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"I--think," said Betty thoughtfully, "--p'r'aps you had better go yourself. f.a.n.n.y said--f.a.n.n.y's manners are awful; I think father ought to send them both away--"
"What did f.a.n.n.y say?"
"f.a.n.n.y told me--well, she said she would rather I--didn't go into the kitchen again--yet."
Kitty groaned. "What have you done to vex them both so, Betty?"
"I only tried to see that the table was nicely laid, and everything just as you told me; and because I took out all the gla.s.ses and told Emily they were dirty, she got as cross as anything; and they really were dirty, for I showed her all the finger-marks, so it wasn't as if I was complaining about nothing. If I'd 'cused her wrongly I shouldn't wonder at her getting mad; but I hadn't, and she couldn't deny it. The forks were dirty too; at least I showed her six that were."
Without any comment Kitty left the room and descended to the kitchen.
All the way she went she was dreading what she should find when she got there, and wondering how she should best approach matters, and it was a relief to her on opening the kitchen door to find that f.a.n.n.y was alone.
f.a.n.n.y was looking cross enough at that moment to daunt any ordinary courage, but, somehow, Kitty never felt as alarmed of her as of Emily.
"Well, f.a.n.n.y," she began, intending to ignore the hints and rumours that had reached her, "we have got back. We were wet through nearly, and now father and I are longing for our supper. Have you got something very nice for us?" She tried to speak cheerfully, but it cost her a great effort.
f.a.n.n.y took up the poker and made an attack on the stove. "You never ordered nothing, Miss Kitty, and 'tisn't my place to say what you should have."
"Oh but, f.a.n.n.y, you generally do," said Kitty, half inclined to be indignant at f.a.n.n.y's injustice, for she could not help remembering how f.a.n.n.y, as a rule, resented any attempt on her part to order or arrange the meals. She knew, though, that her only chance now was to be patient, and to ignore a good many things. "And you manage so well, so much better than I can." She felt she must say something to restore peace and amiability, if they were to have any supper at all that night, and not incur greater disgrace than she had already.
"I don't want to boast," said f.a.n.n.y, "'tisn't my nature to do so, but if I'm gived a free hand, well--I can turn out a pa.s.sable meal; but when one doesn't like this and the other doesn't like that, and nothing I do is right, and there's nothing but rows and squabblings in the kitchen, and no peace nowhere--well, I gives it all up! P'r'aps somebody else could manage better."
f.a.n.n.y's voice rose more and more shrilly. Poor Kitty's head by this time was aching badly, and her nerves were all on edge. "f.a.n.n.y, what _is_ the matter?" she asked despairingly. "What has happened while we've been away? I thought we were coming home to a nice comfortable meal and a happy evening, and when we drive up the house is all dark, and the rain beating in at the windows. Emily is in a fury, and--and oh it is all so miserable. I--I'd rather be out alone on the downs in the storm without any home at all, or--or--" Here Kitty's voice faltered, and once more the tears brimmed up in her eyes--a most unusual occurrence with her; but the events of the day, the storm, and the difficulties that beset her, were proving too much for her.
f.a.n.n.y, hearing the break in her voice, looked round quickly, just in time to see the tears, the white, tired face, and the look of dejection.
"Why, Miss Kitty," she cried, her soft heart touched at once, "don't 'ee take it like that. Why, 'tisn't nothing to fret about; it'll all come right again, my dear," and she put her big red arm round her little mistress, and drew her head down to rest on her shoulder. But Kitty, completely overcome now, shook her head mournfully.
"No, it won't, f.a.n.n.y; it is too late now. Aunt Pike is to come and live here to look after us. Father says we must have some one, and--and I think he is right. I don't seem able to manage things, everything goes just as I don't want it to," and the tears brimmed over again and fell on f.a.n.n.y's shoulder.
"Mrs. Pike!" gasped f.a.n.n.y. "Mrs.--Pike--coming here--for good! Oh my!
Miss Kitty, you don't really mean it!"
"Yes, I do," groaned Kitty. "It is really true. Father has written to her, and--oh I never dreamed such a thing _could_ happen, or I would have tried and tried to be more careful. It must be fate, though, as well as our bad managing, for I've never before known Jabez post a letter when he was told to; but he must have gone right down to the post at once with the one to Aunt Pike that sealed all our fates. If he hadn't I do believe I could have got father not to send it, or at least to give us another chance."
f.a.n.n.y shook her head solemnly. "It do seem like it," she groaned.
"What has happened while I have been out, f.a.n.n.y? Has Betty been rude to Emily?"
"Well, you see, Miss Kitty," said f.a.n.n.y, anxious to tell, but softened sufficiently to wish to make the best of the matter, "Miss Betty is so tackless. Emily's temper really wasn't so bad till Miss Betty kep' on with her. So soon as Emily had put the things on the table for supper, Miss Betty 'd bring them all out again one by one, and put them down before Emily, and every time she'd say, in that way she's got, 'Emily, that gla.s.s is filthy; you must wash it at once. I wonder you ain't ashamed to lay the things in such a state.' When she brought out the third lot Emily got mad, and when Miss Betty come out with the forks too--well, the storm bursted. Emily was cheeky, I don't deny, and Miss Betty was rude, and I had to tell 'em at last that they must go out of the kitchen if they was likely to go on like that. I wasn't going to have my place turned into a bear-garden."
"Emily shouldn't have put down dirty things," said Kitty, loyal to her sister. "She is always doing it, and she ought to know better."
