<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>"DIE KLEINEN TEUFEL"</div>
<p><span class="smcap">Christmas</span> was followed by a week of small
calamities. Some of them would have been laughable,
counted singly, but taken all together they
assumed a seriousness not to be considered lightly.</p>
<p>In the first place, Mary, attempting to tie the
boat at the usual landing, slipped on the muddy
bank and dropped the chain. In her effort to recover
it she stepped into the water. Her shoes
were soaking wet when she reached home, and as
they were her only good ones she stuffed them carefully
with paper and hung them over the little drum
stove in the living room to dry. That evening Jack
read aloud while they washed the dishes, so they
were all in the kitchen when the smouldering log
in the drum stove, having reached the blazing point,
suddenly burst into flame.</p>
<p>Presently a smell of burning leather made them
all begin to sniff inquiringly, and Mary rushed in
to find that one of her shoes had dropped from the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</SPAN></span>
string to which she had tied it by the laces, and
was scorching to a crisp on the red-hot stove. Her
old shoes were so shabby that the immediate need
of new ones, left her figuring over the family accounts
until bed-time. It was hard to cut down a
list of expenses already reduced to low water
mark.</p>
<p>The next day a wet "Norther" blew up, bringing
the first cold weather of the winter. After
weeks of almost summer-like heat, the mercury
dropped to freezing point in just a few hours, and
roaring fires in both the kitchen and drum stoves
failed to warm the little cottage. Like most houses
in that section it had not been built with a view
to excluding the cold. The wind blew in under the
north door, lifting the rugs until they shifted with
a wave-like motion across the floor. Jack had to
have a blanket hung behind his chair, and when Mrs.
Ware sat down to write her weekly letter to Joyce
the draughts that rattled the windows set her to
sneezing as if she never could stop.</p>
<p>Mary, full of resources, brought her pink sunbonnet
and perched it on her mother's head, pulling
its ruffled cape well down on her shoulders.</p>
<p>"There!" she exclaimed, laughing at the jaunty
effect. "That will keep 'the cauld blasts' from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</SPAN></span>
giving you a stiff neck. Do look in the mirror and
then draw a picture of yourself for Joyce. Tell her
that the Sunny South is a delusion. The mercury
is only down to freezing, but I am sure that there
isn't an Esquimau in all the Arctic Circle as cold as
we are this blessed minute. That wind goes through
a body like a fine-pointed needle."</p>
<p>"These little stoves fairly eat up the wood," she
grumbled a few minutes later, glancing into the
empty wood-box which Norman had piled to the
top before he left that morning.</p>
<p>"Norman will be back soon," said Mrs. Ware,
looking out from her aureole of pink ruffles, which
she had found such a comfortable shield from the
draughts that she left it as Mary had placed it.
"He'll fill the box again as soon as he comes."</p>
<p>But Mary had slipped into a coat and was tying
a veil over her ears. "It isn't safe to wait," she
answered. "We'd be stiff and stark as icicles in
no time if we were to let the fires go out. I don't
mind being stoker. It's good exercise."</p>
<p>She skipped out to the wood-pile gaily enough,
but the tune she was whistling changed to a long-drawn
note of surprise and dismay when she saw
what inroads they had made on it since the last
time she had noticed it.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"We'll have to have another cord right away,"
she thought. "I never dreamed that fuel would
be such a big item of expense, away down here so
far South. But if we have much more weather
like this it will be a very serious item."</p>
<p>The discovery sent her back to her account book
again, but this time she took it to her own room
where Jack could not see her figuring. The butcher
raised the price of meat that week. Both butter
and eggs went higher, and Jack's rubber air-cushion
sprung such a leak that it collapsed hopelessly. A
new one was a necessity. Then the cold Norther
made Jack's rheumatism so much worse that he
had to stay in bed, and several visits from the doctor
and a druggist's bill had to be added to the list
of the week's calamities.</p>
<p>The last straw was reached when Joyce's letter
came, deploring the fact that the check which she
was enclosing was only half the size which she
usually sent. She had some unexpected expenses
at the studio which she was obliged to meet, but
she hoped to send the customary amount next
month. This information was not in the letter
which Mrs. Ware promptly sent in to Jack by
Norman, but in a separate postscript, folded inside
the check. Mary read it with startled eyes.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Whatever are we going to do?" she asked in
a despairing whisper.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ware shook her head and sat folding and
unfolding the check in an absent-minded way for
several minutes. Then she went into her room for
pen and ink to endorse it, so that Mary, who was
going down into the town that afternoon, could
cash it. She was gone a long time and when she
came back she had two letters ready to post.</p>
<p>As Mary went down the road a while later, she
glanced at the first envelope which was addressed
to Joyce, admiring as she always did her mother's
penmanship.</p>
<p>"It's just like her," she thought, "so fine and
even and ladylike." Then she gave an exclamation
of surprise as she saw that the second envelope was
addressed to Mrs. Barnaby.</p>
<p>"Whatever can she be writing to <i>her</i> about?"
