It was a morning abounding in unexpected good fortune. For one thing, Miss
Royle was indisposed—to an extent that was fully convincing—and was lying down,
brows swathed by a towel, in her own room; for another, the bursting of a
hot-water pipe on the same floor as the nursery required the prompt attention of
a man in a greasy cap and Johnnie Blake overalls, who, as he hammered and
soldered and coupled lengths of piping with his wrench, discussed various
grown-up topics in a loud voice with Jane, thus levying on her attention.
Miss Royle's temporary incapacity set aside the program of study usual to each
forenoon; and Jane's suddenly aroused interest in plumbing made the canceling of
that day's riding-lesson seem advisable. It was Thomas who telephoned the
postponement. And Gwendolyn found herself granted some little time to
herself.
But she was not playing any of the games she loved—the absorbing
pretend-games with which she occupied herself on just such rare occasions. Her
own pleasure, her own disappointment, too,—these were entirely put aside in a
concern touching weightier matters. Slippers upheld by a hassock, and slender
pink-frocked figure bent across the edge of the school-room table, she had each
elbow firmly planted on a page of the wide-open, dictionary.
At all times the volume was beguiling—this in spite of the fact that the
square of black-board always carried along its top, in glaring chalk, the
irritating reminder: Use Your Dictionary! There was diversion in turning
the leaves at random (blissfully ignoring the while any white list that might be
inscribed down the whole of the board) to chance upon big, strange words.
But the word she was now poring over was a small one. "B-double-e," she
spelled; "Bee: a so-cial hon-ey-gath-er-ing in-sect."
She pondered the definition with wrinkled forehead and worried eye.
"Social"—the word seemed vaguely linked with that other word, "Society", which
she had so fortunately overheard. But what of the remainder of that visitor's
never-to-be-forgotten declaration of scorn? For the definition had absolutely
nothing to say about any bonnet.
She was shoving the pages forward with an impatient damp thumb in her search
for Bonnet, when Thomas entered, slipping in around the edge of the hall door on
soft foot—with a covert peek nursery-ward that was designed to lend significance
to his coming. His countenance, which on occasion could be so rigorously sober,
was fairly askew with a smile.
Gwendolyn stood up straight on the hassock to look at him. And at first
glance divined that something—probably in the nature of an edible—might be
expected. For the breast-pocket of his liveried coat bulged promisingly.
"Hello!" he saluted, tiptoeing genially across the room.
"Hello!" she returned noncommittally.
Near the table, he reached into the bulging pocket and drew out a small
Manila bag. The bag was partly open at the top. He tipped his head to direct one
black eye upon its contents.
"Say, Miss Gwendolyn," he began, "you like old Thomas, don't you?"
Gwendolyn's nostrils widened and quivered, receiving the tempting fragrance
of fresh-roasted peanuts. At the same time, her eyes lit with glad surprise.
Since her seventh anniversary, she had noted a vast change for the better in the
attitude of Miss Royle, Thomas and Jane; where, previous to the birthday, it had
seemed the main purpose of the trio (if not the duty) to circumvent her at every
turn—to which end, each had a method that was unique: the first commanded; the
second threatened; Thomas employed sarcasm or bribery. But now this wave of
thoughtfulness, generosity and smooth speech!—marking a very era in the history
of the nursery. Here was fresh evidence that it was continuing.
Yet—was it not too good to last?
"Why, ye-e-es," she answered, more than half guessing that this time bribery
was in the air.
But the fragrant bag resolved itself into a friendly offering. Thomas let it
drop to the table.
Casting her last doubt aside, Gwendolyn caught it up eagerly. Miss Royle
never permitted her to eat peanuts, which lent to them all the charm of the
forbidden. She cracked a pod; and fell to crunching merrily.
"And you wouldn't like to see me go away, would you now," went on
Thomas.
Her mouth being crammed, she shook her head cordially.
"Ah! I thought so!" He tore the bag down the side so that she could more
easily get at its store. Then, leaning down confidentially, and pointing a
teasing finger at her, "Ha! Ha! Who was it got caught spyin' yesterday?"
