Tabitha\'s Vacation
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Ruth Alberta Brown >> Tabitha\'s Vacation
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"Going on sixteen, daddy."
"And you, my other daughter?" turning to Gloriana sitting silently on
her low stool by his side.
"Fourteen, sir."
"Rather youthful housekeepers," he drawled, teasingly.
"But experienced in spite of youth," Tabitha gayly retorted. "Why,
Miss King says we are the two most promising domestic science pupils
she has. Now what do you think of that?"
"That she is right," came the prompt though unexpected reply; "and if
you really think you want to play Good Samaritan for a couple weeks,
you have my hearty sanction. The fact of the matter is, I find it
impossible to be here at home much for the next fortnight, myself;
possibly not at all after tonight. So you might just as well be
mothering the McKittricks as left alone in this end of the town, so far
as I can see."
"I knew you would say yes," sighed Tabitha contentedly. "You shall see
what model housekeepers your daughters can be. We'll make you proud of
us."
"I have no doubt of it," he answered heartily. "But if you begin your
arduous duties to-morrow, it is time you were in bed this minute. Fly
away now!"
So they ran laughingly away to their room, both secretly glad of the
chance to seek their pillows an hour earlier, for that day at the
McKittrick cottage had been a busy one, and though neither would
acknowledge it to the other, feet, arms and backs ached sadly. But the
next morning, after a refreshing night's sleep, the duet was ready and
eager for the novel role they were about to play; and just as soon as
their own simple tasks were done, the necessary clothes packed and the
little cottage made secure for its two weeks of solitude, they tramped
merrily up the steep path to the Eagles' Nest, and entered upon their
summer vacation as housekeepers for a family of six, as Susie expressed
it.
Everything was topsy-turvy in the excitement of getting the injured
father, and weary, distracted mother started on their brief journey;
but finally they were off, and a row of sober-faced children stood on
the bluff overlooking the flats below, watching the train puff its way
slowly out of sight behind the mountains.
With the last glimpse of the departing cars, the sense of
responsibility in her new charge descended upon the shoulders of the
volunteer housekeeper, and Tabitha was for a brief moment appalled at
the task which she had so rashly undertaken.
"Six children to look after for two whole weeks!" she gasped in dismay.
Then her courage returned with a rush. "Why, Tabitha Catt, you coward!
I am ashamed of you! If you can't take care of six children for two
short weeks, particularly with Gloriana to help, you are not good for
much!" Resolutely she turned toward the house, saying briskly, to hide
her own wavering spirits, "Well, folkses, let's have chocolate pie for
supper!"
"Oh, goody!" cried Inez, whirling about to follow her leader; and at
mention of these words, the faces of the whole group brightened
wonderfully.
"Can't we have some cake, too? Mamma said we might if you knew how to
make it."
"Knew how to make it?" boasted Tabitha scornfully. "Well, I should say
we do! What kind will you have?"
"Nut loaf," quickly responded Mercedes, who knew from experience how
delicious Tabitha's nut loaves were.
"Angel cake," wheedled Susie, with her most engaging smile.
"Frosted with chocolate," added Inez.
"Devil's food," suggested Irene.
"Cookies," pleaded Rosslyn, who had a boy's fondness for that
particular delicacy.
"Dingerbread," lisped the baby.
And Tabitha laughed. "That's quite a collection, my dears."
"I should say so!" gasped Gloriana. "We can't make them all to-night.
In fact, it is nearly four o'clock now. There isn't time for both pie
and cake."
"Unless we do make gingerbread, as Janie suggested," said Tabitha
slowly, seeing the look of disappointment clouding the row of round,
serious faces watching them so expectantly.
"Wiv raisins," coaxed Rosslyn. "Lots of 'em!"
Instantly the faces brightened again. "Oh, yes, that's the way we like
it best," chorused the four older members.
"And let us seed them," pleaded Inez. "Mamma often lets us."
"She won't let us eat more'n twelve," added Irene hopefully, "and we
can work real fast."
"Well, you will have to if we have gingerbread for supper," said
Gloriana. "I supposed the raisins were already seeded. Will we have
time, Tabitha?"
"Yes, if everyone hustles, I reckon. Mercy, you know where things are
in the pantry. Supposing you get out the spices, sugar, flour, and
things. Susie and the twins stone the raisins; and, Rosslyn, you might
bring in some small wood for the stove. We'll use the range to-night,
because I have baked in that oven before and know how it works, but
won't know until I experiment with it, how the gasolene oven bakes."
While she was issuing orders, Tabitha flaxed blithely about the little
kitchen, lighting the fire, hunting up cooking utensils, and beginning
the process of making chocolate pie, leaving Gloriana to wrestle with
the mysteries of a raisin gingerbread.