she wondered. "It's queer she never said anything
about it, when we always talk over everything together,
even the tiniest trifles."</p>
<p>She puzzled over it nearly all the way to the post-office
till she remembered that she had heard her
mother say that she was not altogether satisfied
with the new doctor's treatment for Jack, and that
she wanted to ask Mrs. Barnaby whom to call in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</SPAN></span>
consultation. Satisfied with that solution, Mary
thought no more about the matter till the following
Friday, when she came back from a short call at
the rectory, to find that Mrs. Barnaby had just
driven away from the house. She was disappointed,
for these visits were always hailed as joyful
events by the entire household.</p>
<p>"I wouldn't have missed her for <i>anything!</i>" exclaimed
Mary, following her mother into their bedroom.
"She's so diverting. What particularly
funny things did she say this time? <i>What's that?</i>"</p>
<p>Her glance and question indicated a bundle that
her mother had brought in from the back doorstep
and laid on the bed. Mrs. Ware shook her
head meaningly, and closed the door into Jack's
room before she answered. Then she said in a low
tone:</p>
<p>"It's some linen and lace that Mrs. Barnaby
brought this afternoon. I wrote to her asking her
if she had any fine hand-sewing that I could do.
Sh!" she whispered, lifting a warning finger, as
Mary's cry of "Why, Mamma Ware!" interrupted
her.</p>
<p>"Jack will hear you, and he is not to know.
That's why I had Pedro take the bundle to the back
door. Mrs. Barnaby understands. Something had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</SPAN></span>
to be done, and under the circumstances sewing is
the only thing I can turn my hand to at home."</p>
<p>"But mamma!" exclaimed Mary, so distressed
that she was almost crying. "Your eyes are not
strong enough for that any more. You nearly wore
yourself out trying to support us when we were
little, and I'm very sure we're not going to allow
it now. Joyce would be terribly distressed, and as
for Jack—I know perfectly well that he'd just
rather lie down and die than have you do it. We'll
bundle that stuff right back to Mrs. Barnaby, and
I'll go down town and see if I can't get a position
in one of the stores."</p>
<p>Mrs. Ware's answer was in such a low voice that
it went no farther than the closed door, but it
silenced Mary's protests. Only a few times in her
remembrance had the gentle little woman used that
tone of authority with her children, but on those
rare occasions they recognized the force of her
determination and the uselessness of opposing it.
Mary turned away distressed and sore over the situation.
She said nothing more, but as she went
about her work she kept wiping away the tears, and
a fierce rebellion raged inwardly.</p>
<p>There would have been little said at the supper-table
that night if Norman had not come home in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</SPAN></span>
a talkative mood. He was to start to the public
High School the following Monday, at the beginning
of the new term, and had recently made the
acquaintance of a boy lately come to Bauer, who
would enter with him.</p>
<p>"Ed Masters is his name," Norman reported,
raising his voice a trifle, so that Jack, who was
taking his supper at the same time from a bedside
table in the next room, might be included in the
conversation.</p>
<p>"I like him first rate, and it will make it lots
easier for me at school, not to be the only new boy.
