Polly: A New-Fashioned Girl by L. T. Meade (rooftoppers .TXT) đ
- Author: L. T. Meade
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âOh, father, donât mind what that tiresome Aunt Maria says or thinks on any subject,â said Polly. âWhy should we mind her, she wasnât motherâs real sister. We scarcely know her at all, and she scarcely knows us. We donât like her, and we are sure she doesnât like us. Why should she spoil our lives, and prevent our helping you? For it would help you to have the strangers here, wouldnât it, father?â
âBy and by it would,â answered the Doctor. âBy and by it would help me much.â
Again the troubled expression came to his face and the dimness was perceptible in his eyes.
âYou will let us try it, father,â said Helen. âWe can but fail; girls as young as us have done as much before. I am sure girls as young as we are have done harder things before, so why should not we try?â
âI am a foolish old man,â said the Doctor. âI suppose I shall be blamed for this, not that it greatly matters. Well, children, let it be as you wish. I will go and meet the boy and girl in London, and bring them to the Hollow. We can have them for a month, and if we fail, children,â added the Doctor, a twinkle of amusement overspreading his face, âwe wonât tell any one but ourselves. It is quite possible that in the future we shall be comparatively poor if we cannot manage to make that boy and girl from Australia comfortable and happy; but Polly there has taught us how to economize, for we can always fall back on potatoes and point.â
âOhâohâoh, father,â came from Pollyâs lips.
âThat is unkind, dear father,â said Helen.
But they both hung about his neck and kissed him, and when Dr. Maybright drove away that afternoon on his usual round of visits, his heart felt comparatively light, and he owned to himself that those girls of his, with all their eccentricities, were a great comfort to him.
There is no saying how Pollyâs week of housekeeping might have ended, nor how substantial her castle in the air might have grown, had not a catastrophe occurred to her of a double and complex nature.
The first day during which Polly and Maggie, between them, catered for and cooked the family meals, produced a plain diet in the shape of cold bacon for breakfast, and a dinner of potatoes, minus âpoint.â But on the Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday of that week Maggie quite redeemed her character of being a Flooder, and worked under Polly with such goodwill that, as she herself expressed it, her small brains began to grow. Fortunately, Mrs. Ricketts, Maggieâs mother, was not obliged to meet her rent every day of the week, therefore no more of Pollyâs four pounds went in that direction. And Polly read Mrs. Beatonâs Cookery-book with such assiduity, and Maggie carried out her directions with such implicit zeal and good faith, that really most remarkable meals began to grace the Doctorâs board. Pastry in every imaginable form and guise, cakes of all descriptions; vegetables, so cooked and so flavored, that their original taste was completely obliterated; meats cooked in German, Italian, and American styles; all these things, and many more, graced the board and speedily vanished. The children became decidedly excited about the meals, and Polly was cheered and regarded as a sort of queen. The Doctor sighed, however, and counted the days when Nell and Mrs. Power should once more peacefully reign in Pollyâs stead. Nurse asked severely to have all the nursery medicine bottles replenished. Firefly looked decidedly pasty, and, after one of Pollyâs richest plum-cakes, with three tiers of different colored icings, Bunny was heard crying the greater part of one night. Still the little cook and housekeeper bravely pursued her career of glory, and all might have gone well, and Polly might have worn a chastened halo of well-earned success round her brow for the remainder of her natural life, but for the catastrophe of which I am about to speak.
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday the family fared richly, and the household jogged along somehow, but on Friday morning Dr. Maybright suddenly surprised his girls by telling them that unexpected business would call him to London immediately. He could not possibly return before Monday, but he would get a certain Dr. Strong to see after his patients, and would start for town by the mid-day train.
The Doctorâs portmanteau was quickly packed, and in what seemed a moment of time after the receipt of the letter he had kissed his family and bidden them good-by. Then her four younger sisters and the boys came round Polly with a daring suggestion.[Pg 46]
âLetâs sit up late, to-night, and have a real, jolly supper,â they begged. âLetâs have it at nine oâclock, up in the large garret over the front of the house; let it be a big supper, all kinds of good things; ginger-beer and the rest, and letâs invite some people to come and eat it with us. Do Pollâdo Poll, darling.â
âBut,â said Pollyâshe was dazzled by this glorious prospectââI havenât got a great deal of money,â she said, âand Nurse will be very angry, and Helen wonât like it. For you know, children, you two boys and Firefly, you are never allowed to sit up as late as nine oâclock.â
âBut for once, Poll Parrot,â exclaimed the three victims; âjust for once. We are sure father would not care, and we can coax Nell to consent; and Nurse, as to Nurse, she thinks of no one but baby; we wonât choose the garret over baby. Do, do, do say âyes,â darling Poll.â
âThe dearest cook in all the world!â exclaimed Bunny, tossing his cap in the air.
âThe queen of cake-makers,â said Bob, turning head over heels.
âThe darlingest princess of all housekeepers,â echoed Firefly, leaping on her sister, and half-strangling her with a fierce embrace.
âAnd weâll all subscribe,â said the twins.
âAnd it will really be delightfully romantic; something to remember when you arenât housekeeper,â concluded Katie.
