CHAPTER XXIII"I was thinking, miss," said Sarah, "as 'ow the bit of beef would 'ash nicely.""Beef bone, you mean, Sarah?"Sarah looked uncomfortable; she picked up a corner of her apron and pleated it uneasily."Well, you see, miss, we've been using up a lot of things lately—"Nell laughed lightly."Sarah, are you telling me I eat too much?""No, miss." Sarah sighed, hesitated. "But it do run away with things 'aving folks to meals!" she blurted out. "Oh, miss, I beg your parding!" she gasped, aghast at the change in Nell's face."We will have the beef bone for lunch, with potatoes and bread!" said Nell, tragically, and marched upstairs to the Stronghold, where Denis was mending a shelf before rushing off to the bank."Denis,"—her soft voice rushed it all out in wild indignation,—"we have been insulted! We're not to invite Ted here to meals any more! Nor anyone else! We're to bundle them off without letting them eat or drink beneath this hateful, mean, petty little roof! That's what it has come to now!""By Jove, Nell! what's it all mean?""It means that we've been using up too much of Aunt Kezia's money! The accounts were to run till she came back, whatever that means! But this morning Sarah warned me—me!—that having folks to meals do run away with things so!" She ended with a shaky little laugh."That all? What on earth does it matter what a well-meaning but silly little hap'orth says?""But—Denis—it isn't our money, you see!"He banged a nail into the shelf. "I may be a thief, but I'll never turn my friends away, Nell O'Brien!"She laughed gaily. "I know! I'll make Sarah tell me the exact amount Aunt Kezia spends in a week, and we'll keep horrible accounts, and never go beyond it! At least, with her money. When we get to the end of that, we'll pay for the things with our own money, and live on bread and water and all that sort of thing!""We will, my twin, we will! You're a genius."He took out his watch, then frowned. "Good-bye, Nell. Hustle me out, or I shall never go!""Poor old Denis!""That's not hustling. If you sympathise, I shall begin to cry, and refuse to budge."She went down into the hall to help him into his coat."It's poor old Tellbridge, too," he observed comically. "I don't fancy I'm much of a bargain. Oh, Nell, aren't letters immeasurably more interesting, more human, than hard and dry figures? That Pennington," he added, "can tot up—subtract—fly around with figures, till he makes my head spin. He's helped me out lots of times.""I'm going to figure, too, this morning—with Sarah! So you can think of me drowning in a sea of curly threes and twos and fives, and noughts—heaps of noughts."Ted did not appear that day. But the next morning Nell was standing in the dining-room window, snipping off the dead jonquils from a bunch in a bowl, when, glancing up, she saw Ted coming in at the gate. She nodded and smiled, and he raised his hat. She dropped two or three dead jonquils and ran out into the hall to open the door."Well—" she began; she stopped abruptly—no one was there. She looked to the right; she looked to the left; she gazed up at the sky as if she thought Ted might have become possessed of wings and had flown away. Then suddenly she gave a quick little nod, and off she started in pursuit, clad in blue painting pinafore, and clasping the large pair of old scissors. A good way in front of her there was a broad-shouldered figure striding along at a terrific pace. Up the road went Nell, and after her came an open-mouthed butcher's boy. Nell was a splendid runner, but Ted's pace was swift and his strides long. He turned the corner and disappeared."Ted!Ted!" But he was too far off to hear. She rounded the corner in her turn, and collided with a respectable old gentleman going citywards."So—sorry!" she gasped, not stopping. "Did I hurt you?" she called back."A—pleasure!" ejaculated the respectable old gentleman, who was little and very rotund. He gazed dazedly after her and the butcher's boy. Then—for he was a chivalrous old gentleman—he trotted after them."If I—can help—" he observed breathlessly to a lamp-post as he passed it."Ted!"He heard at last, and turned and stood staring. Then he approached stiffly, hat in hand. The butcher's boy and the little old gentleman drew nearer."Ted—" Nell clutched hold of his coat-sleeve."If I—can help—" The little old gentleman had reached her side now. The butcher's boy stood listening, mouth agape."Oh!" Nell gave a breathless little gurgle. "Thanks, but—""There's no necessity for anyone's help, thanks," said Ted, coldly."It was very kind of you," she interposed charmingly, "especially after I butted into you like that. But I've caught him, you see. That was all I wanted."The old gentleman raised his hat, and retreated."You'll catch cold," said Ted. "You must have my coat.""I'm not made of sugar! Iwon't!"He shrugged his shoulders."You're to come back with me at once," she said imperiously.Dr. Hildersley, from the corner house, looked forth admiringly: "What eyes! What a colour! I wouldn't mind betting the aunt isn't at home!"Mrs. Denbigh at No. 41 looked out and shrugged her shoulders and smiled: "One of those mad Irish people! Butwhata pretty girl she is!"Once back in the dining room Nell faced him."Now!" she said."What is it you wanted me for?" he asked.She leant, half-sitting, against the back of a chair; she swung herself gently to and fro, and looked at him thoughtfully."Ted, you've got a horrible temper, I believe!""If that's all, I may as well go!"She made a dart toward him. "Oh, don't make me run after you again! And Aunt Kezia has expressly forbidden me to leave the house in my pinny. I've just remembered it.""Ted," suddenly, "what did you do yesterday?""Rode.""What did you ride?""Rowena—then Peter.""How long did you ride?""All day."She nodded."Sit down.""I don't want to, thanks.""Ted, tell me why you began to come in, and changed your mind.""Remembered something. Is O'Brien at the bank?""Oh, no, he's reading in bed!"There was a little pause.She began suddenly: "You may go if you want to! If any little stupid thing can make you never want to come near us any more, go! I shan't run after you again, anyway. We don't understand that kind of thing, but then we're not cold-blooded Englishmen!""I say, Nell!"He had grown very red, but he looked rather amused."Why don't you go? I'll tell Denis not to come round worrying you—" Quite suddenly she stopped. The pink colour leapt to her cheeks; she gave a little, shamefaced laugh, "Oh, Ted, it's just like—that—that first night!""Just what I was thinking."There was a little silence."Nell, whydidyou come after me?""Because I wanted to ask you something.""Well?""I wanted to know where you got that waistcoat," demurely.He glanced down at it."Well, I was afraid it was rather gorgeous," he said slowly, "but I didn't think it would shine through my overcoat!""Oh, yes,"—she was quite unabashed,—"I saw the glow of it on thy manly bosom.""I—I want to apologise for—""Oh, no, you don't!Pleasedon't, Ted!""They were so beastly rude," he said.She searched for excuses. "It really was rather—rather startling for them! You see, they're different from us—I mean," catching sight of his expression, "we're always having fun and that kind of thing—"He smiled at her."Give it up, Nell," he said gently; "it's awfully good of you, but it's no go, anyway.""Well, but—whydidyou come to the gate, and then turn away?"He flushed."I don't know. I was coming in. I saw you, and—I funked it suddenly! I was so beastly ashamed. It was awfully good of you to come after me like that, Nell," earnestly."Oh, now he's a nice, sweet Teddie again, and he'll let me tell him to come and sit up in the Stronghold while I paint, won't he? There's that 'Adventures of an Irish R.M.' you're halfway through. You can read that."He opened the door for her."I can hear my acushlum," he said.CHAPTER XXIV"Aunt Kezia says she hopes to be home in a few days, and that she trusts we are all behaving ourselves, and she hopes I'm looking after Sarah, and seeing that she uses up all the crusts and bits of bread for bread-puddings and bread-crumbs, and that she doesn't go up into Aunt Kezia's bedroom to look out of the window at her young man—""By Jove, Ineverknew Aunt Kezia had a young man!""And she hopes—""And she might let poor Sarah just look at him—he must be a curiosity. Fancy Aunt Kezia being so jealous!"Nell put down her letter."She gives a great deal of advice, and is very anxious, but since Denis is so frivolous I won't tell you any more.""I'vegot a letter from Tommy, and he sends his love to my snowy-breasted Pearl," observed the Atom, "and