Anxious for the coming treat, the children obediently flew to their
various tasks; and soon voices buzzed busily, while the little hands
tried their best to hurry.
"There!" breathed Tabitha at last, lifting a red, perspiring face from
an inspection of two beautifully frosted pies in the oven, "they are
done. Don't they look fine? Now you can put in your gingerbread
whenever you are ready, Glory. I'll set these on the wash bench
outside to cool, while I hustle up the rest of the supper."
"Mamma always puts her pies in the pantry window," volunteered Irene,
not wishing to have the tempting delicacy removed from her sight.
"But they will cool quicker in the open air," explained Tabitha. "And
supper will be ready so soon that they won't be cool enough to eat if
we set them in the window. Now, Mercy----"
"Oh, Kitty," came a sudden wail of alarm from the dooryard where
Rosslyn was still busy with his basket of chips, "Janie is gone! I
can't find her anywhere!"
Tabitha dropped her platter of cold potatoes which she was preparing to
warm over; Mercedes hastily left her dishpan where she was piling up
the soiled kitchen utensils which the youthful cooks had used with
extravagant hand; Susie and the twins abruptly deserted the raisin jar;
and all bolted for the door.
Only Gloriana remained at her post. She had arrived at the most
critical stage of her gingerbread making, and though her first impulse
was to join in the search for the missing baby with the rest of her
mates, her thrifty bringing-up reminded her that in the meantime the
cake would spoil. So she paused long enough to dump in the cupful of
raisins still standing on the doorsill, where the seeders had been
sitting at their task. Giving the mixture a final beat, she poured the
spicy brown dough into the baking sheet, thrust it into the oven,
adjusted the dampers, and followed the example of the others, setting
out down the rocky path as rapidly as her lameness would permit.
Meanwhile, toiling up the steep trail on the other side of the house,
came a tiny, tired figure, almost ready to drop from her unusual
exertions. Her dress was torn in a dozen places where the cruel
mesquite had caught her as she passed, one shoe was unlaced, one
stocking hung in rolls about the plump, scratched ankle, she wore no
hat, and her fair hair was sadly tousled by the wind and her struggle
through sagebrush and Spanish bayonets. Altogether, she presented a
woeful spectacle; but in spite of it all, she clasped tightly in one
chubby fist, a soiled and crumpled letter, which every now and then she
examined critically, having discovered that the warmth and moisture of
her fat hands left tiny, smudgy fingerprints on the white envelope, and
being anxious to present a clean document to her wondering audience
when she should have reached her goal. But oh, it did seem so far up
to the Eagles' Nest, and the way was so rough for her little feet!
Still she kept plodding wearily along, and at length reached the end of
her journey, only to find the house silent and deserted.
"Mercy!" she piped shrilly, pushing open the screen and stumbling into
the hot kitchen. "I'se dot a letter! Where is you? Susie! Rossie!"
Still no answer. Puzzled at this unusual state of affairs, she raced
from room to room as fast as her short, tired legs would carry her, but
no one was there.
"Tabby!" she shrieked. "Dory! What did you leave me for?"
A panic seized her. She had been deserted! Tears gathered in her
sea-blue eyes, and trickled in rivulets down her flushed cheeks. She
was afraid to stay alone. Why had everyone left her? Back to the
kitchen she pattered. It was empty, but a fire still burned in the
stove and savory odors from the oven lured her on. Curiosity overcame
her fear for a moment, and with a mighty tug, she jerked open the door,
revealing Gloriana's gingerbread just done to a turn.
"Dingerbread!" cried the child, gloating over the huge, golden sheet
which smelled, oh, so good! "I want some now!" And forgetting that
the oven was hot, she seized the pan with both chubby fists, but
instantly let go her hold and roared with pain, for ten rosy fingers
were cruelly burned, and how they did smart!
Suddenly above the wail of her lusty voice came the sound of excited
voices and flying feet; and the next instant frightened Tabitha with
her adopted brood in close pursuit, flew into the kitchen, and gathered
up the hurt, sobbing baby in her arms, crooning tenderly, "There,
there, dearie, you mustn't cry any more. We've all come back. We were
hunting you. Where did you go?"
"Oh, see her hands!" cried Irene, shuddering in sympathy. "She has
burned herself!"
"But the gingerbread isn't burned at all," volunteered Susie with
satisfaction, after a keen and anxious scrutiny of the spicy loaf
half-way out of the oven.
"For goodness' sake!" ejaculated Tabitha, not having noticed the seared
fingers up to that moment, "What do you do for burns?"
