What Katy Did by Susan Coolidge (best novels to read in english txt) đ
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âThere, youâve cracked your slate,â said Clover.
âNo matter, I shaânât want it again for eight weeks,â replied Katy, comfortably, as they ran up the steps.
They burst open the front door and raced up stairs, crying âHurrah! hurrah! vacationâs begun. Aunt Izzie, vacationâs begun!â Then they stopped short, for lo! the upper hall was all in confusion. Sounds of beating and dusting came from the spare room. Tables and chairs were standing about; and a cot-bed, which seemed to be taking a walk all by itself, had stopped short at the head of the stairs, and barred the way.
âWhy, how queer!â said Katy, trying to get by. âWhat can be going to happen? Oh, thereâs Aunt Izzie! Aunt Izzie, whoâs coming? What are you moving the things out of the Blue-room for?â
âOh, gracious! is that you?â replied Aunt Izzie, who looked very hot and flurried. âNow, children, itâs no use for you to stand there asking questions; I havenât got time to answer them. Let the bedstead alone, Katy, youâll push it into the wall. There, I told you so!â as Katy gave an impatient shove, âyouâve made a bad mark on the paper. What a troublesome child you are! Go right down stairs, both of you, and donât come up this way again till after tea. Iâve just as much as I can possibly attend to till then.â
âJust tell us whatâs going to happen, and we will,â cried the children.
âYour Cousin Helen is coming to visit us,â said Miss Izzie, curtly, and disappeared into the Blue-room.
This was news indeed. Katy and Clover ran down stairs in great excitement, and after consulting a little, retired to the Loft to talk it over in peace and quiet. Cousin Helen coming! It seemed as strange as if Queen Victoria, gold crown and all, had invited herself to tea. Or as if some character out of a book, Robinson Crusoe, say, or âAmy Herbert,â had driven up with a trunk and announced the intention of spending a week. For to the imaginations of the children, Cousin Helen was as interesting and unreal as anybody in the Fairy Tales: Cinderella, or Blue-Beard, or dear Red Riding-Hood herself. Only there was a sort of mixture of Sunday-school book in their idea of her, for Cousin Helen was very, very good.
None of them had ever seen her. Philly said he was sure she hadnât any legs, because she never went away from home, and lay on a sofa all the time. But the rest knew that this was because Cousin Helen was ill. Papa always went to visit her twice a year, and he liked to talk to the children about her, and tell how sweet and patient she was, and what a pretty room she lived in. Katy and Clover had âplayed Cousin Helenâ so long, that now they were frightened as well as glad at the idea of seeing the real one.
âDo you suppose she will want us to say hymns to her all the time?â asked Clover.
âNot all the time,â replied Katy, âbecause you know sheâll get tired, and have to take naps in the afternoons. And then, of course, she reads the Bible a great deal. Oh dear, how quiet we shall have to be! I wonder how long sheâs going to stay?â
âWhat do you suppose she looks like?â went on Clover.
âSomething like âLucy,â in Mrs. Sherwood, I guess, with blue eyes, and curls, and a long, straight nose. And sheâll keep her hands clasped so all the time, and wear âfrilled wrappers,â and lie on the sofa perfectly still, and never smile, but just look patient. Weâll have to take off our boots in the hall, Clover, and go up stairs in stocking feet, so as not to make a noise, all the time she stays.â
âWonât it be funny!â giggled Clover, her sober little face growing bright at the idea of this variation on the hymns.
The time seemed very long till the next afternoon, when Cousin Helen was expected. Aunt Izzie, who was in a great excitement, gave the children many orders about their behavior. They were to do this and that, and not to do the other. Dorry, at last, announced that he wished Cousin Helen would just stay at home. Clover and Elsie, who had been thinking pretty much the same thing in private, were glad to hear that she was on her way to a Water Cure, and would stay only four days.
Five oâclock came. They all sat on the steps waiting for the carriage. At last it drove up. Papa was on the box. He motioned the children to stand back. Then he helped out a nice-looking young woman, who, Aunt Izzie told them, was Cousin Helenâs nurse, and then, very carefully, lifted Cousin Helen in his arms and brought her in.
âOh, there are the chicks!â were the first words the children heard, in such a gay, pleasant voice. âDo set me down somewhere, uncle. I want to see them so much!â
So Papa put Cousin Helen on the hall sofa. The nurse fetched a pillow, and when she was made comfortable, Dr. Carr called to the little ones.
âCousin Helen wants to see you,â he said.
âIndeed I do,â said the bright voice. âSo this is Katy? Why, what a splendid tall Katy it is! And this is Clover,â kissing her; âand this dear little Elsie. You all look as natural as possibleâjust as if I had seen you before.â
And she hugged them all round, not as if it was polite to like them because they were relations, but as if she had loved them and wanted them all her life.
There was something in Cousin Helenâs face and manner, which made the children at home with her at once. Even Philly, who had backed away with his hands behind him, after staring hard for a minute or two, came up with a sort of rush to get his share of kissing.