he thinks they're comin' home in about a week.""Oh, missansir," exclaimed Sarah, coming in to clear away the breakfast things, "let me shut the winders! You'll catch your deaths of colds!""Oh, it's a lovely morning," said Nell, leaning out."When I die, plant a shamrock o'er my corpse, Sarah," begged Denis.Sarah sighed heavily."It's a great responsibility me having to look after you all!"Nell put her head down on the window-sill and laughed."Sheila Pat," said Molly, "what are you doing?"The Atom was standing, with absorbed countenance, one foot extended, balancing a pin-cushion. On her head was the slop basin."Don't—speak—to me!"The whisper was earnest and intense, but at that moment Kate Kearney crept up, picked off the pin-cushion, and frisked away with it. The slop basin fell with a crash."Oh, we shall catch it," said Nell, eying the pieces."I was tryin' to do the balancin' clown."On the previous Saturday Ted had appeared very casually with a box at a circus going begging."Pity to waste it," he had observed uncomfortably.He had not explained that he had booked for that box three weeks before, and had never summoned up courage to mention it till the very day itself.They had enjoyed every moment of that circus; and Sheila Pat had striven to do many things since that she had witnessed that day."Next time," advised Denis, from the hall, "you practise the clown, do it with sofa-cushions, Atom. It will come more economical in the end."That evening Herr Schmidt went into his bedroom, and found a small burglar walking off with the two tall candles from his toilet table."Good evenin'," the burglar said calmly. "I'm glad you've come in, because now I can ask if you've any injection to lendin' us your candles, Herr Schmidt.""Not at all, my dear; it is a bleasure."He followed her into the hall. Suddenly she turned, looking gnomish."I invite you to join our little party, Herr Schmidt!" she said with a good deal of effect."A barty? But I am old—""Please come! I do sowantyou to come!"He smiled delightedly."You are a nice little girl! Ach, yes, I will come if ze rest wish it also.""Oh, yes, they will! You see, it's to jump over candles!""To joomp? Candles?"She nodded."Nell," entering the dining room, which was cleared for action, "isn't it lovely—Herr Schmidt's goin' to jump them, too!" Her wicked little voice trembled with glee."Oh!" said Nell, "oh, it's very good of him!"Herr Schmidt looked on with benign interest as they arranged twelve candles, big, little, thin, fat, in a row on the floor, some in candlesticks and a few stuck on pieces of wood. He listened earnestly to Nell's explanation."Yes, yes, I understand. Every candle represents a month. Yes. I joomp—so!" He gave an elephantine leap in the air that sent Molly flying from the room. "And if I blow out any, I shall be onhappy zat month—ach, yes!""And all you jump over without blowing out will be happy and prosperous months.""So! I understant. Shall I begin?"He did begin. He stood before the first candle drew his feet together, and—thud!—he was over and beaming round, breathless but triumphant."Ach—he not out!"He smiled seraphically upon his rude, convulsed audience, which was strewn around helplessly on chairs and sofa.Then he prepared to manipulate the second candle. With a thud that shook the whole house, he cleared it triumphantly."January, February! Ach, it is so easy!""You're a fairy, Herr Schmidt!" declared Denis. "I believe you've got gossamer wings hidden in your toes!""You're a bit muddled, O.B., aren't you?" observed Ted.But the hackneyed and stale old saying that pride goes before a fall held good now. Herr Schmidt, overconfident, leapt buoyantly at his third candle and came down with a horrible squelch straight on it."Ach, I've put—him out!" he ejaculated dismally."No, have you?" said Ted."Yes, I haf," he responded in all good faith, eying the flattened mass of wax. "It is March; I shall be unlucky."Then warily he started once more. He surmounted successfully April, May, June, and July. By that time his beaming smiles had given place to a deep and solemn earnestness infinitely more ludicrous. His face was very red, and his breath was very short. But on he went; came to grief over August; on again, over September, October, successfully, put November out, and leapt December with a bang that Denis declared made his teeth rattle in his head."Zere!" He looked round on his audience much as a conqueror might have looked on the worlds he had conquered—with pride tempered by sadness for losses. "I shall be unlucky in March and August and November, but I joomp zem well, eh? Zo many not out, hein?""Oh, beautifully," said Nell, wiping her eyes, "only three out!"They replaced flattened March, then Sheila Pat went earnestly at the candles; bright and airy as a sprite, she skipped over them without putting out one. Molly was not so lucky. Her skirts were longer than the Atom's, her giggles more helpless. Her jumps were wild, hopelessly crooked. She put out February and March, then stood on one leg, her skirts all bunched up in front, shaking with laughter."Don'tlook at me! Oh,mayn'tI begin again?Denis—don't make me laugh!"She gathered her skirts together—thud, thud, thud, thud! In a wild rush April, May, June, July, were jumped triumphantly."O dear!" She stopped again, breathless with giggles and frantic little squeals at each candle. Denis was shouting aloud at her desperate hops."You're like a one-legged frog, Mol! Go on! You mustn't stop!""I'llneverdo the rest!Oh!" She stumbled—kicked August over, trod on September, and fell headlong on October, November, and December. A horrible smell of burning arose. Herr Schmidt, with a torrent of guttural exclamations, rushed to her assistance. Ted also helped her to rise. The others simply collapsed and laughed.Two burnt holes in her skirt, and grease—grease—grease—were the extent of the damages. Molly lay on the lounge and groaned out:—"Oh, Iache!Stopme laughing!"They cut a long candle in two and procured two fresh ones; then Nell went forward, light as Sheila Pat but not able to control her laughter so well, and jumped all successfully except February.A friend called to see Herr Schmidt and he went regretfully away. Denis skipped airily over the whole twelve candles, without a pause, and without putting out one."Come on, Ted! It's as easy as sleeping with your eyes shut!""Wait a moment—I've an idea!" exclaimed Nell."No!""It's not fair for you boys. How do you think I put out February? Why, with the whiff of my skirt!You shall wear skirts!"They draped them artistically with rugs and shawls, pinning them up till Ted declared ruefully that he moved in terror of his life."Come on!" shouted Denis. "What's a rug when you've got a good pair of legs! Houp la!"And he was staggering and stumbling helplessly, with January and February both out."Where are your good pair of legs now?""Ican do better than that. It requires a calm dignity and caution," observed Ted. "You were too rash, O.B., too Oirish altogether."He dragged his rugs and shawls together."You've lit them again? Thanks. Now!"He jumped slowly, heavily, without any spring, cleared January successfully, and put out February with a fliff of his draperies."Hang it all! That's not fair. Why, it's out before I've jumped the thing!""Of course!" cried Nell, gleefully. "You're too English altogether, Ted! You should be more careful with your skirt!""Um." He eyed the candle reflectively, then cautiously stepped round it."I'm not going to jump it for nothing," he declared; "it's out and it can't be outer. Now for March."He rolled his draperies into a ball in front, jumped blindly, the ball projecting too far for him to be able to see the candle, and peered round complacently."He's all right!"But a storm of expostulations arose."You jumped right on one side!""You didn't jump over it at all!""You must do it again!"He sighed."I do call that jolly hard!"He looked appealingly at Nell, but got no sympathy.At that moment Denis gave a war-whoop behind him."Go on! Let's rush 'em! I'm coming! Hurryup!""Oh, I say!" He clutched wildly at his draperies, heard Denis clear the candle behind him, and leapt forward desperately, his rugs held up anyhow.Over March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November they careered without a pause to view what success they had achieved, stumbling, kicking, making the most awful noise; then Ted did not take December quickly enough—Denis, unable to stop himself, with a yell collided into him, and over they went, squashing December as flat as the proverbial pancake. They lay, kicking, struggling, all