came back he was smiling.
"Everything's all fixed," he announced. "Sarah and s.h.i.+rley are going to march up to the guns like good soldiers to-night, and I'm going to do the talking for them. Sarah, sensibly enough, wants to get it over before dinner, so I've promised to come over right after lunch and sit on your porch so I'll be here no matter how early Hugh gets home. You and I have to bolster up the weak spots in their courage."
"I don't see how you ever persuaded Sarah," marveled Rosemary. "I argued and argued, and she wouldn't listen to me."
Jack looked very wise.
"I used moral suasion," he declared. "Told her if she didn't own up to-night, I'd go to Doctor Hugh and tell him everything myself."
"Is that moral suasion?" asked Rosemary doubtfully.
"Of course it is," said Jack with confidence. "If it isn't it ought to be. I've never broken a promise yet and I'm mighty glad Sarah didn't make me, but I'll be jiggered if I don't think there are times when it is worse to keep a promise than to break it."
A promise "wrongly given"--Doctor Hugh's words came back to Rosemary. Had she given her promise wrongly?
Doctor Hugh did not come home till nearly five o'clock and the four solemn young people on the front porch were getting decidedly fidgety before his roadster appeared at the curb and he jumped out and hurried up the walk. He said "h.e.l.lo" to the four as he pa.s.sed them and he was surprised, therefore, when he turned from his desk to see them enter the office and advance toward him.
"Hugh," said Jack clearly, "I've something to tell you. Sarah really ought to, but she asked me to do it."
"Suppose you sit down," said the doctor gravely.
Sarah sat down gingerly on a chair near the door, ready for instant flight, and the others ranged themselves near the desk. Jack began with the loss of the ring and told everything that had happened since. He spoke rapidly, but without excitement, and he was not interrupted once.
"I am really to blame, as much as anyone," he declared, when he had reached the point where Rosemary had confided in him about the missing ring and her determination to replace it. "I had no business to promise not to tell before I heard what I was not to tell. That's a fool stunt."
"Yes, I think it is," agreed Doctor Hugh, but smilingly.
"Rosemary thought she had to go on taking care of cranky babies till she could buy another ring. If I'd had any money of my own--and I don't know why I never do--" Jack paused for a moment to consider this new idea--"I would have bought a ring myself and helped her out of the hole."
Doctor Hugh listened silently to the remainder of the recital, his eyes studying the four expressive faces before him.
"So Rosemary really couldn't tell you what she wanted the money for, because she had promised," finished Jack. "And Sarah was afraid, and so was s.h.i.+rley."
"I see," the doctor said. "I'm sorry they were afraid. Sarah dear, do you really think you have saved yourself anything by not telling me when you lost the ring?" he went on, turning to Sarah. "Haven't you had more trouble and worry and unhappiness trying to keep me from finding out and don't you think it is better to own up right away and take your punishment and have it all over?"
"Yes," admitted Sarah in a very small voice.
"Well, then, next time tell me at once," said Doctor Hugh earnestly.
"And don't ever let me hear of four of you making a chain of promises like this. We'll see what can be done about the ring to-morrow, Sarah, and you and I will talk it over with Aunt Trudy."
He held out his hand to Jack and put an arm around Rosemary, whose face was radiant with relief and happiness.
"I wish you had spoken up a little sooner, Jack," growled the doctor. "I find that keeping track of three girls isn't the easiest task in the world."
"But we won't lose any more rings," said the practical Sarah.
"No, we won't lose any more rings, Hugh," whispered Rosemary, standing on tip-toe to kiss him.
CHAPTER XIV
A NEW SCHOOL TERM
The next morning, as soon as breakfast was over, the unwilling Sarah was called into conference in the office with her brother and Aunt Trudy. The latter was much surprised to learn that she had lost a ring, and insisted that Sarah, who was rather a favorite of hers, should not be punished.
"I never did care anything about the ring, Hugh," said Aunt Trudy earnestly, "and there's been trouble enough about it. It's just like Rosemary to want to buy me another, but I'd never wear it, so why should she? I'm glad enough that this ridiculous idea of hers has been stopped before it went on any longer. Don't, for pity's sake, say another word about that unfortunate ring."
"Well, Sarah, that let's you out," said Doctor Hugh cheerfully. "I must say I think you've s.h.i.+rked all the way through, first in not owning up and again in letting Rosemary take the responsibility of replacing the ring. And you kept her from telling me, simply to s.h.i.+eld yourself. However, I really understand that you were afraid and fear often keeps us from doing what we know to be right. You're going to fight that little 'I'm-afraid'"--for he had had a brief talk with his little sister the night before after the others had left the office and felt that he was just beginning to understand Sarah--"and put him in his place, which is behind you, and so we'll start all over as long as Aunt Trudy is willing. Shall we?"
"Let's," said Sarah laconically, but she slipped a confiding small hand in the doctor's larger one. He squeezed it affectionately.