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<h2> Chapter XVII. Down at Molly's </h2>
<p>"Now, my dears, I've something very curious to tell you, so listen quietly
and then I'll give you your dinners," said Molly, addressing the nine cats
who came trooping after her as she went into the shed-chamber with a bowl
of milk and a plate of scraps in her hands. She had taught them to behave
well at meals, so, though their eyes glared and their tails quivered with
impatience, they obeyed; and when she put the food on a high shelf and
retired to the big basket, the four old cats sat demurely down before her,
while the five kits scrambled after her and tumbled into her lap, as if
hoping to hasten the desired feast by their innocent gambols.</p>
<p>Granny, Tobias, Mortification, and Molasses were the elders. Granny, a
gray old puss, was the mother and grandmother of all the rest. Tobias was
her eldest son, and Mortification his brother, so named because he had
lost his tail, which affliction depressed his spirits and cast a blight
over his young life. Molasses was a yellow cat, the mamma of four of the
kits, the fifth being Granny's latest darling. Toddlekins, the little
aunt, was the image of her mother, and very sedate even at that early age;
Miss Muffet, so called from her dread of spiders, was a timid black and
white kit; Beauty, a pretty Maltese, with a serene little face and pink
nose; Ragbag, a funny thing, every color that a cat could be; and Scamp,
who well deserved his name, for he was the plague of Miss Bat's life, and
Molly's especial pet.</p>
<p>He was now perched on her shoulder, and, as she talked, kept peeping into
her face or biting her ear in the most impertinent way, while the others
sprawled in her lap or promenaded round the basket rim.</p>
<p>"My friends, something very remarkable has happened: Miss Bat is cleaning
house!" and, having made this announcement, Molly leaned back to see how
the cats received it, for she insisted that they understood all she said
to them.</p>
<p>Tobias stared, Mortification lay down as if it was too much for him,
Molasses beat her tail on the floor as if whipping a dusty carpet, and
Granny began to purr approvingly. The giddy kits paid no attention, as
they did not know what house-cleaning meant, happy little dears!</p>
<p>"I thought you'd like it, Granny, for you are a decent cat, and know what
is proper," continued Molly, leaning down to stroke the old puss, who
blinked affectionately at her. "I can't imagine what put it into Miss
Bat's head. I never said a word, and gave up groaning over the clutter, as
I couldn't mend it. I just took care of Boo and myself, and left her to be
as untidy as she pleased, and she is a regular old——"</p>
<p>Here Scamp put his paw on her lips because he saw them moving, but it
seemed as if it was to check the disrespectful word just coming out.</p>
<p>"Well, I won't call names; but what shall I do when I see everything in
confusion, and she won't let me clear up?" asked Molly, looking round at
Scamp, who promptly put the little paw on her eyelid, as if the roll of
the blue ball underneath amused him.</p>
<p>"Shut my eyes to it, you mean? I do all I can, but it is hard, when I wish
to be nice, and do try; don't I?" asked Molly. But Scamp was ready for
her, and began to comb her hair with both paws as he stood on his hind
legs to work so busily that Molly laughed and pulled him down, saying, as
she cuddled the sly kit.</p>
<p>"You sharp little thing! I know my hair is not neat now, for I've been
chasing Boo round the garden to wash him for school. Then Miss Bat threw
the parlor carpet out of the window, and I was so surprised I had to run
and tell you. Now, what had we better do about it?"</p>
<p>The cats all winked at her, but no one had any advice to offer, except
Tobias, who walked to the shelf, and, looking up, uttered a deep,
suggestive yowl, which said as plainly as words, "Dinner first and
discussion afterward."</p>
<p>"Very well, don't scramble," said Molly, getting up to feed her pets.