The only trouble is, he doesn't know whether his
folks are going to stay in Bauer long enough to
make it worth while for him to start or not. They
came for the whole winter, but they say that they
can't stand it at the hotel many more days if something
isn't done to those Mallory kids. Ed says
they're regular little imps for mischief. They've
been here only two weeks, but they're known all
over Bauer as 'die kleinen teufel.'"</p>
<p>"Which being interpreted," laughed Jack from
the next room, "means the little devils. What have
they done to earn such a name?"</p>
<p>"It might be easier to tell what they haven't
done," answered Norman. "There's two of them,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</SPAN></span>
the boy seven and the girl eight, but they're exactly
the same size, and look so much alike everybody
takes them for twins. They put a puppy in the ice-cream
freezer yesterday morning, Ed says, and Miss
Edna, the landlady's daughter, almost had a spasm
when she went to make ice-cream for dinner and
found it in the can.</p>
<p>"Yesterday afternoon the delivery wagon
stopped at the side entrance of the hotel (it's the
Williams House where Ed is staying), and those
children waited until the boy had gone in with a
basket of groceries. Then they climbed up into the
delivery wagon and changed the things all around
in the other baskets so that the orders were hopelessly
mixed up, and nobody got what he had
bought. There was a ten gallon can of kerosene in
the wagon, the kind that has a pump attachment.
The boy stopped to talk a minute to Mrs. Williams,
and by the time he got back they had pumped all
the kerosene out into the road, and were making
regular gatling guns of themselves with a bushel
of potatoes. They were firing them out of the
basket as fast as they could throw, in a wild race
to see which would be first to grab the last potato.</p>
<p>"Ed says they ride up and down the hotel galleries
on their tricycles till it sounds like thunder,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</SPAN></span>
when the other boarders are trying to take a nap,
or they'll chase up and down hooting and slashing
the air with switches. If people don't dodge and
scrooge back against the wall they'll get slashed
too.</p>
<p>"I suppose every merchant on Main Street has
some grievance against them, for they haven't the
slightest regard for other people's rights or property,
and they're not afraid of anything. The little
girl went into the livery stable the other day and
swung onto the tail of one of those big white 'bus
horses, and pulled a handful of hairs out of it. It's
a favorite trick of theirs to climb into any automobile
left at the curbstone, and honk the horn till the
owner comes out. Then they calmly sit still and
demand a ride."</p>
<p>"They must be the children that Doctor Mackay
was telling me about," spoke up Jack. "He came
in here one day, furious with them. He had caught
them smearing soap over the glass wind shield of
his new machine. They had climbed all over the
cushions with their muddy feet, and tinkered with
the clock till it couldn't run. He threatened to tell
their father, and all they did was to put their
thumbs to their noses and say: 'Yah! Tattle-tale!
You <i>can't</i> tell! He's a thousand miles away!'"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Isn't any one responsible for them?" asked
Mrs. Ware.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Norman, "there is a colored girl at
their heels whenever they don't give her the slip.
But their mother is ill—came here for her health,
Ed says, and their grandmother who tries to look
after them is so deaf that she can't hear their noise
and their saucy speeches. They're so quick that
she never sees them making faces and sticking their
tongues out at people. They do it behind her back.
She thinks they are little angels, but she'll find out
when they're asked to leave the Hotel. Ed says
it's coming to that very soon—either the Mallorys
will have to go, or everybody else will.