muddled up."Give us a hand!" shouted Denis. "Here, you idiot, you're hanging on tomyrug!""I'm not! A pin's digging into my calf!""I tell you, youhavegot hold of my rug!""I haven't! It's my shawl you're pulling at.""Nell, I'll disown you as my twin forever if you don't come and separate this fool from me!"Ted groaned dismally. "There's another pin—in my shoulder!""Pooh, I've got 'em digging into me everywhere! I'm the latest thing in pin-cushions! Nell O'Brien, when at the post mortem the verdict is 'Death due to an overdose of pins,' you'll repent, perhaps—""O.B.,willyou let that bit of shawl go? Or tear off the corner you've taken such a fancy to!""Oh, no, it's Aunt Kezia's," squealed Molly, "oh—dobe careful!""Oh,Lor'," gasped Denis, in exhausted tones, "I'm done! And with my last breath I maintain 'tismyshawl.""There, now, I've let everything go. Twirl me—twist me—do what you will with me," said Ted. "Get up, O.B.! I say, ware shins, old man!"They stumbled to their feet and stood and surveyed the row of dilapidated candles—bent double, lying full length on the ground, squashed flat, and one only still alight."Ted, shake hands. In face of the sad and gloomy year I see before us, I can harbour no ill feeling towards you; though'twasmy shawl, yet let us be as brothers in misfortune.""January, February, March, April, May, June, July—July is to be our one and only joyful month, O.B.!""And now," pursued Denis, "let us bow to the ladies of the company. Our awe and admiration—always intense—have increased by five hundred yards, four inches, during the last half hour of sad experience. Amn't I right, sweet brother?"Ted bowed; then his eyes twinkled as he fixed them on the Atom's long legs."My awe and admiration for Sheila Pat remain as they were," he announced firmly.The Atom sat down suddenly on the floor."Oh, the mess!" sighed Nell, "the awful mess!""Who is it who speaks?" inquired Denis, in tragic tones. "I have no twin. In my direst need she deserted me—her one and only twin—her Irish boy—her brown-haired brother—oh, by Jove!" with a sudden shout of laughter,"suppose Aunt Kezia were to walk in now!"CHAPTER XXVNell conned her accounts and sighed worriedly. They were in a hopeless muddle; the only clear thing about them was—the unexpectedness of the size of the total. Then she turned to Aunt Kezia's books and her own separate account of what they were spending. Finally she took a long letter from the pocket of her pinafore, and studied it anxiously. Then she rose and went slowly downstairs to the kitchen."What'll you 'ave for lunch, miss?" queried Sarah."There was some chicken left, wasn't there?""Nothing to speak of, miss.""You might get it up and let me see it Sarah."Sarah left the kitchen, and Nell sat on the table and studied the butcher's account, and her brow grew puckered."There, miss, not more'n enough for two."Nell eyed the diminutive wing and leg and bit of breast anxiously. Then she laughed."Sarah, we'll have it curried—with plenty of rice!""It'll never do, miss.""I shall be quite content with rice. It will have to do, and that's all about it. We're spending too much, Sarah!""Well, miss, it's the little things somehow. I don't know 'ow it is, but you have such alotof extrys—pretty jim-crams I calls 'em to myself.""And the baker's account is so much larger too, Sarah." Nell wandered over to the bread-pan and looked in. Some words in Miss Kezia's letter were in her mind: "Keep a strict watch on the bread, and see that the stale is all used up. Servants never will trouble to do this.""Oh, Sarah, what a heap of stale bread!""Well, miss, I can't help it. You all like new bread. Mr. Denis said only t'other morning at breakfast when I tried to use up a bit o' stale, 'e said, 'Iwondered, where that old pair of shoes of mine had got to!'"Her tone was full of admiration of Denis's wit."But—I don't understand—couldn't we order less, or something?""Oh, no, miss, sure as you did that, you'd come short.""I know! I read once of a way to make stale bread new, Sarah, and I tried it for fun, and it acted beautifully."Sarah looked sceptical."I'll show you with a small piece. Now let me see—first you pass it under the cold-water tap—like this—then you put it in the oven for about ten minutes."At the end of the ten minutes she brought it forth triumphantly."Well, I never!" exclaimed Sarah, admiringly. "I must tell mother that! And oh, miss, I meant to tell you butter's gone up tuppence, and we do use such an orful lot!"Nell sighed. "I've noticed we spend much more on it than Aunt Kezia did.""Oh, yes, that's because you none liked the second best, miss, so I hordered the best. Even Miss Sheilerpat said she would as soon 'ave her bread buttered with candle grease, a little bit of a thing like 'er! You see, miss, you've been used to country butter and the best, living in a castle as you did—"Nell hardly smiled."But which does Aunt Kezia have, Sarah?""The second best. She's a Scotch lady, you see, miss, and different and—it seemed to grow worse lately—""It can't be helped, Sarah. Candle grease or lamp oil, we must have it, if Aunt Kezia did. And—don't you think you could use less butter in your cooking, Sarah?" She felt distinctly mean as she said it, but it was only in accordance with strict injunctions in Miss Kezia's letter."Oh, well, miss," Sarah's tone grew ruffled, "I couldn't cook proper with less! And as for dripping—youwouldn't like that!""But you must use it if you do when Aunt Kezia is at home, Sarah," said Nell, preparing to flee. Now dripping was to Sarah as a red rag to a bull. Nell was pursued across the hall and into the morning room with an avalanche of excited eloquence, the refrain of which was: "Castle folk to eat dripping! Why, you'll turn sick at it, miss!"Nell, in a perfect excess of goodness, went up to the Stronghold once more, and averting her eyes from a study of foxhounds on her easel, took up the account-book once more. She sent Molly and the Atom out with Kate Kearney, and then she wrestled. The end of it was flushed cheeks, angry eyes, worried brows, and a ruffled head of hair. Then Nell flung the book into a corner of the room."That's where you ought to be, you nasty, sordid, money-grubbing little worm!""Hulloa," cried Denis, suddenly appearing with Ted. "Whom on earth are you talking to, and swearing at, what's more?""How-do-you-do?" said Nell to Ted."Been washing your head, twin?""No.""It looks like it, and you look pretty warm.""Oh, do leave my looks alone!" petulantly.Denis's eyebrows went up.Ted looked out of the window and whistled with soft energy to himself."Silly old bounder wouldn't come in for ages," observed Denis, sitting astride a chair; "says he was here to lunch yesterday."He paused, and waited for her to speak. She gave a little gasp, as she remembered the curried chicken, and was silent.Denis's brows drew together in a great frown.Ted broke in with a laugh."I'm not going to stay now! I only came in to pacify O.B."With a little flush of horror all her instincts of hospitality awoke."Shut the door, Denis! Guard it! Don't let him go, except over your dead body!"His brow cleared at once; laughing, he placed himself before the door."Oh, but," expostulated Ted, "I—er—I—really, you know, I justlivehere!""Wish you did, old man!""It's awfully kind, you know, and all that, but—""Oh, Ted, what a lot of breath you do waste!" ejaculated Nell. She spoke heartily, because she felt that if he went away, she would be shamed forever; but she was still cross, and inclined to make molehills into mountains.She took her place at the table and watched Denis moodily as he peered into the dish before him."I say, Sheila Pat, fetch me the fairy spectacles of Karring Glen! I'll need 'em! Bothered if my own unaided mortal eyes can find any meat or snails or puppy-dogs' tails here!""It's curried chicken," said Nell, austerely."Thanks, my dear! But are you sure 'tisn't curried rice?""I'm in luck," Ted observed quietly; "I adore rice.""Glad to hear it, old man! It's pretty well all you'll get to-day. Sarah, are you trying to starve your youthful charges?""It is my fault; I said it would do," Nell said clearly."How awfully nice of you," Ted cut in; "you must have known I was coming along.""Denis, I don't want any chicken—only rice, please.""You've got to have it, anyway.""I don'twantit!""Leave it, then."She knew that tone. She frowned and bit her lip, but rather than make more fuss, she gave in."No one's cut any bread," observed Molly.Ted seized the loaf. Nell glanced at him, saw his face was red and puzzled, looked at the loaf, which wore a somewhat grimy