First the kits, who rushed at the bowl and thrust their heads in, lapping
as if for a wager; then the cats, who each went to one of the four piles
of scraps laid round at intervals and placidly ate their meat; while Molly
retired to the basket, to ponder over the phenomena taking place in the
house.</p>
<p>She could not imagine what had started the old lady. It was not the
example of her neighbors, who had beaten carpets and scrubbed paint every
spring for years without exciting her to any greater exertion than
cleaning a few windows and having a man to clear away the rubbish
displayed when the snow melted. Molly never guessed that her own efforts
were at the bottom of the change, or knew that a few words not meant for
her ear had shamed Miss Bat into action. Coming home from prayer-meeting
one dark night, she trotted along behind two old ladies who were gossiping
in loud voices, as one was rather deaf, and Miss Bat was both pleased and
troubled to hear herself unduly praised.</p>
<p>"I always said Sister Dawes meant well; but she's getting into years, and
the care of two children is a good deal for her, with her cooking and her
rheumatiz. I don't deny she did neglect 'em for a spell, but she does well
by 'em now, and I wouldn't wish to see better-appearing children."</p>
<p>"You've no idee how improved Molly is. She came in to see my girls, and
brought her sewing-work, shirts for the boy, and done it as neat and
capable as you'd wish to see. She always was a smart child, but dreadful
careless," said the other old lady, evidently much impressed by the change
in harum-scarum Molly Loo.</p>
<p>"Being over to Mis Minot's so much has been good for her, and up to Mis
Grant's. Girls catch neat ways as quick as they do untidy ones, and them
wild little tykes often turn out smart women."</p>
<p>"Sister Dawes <i>has</i> done well by them children, and I hope Mr. Bemis
sees it. He ought to give her something comfortable to live on when she
can't do for him any longer. He can well afford it."</p>
<p>"I haven't a doubt he will. He's a lavish man when he starts to do a
thing, but dreadful unobserving, else he'd have seen to matters long ago.
Them children was town-talk last fall, and I used to feel as if it was my
bounden duty to speak to Miss Dawes. But I never did, fearing I might
speak too plain, and hurt her feelings."</p>
<p>"You've spoken plain enough now, and I'm beholden to you, though you'll
never know it," said Miss Bat to herself, as she slipped into her own
gate, while the gossips trudged on quite unconscious of the listener
behind them.</p>
<p>Miss Bat was a worthy old soul in the main, only, like so many of us, she
needed rousing up to her duty. She had got the rousing now, and it did her
good, for she could not bear to be praised when she had not deserved it.
She had watched Molly's efforts with lazy interest, and when the girl gave
up meddling with her affairs, as she called the housekeeping, Miss Bat
ceased to oppose her, and let her scrub Boo, mend clothes, and brush her
hair as much as she liked. So Molly had worked along without any help from
her, running in to Mrs. Pecq for advice, to Merry for comfort, or Mrs.
Minot for the higher kind of help one often needs so much. Now Miss Bat
found that she was getting the credit and the praise belonging to other
people, and it stirred her up to try and deserve a part at least.</p>
<p>"Molly don't want any help about her work or the boy: it's too late for
that; but if this house don't get a spring cleaning that will make it
shine, my name ain't Bathsheba Dawes," said the old lady, as she put away
her bonnet that night, and laid energetic plans for a grand revolution,
inspired thereto not only by shame, but by the hint that "Mr. Bemis was a
lavish man," as no one knew better than she.</p>
<p>Molly's amazement next day at seeing carpets fly out of window, ancient
cobwebs come down, and long-undisturbed closets routed out to the great
dismay of moths and mice, has been already confided to the cats, and as
she sat there watching them lap and gnaw, she said to herself,—</p>
<p>"I don't understand it, but as she never says much to me about my affairs,
I won't take any notice till she gets through, then I'll admire everything
all I can. It is so pleasant to be praised after you've been trying hard."</p>
<p>She might well say that, for she got very little herself, and her trials
had been many, her efforts not always successful, and her reward seemed a
long way off. Poor Boo could have sympathized with her, for he had
suffered much persecution from his small schoolmates when he appeared with
large gray patches on the little brown trousers, where he had worn them
out coasting down those too fascinating steps. As he could not see the
patches himself, he fancied them invisible, and came home much afflicted
by the jeers of his friends. Then Molly tried to make him a new pair out
of a sack of her own; but she cut both sides for the same leg, so one was
wrong side out. Fondly hoping no one would observe it, she sewed bright
buttons wherever they could be put, and sent confiding Boo away in a pair
of blue trousers, which were absurdly hunchy behind and buttony before. He
