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s.h.i.+rley, half-awake and crying, came pattering out into the hall and Winnie dashed from her room. On the second floor, Aunt Trudy scuttled back and forth demanding where the fire was.
"Go to bed girls," ordered Doctor Hugh, who had just come in and was fully dressed. "Go back to bed, and I'll tell you all about the fire in the morning."
"Oh, Hugh, are you going? Wait for me, please?" cried Rosemary. "I won't be a minute."
"Me, too," shouted Sarah. "Wait for me, Hugh."
He was already in the lower hall, struggling into his overcoat.
"Go back to bed, and don't be silly," was his parting injunction as he opened the door. "You'll catch cold, running through the halls.
Send 'em to bed, Winnie."
The door banged behind him and they heard a familiar whistle.
"Hugh!" some one called. "Hugh, it's down Plummers Lane. Going to get the car out? I'll help you."
"That's Jack," cried Rosemary, trying to see through the white curtains without being seen. "Oh, dear, men have all the fun!"
In spite of Winnie's remonstrances and Aunt Trudy's worry that they would have pneumonia, the three girls tried to stay up till their brother came back. After half an hour they gave up and went sleepily to bed. The next morning they heard that the fire had been in one of the novelty factories and that several houses had also been destroyed.
"If the hydrants hadn't been open and the street clear, they say the whole block would have gone," the doctor reported. "In some way it's got over town that Jack and his gang were the only high school boys on the job yesterday and that they voluntarily cleaned the snow out of Wycliffe street. The Common Council is talking of doing something handsome to show their appreciation."
Rosemary beamed, but Sarah who never could keep still blurted out the truth.
"Rosemary told Mr. Jordan last night," she said matter-of-factly.
When Doctor Hugh had heard the details, he declared that while Jack might not approve at once, he was sure he would later be glad.
"You're a loyal friend, Rosemary," said the doctor patting the gold-red hair now long enough to tie back in a thick bunch of curls again, "and there are few finer qualities to possess than that."
The Common Council, through Mr. Jordan pa.s.sed a resolution thanking the boys, by name, for their faithful "and valuable" services, and the resolution was printed in the Eastsh.o.r.e "Chronicle" much to the confusion of the lads and the delight and pride of their admiring families. The Council also voted each boy the sum of $25, not, Mr.
Jordan explained, as an attempt to pay them, but in recognition of "the devotion to duty which is able to ignore personal pleasure and the initiative which is directed by common sense."
"Incidentally," he added, "the property, saved because the street was clear and the fire apparatus could get through, totals considerable more than the sum we are voting you."
Jack learned, of course, of the part Rosemary had played in this train of events and though he made several cutting remarks about the inability of girls to hold their tongues, he gradually, if grudgingly, admitted that "it might have been worse."
"Norman c.o.x and Eustice Gray and the others are tickled pink with the $25," he confided. "They think you are great. And I suppose you couldn't help spilling the beans to Mr. Jordan."
But Rosemary was content to do without paeans of praise.
The famous "January thaw" filled the streets with slush a few weeks later and made indoors a pleasant place to stay. Fannie Mears caught a heavy cold and was out of school a week and Nina Edmonds began to seek the society of Rosemary, whom she had rather neglected.
"You never come to my house any more," said Nina, one noon period.
"Come home with me this afternoon, won't you, dear?"
Rosemary was acutely conscious of her brother's wishes concerning Nina, and she knew that he preferred she did not go often to the Edmonds' handsome home.
"Well at least come shopping with me," suggested Nina, noticing the younger girl's hesitation. "Go uptown after school this afternoon, please, Rosemary?"
"Aunt Trudy expects me home," said Rosemary doubtfully.
"For goodness sake, do you have to go straight home from school every day?" demanded Nina fretfully. "Why any one would think you were s.h.i.+rley's age! Can't Sarah tell your aunt you won't be home?"
"I suppose she could," admitted Rosemary. "All right, Nina, I'll go with you."
Sarah accepted the message reluctantly after school that afternoon and she and s.h.i.+rley went home while Nina and Rosemary hurried off up town. Nina's shopping manners were remarkably like her mother's and she was respectfully treated in all the shops. Eastsh.o.r.e had no very large stores, but the merchandise was of the better grade in even the tiny places, the lack of variety, as in many small towns, being balanced by uniform quality.
"Charge it," said Nina airily, flitting from shop to shop and counter to counter.
It was dark, almost before they knew it and though Nina was insistent that Rosemary come home to dinner with her, Rosemary refused. No, she must go home.
"Well, here's your parcel," said Nina good-naturedly. "You'll love 'em when you get used to them and you look perfectly stunning in them, you know you do."
Rosemary tucked the brown paper package under her arm and fled up the street, das.h.i.+ng up the front steps behind a tall figure just putting a key in the Willis front door.
"Well, honey, why this haste?" demanded the doctor, stepping back to let her go in first. "You didn't smell Winnie's apple pudding a block away, did you?"
"Where have you been, Rosemary?" asked Aunt Trudy, coming into the hall. "Sarah said you said you would be home by half-past four."
"What you got?" inquired Sarah, eyeing the parcel under Rosemary's arm with frank curiosity.
"Let me open it, Rosemary?" begged s.h.i.+rley, standing on tip-toe to pinch the package, her usual method of guessing the contents.
"There isn't a speck of privacy in the house!" flared Rosemary. "I think I might buy something once in a while that the whole family didn't have to see. And no one has to come straight home from school, except me. If I'm an hour late, Aunt Trudy always wants to know where I've been."
"I told her you went shopping with Nina Edmonds," remarked Sarah sweetly, "And you're always cross when you go anywhere with her."
"Sarah!" said Doctor Hugh, warningly, but Rosemary dashed past them and up the stairs to her own room.
She thrust the package down deep in her cedar chest and there it stayed till the next Sat.u.r.day afternoon. Then Rosemary deliberately locked her door and proceeded to array herself in gray silk stockings and patent leather pumps with narrow, high heels, the results of Nina Edmonds' persuasive arguments and Rosemary's deep longing to possess these accessories.
Walking in the pumps proved to be unexpectedly difficult, but Rosemary practised while she dressed and by the time she had put on her best hat and coat and was ready to go down stairs she was able to manage them better. Sarah and s.h.i.+rley had gone to the library, Winnie was busy in the kitchen and Aunt Trudy was sewing in her room. Rosemary counted on leaving the house un.o.bserved. She teetered to the door of her aunt's room and carefully keeping out of her range of vision announced that she was going up town for a little walk.
"All right, dearie, have a nice time," answered Aunt Trudy, rocking placidly. "Tell Winnie to answer the telephone if it rings, because I don't want to have to go down stairs."
Rosemary experimented cautiously with the top step and then discretion prompted her to abandon valor. In her best coat and hat and gorgeously arrayed as to her pretty feet, she, who considered herself quite grown up this afternoon, quietly slid down the banister! Just as she reached the newel post the door opened. There stood Doctor Hugh!
"Haven't forgotten how, have you?" he said, laughing. "That was neatly done, dear. I saw you through the gla.s.s before I opened the door."
Rosemary was painfully conscious of her shoes. Against her will, her glance strayed down and the doctor's eyes followed hers.
"Why how fine we are!" he said.
Rosemary sat down on the last step and tried to pull her skirt down over her feet.
"I know you don't like them, Hugh," she answered resentfully, "but I don't see why I can't wear high heels when I'm dressed up. All the girls do."
"They are very pretty shoes," said the doctor gravely. "And very unsuitable for a walk on a cold, slushy winter day," he added.