and cindery appearance, leant forward, and gave it a squeeze. Then suddenly she began to laugh and laugh: "Oh—it's an experiment!" she gasped. "I'm—afraid—it isn't—a success!"Ted was smiling amusedly.Denis seized the loaf."Great Scott, it's as hard as stone! Shake her, Ted, shake the explanation out of her!""I—I told Sarah—to wet it and put it in the oven—to make it new! O dear!"He rang the bell."You might experiment on lump sugar next time, old girl, 'twon't affect me, you see!""The rest's all the same, miss! I did it all at once just as you told me to, and you said as I wasn't to horder any more till the stale was used up—""All right, Sarah," Denis broke in impatiently; "go to the nearest baker's, and get a loaf at once.""Mistress won't 'ave nothink to do with Brown, sir; she says they give short weight—""Then go to Smith or Robinson's!" he shouted impatiently."I don't know either of them, sir, if you'll hexcuse me—""Go to the next nearest to Brown's, Sarah," he said in a gentle, lamblike voice."Yessir. I 'aven't any money."He found a sixpence and handed it to her with a bow.Ted was calmly eating his lunch."Servants," observed Denis, "are born without brains, and with the bump of unconscious aggravation dumped in the place where the brains ought to be."Later, they found that the butter was rank. Before Nell knew what he was going to do Denis had attacked Sarah about it and out came a voluble and injured explanation about the best butter being so dear, and Miss Nell had said they were to have the second best because they ate such a lot and were spending too much money. Nell sat quite calm and quiet; she made no attempt to stop Sarah. She had got beyond that. Ted meanwhile had helped himself to the rank butter, and was heroically eating it, his face stolid.Denis's brow was thunderous; in a curt voice that set poor Sarah weeping in the kitchen he told her to go.Then there was an uncomfortable pause.Ted broke it with an anecdote. He told it, and Nell smiled politely. Sheila Pat sat and considered awhile, then she observed clearly, "I don't see anythin' to laugh at in that story at all!"Ted grew scarlet."I—I believe I left out the point, acushlum!""Please tell it me!"He did—laboriously, and with none of the dry humour that usually distinguished his stories.Nell looked at him, heroically retelling his poor little anecdote, and heroically eating his bread and rank butter, and she burst out laughing."Oh, poor Ted, do give K.K. the rest of that crust!""Should think it would poison her," said Denis, moodily."I like it," declared Ted, with obstinate mendacity. "You're all so particular!"And he ate it down to the very last crumb.After lunch Denis went off to the bank, and Ted went with him."Nell," at the end of the afternoon Denis burst in, "I'm all bottled up! Let me explode! Wasn't it a beastly lunch, old girl? I know we've got to be poor,—horribly, beastly poor,—but I can't stand making a show like that before a guest—making him think he oughtn't to be there at all—hang it all, to be stingy to one's friends!""You see," said Nell, in quite a weary old little voice, "poverty isn't so picturesque out of books as in them.""Rice and rank butter—bricky bread! It's all rot! We can stint more when we're alone.""I didn't know Ted was coming.""Good Heavens, are we to live like pigs, that we can't ask anyone to lunch without an elaborate warning beforehand?""You just said we could stint—""I don't care what I said! It was a ridiculous and needless fiasco! And you know it! Why are we living so much worse all of a sudden? When Aunt Kezia's here we do have something decent to eat, though itisplain."Nell sprang up. She flung her palette, her brush, down."Why don't you telegraph for her to come back since you miss her so terribly?Ican't do any better! It's so beautifully easy to stand and look on, and then grumble because you can't live on the fat of the land! What do you care if the butcher's bill runs to a disgraceful total—if we're spending six times as much as we ought—if we have, in the end, to beg money of Aunt Kezia, because ours has all gone—if the bread-pan is full of stale bread? No, you're the lordly male creature who ordains impossibilities and expects them to be carried out with a smiling face! Oh, I'm sick—sickof it all! And I loathe andabominatehousekeeping on farthings! It's sordid and hateful!" And she fled from the room.Denis stood and stared at the door; then he gave a low whistle, and walked slowly up and down the room. Finally, he strode out and banged on to Nell's door."May I come in, twin?""Yes," said a very small voice. He rushed at her and butted his cheek against hers, which was suspiciously wet."I was a beast, mavourneen! I'm sorry, Nell—all through. By Jove, to think I'm growing into a grumpy old curmudgeon all along o' these London fogs! Why didn't we just laugh at it all, I wonder? I'm sure itwasfunny! You're not cross with poor bad-tempered old Snarly-Jaw, are you, Nell?""No! You know quite well that it wasI—""I say, Nell, stick on a hat! We'll go and get some kippers for tea! Savory and economical and charmingly vulgar! I'm pretty hungry—I am. And we'll haul Ted along, shall we? To get the taste of that grumpy lunch out of him, eh? Here's a hat!" He seized one up from the bed and stuck it on her head. She looked up at him from under its brim, her pretty eyes still wet, her dimples dancing.He seized her face in his hands, and gave her cheek a great, hearty kiss."Denis," she said, "suppose Fate had given me Patsy O'Neil for a twin!""You desecrate the annals of our house by such an infamous and unalluring supposition."Ted was easily persuaded to come back to tea: he jumped at the invitation before it was finished. He would have agreed to come and stay for a week, a month, so terrified was he that he should betray remembrance of that luckless luncheon.The Stronghold greeted them with a great, glowing fire, before which Jim O'Driscoll sat eating a biscuit; the table glimmered in its light, set out with a special daintiness; poor Sarah also was doing her best to obliterate memories. There was a raid on the kitchen for forks; a hustling and pushing for places at the fire in the Stronghold. Ted pushed and hustled Denis with all his strength, but his politeness stood in his way with the others. There was a food deal of noise and a good many tumbles as they fought and elbowed each other, and of course Molly's kipper fell into the fire."Oh! Oh,Denis—get it out!""I will!" cried Ted, and gallantly hied to the rescue.They shouted with joy at his wild plunges after the kipper, and when he at last held it proudly aloft, minus a tail, and scorched and shrivelled into a sprat, it was met with a torrent of rude remarks.Ted handed Molly his own kipper with an air of offended pride; in vain she protested."Here—catch, old man!" Denis flung a fresh kipper to him. "The burnt one will do for your second help!"And sure enough it did. Ted found kippers, cooked by himself and eaten for tea, so good that he ate up every blackened bit of the luckless burnt fish, and declared he regretted the lost tail.He looked round on the scorched cheeks and smiled benignly. "Isn't it good?" he said, with the simplicity that made Nell so fond of him."Oh, Ted, what a dear old man you will make some day!""Cantankerous old beast, I think!" observed Denis."Isn't it funny that things one cooks one's self are always so much nicer than kitchen-cooked things?" reflected Molly. "But I wish I hadn't cooked my nose quite so much.""A cape is a promontory projecting from the land," suddenly declaimed Denis, and they all laughed."Ware noses!" exclaimed Ted, tenderly fingering his own."I like big noses," Sheila Pat said thoughtfully. "There's a more—sort of—understandin'look about them—for boys.""Acushlum,whatmade you think of big noses just then?" he urged reproachfully."Let's play hide-and-seek all over the house!" exclaimed Molly. Sheila Pat slid from her chair."The benighted Englishman shall be seeker first!" she decreed, and with a little squeal of laughter darted from the room.
CHAPTER XXIII
"I was thinking, miss," said Sarah, "as 'ow the bit of beef would 'ash nicely."
"Beef bone, you mean, Sarah?"
Sarah looked uncomfortable; she picked up a corner of her apron and pleated it uneasily.
"Well, you see, miss, we've been using up a lot of things lately—"
Nell laughed lightly.
"Sarah, are you telling me I eat too much?"
"No, miss." Sarah sighed, hesitated. "But it do run away with things 'aving folks to meals!" she blurted out. "Oh, miss, I beg your parding!" she gasped, aghast at the change in Nell's face.