The small jaws ceased grinding. She lifted her eyes. Their gray was suddenly
clouded—remembering what, for a moment, her joy in the peanuts had blotted out.
"But I wasn't spying," she denied earnestly.
"Then what was you doin'?—still as mice behind them curtains."
The mist cleared. Her face sunned over once more. "I was waving at the nurse
in the brick house," she explained.
At that, up went Thomas's head. His mouth opened. His ears grew red. "The
nurse in the brick house!" he repeated softly.
"The one with the curly hair," went on Gwendolyn, cracking more pods.
Thomas turned his face toward the side window of the school-room. Through it
could be seen the chimneys of the brick house. He smacked his lips.
"You like peanuts, too," said Gwendolyn. She proffered the bag.
He ignored it. His look was dreamy. "There's a fine Pomeranian at the brick
house," he remarked.
"It was the first time I'd ever seen her," said Gwendolyn, with the nurse
still in mind. "Doesn't she smile nice!"
Now, Thomas waxed enthusiastic. "And she's a lot prettier close to," he
declared, "than she is with a street between. Ah, you ought—"
That moment, Jane entered, fairly darting in.
"Here!" she called sharply to Gwendolyn. "What're you eatin'?"
"Peanuts, Jane,"—perfect frankness being the rule when concealment was not
possible.
Jane came over. "And where'd you git 'em?" she demanded, promptly seizing the
bag as contraband.
"Thomas."
Sudden suspicion flamed in Jane's red glance. "Oh, you must've did Thomas a
grand turn," she observed.
Thomas shifted from foot to foot. "I was—er—um—just tellin' Miss
Gwendolyn"—he winked significantly—"that she wouldn't like to lose us."
"So?" said Jane, still sceptical. Then to Gwendolyn, after a moment's
reflection. "Let me close up your dictionary for you, pettie. Jane never likes
to see one of your fine books lyin' open that way. It might put a strain on the
back."
Emboldened by that cooing tone, Gwendolyn eyed the Manila bag covetously. "I
didn't eat many," she asserted, gently argumentative.
"Oh, a peanut or two won't hurt you, lovie," answered Jane, kneeling to
present the bag. Then drawing the pink-frocked figure close, "And you
didn't tell him what them two ladies had to say?"
"No." It was decisive, "I told him about—"
"I didn't ask her," interrupted Thomas. "No; I talked about how she loves us.
And a-course, she does.... Jane, ain't it near twelve?"
But Gwendolyn had no mind to be held as a tattler. "I told him," she
continued, husking peanuts busily, "about the nurse-maid at the brick
house."
Jane sat back.
"Ah?" She flashed a glance at Thomas, still shifting about uneasily mid-way
between table and door. Then, "What about the nurse-maid, dearie?"
It was Gwendolyn's turn to wax enthusiastic. "Oh, she has such sweet
hair!" she exclaimed. "And she smiles nice!"
Jealousy hardened the freckled visage of the kneeling Jane. "And she's taken
with you, I suppose," said she.
"She threw me kisses," recounted Gwendolyn, crunching happily the while.
"And, oh, Jane, some day may I go over to the brick house?"
"Some day you may—not."
Gwendolyn recognized the sudden change to belligerence; and foreseeing a
possible loss of the peanuts, commenced to eat more rapidly. "Well, then," she
persisted, "she could come over here."
Jane stared. "What do you mean?" she demanded crossly. "And don't you go
botherin' your poor father and mother about this strange woman. Do you
hear?"
"But she takes care of a rich little girl. I know—'cause there are
bars on the basement windows. And Thomas says—"
"Oh, come" broke in Thomas, urging Jane hallward with a nervous jerk
of the head.
"Ah!" Now complete understanding brought Jane to her feet. She fixed Thomas
with blazing eyes. "And what does Thomas say, darlin'?"
Thomas waited. His ears were a dead white.
"There's a Pomeranian at the brick house," went on Gwendolyn, "and the pretty
nurse takes it out to walk. And—"
"And Thomas is a-walkin' our Poms at the same time." Jane was breathing
hard.
"And he says she's lots prettier close to—"
A bell rang sharply. Thomas sprang away. With a gurgle, Jane flounced
after.