"Bring some butter," ordered Gloriana, remembering Granny Conover's
first remedy for burns.
"Mamma uses molasses," said Irene; and Susie and Inez, recovering their
senses at the same instant, dived into the pantry, returning
immediately, one with a crock of butter in her hand, and the other
bearing a bucket of molasses; and before either of the older girls
could intervene, they plunged both of Janie's dirty, scorched hands
first into one dish and then into the other, leaving them to drip
sticky puddles down the front of Tabitha's dress and on to the clean
kitchen floor.
"Why, you little monkeys!" gasped the senior housekeeper, forgetting
the dignity of her position in her wrath at what seemed inexcusable
carelessness on the part of the girls.
"Mamma _always_ puts molasses on burns," quavered Inez, her lip
trembling at Tabitha's tone.
"And Glory said butter," surprised Susie defended. Then both culprits
dissolved in tears.
"There, there, never mind!" cried Tabitha in dismay. "I didn't mean to
scold, but you ought to have known more than to stick the baby's dirty
hands into the molasses pail and butter crock."
"Not dirty!" screamed the outraged Janie, striking the face above her
with a dripping fist. "On'y burned! Ve pan was--" Her sentence
unfinished, she found herself ruthlessly shaken and dumped into the
middle of the floor, while angry Tabitha rushed out of the door into
the cool dusk of early evening, leaving a dismayed family staring
aghast at each other in the hot kitchen. Even the amazed baby forgot
to voice her protest at such treatment, but stood where she had landed,
staring with round, scared eyes after the fleeing figure.
Down the mountainside sped Tabitha to the big boulder, wheeled about
and rushed back to the house as swiftly as she had left it, and before
the astounded children had recovered their breath, she cried, "I am
sorry I was cross. I reckon I'm a little tired and everything has gone
upside down and--suppose we have supper now. I know you are all
hungry. Susie, while I am tying up Janie's hands, you might put the
potatoes on in the frying pan; Irene, set the table; Inez, fetch the
water; and Mercy, cut the bread. Is the gingerbread done, Gloriana?"
"Yes," responded the junior housekeeper proudly, "and already sliced
for the table. Shall I bring in the pie?"
"The pies!" shouted the six McKittricks.
"I had forgotten all about them," confessed the older girl. "Yes, you
better get them right away. One will be enough for supper,--the tins
are so large."
While Tabitha was speaking, Gloriana had stepped briskly out of the
door into the summer night and disappeared around the corner of the
house; but immediately a terrified scream pierced the air, there was a
loud snort and the sound of startled, scampering feet, and Gloriana
burst into the room again bearing an empty plate in one hand and a
dilapidated looking pie, minus all its frosting, in the other.
"Oh, our lovely pies!" wailed the children in chorus.
"The burros!" gasped Tabitha.
Gloriana nodded. "One had his nose right in the middle of this pie.
The other beast had upset the second tin and was licking up the crumbs
from the gravel."
"Oh, dear, I want some pie!" whimpered Rosslyn, puckering his face to
cry.
"Ain't that the worst luck?" Susie burst out.
"If you had put the pies in the _window_ to cool, like mamma does--"
began Inez.
"It's too late to make any more to-night," Gloriana hastily
interrupted, seeing a wrathful sparkle in Tabitha's black eyes; "but if
you don't make any more fuss about it this time, we'll bake some
to-morrow."
"And if you want any supper at all, you'd better come now," advised
Mercedes, from her post by the stove, where she was vigorously making
hash of the sliced potatoes. "This stuff is beginning to burn."
Gloriana rescued the frying pan, and the disappointed children gathered
about the table, trying to look cheerful, but failing dismally.
"Don't want any 'tato," objected Janie, scorning the proffered dish.
"Dingerbread!"
"Potato and beans first," insisted Tabitha.
"Dingerbread!" stubbornly repeated the child, so sleepy and cross that
the weary older girl said no more, but slid a large slice of the savory
cake into the little plate, and proceeded to help the other children in
the same liberal manner. No one wanted beans and potato, but at the
first mouthful of the tempting-looking gingerbread, everyone paused,
looked inquiringly at her neighbor, chewed cautiously a time or two,
and then eight hands went to eight pair of lips.
"I thought we stoned raisins for this cake," cried Susie, half
indignantly.
"So you did," replied Gloriana, her face flushed crimson as she bent
over her plate, intently examining her slice of cake.
"Oh, and put the stones in the cake! What did you do with the
raisins?" demanded Inez.