"We will have the beef bone for lunch, with potatoes and bread!" said Nell, tragically, and marched upstairs to the Stronghold, where Denis was mending a shelf before rushing off to the bank.
"Denis,"—her soft voice rushed it all out in wild indignation,—"we have been insulted! We're not to invite Ted here to meals any more! Nor anyone else! We're to bundle them off without letting them eat or drink beneath this hateful, mean, petty little roof! That's what it has come to now!"
"By Jove, Nell! what's it all mean?"
"It means that we've been using up too much of Aunt Kezia's money! The accounts were to run till she came back, whatever that means! But this morning Sarah warned me—me!—that having folks to meals do run away with things so!" She ended with a shaky little laugh.
"That all? What on earth does it matter what a well-meaning but silly little hap'orth says?"
"But—Denis—it isn't our money, you see!"
He banged a nail into the shelf. "I may be a thief, but I'll never turn my friends away, Nell O'Brien!"
She laughed gaily. "I know! I'll make Sarah tell me the exact amount Aunt Kezia spends in a week, and we'll keep horrible accounts, and never go beyond it! At least, with her money. When we get to the end of that, we'll pay for the things with our own money, and live on bread and water and all that sort of thing!"
"We will, my twin, we will! You're a genius."
He took out his watch, then frowned. "Good-bye, Nell. Hustle me out, or I shall never go!"
"Poor old Denis!"
"That's not hustling. If you sympathise, I shall begin to cry, and refuse to budge."
She went down into the hall to help him into his coat.
"It's poor old Tellbridge, too," he observed comically. "I don't fancy I'm much of a bargain. Oh, Nell, aren't letters immeasurably more interesting, more human, than hard and dry figures? That Pennington," he added, "can tot up—subtract—fly around with figures, till he makes my head spin. He's helped me out lots of times."
"I'm going to figure, too, this morning—with Sarah! So you can think of me drowning in a sea of curly threes and twos and fives, and noughts—heaps of noughts."
Ted did not appear that day. But the next morning Nell was standing in the dining-room window, snipping off the dead jonquils from a bunch in a bowl, when, glancing up, she saw Ted coming in at the gate. She nodded and smiled, and he raised his hat. She dropped two or three dead jonquils and ran out into the hall to open the door.
"Well—" she began; she stopped abruptly—no one was there. She looked to the right; she looked to the left; she gazed up at the sky as if she thought Ted might have become possessed of wings and had flown away. Then suddenly she gave a quick little nod, and off she started in pursuit, clad in blue painting pinafore, and clasping the large pair of old scissors. A good way in front of her there was a broad-shouldered figure striding along at a terrific pace. Up the road went Nell, and after her came an open-mouthed butcher's boy. Nell was a splendid runner, but Ted's pace was swift and his strides long. He turned the corner and disappeared.
"Ted!Ted!" But he was too far off to hear. She rounded the corner in her turn, and collided with a respectable old gentleman going citywards.
"So—sorry!" she gasped, not stopping. "Did I hurt you?" she called back.
"A—pleasure!" ejaculated the respectable old gentleman, who was little and very rotund. He gazed dazedly after her and the butcher's boy. Then—for he was a chivalrous old gentleman—he trotted after them.
"If I—can help—" he observed breathlessly to a lamp-post as he passed it.
"Ted!"
He heard at last, and turned and stood staring. Then he approached stiffly, hat in hand. The butcher's boy and the little old gentleman drew nearer.
"Ted—" Nell clutched hold of his coat-sleeve.
"If I—can help—" The little old gentleman had reached her side now. The butcher's boy stood listening, mouth agape.
"Oh!" Nell gave a breathless little gurgle. "Thanks, but—"
"There's no necessity for anyone's help, thanks," said Ted, coldly.
"It was very kind of you," she interposed charmingly, "especially after I butted into you like that. But I've caught him, you see. That was all I wanted."
The old gentleman raised his hat, and retreated.
"You'll catch cold," said Ted. "You must have my coat."
"I'm not made of sugar! Iwon't!"
He shrugged his shoulders.
"You're to come back with me at once," she said imperiously.
Dr. Hildersley, from the corner house, looked forth admiringly: "What eyes! What a colour! I wouldn't mind betting the aunt isn't at home!"
Mrs. Denbigh at No. 41 looked out and shrugged her shoulders and smiled: "One of those mad Irish people! Butwhata pretty girl she is!"
Once back in the dining room Nell faced him.
"Now!" she said.
"What is it you wanted me for?" he asked.
She leant, half-sitting, against the back of a chair; she swung herself gently to and fro, and looked at him thoughtfully.
"Ted, you've got a horrible temper, I believe!"
"If that's all, I may as well go!"
She made a dart toward him. "Oh, don't make me run after you again! And Aunt Kezia has expressly forbidden me to leave the house in my pinny. I've just remembered it."
"Ted," suddenly, "what did you do yesterday?"
"Rode."
"What did you ride?"
"Rowena—then Peter."
"How long did you ride?"
"All day."
She nodded.
"Sit down."
"I don't want to, thanks."
"Ted, tell me why you began to come in, and changed your mind."
"Remembered something. Is O'Brien at the bank?"
"Oh, no, he's reading in bed!"
There was a little pause.
She began suddenly: "You may go if you want to! If any little stupid thing can make you never want to come near us any more, go! I shan't run after you again, anyway. We don't understand that kind of thing, but then we're not cold-blooded Englishmen!"
"I say, Nell!"
He had grown very red, but he looked rather amused.
"Why don't you go? I'll tell Denis not to come round worrying you—" Quite suddenly she stopped. The pink colour leapt to her cheeks; she gave a little, shamefaced laugh, "Oh, Ted, it's just like—that—that first night!"
"Just what I was thinking."
There was a little silence.
"Nell, whydidyou come after me?"
"Because I wanted to ask you something."
"Well?"
"I wanted to know where you got that waistcoat," demurely.
He glanced down at it.
"Well, I was afraid it was rather gorgeous," he said slowly, "but I didn't think it would shine through my overcoat!"
"Oh, yes,"—she was quite unabashed,—"I saw the glow of it on thy manly bosom."
"I—I want to apologise for—"
"Oh, no, you don't!Pleasedon't, Ted!"
"They were so beastly rude," he said.
She searched for excuses. "It really was rather—rather startling for them! You see, they're different from us—I mean," catching sight of his expression, "we're always having fun and that kind of thing—"
He smiled at her.
"Give it up, Nell," he said gently; "it's awfully good of you, but it's no go, anyway."
"Well, but—whydidyou come to the gate, and then turn away?"
He flushed.
"I don't know. I was coming in. I saw you, and—I funked it suddenly! I was so beastly ashamed. It was awfully good of you to come after me like that, Nell," earnestly.
"Oh, now he's a nice, sweet Teddie again, and he'll let me tell him to come and sit up in the Stronghold while I paint, won't he? There's that 'Adventures of an Irish R.M.' you're halfway through. You can read that."
He opened the door for her.
"I can hear my acushlum," he said.
CHAPTER XXIV
"Aunt Kezia says she hopes to be home in a few days, and that she trusts we are all behaving ourselves, and she hopes I'm looking after Sarah, and seeing that she uses up all the crusts and bits of bread for bread-puddings and bread-crumbs, and that she doesn't go up into Aunt Kezia's bedroom to look out of the window at her young man—"
"By Jove, Ineverknew Aunt Kezia had a young man!"
"And she hopes—"
"And she might let poor Sarah just look at him—he must be a curiosity. Fancy Aunt Kezia being so jealous!"
Nell put down her letter.
"She gives a great deal of advice, and is very anxious, but since Denis is so frivolous I won't tell you any more."
"I'vegot a letter from Tommy, and he sends his love to my snowy-breasted Pearl," observed the Atom, "and he thinks they're comin' home in about a week."
"Oh, missansir," exclaimed Sarah, coming in to clear away the breakfast things, "let me shut the winders! You'll catch your deaths of colds!"
"Oh, it's a lovely morning," said Nell, leaning out.