The next moment Gwendolyn, from the hassock—upon which she had settled in
comfort—heard a wrangle of voices: First, Jane's shrill accusing, "It was
you put it into her head!—to come—and take my place from under me—and the
food out of my very mouth—and break my hear-r-r-rt!" Next, Thomas's sonorous,
"Stuff and fiddle-sticks!" then sounds of lamentation, and the slamming of a
door.
The last peanut was eaten. As Gwendolyn searched out some few remaining bits
from the crevices of the bag, she shook her yellow hair hopelessly. Truly there
was no fathoming grown-ups!
The morning which had begun so propitiously ended in gloom. At the noon
dinner, Thomas looked harassed. He had set the table for one. That single plate,
as well as the empty arm-chair so popular with Jane, emphasized the infestivity.
As for the heavy curtains at the side window, which—as near as Gwendolyn could
puzzle it out—were the cause of the late unpleasantness, these were closely
drawn.
Having already eaten heartily, Gwendolyn had little appetite. Furthermore,
again she was turning over and over the direful statements made concerning her
parents. She employed the dinner-hour in formulating a plan that was simple but
daring—one that would bring quick enlightenment concerning the things that
worried. Miss Royle was still indisposed. Jane was locked in her own room, from
which issued an occasional low bellow. When Thomas, too, was out of the way—gone
pantry-ward with tray held aloft—she would carry it out. It called for no great
amount of time: no searching of the dictionary. She would close all doors
softly; then fly to the telephone—and call up her father.
There were times when Thomas—as well as the two others—seemed to possess the
power of divination. And during the whole of the dinner his manner showed
distinct apprehension. The meal concluded, even to the use of the finger-bowl,
and all dishes disposed upon the tray, he hung about, puttering with the table,
picking up crumbs and pins, dusting this article and that with a napkin,—all the
while working his lips with silent speech, and drawing down and lifting his
black eye-brows menacingly.
Meanwhile, Gwendolyn fretted. But found some small diversion in standing
before the pier glass, at which, between the shining rows of her teeth, she
thrust out a tip of scarlet. She was thinking about the discussion anent tongues
held by her mother and the two visitors.
"Seven," she murmured, and viewed the greater part of her own tongue
thoughtfully; "seven."
The afternoon was a French-and-music afternoon. Directly after dinner might
be expected the Gallic teacher—undesired at any hour. Thomas puttered and
frowned until a light tap announced her arrival. Then quickly handed Gwendolyn
over to her company.
Mademoiselle Du Bois was short and spare. And these defects she emphasized by
means of a wide hat and a long feather boa. She led Gwendolyn to the
school-room. There she settled down in a low chair, opened a black reticule,
took out a thick, closely written letter, and fell to reading.
Gwendolyn amused herself by experimenting with the boa, which she festooned,
now over one shoulder, now over the other. "Mademoiselle," she began, "what kind
of a bird owned these feathers?"
"Dear me, Mees Gwendolyn," chided Mademoiselle, irritably (she spoke with
much precision and only a slight accent), "how you talk!"
Talk—the word was a cue! Why not make certain inquiries of
Mademoiselle?
"But do little birds ever talk?" returned Gwendolyn, undaunted. The
boa was thin at one point. She tied a knot in it. "And which little bird is it
that tells things to—to people?" Then, more to herself than to Mademoiselle, who
was still deep in her letter, "I shouldn't wonder if it wasn't the little bird
that's in the cuckoo clock, though—"
"Ma foil!" exclaimed Mademoiselle. She seized an end of the boa and
drew Gwendolyn to her knee. "You make ze head buzz. Come!" She reached for a
book on the school-room table. "Attendez!"
"Mademoiselle," persisted Gwendolyn, twining and untwining, "if I do my
French fast will you tell me something? What does nouveaux riches
mean?"
"Nouveaux riches," said Mademoiselle, "is not on ziss page.
Attendez-vous!"
Miss Brown followed Mademoiselle Du Bois, the one coming upon the heels of
the other; so that a loud crescendo from the nursery, announcing the
arrival of the music-teacher, drowned the last paragraph of French.