Before Glory could frame a reply, or offer any excuse for the accident,
Irene slid hurriedly off her chair, flew through the doorway and down
the path toward town, but she was back in a moment, and in her hand she
held a cup of raisins.
"Why, Irene McKittrick!" cried Mercedes, lifting her hands in horror.
"What made you hide them?"
"I didn't hide them," the twin indignantly protested. "The cup was in
my lap when Rosslyn called that Janie was lost, and I forgot to put it
down when I ran out-doors. I remembered it by the time we reached our
playhouse, so I set it down there and that's where I found it now."
"Janie wasn't lost," interrupted that small maiden in drowsy tones.
"Me went to get a letter."
"To get a letter!" chorused her sisters. "Where?"
"To the store where Mercy goes. A man dave me one, too," she finished
triumphantly, squirming down from her high chair to search about the
room for the missing epistle, while the rest of the family forgot both
pie and gingerbread in joining in the hunt. Rosslyn found it at last
under the stove where it had fallen when Janie began her investigation
of the oven; and the girls exclaimed in genuine surprise, "Why, it _is_
a real letter!"'
"Addressed to mamma," said Mercedes, "Do you suppose Janie really went
to the post-office all alone?"
But Janie was fast asleep in her chair where she had retired when
convinced that Rosslyn had actually found her precious letter; so the
sisters once more bent curious eyes upon the soiled envelope.
"Better re-address it to your mother," suggested Tabitha, remembering
that in her written instructions, Mrs. McKittrick had failed to mention
the matter of mail which might come to Silver Bow for her.
"Mamma told me to open all her letters, and not even to send papa's to
Los Angeles, unless 'twas something _very_ important."
"Then why don't you open it?" cried Susanne impatiently.
"And see who wrote it," added Inez.
"I--I--guess I will." Deliberately she tore open the envelope, spread
out the brief letter it contained, and with a comically important air,
read the few short lines. Then beginning with the heading, she read it
the second time, her face growing graver at each word, until impatient
Inez could stand the strain no longer, and burst out, "Well, what's it
all about? Does it take you all night to read that teenty letter?"
"It's from Aunt Kate, Uncle Dennis' wife," Mercedes slowly retorted.
"She is going to Europe for something, and wants to send the boys out
here to us."
"Williard and Theodore?"
"Yes."
"But how can they, with papa hurt and mamma gone?"
"She says that they will pay good board and she knows mamma will be
glad enough to get the money, seeing that papa's still unable to work."
Tabitha's face darkened. "It's an imposition!" she exploded wrathfully.
"I sh'd say so!" agreed Susanne. "They are dreadful noisy boys. We
had 'em here once before, and Aunt Kate got awful mad 'cause papa
licked 'em when they touched a match to the old shed to see how the
people on the desert put out fires."
"She said they never should come again," added Inez, "but I guess she's
forgot."
"How old are they?" ventured Gloriana.
"Williard's between me and Susie," Mercedes answered, "and Theodore's
between Susie and the twins."
"Are you going to let them come?" demanded Irene.
Mercedes turned helplessly toward Tabitha. "What would you do, Kitty?"
she asked. "Shall I write and ask mamma?"
"I shouldn't," Tabitha promptly replied. "Your mother has her hands
full now, and it would only worry her to know how nervy your Aunt Kate
is. I'd write her,--your aunt, I mean,--and tell her just how things
stand, your father in the hospital and your mother with him. She ought
to know more than to send them then. Still, I believe I'd just say
that the boys can't come. She would understand that all right. And
I'll be responsible, Mercedes, if your mother should think we ought to
have told her about it first."
"_I'd_ telegraph, so's to be sure," said Susanne. "Aunt Kate doesn't
think much about other folks' wishes, and if she wanted to go to Europe
bad enough, she'd ship the boys to us if we all had smallpox."
"That's a good idea," Tabitha acknowledged. "We'll telegraph at once,
and then she will have no excuse for not knowing how sick your father
is. Where is there a pencil and paper? I'll write out a telegram now,
and we'll slip down town, and send it to-night."
She hastily scribbled the words:
"Mrs. Dennis McKittrick,
Jamaica Plains, Mass.
Don't send boys. Father in Los Angeles hospital. Mother with him.
MERCEDES McKITTRICK."
Then taking Irene as company, she carried the message to the telegraph
station that same evening, to make sure it reached its destination in
time to prevent the threatened visit from the unwelcome cousins.
"Perhaps I acted in a high-handed manner," she confessed to Gloriana,
as they were preparing for bed that night, "but I couldn't bear to
think of that selfish old cat--yes, that's what she is,--imposing upon
Mrs. McKittrick again. I remember the boys, though it was quite a
while ago that they were here. They were only little shavers then,
too. I never met them, but one doesn't have to in order to know all
they want to know about their antics."
