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"Oh, Mother, I don't feel a bit like it! Mayn't I skip it to-day?"
This was, in effect, a speech that Marjorie often made, and she had to laugh at her mother's mimicry.
But she straightened her face, and said, "No, my child; you must do your practising, or you won't be ready for your lesson when the teacher comes to-morrow."
"All right, Mother," said Mrs. Maynard, cheerfully, and sitting down at the piano, she began to rattle off a gay waltz.
"Oh, no, Helen," remonstrated Marjorie, "that won't do! You must play your scales and exercises. See, here's the book. Now, play that page over and over for an hour."
Marjorie did hate those tedious "exercises," and she was glad for her mother to see how poky it was to drum at them for an hour. As a rule, Marjorie did her practising patiently enough, but sometimes she revolted, and it made her chuckle to see Mrs. Maynard carefully picking out the "five-finger drills."
"Keep your hands straight, Helen," she admonished her mother. "Keep the backs of them so level that a lead pencil wouldn't roll off. I'll get a lead pencil."
"No, don't!" exclaimed Mrs. Maynard, in dismay. She liked to play the piano, but she was far from careful to hold her hands in the position required by Midget's teacher.
"Yes, I think I'd better, Helen. If you contract bad habits, it's so difficult to break them."
Roguish Marjorie brought a lead pencil, and laid it carefully across the back of her mother's hand, from which it immediately rolled off.
"Now, Helen, you must hold your hand level. Try again, dearie, and if it rolls off, pick it up and put it back in place."
Mrs. Maynard made a wry face, and the other grown-ups laughed, to see the difficulty she experienced with the pencil.
"One--two--three--four," she counted, aloud.
"Count to yourself, Helen," said Marjorie. "It's annoying to hear you do that!"
This, too, was quoted, for Mrs. Maynard had often objected to the monotonous drone of Marjorie's counting aloud.
But the mother began to see that a child's life has its own little troubles, and she smiled appreciatively at Midget, as she picked up the pencil from the floor for the twentieth time, and replaced it on the back of her hand, now stiff and lame from the unwonted restraint.
"You dear old darling!" cried Midget, flying over and kissing the patient musician; "you sha'n't do that any longer! I declare, King, it's clearing off, after all! Let's take the children out for a walk."
"Very well, we will. Oh, here comes Ruth! Come in, Ruth."
Ruth Rowland came in, and looked greatly mystified at the appearance of the elder members of the group before her.
But King and Midget explained what was going on, and said:
"And you can be Aunt Ruth, come to call on us and our children."
Ruth's eyes danced with fun, and she sat down, saying to Marjorie, "I'm glad to see the children looking so well; have any of them the whooping-cough? I hear it's around some."
"I have," declared Cousin Jack, and then he began to cough and whoop in a most exaggerated imitation of the whooping-cough. Indeed, in his paroxysms, he almost turned somersaults.
"I hab a bad cold id by head," declared Mr. Maynard, and he began a series of such prodigious sneezes that all the others screamed with laughter.
"Well, your children aren't so very well, after all, are they?"
commented Ruth, as they watched the two men cutting up their capers.
"The girls are," said Marjorie, looking affectionately at her two "daughters."
"Oh, I'm not!" declared Mrs. Maynard; "I have a fearful toothache," and she held her cheek in her hand, and rocked back and forth, pretending dreadful pain.
"And I have the mumps!" announced Cousin Ethel, puffing out her pretty pink cheeks, to make believe they were swollen with that ailment.
"Well, you're a crowd of invalids!" said King; "I believe some fresh air would do you good. Out you all go, for a walk. Get your hats, kiddies, and be quick about it."
The grown-ups scampered away to get their hats, and the ladies put up their hair properly and took off their white ap.r.o.ns.
The two men discarded their big collars and ties, but the game was not yet over, and the group went gayly out and down toward the beach.
"May we go in bathing, Mother?" asked Mr. Maynard.
"Not in bathing, my son," returned Marjorie; "the waves are too strong.
But, if you wish, you may all take off your shoes and stockings and go 'paddling.'"
However, none of the quartette of "children" accepted this permission, so they all sat on the sand and built forts.
"Now, I guess we'll all go to the pier, and get ice cream," said King.
"How would you like that, kiddies?"
"Fine!" said Cousin Jack. "It's getting warmer, and I'm hungering for ice cream. Come on, all."
"Gently, my boy, gently," said King, as Cousin Jack scrambled to his feet, upsetting sand all over everybody. "Now, walk along nicely and properly, don't go too fast, and we'll reach the pier in good time."
"Turn out your toes," directed Marjorie; "hold up your head, Ethel.
Don't swing your arms, Edward."
As a matter of fact the four grown people found it a little difficult to follow these bits of good advice they had so often given carelessly to the children, and they marched along rather stiffly.
"Try to be a little more graceful, Helen," said King, and they all laughed, for Mrs. Maynard was really a very graceful lady, and was spoiling her gait by over-attention to Midget's rules. At the pier, King selected a pleasant table, and ranged his party around it.
"Bring three plates of ice cream, and four half-portions," he directed the waiter. And when it was brought, he calmly gave the four small pieces to his parents and the Bryants.
Cousin Jack's face fell, for he was warm and tired, and he wanted more than a spoonful of the refres.h.i.+ng delicacy. But a surrept.i.tious glance at his watch showed him it was almost five o'clock; so he accepted his plate without a murmur.
"It's very nice, Mother," he said demurely, eating it by tiny bits, sc.r.a.ped from the edges as he had sometimes seen Marjorie do, when her share had been limited to half a plate.
"I'm glad you like it, son," she returned; "don't eat too fast,--hold your spoon properly,--take small bites of cake."
Ruth was convulsed by this new sort of fun, and asked Marjorie if they had ever played the game before.
"No," Cousin Jack answered for her, "and I'm jolly well sure we never will again! I've had enough of being 'a child again, just for to-night!'
And, if you please, ladies and gentlemen, it's now five o'clock! the jig is up! the game is played out! the ball is over! Here, waiter; bring some ice cream, please. Full-sized plates, all around!"
The amused waiter hurried away on his errand, and Mr. and Mrs. Maynard sat up suddenly, as if relieved of a great responsibility.
"Bring some cake, too," said Mrs. Maynard, "and a pot of tea. Don't you want some tea, Ethel?"