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"I'll telephone Mr. Mertz," said Rosemary absently.
"You ought to make Sarah do her part," went on Winnie, spreading salve on a piece of gauze and binding it around her finger. "I'm tired trying to get any help from her. And Miss Trudy wants ice-water every minute of the day and if I don't get it for her she comes out to the refrigerator and wastes half a block, hacking it.
s.h.i.+rley wants nothing but hot breads and meat and first thing we know she'll be sick on our hands."
Winnie sat on the edge of the bath-tub and let her mind dwell on her woes. Rosemary tried to listen sympathetically, but she was warm and tired and if Winnie would only go perhaps she could finish the rooms in time to read a little before lunch. The afternoon would have to be given over to her delayed practising.
"Well, I'm going down stairs," said Winnie, putting the salve jar back on its shelf, "and all we're going to have for lunch is tomato salad and bread and b.u.t.ter. If any one doesn't like it, they can leave it; I'm not going to spend any time fussing with special dishes this kind of weather."
Rosemary's practising that afternoon was interrupted several times by the telephone, twice for the wrong number. Aunt Trudy, with the air of a martyr, took her sewing out under the horse chestnut tree, Sarah and s.h.i.+rley went to a neighbor's to play and Winnie announced that she intended to take a nap. So there was no one to answer the bells except Rosemary. By the time she had jumped up to be asked "Is this the grocery store?" once or twice, had admitted the butcher boy with fresh meat which must be put on the ice and had been summoned three times by Aunt Trudy to thread her needle--for gla.s.ses, declared her aunt made her warmer in summer and she would not wear them--Rosemary's temper was fraying sadly.
"Rosemary," said Aunt Trudy, coming into the living room as the practise hour was about over (not allowing for time wasted, Rosemary told herself resentfully), "Rosemary, where is Sarah?"
"I don't care where she is!" cried Rosemary, whirling around on the piano bench. "I'm tired of always being asked where Sarah and s.h.i.+rley are. I don't care!"
Aunt Trudy burst into tears.
"I don't think you ought to speak to me like that," she sobbed.
CHAPTER X
THE LAST STRAW
Jack Welles' cheerful whistle sounded outside.
"Coming!" answered Rosemary.
She flung her arms about Aunt Trudy and gave her a penitent hug.
"I'm sorry I was cross, Auntie," she whispered. "You know I didn't mean it."
Then she sped out the front door and joined Jack who was waiting on the walk outside the hedge.
"Come on uptown and have a soda," he suggested. "Perhaps it will cool you off--you look slightly wild."
"I feel wild," admitted Rosemary, falling into step beside him.
"This has been the most dreadful day!"
"Weather's enough to make anyone cross," said the boy quickly. "I'll bet the trouble is you're doing everyone's work. Hugh ought to make Sarah stir around. She's lazy."
"No, I don't think she is lazy," protested Rosemary, "Only, well you know Jack, it was more fun doing the things you have to do when Mother was home. I can't explain it very well, but I remember last summer Sarah thought she'd wash the upstairs windows to surprise Mother--Winnie was sick and Mother happened to say she didn't know when in the world the windows would get cleaned. Sarah heard her and the next day she lugged up a pail of water and a cloth and tried to wash them. She splashed water all over the wall paper and made an awful mess of it, but Mother kissed her and praised her and said she was glad she had such a helpful little daughter. Aunt Trudy isn't like that and Sarah likes to be praised for what she does. Aunt Trudy never tells her she makes a bed well, but if there is a wrinkle in the spread she shows her that. Sarah made the beds all right for a long time, but now she goes off mornings and plays."
"I knew it," nodded Jack, "and Winnie has a list of troubles a mile long waiting for you every night."
"Morning," corrected Rosemary, laughing. "Oh, Jack how do you know so much? I don't see how I could get along without you, because you're the only one who listens to my troubles. Hugh is a dear, but he is so busy, and we're forbidden to write anything that will bother Mother."