"When I die, plant a shamrock o'er my corpse, Sarah," begged Denis.
Sarah sighed heavily.
"It's a great responsibility me having to look after you all!"
Nell put her head down on the window-sill and laughed.
"Sheila Pat," said Molly, "what are you doing?"
The Atom was standing, with absorbed countenance, one foot extended, balancing a pin-cushion. On her head was the slop basin.
"Don't—speak—to me!"
The whisper was earnest and intense, but at that moment Kate Kearney crept up, picked off the pin-cushion, and frisked away with it. The slop basin fell with a crash.
"Oh, we shall catch it," said Nell, eying the pieces.
"I was tryin' to do the balancin' clown."
On the previous Saturday Ted had appeared very casually with a box at a circus going begging.
"Pity to waste it," he had observed uncomfortably.
He had not explained that he had booked for that box three weeks before, and had never summoned up courage to mention it till the very day itself.
They had enjoyed every moment of that circus; and Sheila Pat had striven to do many things since that she had witnessed that day.
"Next time," advised Denis, from the hall, "you practise the clown, do it with sofa-cushions, Atom. It will come more economical in the end."
That evening Herr Schmidt went into his bedroom, and found a small burglar walking off with the two tall candles from his toilet table.
"Good evenin'," the burglar said calmly. "I'm glad you've come in, because now I can ask if you've any injection to lendin' us your candles, Herr Schmidt."
"Not at all, my dear; it is a bleasure."
He followed her into the hall. Suddenly she turned, looking gnomish.
"I invite you to join our little party, Herr Schmidt!" she said with a good deal of effect.
"A barty? But I am old—"
"Please come! I do sowantyou to come!"
He smiled delightedly.
"You are a nice little girl! Ach, yes, I will come if ze rest wish it also."
"Oh, yes, they will! You see, it's to jump over candles!"
"To joomp? Candles?"
She nodded.
"Nell," entering the dining room, which was cleared for action, "isn't it lovely—Herr Schmidt's goin' to jump them, too!" Her wicked little voice trembled with glee.
"Oh!" said Nell, "oh, it's very good of him!"
Herr Schmidt looked on with benign interest as they arranged twelve candles, big, little, thin, fat, in a row on the floor, some in candlesticks and a few stuck on pieces of wood. He listened earnestly to Nell's explanation.
"Yes, yes, I understand. Every candle represents a month. Yes. I joomp—so!" He gave an elephantine leap in the air that sent Molly flying from the room. "And if I blow out any, I shall be onhappy zat month—ach, yes!"
"And all you jump over without blowing out will be happy and prosperous months."
"So! I understant. Shall I begin?"
He did begin. He stood before the first candle drew his feet together, and—thud!—he was over and beaming round, breathless but triumphant.
"Ach—he not out!"
He smiled seraphically upon his rude, convulsed audience, which was strewn around helplessly on chairs and sofa.
Then he prepared to manipulate the second candle. With a thud that shook the whole house, he cleared it triumphantly.
"January, February! Ach, it is so easy!"
"You're a fairy, Herr Schmidt!" declared Denis. "I believe you've got gossamer wings hidden in your toes!"
"You're a bit muddled, O.B., aren't you?" observed Ted.
But the hackneyed and stale old saying that pride goes before a fall held good now. Herr Schmidt, overconfident, leapt buoyantly at his third candle and came down with a horrible squelch straight on it.
"Ach, I've put—him out!" he ejaculated dismally.
"No, have you?" said Ted.
"Yes, I haf," he responded in all good faith, eying the flattened mass of wax. "It is March; I shall be unlucky."
Then warily he started once more. He surmounted successfully April, May, June, and July. By that time his beaming smiles had given place to a deep and solemn earnestness infinitely more ludicrous. His face was very red, and his breath was very short. But on he went; came to grief over August; on again, over September, October, successfully, put November out, and leapt December with a bang that Denis declared made his teeth rattle in his head.
"Zere!" He looked round on his audience much as a conqueror might have looked on the worlds he had conquered—with pride tempered by sadness for losses. "I shall be unlucky in March and August and November, but I joomp zem well, eh? Zo many not out, hein?"
"Oh, beautifully," said Nell, wiping her eyes, "only three out!"
They replaced flattened March, then Sheila Pat went earnestly at the candles; bright and airy as a sprite, she skipped over them without putting out one. Molly was not so lucky. Her skirts were longer than the Atom's, her giggles more helpless. Her jumps were wild, hopelessly crooked. She put out February and March, then stood on one leg, her skirts all bunched up in front, shaking with laughter.
"Don'tlook at me! Oh,mayn'tI begin again?Denis—don't make me laugh!"
She gathered her skirts together—thud, thud, thud, thud! In a wild rush April, May, June, July, were jumped triumphantly.
"O dear!" She stopped again, breathless with giggles and frantic little squeals at each candle. Denis was shouting aloud at her desperate hops.
"You're like a one-legged frog, Mol! Go on! You mustn't stop!"
"I'llneverdo the rest!Oh!" She stumbled—kicked August over, trod on September, and fell headlong on October, November, and December. A horrible smell of burning arose. Herr Schmidt, with a torrent of guttural exclamations, rushed to her assistance. Ted also helped her to rise. The others simply collapsed and laughed.
Two burnt holes in her skirt, and grease—grease—grease—were the extent of the damages. Molly lay on the lounge and groaned out:—
"Oh, Iache!Stopme laughing!"
They cut a long candle in two and procured two fresh ones; then Nell went forward, light as Sheila Pat but not able to control her laughter so well, and jumped all successfully except February.
A friend called to see Herr Schmidt and he went regretfully away. Denis skipped airily over the whole twelve candles, without a pause, and without putting out one.
"Come on, Ted! It's as easy as sleeping with your eyes shut!"
"Wait a moment—I've an idea!" exclaimed Nell.
"No!"
"It's not fair for you boys. How do you think I put out February? Why, with the whiff of my skirt!You shall wear skirts!"
They draped them artistically with rugs and shawls, pinning them up till Ted declared ruefully that he moved in terror of his life.
"Come on!" shouted Denis. "What's a rug when you've got a good pair of legs! Houp la!"
And he was staggering and stumbling helplessly, with January and February both out.
"Where are your good pair of legs now?"
"Ican do better than that. It requires a calm dignity and caution," observed Ted. "You were too rash, O.B., too Oirish altogether."
He dragged his rugs and shawls together.
"You've lit them again? Thanks. Now!"
He jumped slowly, heavily, without any spring, cleared January successfully, and put out February with a fliff of his draperies.
"Hang it all! That's not fair. Why, it's out before I've jumped the thing!"
"Of course!" cried Nell, gleefully. "You're too English altogether, Ted! You should be more careful with your skirt!"
"Um." He eyed the candle reflectively, then cautiously stepped round it.
"I'm not going to jump it for nothing," he declared; "it's out and it can't be outer. Now for March."
He rolled his draperies into a ball in front, jumped blindly, the ball projecting too far for him to be able to see the candle, and peered round complacently.
"He's all right!"
But a storm of expostulations arose.
"You jumped right on one side!"
"You didn't jump over it at all!"
"You must do it again!"
He sighed.
"I do call that jolly hard!"
He looked appealingly at Nell, but got no sympathy.
At that moment Denis gave a war-whoop behind him.
"Go on! Let's rush 'em! I'm coming! Hurryup!"
"Oh, I say!" He clutched wildly at his draperies, heard Denis clear the candle behind him, and leapt forward desperately, his rugs held up anyhow.
Over March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November they careered without a pause to view what success they had achieved, stumbling, kicking, making the most awful noise; then Ted did not take December quickly enough—Denis, unable to stop himself, with a yell collided into him, and over they went, squashing December as flat as the proverbial pancake. They lay, kicking, struggling, all muddled up.
"Give us a hand!" shouted Denis. "Here, you idiot, you're hanging on tomyrug!"
"I'm not! A pin's digging into my calf!"
"I tell you, youhavegot hold of my rug!"