"And judging from our first day's experiences as housekeepers in this
family, we shall have all _we_ want to do, without two terrors of boys
added."
"To-day has been rather hard and disappointing," Tabitha acknowledged
with a gusty sigh.
"But to-morrow will be better," Gloriana comforted her. "And it is
only for two weeks. That's one consolation."
"Thank fortune!" Tabitha exclaimed with fervor; and the tired eyelids
closed over the drowsy black eyes and the gray.
CHAPTER III
UNWELCOME GUESTS
"Well, one whole week is gone," said Tabitha exultantly, as she bent
over the heaped-up mending basket one hot afternoon, and tried to make
neat darns of the gaping holes in the heels of Susie's stockings.
"Yes, and half of the first day of the second week," Gloriana replied
cheerily. "But really, Puss, time hasn't dragged as slowly as I
feared. That first day was the longest, I think, I ever knew."
"That first day was a horrible nightmare," the older girl emphatically
declared. "I thought it _never_ would end, and I'd have quit my job on
the spot if there had been anyone to take my place."
"I'd have quit it anyway if you had just said the word," laughed her
companion. "I thought you'd never go to sleep that night--I wanted so
badly to cry."
"Did you? So did I, but you kept tossing so restlessly that I knew you
were still awake, and finally I dropped off without getting my cry at
all."
"That's just what I did, too!" giggled Gloriana.
"And the next morning everything looked so different----"
"Yes, I could laugh then at the burro's nose in your lovely pie and the
seeds in my gingerbread; but they didn't seem so funny the night
before."
"They seemed anything but funny to me for several days, and I don't
think I'll ever see a chocolate pie or a gingerbread again in my life
without remembering this vacation."
"But things have gone splendidly since that first night," Gloriana
reminded her. "The children have tried to be angels, even if they have
executed some queer stunts for cherubs."
"Yes, I know, but I am glad just the same that half of
our--apprenticeship--is over. If this week will pass as smoothly as
last week did, it's all I'll-- What in the world is the matter with
the children? Sounds as if they were having an Indian war dance. I
wonder if those Swanberg boys are bothering again."
Both girls dropped their mending and hurried to the door just in time
to hear Inez's voice say cuttingly, "Of course we know who you are,
Williard and Theodore McKittrick!"
"Guess again!" drawled the older of two strange boys, lolling on
suitcases in the middle of the yard.
"Well, those _are_ your names," Inez insisted.
"You look enough like you used to when you were here before, so we
can't be mistaken," said Mercedes primly.
"Can't, eh? Well, our names are Williard and Theodore no longer. We
are Billiard and Toady these days. Mind you don't forget! We've come
to stay till the folks get back----"
"Didn't you get our telegram telling you not to come?" demanded
belligerent Susie.
"Sure we did!"
"Then why didn't you stay at home?"
"'Cause ma had the arrangements all made to go across the ocean and
there wasn't anyone else to send us to. Grandma's away travelling, and
Aunt Helen's kids have got scarlet fever."
"But papa's in the hospital and mamma's there nursing him," said Irene
indignantly.
"Truly?" The boy called Toady spoke for the first time.
"Do you think I'm lying?"
"Well, ma said she bet it was all a bluff to keep us from coming out
here," Billiard explained, looking genuinely surprised at Irene's words.
"And anyway," supplemented Toady, "she said if it was true about your
father and mother being away to Los Angeles, there'd have to be someone
here to look after you kids, and two more wouldn't make much
difference."
"Specially when she's paying for our board!"
Tabitha, a silent spectator in the doorway, ground her teeth in
helpless rage, while Gloriana gasped audibly at the impudence of mother
and sons.
"It's no more'n right that you should pay board," Susie declared in
heat. "You make so much trouble wherever you go."
"Do, huh?" Billiard, frowning darkly, advanced threateningly toward
his outspoken cousin, with fists doubled up and an ugly sneer on his
face. But Susie was no coward, and when he shook his knuckles close to
her little pug nose to emphasize his words, the girl's arm shot out
unexpectedly and landed a blow fair and square on one eye.
With a yell of rage and pain, the surprised boy lunged forward, but
instead of confronting Susie, he found himself in the grasp of a tall,
irate young lady, who wore her shining black hair pinned up on top of
her head, although her skirts were still short enough to show a pair of
trim ankles. "Now stop right here!"
She spoke quietly, almost too quietly; but one look into the
smouldering depths of those big, black eyes was enough to cow the
bully, and he jerked himself free, muttering sulkily, "She hit me
first!"
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