"Fire into me any time you feel like it," invited Jack, steering her toward the drug-store steps and the soda fountain therein. "I'm always ready to listen and if you want any punching done, just let me know."
But the next hard day, when everything seemed to go wrong from breakfast time to the dinner hour, no Jack was at hand to listen to Rosemary's recital. He had gone away for a week's fis.h.i.+ng trip with his father.
The day started with a pitched battle between Winnie and Sarah after breakfast, over the question of feeding the cat the top of the milk.
Sarah declared pa.s.sionately that she would starve herself before she would feed a defenseless cat skimmed milk and Winnie, with equal fervor, had announced that when she saw herself handing over the top milk to a cat they might send her to the insane asylum without delay.
"You're a mean, hateful woman!" shouted Sarah, rus.h.i.+ng out of the kitchen and shutting the door on s.h.i.+rley's finger which was too near the crack.
s.h.i.+rley screamed with pain and after Rosemary had bathed the poor bruised finger and Winnie had comforted the child with a cookie, Aunt Trudy declared that her nerves were too unstrung to spend the day in such a house and that she would go to town and shop.
"That means I'll have to answer the telephone while I'm practising,"
grumbled Rosemary. "Oh, dear, how selfish everyone is! I've a good mind to sit down and read on the porch while it is shady. All the others do as they please and I will, too."
Her book was interesting, and there was a blessed freedom from interruptions. Rosemary was amazed when Sarah, warm and dirty from grubbing in the rabbit house appeared at the foot of the steps and demanded to know if lunch was ready.
"Oh well, I'll make the beds and pick up after lunch," said Rosemary to herself.
s.h.i.+rley a.s.sumed the airs of an invalid at the lunch table and secured large portions of meat and dessert as a concession to her hurt finger. She ignored the vegetables entirely though the meal was supposed to be her dinner and Doctor Hugh had given orders that she was to be fed after certain rules.
Winnie was put out because the iceman was late and her dinner supplies threatened to spoil and Sarah insisted on the hot-water heater being lit so that she might have hot water in which to wash her cat. The wrangle with Winnie over this continued throughout the meal.
"I don't care whether you wash the cat or not," said Rosemary, when Sarah followed her to the corner of the living-room where the piano stood. "I'm going to practise, and don't bother me."
"Silly old music," grumbled Sarah, "come on, s.h.i.+rley, let's go sail boats in the bath-tub."
Rosemary spent the afternoon at the piano, having promised herself that she would put in a full two hours over her music. The numerous interruptions spun out the time so that when she finally closed the lid the little clock on the mantelpiece chimed five.
"Good gracious, the beds aren't made!" thought Rosemary and flew up the stairs.
One glance into the bathroom halted her and cooled her energy.
s.h.i.+rley and Sarah had spent a busy afternoon, sailing boats in the tub. They had used every clean towel in sight to mop up the puddles on the floor and they were wet to their chins. Rosemary hustled them off to get into clean dry clothes and then worked feverishly to restore the room to a semblance of order. Aunt Trudy came home before she had finished and when she saw the unmade beds and the morning's disorder still untouched, she spoke her mind in no uncertain terms.
"Everybody has a grouch," observed Sarah cheerfully when they sat down to dinner. Doctor Hugh had not come in.
"Don't use that word, Sarah," reproved her aunt, sugaring a bowl of boiled rice for s.h.i.+rley.
"Don't want rice, want cutylet," said s.h.i.+rley, pointing to the veal cutlet.
"She's had enough meat to-day," interposed Winnie. "The doctor says she shouldn't have it at all at night."
s.h.i.+rley refused to touch the rice and was sitting in stately aloofness when Doctor Hugh came in looking warm and tired.
"What's the matter?" he asked, dropping into his chair and testing the soup Winnie instantly placed before him. Hugh was her idol and she always managed not to keep him waiting. "Heat too much for you?"
he added.
"Grouches is what ails 'em," volunteered Sarah.
"I've asked her not to use that word, but no one pays any attention to my wishes," sighed Aunt Trudy.