âIâd like it awfully,â said Polly, âI donât pretend that I wouldnât, and Iâve just found such a recipe for whipped cream. Do you know, girls, I shouldnât be a bit surprisedâI really shouldnâtâif I turned out some meringues made all by myself for supper. The only drawback is the money, for Mrs. White does charge a lot for cream, and I donât mind owning to you all, now that you are nice and sympathetic, that the reason you had only potatoes for dinner on Monday was because Maggie and I met with a misfortune; it was a money trouble,â continued Polly, with an important air, âand of course children like you cannot understand what money troubles mean. They are wearing, very, and Maggie says she thinks Iâm beginning to show some crowâs feet around my eyes on account of them. But never mind, Iâm not going to cast the shadows of money troubles on you all, and this thing is not to be spoken of, only it makes me very short now.â
âBut weâll help you, Poll,â said all the eager voices. âLetâs fetch our purses and see what we can spare.â
In a twinkling many odd receptacles for holding money made an appearance, and the children between them found they could muster the noble sum of six shillings. All this was handed to Polly, who said, after profound deliberation, that she thought she could make it go furthest and make most show in the purchase of cream and ginger-beer.
âIâll scrape the rest together, somehow,â she said, in conclusion,[Pg 47] âand Maggie will help me fine. Maggieâs a real brick now, and her brains are growing beautifully.â
But there was another point to be decidedâWho were to be invited to partake of the supper, and was Nurse to be told, and was Helen to be consulted?
Certainly Polly would not have ventured to carry out so daring a scheme without Helenâs consent and cooperation, if it had not happened that she was away for the day. She had taken the opportunity to drive into the nearest town five miles away with her father, and had arranged to spend the day there, purchasing several necessary things, and calling on one or two friends.
âAnd it will be much too late to tell Nell when she comes back,â voted all the children. âIf she makes a fuss then, and refuses to join, she will spoil everything. We are bound too, to obey Helen, so we had much better not give her the chance of saying âno.â Let us pretend to go to bed at our usual hour, and say nothing to either Nurse or Helen. We can tell them to-morrow if we like, and they can only scold us. Yes, that is the only thing to do, for it would never, never do to have such a jolly plan spoilt.â
A unanimous vote was therefore carried that the supper in the garret was to be absolutely secret and confidential, and, naughty as this plan of carrying out their pleasure was, it must be owned that it largely enhanced the fun. The next point to consider was, who were to be the invited guests? There were no boys and girls of the childrenâs own class in life within an easy distance.
âTherefore there is no one to ask,â exclaimed Katie, in her shortest and most objectionable manner.
But here Firefly electrified her family by quoting Scripture.
âWhen thou makest a supper,â she began.
All the others rose in a body and fell upon her. But she had started a happy idea, and in consequence, Mrs. Rickettsâ youngest son and daughter, and the three very naughty and disreputable sons of Mrs. Jones, the laundress, were invited to partake of the coming feast.
The rest of the day passed to all appearance very soberly. Helen was away. The Doctorâs carriage neither came nor went; the Doctor himself, with his kindly voice, and his somewhat brusque, determined manner, awoke no echoes in the old house. Nurse was far away in the nursery wing, with the pretty, brown-eyed baby and the children; all the girls and the little boys were remarkably good.
To those who are well acquainted with the habits and ways of young folks, too much goodness is generally a suspicious circumstance. There is a demure look, there is an instant obedience, there is an absence of fretfulness, and an abnormal, although subdued, cheerfulness, which arouses the watchful gaze of the knowing among mothers, governesses, and nurses.[Pg 48]
Had Nurse been at dinner that day she might have been warned of coming events by Bunnyâs excellent behavior; by Bobâs rigid refusal to partake twice of an unwholesome compound, which went by the name of iced pudding; by Fireflyâs anxiety to be all that a good and proper little girl should be. But Nurse, of course, had nothing to say to the family dinner. Helen was away, the Doctor was nearing the metropolis, and the little boysâ daily governess was not dining with the family.
These good children had no one to suspect them, and all went smoothly; in short, the wheels of the house machinery never seemed more admirably oiled.
True, had any one listened very closely there might have been heard the stealthy sound of shoeless feet ascending the rickety step-ladder which led to the large front garret. Shoeless feet going up and down many, many times. Trays, too, of precious crockery were carried up, baskets piled with evergreens and flowers were conveyed thither, the linen cupboard was ruthlessly rifled for snowy tablecloths and table napkins of all descriptions. Then later in the day a certain savory smell might have been perceived by any very suspicious person just along this special passage and up that dusty old ladder. For hot bread and hot pastry and hot cakes were being conveyed to the attic, and the sober twins themselves fetched the cream from the farm, and the ginger beer from the grocerâs.
No one was about, however, to suspect, or to tell tales if they did suspect.
Helen came home about seven oâclock, rather tired, and very much interested in her purchases, to find a cozy tea awaiting her, and Polly anxious to serve her. The twin girls were supposed to be learning their lessons in the schoolroom, Katie was nowhere to be seen, and Helen remarked casually that she supposed the young ones had gone to bed.
âOh, yes,â said Polly, in
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