"I haven't! It's my shawl you're pulling at."
"Nell, I'll disown you as my twin forever if you don't come and separate this fool from me!"
Ted groaned dismally. "There's another pin—in my shoulder!"
"Pooh, I've got 'em digging into me everywhere! I'm the latest thing in pin-cushions! Nell O'Brien, when at the post mortem the verdict is 'Death due to an overdose of pins,' you'll repent, perhaps—"
"O.B.,willyou let that bit of shawl go? Or tear off the corner you've taken such a fancy to!"
"Oh, no, it's Aunt Kezia's," squealed Molly, "oh—dobe careful!"
"Oh,Lor'," gasped Denis, in exhausted tones, "I'm done! And with my last breath I maintain 'tismyshawl."
"There, now, I've let everything go. Twirl me—twist me—do what you will with me," said Ted. "Get up, O.B.! I say, ware shins, old man!"
They stumbled to their feet and stood and surveyed the row of dilapidated candles—bent double, lying full length on the ground, squashed flat, and one only still alight.
"Ted, shake hands. In face of the sad and gloomy year I see before us, I can harbour no ill feeling towards you; though'twasmy shawl, yet let us be as brothers in misfortune."
"January, February, March, April, May, June, July—July is to be our one and only joyful month, O.B.!"
"And now," pursued Denis, "let us bow to the ladies of the company. Our awe and admiration—always intense—have increased by five hundred yards, four inches, during the last half hour of sad experience. Amn't I right, sweet brother?"
Ted bowed; then his eyes twinkled as he fixed them on the Atom's long legs.
"My awe and admiration for Sheila Pat remain as they were," he announced firmly.
The Atom sat down suddenly on the floor.
"Oh, the mess!" sighed Nell, "the awful mess!"
"Who is it who speaks?" inquired Denis, in tragic tones. "I have no twin. In my direst need she deserted me—her one and only twin—her Irish boy—her brown-haired brother—oh, by Jove!" with a sudden shout of laughter,"suppose Aunt Kezia were to walk in now!"
CHAPTER XXV
Nell conned her accounts and sighed worriedly. They were in a hopeless muddle; the only clear thing about them was—the unexpectedness of the size of the total. Then she turned to Aunt Kezia's books and her own separate account of what they were spending. Finally she took a long letter from the pocket of her pinafore, and studied it anxiously. Then she rose and went slowly downstairs to the kitchen.
"What'll you 'ave for lunch, miss?" queried Sarah.
"There was some chicken left, wasn't there?"
"Nothing to speak of, miss."
"You might get it up and let me see it Sarah."
Sarah left the kitchen, and Nell sat on the table and studied the butcher's account, and her brow grew puckered.
"There, miss, not more'n enough for two."
Nell eyed the diminutive wing and leg and bit of breast anxiously. Then she laughed.
"Sarah, we'll have it curried—with plenty of rice!"
"It'll never do, miss."
"I shall be quite content with rice. It will have to do, and that's all about it. We're spending too much, Sarah!"
"Well, miss, it's the little things somehow. I don't know 'ow it is, but you have such alotof extrys—pretty jim-crams I calls 'em to myself."
"And the baker's account is so much larger too, Sarah." Nell wandered over to the bread-pan and looked in. Some words in Miss Kezia's letter were in her mind: "Keep a strict watch on the bread, and see that the stale is all used up. Servants never will trouble to do this."
"Oh, Sarah, what a heap of stale bread!"
"Well, miss, I can't help it. You all like new bread. Mr. Denis said only t'other morning at breakfast when I tried to use up a bit o' stale, 'e said, 'Iwondered, where that old pair of shoes of mine had got to!'"
Her tone was full of admiration of Denis's wit.
"But—I don't understand—couldn't we order less, or something?"
"Oh, no, miss, sure as you did that, you'd come short."
"I know! I read once of a way to make stale bread new, Sarah, and I tried it for fun, and it acted beautifully."
Sarah looked sceptical.
"I'll show you with a small piece. Now let me see—first you pass it under the cold-water tap—like this—then you put it in the oven for about ten minutes."
At the end of the ten minutes she brought it forth triumphantly.
"Well, I never!" exclaimed Sarah, admiringly. "I must tell mother that! And oh, miss, I meant to tell you butter's gone up tuppence, and we do use such an orful lot!"
Nell sighed. "I've noticed we spend much more on it than Aunt Kezia did."
"Oh, yes, that's because you none liked the second best, miss, so I hordered the best. Even Miss Sheilerpat said she would as soon 'ave her bread buttered with candle grease, a little bit of a thing like 'er! You see, miss, you've been used to country butter and the best, living in a castle as you did—"
Nell hardly smiled.
"But which does Aunt Kezia have, Sarah?"
"The second best. She's a Scotch lady, you see, miss, and different and—it seemed to grow worse lately—"
"It can't be helped, Sarah. Candle grease or lamp oil, we must have it, if Aunt Kezia did. And—don't you think you could use less butter in your cooking, Sarah?" She felt distinctly mean as she said it, but it was only in accordance with strict injunctions in Miss Kezia's letter.
"Oh, well, miss," Sarah's tone grew ruffled, "I couldn't cook proper with less! And as for dripping—youwouldn't like that!"
"But you must use it if you do when Aunt Kezia is at home, Sarah," said Nell, preparing to flee. Now dripping was to Sarah as a red rag to a bull. Nell was pursued across the hall and into the morning room with an avalanche of excited eloquence, the refrain of which was: "Castle folk to eat dripping! Why, you'll turn sick at it, miss!"
Nell, in a perfect excess of goodness, went up to the Stronghold once more, and averting her eyes from a study of foxhounds on her easel, took up the account-book once more. She sent Molly and the Atom out with Kate Kearney, and then she wrestled. The end of it was flushed cheeks, angry eyes, worried brows, and a ruffled head of hair. Then Nell flung the book into a corner of the room.
"That's where you ought to be, you nasty, sordid, money-grubbing little worm!"
"Hulloa," cried Denis, suddenly appearing with Ted. "Whom on earth are you talking to, and swearing at, what's more?"
"How-do-you-do?" said Nell to Ted.
"Been washing your head, twin?"
"No."
"It looks like it, and you look pretty warm."
"Oh, do leave my looks alone!" petulantly.
Denis's eyebrows went up.
Ted looked out of the window and whistled with soft energy to himself.
"Silly old bounder wouldn't come in for ages," observed Denis, sitting astride a chair; "says he was here to lunch yesterday."
He paused, and waited for her to speak. She gave a little gasp, as she remembered the curried chicken, and was silent.
Denis's brows drew together in a great frown.
Ted broke in with a laugh.
"I'm not going to stay now! I only came in to pacify O.B."
With a little flush of horror all her instincts of hospitality awoke.
"Shut the door, Denis! Guard it! Don't let him go, except over your dead body!"
His brow cleared at once; laughing, he placed himself before the door.
"Oh, but," expostulated Ted, "I—er—I—really, you know, I justlivehere!"
"Wish you did, old man!"
"It's awfully kind, you know, and all that, but—"
"Oh, Ted, what a lot of breath you do waste!" ejaculated Nell. She spoke heartily, because she felt that if he went away, she would be shamed forever; but she was still cross, and inclined to make molehills into mountains.
She took her place at the table and watched Denis moodily as he peered into the dish before him.
"I say, Sheila Pat, fetch me the fairy spectacles of Karring Glen! I'll need 'em! Bothered if my own unaided mortal eyes can find any meat or snails or puppy-dogs' tails here!"
"It's curried chicken," said Nell, austerely.
"Thanks, my dear! But are you sure 'tisn't curried rice?"
"I'm in luck," Ted observed quietly; "I adore rice."
"Glad to hear it, old man! It's pretty well all you'll get to-day. Sarah, are you trying to starve your youthful charges?"
"It is my fault; I said it would do," Nell said clearly.
"How awfully nice of you," Ted cut in; "you must have known I was coming along."
"Denis, I don't want any chicken—only rice, please."