came home heart-broken and muddy, having been accidentally tipped into a
mud-puddle by two bad boys who felt that such tailoring was an insult to
mankind. That roused Molly's spirit, and she begged her father to take the
boy and have him properly fitted out, as he was old enough now to be
well-dressed, and she wouldn't have him tormented. His attention being
called to the trousers, Mr. Bemis had a good laugh over them, and then got
Boo a suit which caused him to be the admired of all observers, and to
feel as proud as a little peacock.</p>
<p>Cheered by this success, Molly undertook a set of small shirts, and
stitched away bravely, though her own summer clothes were in a sad state,
and for the first time in her life she cared about what she should wear.</p>
<p>"I must ask Merry, and may be father will let me go with her and her
mother when they do their shopping, instead of leaving it to Miss Bat, who
dresses me like an old woman. Merry knows what is pretty and becoming: I
don't," thought Molly, meditating in the bushel basket, with her eyes on
her snuff-colored gown and the dark purple bow at the end of the long
braid Muffet had been playing with.</p>
<p>Molly was beginning to see that even so small a matter as the choice of
colors made a difference in one's appearance, and to wonder why Merry
always took such pains to have a blue tie for the gray dress, a rosy one
for the brown, and gloves that matched her bonnet ribbons. Merry never
wore a locket outside her sack, a gay bow in her hair and soiled cuffs, a
smart hat and the braid worn off her skirts. She was exquisitely neat and
simple, yet always looked well-dressed and pretty; for her love of beauty
taught her what all girls should learn as soon as they begin to care for
appearances—that neatness and simplicity are their best ornaments,
that good habits are better than fine clothes, and the most elegant
manners are the kindest.</p>
<p>All these thoughts were dancing through Molly's head, and when she left
her cats, after a general romp in which even decorous Granny allowed her
family to play leap-frog over her respectable back, she had made up her
mind not to have yellow ribbons on her summer hat if she got a pink muslin
as she had planned, but to finish off Boo's last shirt before she went
shopping with Merry.</p>
<p>It rained that evening, and Mr. Bemis had a headache, so he threw himself
down upon the lounge after tea for a nap, with his silk handkerchief
spread over his face. He did get a nap, and when he waked he lay for a
time drowsily listening to the patter of the rain, and another sound which
was even more soothing. Putting back a corner of the handkerchief to learn
what it was, he saw Molly sitting by the fire with Boo in her lap, rocking
and humming as she warmed his little bare feet, having learned to guard
against croup by attending to the damp shoes and socks before going to
bed. Boo lay with his round face turned up to hers, stroking her cheek
while the sleepy blue eyes blinked lovingly at her as she sang her lullaby
with a motherly patience sweet to see. They made a pretty little picture,
and Mr. Bemis looked at it with pleasure, having a leisure moment in which
to discover, as all parents do sooner or later, that his children were
growing up.</p>
<p>"Molly is getting to be quite a woman, and very like her mother," thought
papa, wiping the eye that peeped, for he had been fond of the pretty wife
who died when Boo was born. "Sad loss to them, poor things! But Miss Bat
seems to have done well by them. Molly is much improved, and the boy looks
finely. She's a good soul, after all;" and Mr. Bemis began to think he had
been hasty when he half made up his mind to get a new housekeeper, feeling
that burnt steak, weak coffee, and ragged wristbands were sure signs that
Miss Bat's days of usefulness were over.</p>
<p>Molly was singing the lullaby her mother used to sing to her, and her
father listened to it silently till Boo was carried away too sleepy for
anything but bed. When she came back she sat down to her work, fancying
her father still asleep. She had a crimson bow at her throat and one on
the newly braided hair, her cuffs were clean, and a white apron hid the
shabbiness of the old dress. She looked like a thrifty little housewife as
she sat with her basket beside her full of neat white rolls, her spools
set forth, and a new pair of scissors shining on the table. There was a
sort of charm in watching the busy needle flash to and fro, the anxious
pucker of the forehead as she looked to see if the stitches were even, and
the expression of intense relief upon her face as she surveyed the
finished button-hole with girlish satisfaction. Her father was wide awake
and looking at her, thinking, as he did so,—</p>
<p>"Really the old lady has worked well to change my tomboy into that nice
little girl: I wonder how she did it." Then he gave a yawn, pulled off the
handkerchief, and said aloud, "What are you making, Molly?" for it struck
him that sewing was a new amusement.</p>
<p>"Shirts for Boo, sir. Four, and this is the last," she answered, with
pardonable pride, as she held it up and nodded toward the pile in her
basket.</p>
<p>"Isn't that a new notion? I thought Miss Bat did the sewing," said Mr.