They got into his box of fishing tackle, and you
never saw such a mess as they made. He is
furious."</p>
<p>With her mind intent on her own troubles, Mary
did not listen to the recital of other people's with
her usual interest, although what she heard that
night was recalled very clearly afterward. All evening
she brooded over her grievance, trying to discover
some remedy. She could not take the sewing
away from her mother and do it herself, for while
fairly skilful with her needle, she had not learned
to make a fine art of her handiwork. The garments<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</SPAN></span>
Mrs. Ware made were as beautifully wrought as
those fashioned and embroidered by the French
nuns.</p>
<p>"I <i>know</i> Mrs. Barnaby never would order anything
so fine and expensive," thought Mary bitterly,
"if she didn't know that we need the money
so badly. She did it because mamma asked her,
and felt that she couldn't refuse. That is a sort
of charity that kills me to accept, and I sha'n't do
it one minute longer than I have to."</p>
<p>It was easier to make such a resolution, however,
than to carry it out. A short call on Mrs. Metz next
morning, showed her that her first plan was not
feasible. The old woman being related to nearly
half of Bauer by birth or marriage, and knowing
the other half with the intimacy of an "oldest inhabitant,"
was in a position to know each merchant's
needs and requirements, also what wages he paid
each employee. Most of them had no occasion to
hire outside help. Their own families furnished
enough. It was a necessary requirement of course,
that any one applying for a position must speak
German. That one thing alone barred Mary out,
and she went home anxious and disheartened. Still,
even if she could have spoken a dozen tongues, the
position she had coveted did not seem so desirable,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</SPAN></span>
after she learned the small amount the clerks received.</p>
<p>All that day and the next she worried over the
matter, and finally decided to go to Mrs. Rochester
and ask her advice. On the way up to the rectory
she stopped at the post-office. The mail was being
distributed, and while she stood waiting for the
delivery window to open, the rector himself came
in. As he turned away from his locked box, in
which only papers had been deposited so far, he
saw Mary and went over to her with a cordial
greeting.</p>
<p>"I'm looking for something," he said with a
twinkle of fun in his eyes. "Maybe you can help
me. It is as hard to find as the proverbial needle
in the haystack, but I must have it before sundown
if possible. Some one as patient as Job, as tactful
as a diplomat, with the nerve of a lion-tamer and
the resources of a sleight-of-hand performer—the
kind who can draw rabbits out of a silk hat if necessary."</p>
<p>Mary laughed. "What are you going to do with
such a wonderful creature when you find it?"</p>
<p>"Turn it loose on those Mallory children,"
answered Mr. Rochester, lowering his tone. "I was
sent for yesterday, presumably to see their mother<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</SPAN></span>
who is an invalid, but I found that the real reason
was to give some advice to Mr. Mallory about the
children. The hotel refused to harbor them any
longer, and he had been summoned hastily by telegraph.
He has moved his family to a furnished
cottage near the hotel. Their meals will be sent in
to them, and his mother can look after his wife, but
he is desperate about the children.</p>
<p>"He acknowledges he could not cope with them
even if he could stay here all the time away from his
business. His wife has never allowed them to be
punished, and has foolishly humored them till they
are past being controlled. He besought me to find
some one who could take them in hand for a part
of the day at least."</p>
<p>"But what could an outsider do with them if
their own family has failed?" queried Mary.</p>
<p>"Ah, that's where the lion-tamer and the sleight-of-hand
performer combination gets in his work.
He must quell them with his eye, and draw ways
and means out of his silk hat. Mrs. Mallory would
like to have them taught to read and write if it can
be done without crossing the little dears, but I
inferred that their father would be glad simply to
have them taken in hand and tamed sufficiently to
keep them from being public nuisances."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Mary's pulses began to pound with the excitement
of a daring thought, but she managed to
appear unconcerned, and asked him in a joking
way, "And if you can't find this Job-like, diplomatic
lion-tamer they want, they'll have to take
some ordinary person?"</p>
<p>"They'll be obliged to. But I'm afraid that a
quest even in that direction will prove fruitless. It's
a field for real missionary effort, though. Some
one might be willing to approach it in that
spirit."</p>
<p>The delivery window flew up, and as the waiting
line began moving along towards it, Mr. Rochester
lifted his hat and turned away. But before he
could fit his key in the lock of his box, Mary was
at his side.</p>
<p>"One moment, please," she exclaimed, her face
flushing. She spoke very fast. "If you think that
<i>I</i> can fill that position will you tell them about me?
I've really got lots of patience with children, and"—laughing
nervously—"last summer I partly tamed
a young wild-cat. I could at least tell the children
stories, and teach them all sorts of wood-lore that
would keep them busy and interested out of doors.
Besides," she flushed still deeper, "I <i>must</i> find some
way to earn some money soon. My very need of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</SPAN></span>
it would make me try all the harder to fill the place.
