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"Well, as you are only a cousin it doesn't matter," she remarked indifferently. "Please all make yourselves at home. Oh there's the stage stopping at the gate! the girls have come!" and she flew out to welcome them.
The little parlor was quite inconveniently crowded, but that afforded subject for mirth, as Mary introduced her friends and bustled about trying to find seats for them all.
"We shall have to take dinner in relays or else set a table in here, besides the one in the dining-room," she said, laughing.
"Let Amy and me go to our room and dress while your first set eat, and give us our dinner afterwards," suggested Ella Neff.
"Yes, I should much prefer it," Miss Fletcher said, "for we are really too dusty and dirty to sit down to your table now."
"And I shall act as waiter to the first table and eat with these ladies at the second," said Charlie.
"Very well, I can manage to seat the rest," Mary said; and so it was arranged.
The dinner proved very nice and very abundant with the help of the contents of the hamper. Mary's cooking received many praises, in which Charlie claimed a share, because, as he said, he had a.s.sisted largely.
CHAPTER XXII.
"O spirits gay, and kindly heart!
Precious the blessings ye impart!"
--_Joanna Baillie._
"Well, cricket, are we to carry you back with us?" Mr. Dinsmore asked, with a smiling look at Violet. "If so, 'tis time to be tying on your hat, for the carriage is at the door."
"No, grandpa, I am going to stay," she answered, holding up her face for a parting kiss.
"I am well satisfied with your decision, dear child," her mother said when bidding her good-bye, as they and Edward stood alone together for a moment on the little porch. "I think these young people are all safe a.s.sociates for you and your brother," turning to him and taking a hand of each, "and that you will enjoy yourselves very much with them. But, my darlings, never forget in the midst of your mirth and gayety--or in trouble, if that should come--that G.o.d's eye is upon you, and that you have a Christian character to maintain before men. Let me give you a parting text, 'Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of G.o.d.' And yet another for your joy and comfort, 'The Lord G.o.d is a sun and shields the Lord will give grace and glory: no good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly.'"
"Was there ever such another dear, good mother as ours?" Violet said to her brother, as together they watched the carriage out of sight.
"I wish there were thousands like her," he answered. "Ever since I can remember it has been plain to me that what she most desired for all her children was that they might be real, true, earnest Christians. Vi, if we are not all that, we can never lay the blame at our mother's door."
"Nor papa's either," Violet said with a sigh and a tear to his memory, "for he was just as careful as she is to train us up for G.o.d and heaven."
"Yes," Edward a.s.sented with emotion. "O Vi, if I could but be the man he was!"
They went into the house. In the little parlor Amy Fletcher reclined on a sofa gazing out through the open door upon the sea.
"I have had my first sight of old ocean to-day," she said, glancing up at them as they came in, "and oh how beautiful it is! how delicious this breeze coming from it! it surely must bring health and strength to any one who is not very ill indeed!"
"I hope it will to you," Violet said, sitting down by her side.
"I hope so," she returned with a cheerful look and smile, "for the doctors tell me I have no organic disease, and that nothing is more likely to build me up than sea air and sea-bathing."
Amy was small and fragile in appearance, but not painfully thin; she had large dark grey eyes, brown hair, a sweet patient expression, a clear complexion, and though usually rather too pale and quiet, when excited or greatly interested the color would come and go on her cheek, her eyes shine, and her whole face light up in a way that made her decidedly pretty.
She was weary now with her journey and a visit to the beach, though she had only walked to a summer house near by and sat there while the rest strolled about.
Merry sounds of jest and laughter were coming from the kitchen.
"The girls are washing the dishes," Amy said with a smile, "and the lads helping or hindering, I don't know which."
"The dinner dishes?" asked Violet.
"Yes, Mary set them aside for the time, that she might enjoy the company of your friends while they stayed."
"Do you think I could be of any a.s.sistance out there?" queried Edward, with gravity.
"I have an idea that the place is quite full now," Amy said, with a merry glance up into his face. "I wish there was room for us all, for they seem to be having a great deal of sport. Just hark how they are laughing! Well, our turn will come. Don't you think we are going to have a jolly time here?"
The door opened and the two young men came in.
"You don't know what you've missed, Ed," said Charlie helping himself to a chair near Amy's couch; "housework's jolly good fun."
"When you don't have too much of it," remarked Amy.
"And do it in pleasant company," added Donald.
"And under a capable and kind instructress," supplemented Mary, speaking from the kitchen.
"What are your terms for tuition, Miss Keith?" inquired Edward, as she and Ella Neff joined the circle in the parlor.
"Beginners get their board, which is sometimes more than they earn."
"Is that all?" said Donald. "Then I think I shall retire from the service."
"I advise you to do no such thing," said Ella, "the knowledge you gain may prove invaluable in some future emergency: some time when you find yourself out on the plains or buried in the forests of the Far West, with no gentle, loving woman at hand to prepare your meals."
"In that case there would doubtless be an ungentle and obedient orderly to do so," rejoined Donald with gravity.
"Well, women are often lectured by newspaper writers and others on the paramount duty of making themselves acquainted with the culinary art, as well as everything else pertaining to housewifery, in order that they may be fully capable of directing the labors of their servants, and I see no reason why the rule shouldn't hold good for men," remarked Ella.
"There, sir, you're cornered, Donald!" laughed Charlie.
"Now that we are all here together, suppose we make such arrangements as are necessary to const.i.tute ourselves a tolerably orderly household,"
said Mary.
"I understood that you were commanding officer, and the rest of us had nothing to do but obey orders," said Donald.
"Quite a mistake. This is not an army, but a democracy, in which the majority rules. All important questions, therefore--"
"Such as the bill of fare for dinner," suggested Charlie. "Excuse the hint, ma'am."
"Are to be put to vote," Mary went on, not deigning to notice the interruption. "Mr. Keith, I propose that you, as the eldest of the party, take the chair."