Bemis, as he smiled at the funny little garment, it looked so like Boo
himself.</p>
<p>"No, sir; only yours. I do mine and Boo's. At least, I'm learning how, and
Mrs. Pecq says I get on nicely," answered Molly, threading her needle and
making a knot in her most capable way.</p>
<p>"I suppose it is time you did learn, for you are getting to be a great
girl, and all women should know how to make and mend. You must take a
stitch for me now and then: Miss Bat's eyes are not what they were, I
find;" and Mr. Bemis looked at his frayed wristband, as if he particularly
felt the need of a stitch just then.</p>
<p>"I'd love to, and I guess I could. I can mend gloves; Merry taught me, so
I'd better begin on them, if you have any," said Molly, much pleased at
being able to do anything for her father, and still more so at being
asked.</p>
<p>"There's something to start with;" and he threw her a pair, with nearly
every finger ripped.</p>
<p>Molly shook her head over them, but got out her gray silk and fell to
work, glad to show how well she could sew.</p>
<p>"What are you smiling about?" asked her father, after a little pause, for
his head felt better, and it amused him to question Molly.</p>
<p>"I was thinking about my summer clothes. I must get them before long, and
I'd like to go with Mrs. Grant and learn how to shop, if you are willing."</p>
<p>"I thought Miss Bat did that for you."</p>
<p>"She always has, but she gets ugly, cheap things that I don't like. I
think I am old enough to choose myself, if there is someone to tell me
about prices and the goodness of the stuff. Merry does; and she is only a
few months older than I am."</p>
<p>"How old are you, child?" asked her father, feeling as if he had lost his
reckoning.</p>
<p>"Fifteen in August;" and Molly looked very proud of the fact.</p>
<p>"So you are! Bless my heart, how the time goes! Well, get what you please;
if I'm to have a young lady here, I'd like to have her prettily dressed.
It won't offend Miss Bat, will it?"</p>
<p>Molly's eyes sparkled, but she gave a little shrug as she answered, "She
won't care. She never troubles herself about me if I let her alone.</p>
<p>"Hey? what? Not trouble herself? If <i>she</i> doesn't, who does?" and Mr.
Bemis sat up as if this discovery was more surprising than the other.</p>
<p>"I take care of myself and Boo, and she looks after you. The house goes
any way."</p>
<p>"I should think so! I nearly broke my neck over the parlor sofa in the
hall to-night. What is it there for?"</p>
<p>Molly laughed. "That's the joke, sir, Miss Bat is cleaning house, and I'm
sure it needs cleaning, for it is years since it was properly done. I
thought you might have told her to."</p>
<p>"I've said nothing. Don't like house-cleaning well enough to suggest it. I
did think the hall was rather dirty when I dropped my coat and took it up
covered with lint. Is she going to upset the whole place?" asked Mr.
Bemis, looking alarmed at the prospect.</p>
<p>"I hope so, for I really am ashamed when people come, to have them see the
dust and cobwebs, and old carpets and dirty windows," said Molly, with a
sigh, though she never had cared a bit till lately.</p>
<p>"Why don't you dust round a little, then? No time to spare from the books
and play?"</p>
<p>"I tried, father, but Miss Bat didn't like it, and it was too hard for me
alone. If things were once in nice order, I think I could keep them so;
for I do want to be neat, and I'm learning as fast as I can."</p>
<p>"It is high time someone took hold, if matters are left as you say. I've
just been thinking what a clever woman Miss Bat was, to make such a tidy
little girl out of what I used to hear called the greatest tomboy in town,
and wondering what I could give the old lady. Now I find <i>you</i> are
the one to be thanked, and it is a very pleasant surprise to me."</p>
<p>"Give her the present, please; I'm satisfied, if you like what I've done.
It isn't much, and I didn't know as you would ever observe any difference.