Her sympathies were all with Betty. She may have been "tackless," as f.a.n.n.y called it, but however kindly Emily had been told of her carelessness she would have been certain to fly into a rage; and they had put up with so much from her without complaining, that no one could accuse them of being fidgety or captious.
As a matter of fact, Emily, who needed a very firm mistress of whom she would stand in awe, should have been sent away long before. Kitty could not manage her at all, and as she thought of all they had endured daily at Emily's hands, she felt almost thankful that soon the management of her would fall to Aunt Pike's lot.
"Did you say, Miss Kitty, that the master had asked Mrs. Pike to come here to live altogether, to look after us?"
Kitty nodded despairingly. After all, the managing of Emily seemed but a very trifling advantage to weigh against the Pike invasion and all that would follow on it. "O f.a.n.n.y," she sighed brokenly, "if only--if only mother were alive! Nothing has gone right since, nor ever will again; and I feel it is almost all my fault that Aunt Pike has got to come, and--and--"
"Now don't take on like that, Miss Kitty," said f.a.n.n.y, sniffing audibly, and not entirely able to throw off a sense of her own guilt in the matter. "'Tisn't nothing to do with you, I'm sure. If things _'as_ to be, they _'as_ to be, and we'll manage some'ow. I'm going to set about getting a nice supper so soon as ever I can. I think we'm all low with the thunder and the 'eat, and we'll be better when we've had some food.
Now don't 'ee fret any more, that's a dear," and she wiped Kitty's eyes and then her own on her very soiled ap.r.o.n, but Kitty bore it gladly for the sake of the warm heart that beat beneath the soiled bib.
"Thank you, f.a.n.n.y; you are a dear," she said gratefully; "and I will go and light some lights about the house by the time father has done with that patient he has in with him now."
Kitty had a great idea of making the house bright and cheerful, but in her zeal she forgot the heat of the night.
"Phew! my word!" gasped Dr. Trenire as he came presently to the dining-room. "Why, children, how can you breathe in this atmosphere?
I have been turning down the gas all the way I've come. But how nice the table is looking, and how good something is smelling. I want some supper pretty badly; don't you, little woman?" with a friendly pull at Kitty's curls.
Kitty was not hungry now, but she was delighted by her father's appreciation, and she cut the bread very zealously, and pa.s.sed him everything she thought he could want. It was not until she had done all that that the silence and the emptiness of the table struck her.
"Why, where is Dan?" she cried.
"And where is Anthony?" asked Anthony's father.
Betty gave a little jump, but as quickly controlled herself again. "Oh, I'd quite forgotten about him," she said calmly. "Tony is in bed."
"In bed?" cried Dr. Trenire and Kitty at the same moment. "Isn't he well?"
None of them had ever been sent to bed for being naughty, so that illness was the only explanation that occurred to them.
"Oh yes, he is all right; but I made him get under the feather-bed because of the lightning--"
"The what?"
"The lightning. They say it can't strike you if you are covered with feathers, and of course I didn't want it to strike Tony, speshally with n.o.body here but me to--to take the 'sponsibility," looking at her father with the most serious face imaginable. "So I made him get into the spare-room bed, 'cause it's a feather-bed, and then I put all the eider-downs over him, and I expect he's as safe as can be."
Dr. Trenire gave a low whistle and started to his feet.
"Very thoughtful of you, child," he said, trying not to smile, "and I expect Tony is safe enough, if he isn't cooked or suffocated. For my part, I should prefer the risk to such a protection in this weather.
I'll go and rescue him." But Kitty had already flown.
"I forgot to tell Kitty," went on Betty thoughtfully, "that I think the moths have got into the eider-downs, such a lot of them flew out when I moved the quilts."
Dr. Trenire groaned. "I suppose the quilts have never been attended to or put away since we ceased to use them?"
"No," said Betty gravely. "You see, if they are on the spare-room bed they are all out in readiness for when we want them."
"And for the moths when they want them," sighed her father. "I expect they will not leave much for us."
Kitty, her father's half-jesting words filling her with a deep alarm, had meanwhile raced up to the spare room. Somehow, on this dreadful day, anything seemed possible, certainly anything that was terrible, and she remembered suddenly that the spare bedroom was the very hottest room in the house. It was over the kitchen, and caught every possible gleam of suns.h.i.+ne from morning till evening. Also she knew Betty's thoroughness only too well, and her mind's eye saw poor little Tony buried deep and tucked in completely, head and all.
The whole house was stiflingly hot. Kitty's own face grew crimson with her race upstairs, and when she opened the door of the spare bedroom the heat positively poured out; but a terrible load was lifted from her mind, for, mercifully, Tony's head was uncovered. He was the colour of a crimson peony, it is true, but at any rate he was not suffocated, unless--Kitty stepped quickly forward and touched his cheek. It almost made her sick with dread to do so; but the red cheek was very, very hot and lifelike to the touch, and at the same moment Tony opened a y pair of large sleepy eyes, and stared up at his sister wonderingly.
"I'm not struck, am I?" he asked half nervously. "I am very hot, Kitty.
Is it the lightning?"
"No," said Kitty cheerfully, "it is feathers," and she flung back the pile of quilts. "Poor Tony. Get up, dear, and come down and have some supper. It is all ready, and father was wondering where you were."
Tony slipped with grateful obedience from his protection and followed Kitty, but rather languidly, it is true, for he was very hot and exhausted, and very rumpled, all but his sweet temper, which was quite unruffled.
"Is Dan come back?" he asked eagerly, as he crept slowly down the stairs.