I am on my way now to see Mrs. Rochester and ask
her advice about what to do."</p>
<p>A few minutes later she and Mr. Rochester were
walking rapidly along the road in the direction
of the Williams House. As they crossed the wide
foot-bridge which spans the creek, and climbed the
hill on the other side, she told him of the work she
had done the previous summer under the noted
naturalist, Professor Carnes.</p>
<p>"He had arranged to send his fifteen-year-old
niece to Lone Rock this winter," she added, "but
her physicians decided at the last moment that she
needed a milder climate. She was to have boarded
near us, and I had promised to devote my mornings
to keeping her out of doors and teaching her in an
indirect way that would not suggest books or study
hours. Maybe the fact that such a man as Professor
Carnes thought me competent to do that, and was
willing to pay me a grown teacher's salary, might
have some weight with the Mallorys. Oh, I <i>hope</i>
they won't think seventeen and a half is too young,"
she exclaimed, with an anxious glance at her companion,
as if to discover his opinion.</p>
<p>"If I'd only known such an important interview
was ahead of me I'd have worn my blue suit. I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</SPAN></span>
look lots older in that because it's longer than this
one."</p>
<p>"I don't think you need worry about that," the
rector answered. He spoke gravely, but the face
he turned away from her twitched with suppressed
amusement.</p>
<p>They passed the Williams House, and turned in
at the gate of a gray cottage, where Mr. Mallory
himself met them at the door. He was a prosperous
young broker with an affable manner and the self-confident
air that some people acquire from the
carrying of a fat bank-book. He ushered them into
the room where Mrs. Mallory was lying on a couch.
She was very young and blue-eyed and soft-haired.
Curled up among the cushions under a blue and
white afghan, she made Mary think of a kitten.
She seemed so helpless and incapable, as if she had
never known anything but cushions and cream,
all her life.</p>
<p>Two children were playing quietly under a table,
in the corner. Mary could not see what they were
doing, for they were lying on their stomachs with
their heads towards the wall. Only their little
black-stockinged legs and slippered feet protruded
from under the table, and they were waving back
and forth in mid-air above their backs.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When Mr. Rochester introduced Mary as the
young lady they were so desirous of finding, one
pair of small legs stopped waving, and their owner
backed hastily out into the room. Humping along
on all fours until she reached her mother's couch,
she sat on the floor beside it and began studying
the visitors with a quiet intense gaze. She was an
attractive child, with rather a wistful little face.
Her hair was cut short in Buster Brown fashion,
and she was remarkably strong and sturdy looking
for a girl. Otherwise there was nothing in her
appearance to justify one's belief that she had done
all the tom-boy things ascribed to her.</p>
<p>To Mary's surprise Mrs. Mallory discussed the
children as freely as if they were not present, repeating
their pranks and smart sayings as if they
were too young to understand what was being said,
and frankly admitting her inability to control them.</p>
<p>"Mr. Mallory and I agree on every subject but
the proper way to rear children, and we almost
come to blows over that," she said, smiling up at
him till the dimples in her cheeks made her seem
more childish and appealing than ever.</p>
<p>"I believe in letting children do exactly as they
please as far as possible. The time will come soon
enough when they can't, poor little dears. We have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</SPAN></span>
not imposed our wishes on them even in the matter
of names. It has been a life-long regret with me
that my mother burdened me with a name that I
despised, and I made up my mind that <i>my</i> children
should be allowed to choose their own. Little
brother, there, has chosen his father's name, Herbert.
But we're slow about adopting it. We've
called him Brud so long, his sister's baby name
for him, when she was learning to talk, that it is
hard to break the habit."</p>
<p>"And the little girl?" asked Mary politely, beginning
to feel that she had hastened to shoulder a
load which she might not be able to carry.</p>
<p>"Really it's too cunning the way Little Sister
does," exclaimed Mrs. Mallory. "One week she
announces she's Genevive and the next <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'that's'">that</ins> she's
Bessie or Maud or Irma—whatever happens to
strike her fancy, and she gets simply furious if we
don't remember every time she changes. That was
one thing that Miss Edna fell out with us about.