But I did try, and now I guess I'm really getting on," said Molly, sewing
away with a bright color in her cheeks, for she, too, found it a pleasant
surprise to be praised after many failures and few successes.</p>
<p>"You certainly are, my dear. I'll wait till the house-cleaning is over,
and then, if we are all alive, I'll see about Miss Bat's reward. Meantime,
you go with Mrs. Grant and get whatever you and the boy need, and send the
bills to me;" and Mr. Bemis lighted a cigar, as if that matter was
settled.</p>
<p>"Oh, thank you, sir! That will be splendid. Merry always has pretty
things, and I know you will like me when I get fixed," said Molly,
smoothing down her apron, with a little air.</p>
<p>"Seems to me you look very well as you are. Isn't that a pretty enough
frock?" asked Mr. Bemis, quite unconscious that his own unusual interest
in his daughter's affairs made her look so bright and winsome.</p>
<p>"This? Why, father, I've worn it all winter, and it's <i>frightfully</i>
ugly, and almost in rags. I asked you for a new one a month ago, and you
said you'd 'see about it'; but you didn't, so I patched this up as well as
I could;" and Molly showed her elbows, feeling that such masculine
blindness as this deserved a mild reproof.</p>
<p>"Too bad! Well, go and get half a dozen pretty muslin and gingham things,
and be as gay as a butterfly, to make up for it," laughed her father,
really touched by the patches and Molly's resignation to the unreliable
"I'll see about it," which he recognized as a household word.</p>
<p>Molly clapped her hands, old gloves and all, exclaiming, with girlish
delight, "How nice it will seem to have a plenty of new, neat dresses all
at once, and be like other girls! Miss Bat always talks about economy, and
has no more taste than a—caterpillar." Molly meant to say "cat," but
remembering her pets, spared them the insult.</p>
<p>"I think I can afford to dress my girl as well as Grant does his. Get a
new hat and coat, child, and any little notions you fancy. Miss Bat's
economy isn't the sort I like;" and Mr. Bemis looked at his wristbands
again, as if he could sympathize with Molly's elbows.</p>
<p>"At this rate, I shall have more clothes than I know what to do with,
after being a rag-bag," thought the girl, in great glee, as she bravely
stitched away at the worst glove, while her father smoked silently for a
while, feeling that several little matters had escaped his eye which he
really ought to "see about."</p>
<p>Presently he went to his desk, but not to bury himself in business papers,
as usual, for, after rummaging in several drawers, he took out a small
bunch of keys, and sat looking at them with an expression only seen on his
face when he looked up at the portrait of a dark-eyed woman hanging in his
room. He was a very busy man, but he had a tender place in his heart for
his children; and when a look, a few words, a moment's reflection, called
his attention to the fact that his little girl was growing up, he found
both pride and pleasure in the thought that this young daughter was trying
to fill her mother's place, and be a comfort to him, if he would let her.</p>
<p>"Molly, my dear, here is something for you," he said; and when she stood
beside him, added, as he put the keys into her hand, keeping both in his
own for a minute,—</p>
<p>"Those are the keys to your mother's things. I always meant you to have
them, when you were old enough to use or care for them. I think you'll
fancy this better than any other present, for you are a good child, and
very like her."</p>
<p>Something seemed to get into his throat there, and Molly put her arm round
his neck, saying, with a little choke in her own voice, "Thank you,
father, I'd rather have this than anything else in the world, and I'll try
to be more like her every day, for your sake."</p>
<p>He kissed her, then said, as he began to stir his papers about, "I must
write some letters. Run off to bed, child. Good-night, my dear,
good-night."</p>
<p>Seeing that he wanted to be alone, Molly slipped away, feeling that she
had received a very precious gift; for she remembered the dear, dead
mother, and had often longed to possess the relics laid away in the one
room where order reigned and Miss Bat had no power to meddle. As she
slowly undressed, she was not thinking of the pretty new gowns in which
she was to be "as gay as a butterfly," but of the half-worn garments
waiting for her hands to unfold with a tender touch; and when she fell
asleep, with the keys under her pillow and her arms round Boo, a few happy
tears on her cheeks seemed to show that, in trying to do the duty which
lay nearest her, she had earned a very sweet reward.</p>
<p>So the little missionaries succeeded better in their second attempt than
in their first; for, though still very far from being perfect girls, each
was slowly learning, in her own way, one of the three lessons all are the
better for knowing—that cheerfulness can change misfortune into love
and friends; that in ordering one's self aright one helps others to do the
same; and that the power of finding beauty in the humblest things makes
home happy and life lovely.</p>
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