To Gwendolyn an interruption at any time was welcome. This day it was doubly
so. She had learned nothing from Mademoiselle. But Miss Brown—She made toward
the nursery, doing her newest dance step.
Miss Brown was stocky, with a firm tread and an eye of decision. As Gwendolyn
appeared, she was seated at the piano, her face raised (as if she were seeking
out some spot on the ceiling), and her solid frame swaying from side to side in
the ecstasy of performance. Up and down the key-board of the instrument her
plump hands galloped.
Gwendolyn paused beside the piano-seat. The air was vibrant with melody. The
lifted face, the rocking, the ardent touch—all these inspired hope. The gray
eyes were wide with eagerness. Each corner of the rosy mouth was upturned.
The resounding notes of a march ended with a bang. Miss Brown
straightened—got to her feet—smiled down.
That smile gave Gwendolyn renewed encouragement. They were alone. She stood
on tiptoe. "Miss Brown," she began, "did you ever hear of a—a bee that some
ladies carry in a—"
Miss Brown's smile of greeting went. "Now, Gwendolyn," she interrupted
severely, "are you going to begin your usual silly, silly questions?"
Gwendolyn fell back a step. "But I didn't ask you a silly question day before
yesterday," she plead. "I just wanted to know how anybody could call my
German teacher Miss French."
"Take your place, if you please," bade Miss Brown curtly, "and don't waste my
time." She pointed a stubby finger at the piano-seat.
Gwendolyn climbed up, her cheeks scarlet with wounded dignity, her breast
heaving with a rancor she dared not express. "Do I have to play that old piece?"
she asked.
"You must,"—with rising inflection.
"Up at Johnnie Blake's it sounded nice. 'Cause my moth-er—"
"Ready!" Miss Brown set the metronome to tick-tocking. Then she
consulted a watch.
Gwendolyn raised one hand to her face, and gulped.
"Come! Come! Put your fingers on the keys."
"But my cheek itches."
"Get your position, I say."
Gwendolyn struck a spiritless chord.
Miss Brown gone, Gwendolyn sought the long window-seat and curled up among
its cushions—at the side which commanded the best view of the General. Straight
before that martial figure, on the bridle-path, a man with a dump-cart and a
shaggy-footed horse was picking up leaves. He used a shovel. And each time he
raised it to shoulder-height and emptied it into his cart, a few of the leaves
went whirling away out of reach—like frightened butterflies. But she had no time
to pretend anything of the kind. A new and a better plan!—this was what she must
prepare. For—heart beating, hands trembling from haste—she had tried the
telephone—and found it dead to every Hello!
But she was not discouraged. She was only balked.
The talking bird, the bee her mother kept in a bonnet, her father's harness,
and the candles that burned at both ends—if she had only known about them
that evening of her seventh anniversary! Ignoring Miss Royle's oft-repeated
lesson that "Nice little girls do not ask questions," or "worry father and
mother," how easy it would have been to say, "Fath-er, what little bird tells
things about you?" and, "Moth-er, have you really got a bee in your
bonnet?"
But—the questions could still be asked. She was balked only temporarily.
She got down and crossed the room to the white-and-gold writing-desk. Two
photographs in silver frames stood upon it, flanking the rose-embossed calendar
at either side. She took them down, one at a time, and looked at them
earnestly.
The first was of her mother, taken long, long ago, before Gwendolyn was born.
The oval face was delicately lovely and girlish. The mouth curved in a smile
that was tender and sweet.
The second photograph showed a clean-shaven, boyish young man in a rough
business-suit—this was her father, when he first came to the city. His lips were
set together firmly, almost determinedly. But his face was unlined, his dark
eyes were full of laughter.
Despite all the well-remembered commands Miss Royle had issued; despite
Jane's oft-repeated threats and Thomas's warnings, [and putting aside, too, any
thought of what punishment might follow her daring] Gwendolyn now made a firm
resolution: To see at least one of her parents immediately and alone.
As she set the photographs back in their places, she lifted each to kiss it.
She kissed the smiling lips of the one, the laughing eyes of the other.