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"And we aren't going to tell," said Jack wisely, "but we've picked out somebody."
"Yeth, and we're going to thend her to Mr. Arnold to-morrow!" burst forth b.u.mps excitedly.
Miss Webb threw up her hands in mock astonishment.
"Really! You don't mean it! And when is the wedding going to be?"
Mona here interposed.
"Jill, you are old enough to know better. You must not go to the vicarage at all, if you talk such nonsense."
"It isn't nonsense!" Jill said indignantly. "Mr. Arnold wants a wife, he said he did; and we're going to find one for him."
She rushed out of the room like a small whirlwind.
"Who is the happy lady, Jack?" asked Miss Webb inquisitively.
Jack was silent.
"Miss Falkner, you will have to a.s.sert your authority and stop this,"
said Mona, half laughing, yet half vexed.
"Let's tell, Jack," said b.u.mps, who loved giving information.
But Jack shook his head.
"We didn't even tell Mr. Arnold; we said we would send him some one to-morrow."
"And have you told her her fate?" asked Miss Webb.
"Jill is going to see Miss Grant in the morning," said Jack with dignity, and not perceiving he had let the cat out of the bag.
Miss Webb began to laugh afresh, and even Mona smiled. Miss Grant was a lady between fifty and sixty who was an indefatigable parish worker, but whose strong will and love of interference had always been a sore trial to her vicar.
"You think she'll make him a good wife?" Miss Webb said, trying to draw the children out.
"She's just the sort to make tea," said Jack, "and she'll be much more help to him than Mrs. Errington would be, or any one else."
"I think you will have to keep certain small people hard at lessons to-morrow, Miss Falkner. This proposed visit must be nipped in the bud."
Miss Falkner took her charges off to the school-room and presently Jill appeared.
She seemed to have forgotten the subject under discussion, for she was full of a plan she had talked over with Mr. Arnold of supporting a children's cot in the local hospital.
"And my bag will begin it, like it did the Bethel Room. Don't you think it lovely?"
Just before the children went to bed, Miss Falkner picked up an old copy-book an the floor of Jill's bedroom. She did not often look at her scribblings, but the first words startled her:
"DEAR MISS GRANT,"--
She read on, with an anxious face, yet with a keen sense of humour--
"We've been having tea with Mr. Arnold. We think you had better be his wife. He has not anybody to do things like Mrs. Errington did, and we told him we would find a wife for him. We said we would send her to-morrow. He wants a wife, and so he will expect you. Please tell him you came from us. And have your wedding-day very soon, because we shall all come and see you married. Mr. Arnold told us we could do this, so it is not wrong.
"Your affectionate friend, "JILL BARON.
"P.S.--Jack and b.u.mps and I chose you, and we know Mr. Arnold will be pleased."
"Jill," said Miss Falkner sharply, "what is this?"
"Oh," said Jill unconcernedly, "it's a copy of a letter I sent Miss Grant. I wanted to do it neatly, so I wrote it in there first."
"But you have never sent it?"
"Yes, I did. Annie was going out, and she took it to the post."
"But Jill, that was very naughty."
"Why?"
"You know why. Your sister was very vexed at your talking about such things. I don't know what she will say now. You must come and tell her what you have done."
"Oh, I can't; please don't make me--Miss Webb will laugh. It isn't naughty. We simply _love_ Mr. Arnold. And why shouldn't he have a wife as well as Mr. Errington? He didn't mind us doing it."
"He never told you to write to Miss Grant."
"No, because it was only afterwards that we thought of her."
Miss Falkner, in spite of her entreaties, took her straight to Mona, who was in her bedroom dressing for dinner.
"I have brought Jill to tell you what she has done, as I think you ought to know."
And then Miss Falkner left the little delinquent, who stood copy-book in hand with hanging head before her eldest sister.
"It's--it's a letter I've sent to Miss Grant," said Jill.
Mona took the copy-book from her.
"Oh, Jill!" she exclaimed in real distress. "This is really very naughty of you. You may make a great deal of mischief, and annoy Miss Grant extremely. I don't know how we can put it straight."
"I don't see what I've done wrong," said Jill stubbornly.
"Little girls have no business to interfere with grown-up people. I don't know what Miss Grant will think; I must see Miss Falkner. Ask her to come here, and you had better go straight to bed."
"It's always the way," Jill confided to b.u.mps when they were both in bed that evening; "everything I do turns out wrong. Children can't be kind to grown-up people. It's no good to try. They won't let them. And Mr.
Arnold will never have a wife, if he doesn't have Miss Grant. There's no one else like her."
"But you sent her a letter," said b.u.mps comfortingly.