"You've got to have it, anyway."
"I don'twantit!"
"Leave it, then."
She knew that tone. She frowned and bit her lip, but rather than make more fuss, she gave in.
"No one's cut any bread," observed Molly.
Ted seized the loaf. Nell glanced at him, saw his face was red and puzzled, looked at the loaf, which wore a somewhat grimy and cindery appearance, leant forward, and gave it a squeeze. Then suddenly she began to laugh and laugh: "Oh—it's an experiment!" she gasped. "I'm—afraid—it isn't—a success!"
Ted was smiling amusedly.
Denis seized the loaf.
"Great Scott, it's as hard as stone! Shake her, Ted, shake the explanation out of her!"
"I—I told Sarah—to wet it and put it in the oven—to make it new! O dear!"
He rang the bell.
"You might experiment on lump sugar next time, old girl, 'twon't affect me, you see!"
"The rest's all the same, miss! I did it all at once just as you told me to, and you said as I wasn't to horder any more till the stale was used up—"
"All right, Sarah," Denis broke in impatiently; "go to the nearest baker's, and get a loaf at once."
"Mistress won't 'ave nothink to do with Brown, sir; she says they give short weight—"
"Then go to Smith or Robinson's!" he shouted impatiently.
"I don't know either of them, sir, if you'll hexcuse me—"
"Go to the next nearest to Brown's, Sarah," he said in a gentle, lamblike voice.
"Yessir. I 'aven't any money."
He found a sixpence and handed it to her with a bow.
Ted was calmly eating his lunch.
"Servants," observed Denis, "are born without brains, and with the bump of unconscious aggravation dumped in the place where the brains ought to be."
Later, they found that the butter was rank. Before Nell knew what he was going to do Denis had attacked Sarah about it and out came a voluble and injured explanation about the best butter being so dear, and Miss Nell had said they were to have the second best because they ate such a lot and were spending too much money. Nell sat quite calm and quiet; she made no attempt to stop Sarah. She had got beyond that. Ted meanwhile had helped himself to the rank butter, and was heroically eating it, his face stolid.
Denis's brow was thunderous; in a curt voice that set poor Sarah weeping in the kitchen he told her to go.
Then there was an uncomfortable pause.
Ted broke it with an anecdote. He told it, and Nell smiled politely. Sheila Pat sat and considered awhile, then she observed clearly, "I don't see anythin' to laugh at in that story at all!"
Ted grew scarlet.
"I—I believe I left out the point, acushlum!"
"Please tell it me!"
He did—laboriously, and with none of the dry humour that usually distinguished his stories.
Nell looked at him, heroically retelling his poor little anecdote, and heroically eating his bread and rank butter, and she burst out laughing.
"Oh, poor Ted, do give K.K. the rest of that crust!"
"Should think it would poison her," said Denis, moodily.
"I like it," declared Ted, with obstinate mendacity. "You're all so particular!"
And he ate it down to the very last crumb.
After lunch Denis went off to the bank, and Ted went with him.
"Nell," at the end of the afternoon Denis burst in, "I'm all bottled up! Let me explode! Wasn't it a beastly lunch, old girl? I know we've got to be poor,—horribly, beastly poor,—but I can't stand making a show like that before a guest—making him think he oughtn't to be there at all—hang it all, to be stingy to one's friends!"
"You see," said Nell, in quite a weary old little voice, "poverty isn't so picturesque out of books as in them."
"Rice and rank butter—bricky bread! It's all rot! We can stint more when we're alone."
"I didn't know Ted was coming."
"Good Heavens, are we to live like pigs, that we can't ask anyone to lunch without an elaborate warning beforehand?"
"You just said we could stint—"
"I don't care what I said! It was a ridiculous and needless fiasco! And you know it! Why are we living so much worse all of a sudden? When Aunt Kezia's here we do have something decent to eat, though itisplain."
Nell sprang up. She flung her palette, her brush, down.
"Why don't you telegraph for her to come back since you miss her so terribly?Ican't do any better! It's so beautifully easy to stand and look on, and then grumble because you can't live on the fat of the land! What do you care if the butcher's bill runs to a disgraceful total—if we're spending six times as much as we ought—if we have, in the end, to beg money of Aunt Kezia, because ours has all gone—if the bread-pan is full of stale bread? No, you're the lordly male creature who ordains impossibilities and expects them to be carried out with a smiling face! Oh, I'm sick—sickof it all! And I loathe andabominatehousekeeping on farthings! It's sordid and hateful!" And she fled from the room.
Denis stood and stared at the door; then he gave a low whistle, and walked slowly up and down the room. Finally, he strode out and banged on to Nell's door.
"May I come in, twin?"
"Yes," said a very small voice. He rushed at her and butted his cheek against hers, which was suspiciously wet.
"I was a beast, mavourneen! I'm sorry, Nell—all through. By Jove, to think I'm growing into a grumpy old curmudgeon all along o' these London fogs! Why didn't we just laugh at it all, I wonder? I'm sure itwasfunny! You're not cross with poor bad-tempered old Snarly-Jaw, are you, Nell?"
"No! You know quite well that it wasI—"
"I say, Nell, stick on a hat! We'll go and get some kippers for tea! Savory and economical and charmingly vulgar! I'm pretty hungry—I am. And we'll haul Ted along, shall we? To get the taste of that grumpy lunch out of him, eh? Here's a hat!" He seized one up from the bed and stuck it on her head. She looked up at him from under its brim, her pretty eyes still wet, her dimples dancing.
He seized her face in his hands, and gave her cheek a great, hearty kiss.
"Denis," she said, "suppose Fate had given me Patsy O'Neil for a twin!"
"You desecrate the annals of our house by such an infamous and unalluring supposition."
Ted was easily persuaded to come back to tea: he jumped at the invitation before it was finished. He would have agreed to come and stay for a week, a month, so terrified was he that he should betray remembrance of that luckless luncheon.
The Stronghold greeted them with a great, glowing fire, before which Jim O'Driscoll sat eating a biscuit; the table glimmered in its light, set out with a special daintiness; poor Sarah also was doing her best to obliterate memories. There was a raid on the kitchen for forks; a hustling and pushing for places at the fire in the Stronghold. Ted pushed and hustled Denis with all his strength, but his politeness stood in his way with the others. There was a food deal of noise and a good many tumbles as they fought and elbowed each other, and of course Molly's kipper fell into the fire.
"Oh! Oh,Denis—get it out!"
"I will!" cried Ted, and gallantly hied to the rescue.
They shouted with joy at his wild plunges after the kipper, and when he at last held it proudly aloft, minus a tail, and scorched and shrivelled into a sprat, it was met with a torrent of rude remarks.
Ted handed Molly his own kipper with an air of offended pride; in vain she protested.
"Here—catch, old man!" Denis flung a fresh kipper to him. "The burnt one will do for your second help!"
And sure enough it did. Ted found kippers, cooked by himself and eaten for tea, so good that he ate up every blackened bit of the luckless burnt fish, and declared he regretted the lost tail.
He looked round on the scorched cheeks and smiled benignly. "Isn't it good?" he said, with the simplicity that made Nell so fond of him.
"Oh, Ted, what a dear old man you will make some day!"
"Cantankerous old beast, I think!" observed Denis.
"Isn't it funny that things one cooks one's self are always so much nicer than kitchen-cooked things?" reflected Molly. "But I wish I hadn't cooked my nose quite so much."
"A cape is a promontory projecting from the land," suddenly declaimed Denis, and they all laughed.
"Ware noses!" exclaimed Ted, tenderly fingering his own.
"I like big noses," Sheila Pat said thoughtfully. "There's a more—sort of—understandin'look about them—for boys."
"Acushlum,whatmade you think of big noses just then?" he urged reproachfully.
"Let's play hide-and-seek all over the house!" exclaimed Molly. Sheila Pat slid from her chair.
"The benighted Englishman shall be seeker first!" she decreed, and with a little squeal of laughter darted from the room.