She kept calling her Bessie the week that she wished
to be known as Marion. Of course the child naturally
resented it, and Miss Edna actually caught her
and shook her, when she hadn't done a thing but
throw a biscuit or some little article like that in her
direction."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Mary cast a half-frightened glance at Mr. Rochester,
aghast at the prospect before her. The soft
voice went on.</p>
<p>"<i>We</i> don't believe in being harsh with children,
<i>do</i> we, Beautiful?" She reached down to stroke the
little head nestled against her couch. "I want my
children to have it to remember of their mother
that she never scolded or punished them. <i>You</i>
can say that. <i>Can't</i> you, pet?"</p>
<p>Pet only nodded in reply, but she caught the
slim white hand in both her own and pressed it
lovingly against her cheek. It made a pretty tableau,
and Mary found it hard to realize that this
affectionate little creature was one of the "kleinen
teufel" of Norman's report. But she noticed the
satisfied gleam in the child's eyes when her mother
went on to retail other instances of Miss Edna's
harshness.</p>
<p>Mr. Rochester saw the expression also, and the
shrewd, knowing glance that followed when he
finally broached the terms of a settlement, asking
them to specify exactly what would be expected
of Mary and what salary would be paid in return.
He mildly suggested that it might be wiser to dispense
with a juvenile audience at this point.</p>
<p>He had chosen words that he thought far beyond<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</SPAN></span>
Little Sister's comprehension, and there was something
startling as well as uncanny in the way she
spoke up for the first time since his entrance.</p>
<p>"<i>I aren't a-going to leave this room! Nobody
can make me!</i>"</p>
<p>Mrs. Mallory looked up at her husband with an
amused simper and shook her head as if to say,
"Now, isn't that the smartest thing you <i>ever</i> saw?"
and Mr. Rochester's suggestion was ignored.</p>
<p>When they rose to go it had been arranged that
Mary was to take the children in charge every
afternoon, except Sundays, from one o'clock till
five, at the same salary Professor Carnes had offered
her. She was to teach them anything she could
in any way she chose, provided her methods did
not conflict with their happiness. The chief thing
was that they should be kept interested and amused.</p>
<p>"Then to-morrow at one," said Mr. Mallory, rising
with them, "they will take their first lesson.
Come out from under that table, Brud, and get acquainted
with your new teacher."</p>
<p>Brud waved one leg in token that he heard, but
made no further response. Suddenly Sister found
her voice again.</p>
<p>"<i>What you going to teach us first? 'Cause if
we don't like it we won't go.</i>"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Taken thus suddenly, without having had a moment
in which to form any plan of action, Mary
groped wildly around in her mind for an answer.
She recognized this as a crucial moment. She could
not hesitate long, for Mrs. Mallory's appealing blue
eyes were fixed on her also, the while she patted the
child's cheek and purred, "Why, of <i>course</i> little
Sister will go when the nice lady is planning to give
her such a happy time."</p>
<p>"Happy time adoing <i>what</i>?" was the persistent
question.</p>
<p>Just then, Meliss, the colored nurse-girl, opened
the side door, and there floated in from the hotel
kitchen the appetizing smell of pies—hot mince
pies just being lifted from the oven. Mary caught
eagerly at the straw of suggestion which the odor
offered. At the same time some instinct prompted
her that it was foolishness to address this child of
eight as if she were an infant, or to talk down to
her as her family made a practise of doing. So
speaking directly to her as if she were addressing
an intelligent and reasonable being she said
gravely:</p>
<p>"The kind of school we are going to have is so
different from any you've ever heard of, that I can't
explain it beforehand. I can only tell you this,—it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</SPAN></span>
is somewhat like a Jack Horner pie. Each day you'll
put in your thumb and pull out a plum. But what
that particular plum will be depends on so many
things that I could not possibly give it a name
before it actually happens. It will be a surprise
school."</p>
<p>At the mention of pies the legs under the table
hastily came down out of the air, and the small
boy attached hastily backed out into general view.
Planting himself in front of Mary with a swaggering
air, his feet wide apart, he announced aggressively:</p>
<p>"I'll bring my new hatchet if I want to, and
nobody can make me leave it at home!"</p>
<p>There was something so impertinent in his
manner that Mary longed to shake him and say,
"Don't be so sure of that, Mr. Smarty!" But remembering
the dignified position she now had to
maintain, she only remarked in a matter of fact
tone:</p>
<p>"If your hatchet has a good sharp edge it will
probably be one of the first things you'll need. And
you'll find use for a pocket full of medium sized
nails, too."</p>
<p>"What for?" he demanded, drawing a little
closer to begin a thorough cross examination. But<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</SPAN></span>
Mary, who had turned to listen to a question of
Mr. Mallory's, paid no heed.</p>
<p>"I say," Brud repeated, calling as if she were
deaf. "What for? <i>What for?</i> WHAT FOR?"</p>
<p>Mary paid not the slightest attention until she
had answered his father, then said deliberately,
"I've already explained that in a surprise school
you can't know what is going to happen till the
time comes."</p>
<p>"Why?" he whined.</p>
<p>"Because," she said, pausing impressively, and
then lowering her voice as if she were imparting
a mysterious secret, "<i>it's the Law of the
Jungle</i>."</p>
<p>The unexpectedness of this mystifying answer
and the sepulchral voice in which she gave it, was
so different from anything Brud had ever encountered
before, that it took him some seconds to recover, and
she was gone before he could think of
another question.</p>
<p>Mr. Mallory walked to the gate with them.