Still, Katyâs first feeling was one of disappointment. Cousin Helen was not at all like âLucy,â in Mrs. Sherwoodâs story. Her nose turned up the least bit in the world. She had brown hair, which didnât curl, a brown skin, and bright eyes, which danced when she laughed or spoke. Her face was thin, but except for that you wouldnât have guessed that she was sick. She didnât fold her hands, and she didnât look patient, but absolutely glad and merry. Her dress wasnât a âfrilled wrapper,â but a sort of loose travelling thing of pretty gray stuff, with a rose-colored bow, and bracelets, and a round hat trimmed with a gray feather. All Katyâs dreams about the âsaintly invalidâ seemed to take wings and fly away. But the more she watched Cousin Helen the more she seemed to like her, and to feel as if she were nicer than the imaginary person which she and Clover had invented.
âShe looks just like other people, donât she?â whispered Cecy, who had come over to have a peep at the new arrival.
âY-e-s,â replied Katy, doubtfully, âonly a great, great deal prettier.â
By and by, Papa carried Cousin Helen up stairs. All the children wanted to go too, but he told them she was tired, and must rest. So they went out doors to play till tea-time.
âOh, do let me take up the tray,â cried Katy at the tea-table, as she watched Aunt Izzie getting ready Cousin Helenâs supper. Such a nice supper! Cold chicken, and raspberries and cream, and tea in a pretty pink-and-white china cup. And such a snow-white napkin as Aunt Izzie spread over the tray!
âNo indeed,â said Aunt Izzie; âyouâll drop it the first thing.â But Katyâs eyes begged so hard, that Dr. Carr said, âYes, let her, Izzie; I like to see the girls useful.â
So Katy, proud of the commission, took the tray and carried it carefully across the hall. There was a bowl of flowers on the table. As she passed, she was struck with a bright idea. She set down the tray, and picking out a rose, laid it on the napkin besides the saucer of crimson raspberries. It looked very pretty, and Katy smiled to herself with pleasure.
âWhat are you stopping for?â called Aunt Izzie, from the dining-room. âDo be careful, Katy, I really think Bridget had better take it.â
âOh no, no!â protested Katy, âIâm most up already.â And she sped up stairs as fast as she could go. Luckless speed! She had just reached the door of the Blue-room, when she tripped upon her boot-lace, which, as usual, was dangling, made a misstep, and stumbled. She caught at the door to save herself; the door flew open; and Katy, with the tray, cream, raspberries, rose and all, descended in a confused heap upon the carpet.
âI told you so!â exclaimed Aunt Izzie from the bottom of the stairs.
Katy never forgot how kind Cousin Helen was on this occasion. She was in bed, and was of course a good deal startled at the sudden crash and tumble on her floor. But after one little jump, nothing could have been sweeter than the way in which she comforted poor crest-fallen Katy, and made so merry over the accident, that even Aunt Izzie almost forgot to scold. The broken dishes were piled up and the carpet made clean again, while Aunt Izzie prepared another tray just as nice as the first.
âPlease let Katy bring it up!â pleaded Cousin Helen, in her pleasant voice, âI am sure she will be careful this time. And Katy, I want just such another rose on the napkin. I guess that was your doingâwasnât it?â
Katy was careful.âThis time all went well. The tray was placed safely on a little table beside the bed, and Katy sat watching Cousin Helen eat her supper with a warm, loving feeling at her heart. I think we are scarcely ever so grateful to people as when they help us to get back our own self-esteem.
Cousin Helen hadnât much appetite, though she declared everything was delicious. Katy could see that she was very tired.
âNow,â she said, when she had finished, âif youâll shake up this pillow, so;âand move this other pillow a little, I think I will settle myself to sleep. Thanksâthatâs just right. Why, Katy dear, you are a born nurse Now kiss me. Good-night! To-morrow we will have a nice talk.â
Katy went down stairs very happy.
âCousin Helenâs perfectly lovely,â she told Clover. âAnd sheâs got on the most beautiful nightgown, all lace and ruffles. Itâs just like a nightgown in a book.â
âIsnât it wicked to care about clothes when youâre sick?â questioned Cecy.
âI donât believe Cousin Helen could do anything wicked,â said Katy.
âI told Ma that she had on bracelets, and Ma said she feared your cousin was a worldly person,â retorted Cecy, primming up her lips.
Katy and Clover were quite distressed at this opinion. They talked about it while they were undressing.
âI mean to ask Cousin Helen to-morrow,â said Katy.
Next morning the children got up very early. They were so glad that it was vacation! If it hadnât been, they would have been forced to go to school without seeing Cousin Helen, for she didnât wake till late. They grew so impatient of the delay, and went up stairs so often to listen at the door, and see if she were moving, that Aunt Izzie finally had to order them off. Katy rebelled against this order a good deal, but she consoled herself by going into the garden and picking the prettiest flowers she could find, to give to Cousin Helen the moment she should see her.
When Aunt
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