"You've certainly started out well, Miss Ware,"
he remarked admiringly. "At first I thought we
might have some difficulty in getting their consent
to go, but they'll be on hand to-morrow all right.
You've aroused their curiosity to such a pitch that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span>
a regiment armed to the teeth couldn't keep them
from satisfying it now." After an instant's pause
he added a trifle awkwardly, seeming to feel some
explanation was due, "Their mother never sees
a fault in them, and my business keeps me away
from them so much that—well, you see yourself
how it is."</p>
<p>On the way home neither Mary nor Mr. Rochester
spoke till they were halfway down the hill.
Then they looked at each other and laughed.</p>
<p>"I hope I haven't got you into <i>too</i> deep water,
Miss Mary," he said. "It's a big undertaking. I
must confess to a curiosity as great as Brud's.
What <i>are</i> you going to do with them?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know!" exclaimed Mary desperately.
"Did you see me fencing for time when
Little Sister demanded to be told what I'd teach
them first? Things had happened so fast that I
hadn't had a moment to think, so I had to say the
first thing that came into my head. I tremble to
think what a long pause there might have been if
the smell of those pies had not suggested an answer.
I think the first week I'll just play with them as
hard as I can. Play Indian maybe, so that if they
get too obstreperous it will be part of the game to
tie them to a tree and torture them. But after all I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span>
can't help being sorry for the little things after
hearing their mother talk to them and about
them."</p>
<p>At the end of the foot-bridge where she turned
to take the lower road which was the short cut
home, she started to thank him, but he stopped her
earnest words with an uplifted hand and an amused
protest.</p>
<p>"Wait and see how it turns out before you thank
me. You may want to wreak dire vengeance on
me before the week's over, for getting you into such
a predicament."</p>
<p>With a cordial word of parting Mary hurried
down the road, and burst into the house with the
breathless announcement that she'd consented to go
as a missionary; that Mr. Rochester had persuaded
her to take the step. She waited a moment to
give them a chance to guess what special field it
was she was about to enter, but was so eager to tell
that she had to burst out with the answer herself:</p>
<p>"It's to the heathen at home I am going, I'm to
be an apostle to 'die kleinen teufel'!"</p>
<p>Jack gave a loud whistle of surprise and then
burst out laughing, but Mrs. Ware looked across
at him soberly, with a triumphant nod of the head.</p>
<p>"There! What did I tell you?" she asked.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</SPAN></span>
"Didn't I say that she'd soon adjust herself—find
something to amuse herself and all the rest of us
as well?"</p>
<p>Mary, who had been wondering all the way home
how her news would be received, had never imagined
this—that her venture would be looked upon merely
as an outlet for her surplus energy, but after one
gasp of surprise she was glad that her mother had
put it that way.</p>
<p>"She did it on purpose," Mary thought. "So
that Jack need not have added to his other ills the
tormenting thought that he had driven his little
sister to a disagreeable task, in order that she might
help support him."</p>
<p>An understanding glance from her mother, full
of approval and tender appreciation, flashed on her
as she drew her chair up to the stove, but all she
said was, "I'm sure you had an amusing interview."
Then Mary proceeded to recount it, giving a graphic
and laughable description of her half hour in the
gray cottage. But all the time she was talking and
mimicking she was looking forward to the moment
when she could escape to a corner of the kitchen,
and calculate with pencil and paper what she could
never do in her head, the height of prosperity to
which this tidal wave of a salary would lift them.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</SPAN></span></p>
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